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large to huge amounts of small or medium sized receive buffers. The problem with these situations is that they eat up the available DMA address space very quickly when using mbufs or even mbuf clusters. Additionally this facility provides a direct mapping between 32-bit integers and these buffers. This is needed for devices originally designed for 32-bit systems. Ususally the virtual address of the buffer is used as a handle to find the buffer as soon as it is returned by the card. This does not work for 64-bit machines and hence this mapping is needed.
207 lines
7.6 KiB
Groff
207 lines
7.6 KiB
Groff
.\" Copyright (c) 2003
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.\" Fraunhofer Institute for Open Communication Systems (FhG Fokus).
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.\" All rights reserved.
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.\"
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.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
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.\" are met:
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.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
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.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
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.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
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.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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.\"
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.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
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.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
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.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
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.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
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.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
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.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
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.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
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.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
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.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
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.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
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.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
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.\"
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.\" Author: Hartmut Brandt <harti@freebsd.org>
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.\"
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.\" $FreeBSD$
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.Dd July 15, 2003
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.Dt MBPOOL 9
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.Os FreeBSD
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.Sh NAME
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.Nm mbpool
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.Nd Buffer pools for network interfaces
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.Sh SYNOPSIS
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.In sys/types.h
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.In machine/bus.h
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.In sys/mbpool.h
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.Vt struct mbpool;
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.Ft int
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.Fn mbp_create "struct mbpool **mbp" "const char *name" "bus_dma_tag_t dmat" "u_int max_pages" "size_t page_size" "size_t chunk_size"
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.Ft void
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.Fn mbp_destroy "struct mbpool *mbp"
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.Ft void *
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.Fn mbp_alloc "struct mbpool *mbp" "bus_addr_t *pa" "uint32_t *hp"
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.Ft void
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.Fn mbp_free "struct mbpool *mbp" "void *p"
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.Ft void
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.Fn mbp_ext_free "void *" "void *"
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.Ft void
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.Fn mbp_card_free "struct mbpool *mbp"
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.Ft void
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.Fn mbp_count "struct mbpool *mbp" "u_int *used" "u_int *card" "u_int *free"
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.Ft void *
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.Fn mbp_get "struct mbpool *mbp" "uint32_t h"
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.Ft void *
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.Fn mbp_get_keep "struct mbpool *mbp" "uint32_t h"
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.Ft void
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.Fn mbp_sync "struct mbpool *mbp" "uint32_t h" "bus_addr_t off" "bus_size_t len" "u_int op"
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.Pp
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.Fn MODULE_DEPEND "your_module" "libmbpool" 1 1 1
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.Pp
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.Cd options LIBMBPOOL
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.Sh DESCRIPTION
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Mbuf pools are intented to help drivers for interface cards that need huge
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amounts of receive buffers and additionally provides a mapping between these
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buffers and 32-bit handles.
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.Pp
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An example of these cards are the Fore/Marconi ForeRunnerHE cards. These
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employ up to 8 receive groups, each with two buffer pools, each of which
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can contain up to 8192. This gives a total maximum number of more than
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100000 buffers. Even with a more moderate configuration the card eats several
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thousand buffers. Each of these buffers must be mapped for DMA. While for
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machines without an IOMMU and with lesser than 4GByte memory this is not
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a problem, for other machines this may quickly eat up all available IOMMU
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address space and/or bounce buffers. On the sparc64 the default IO page size
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is 16k, so mapping a simple mbuf wastes 31/32 of the address space.
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.Pp
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Another problem with most of these cards is that they support putting a 32-bit
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handle into the buffer descriptor together with the physical address.
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This handle is reflected back to the driver when the buffer is filled and
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assists the driver in finding the buffer in host memory. For 32-bit machines
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usually the virtual address of the buffer is used as the handle. This does not
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work for 64-machines for obvious reasons so a mapping is needed between
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these handles and the buffers. This mapping should be possible without
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searching lists and the like.
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.Pp
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An mbuf pool overcomes both problems by allocating DMA-able memory page wise
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with a per-pool configurable page size. Each page is divided into a number
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equally-sized chunks the last
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.Dv MBPOOL_TRAILER_SIZE
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of which are used by the pool code (4 bytes). The rest of each chunk is
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usable as buffer.
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There is a per-pool limit on pages that will be allocated.
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.Pp
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Additionally the code manages two flags for each buffer: on-card and used.
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A buffer may be in one of three states:
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.Bl -tag -width XXX
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.It free
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none of the flags is set.
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.It on-card
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both flags are set. The buffer is assumed to be handed over to the card and
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waiting to be filled.
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.It used
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The buffer was returned by the card and is now travelling through the system.
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.El
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.Pp
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A pool is created with
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.Fn mbp_create .
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This call specifies a DMA tag
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.Fa dmat
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to be used to create and map the memory pages via
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.Fn bus_dmamem_alloc .
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The
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.Fa chunk_size
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includes the pool overhead. That means to get buffers for 5 ATM cells
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(240 bytes) a chunk size of 256 should be specified. This results in 12 unused
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bytes between the buffer and the pool overhead of four byte. The total
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maximum number of buffers in a pool is
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.Fa max_pages *
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(
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.Fa page_size /
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.Fa chunk_size ).
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The maximum value for
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.Fa max_pages
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is 2^14-1 (16383) and the maximum of
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.Fa page_size /
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.Fa chunk_size
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is 2^9 (512).
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If the call is sucessful a pointer to a newly allocated
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.Vt "struct mbpool"
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is set into the variable pointed to by
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.Fa mpb .
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.Pp
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A pool is destroyed with
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.Fn mbp_destroy .
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This frees all pages and the pool structure itself. If compiled with
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.Dv DIAGNOSTICS
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the code checks that all buffers are free. If not a warning message is issued
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to the console.
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.Pp
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A buffer is allocate with
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.Fn mbp_alloc .
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This returns the virtual address of the buffer and stores the physical
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address into the variable pointed to by
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.Fa pa .
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The handle is stored into the variable pointed to by
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.Fa hp .
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The two most significant bits and the 7 least significant bits of the handle
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are unused by the pool code and may be used by the caller. These are
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automatically stripped when passing a handle to one of the other functions.
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If a buffer cannot be allocated (either because the maximum number of pages
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is reached, no memory is available or the memory cannot be mapped) NULL is
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returned. If a buffer could be allocated it is in the on-card state.
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.Pp
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When the buffer is returned by the card the driver calls
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.Fn mbp_get
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with the handle. This function returns the virtual address of the buffer
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and clears the on-card bit. The buffer is now in the used state.
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The function
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.Fn mbp_get_keep
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differs from
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.Fn mbp_get
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in that it does not clear the on-card bit. This can be used for buffers
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that are returned
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.Sq partially
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by the card.
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.Pp
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A buffer is freed by calling
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.Fn mbp_free
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with the virtual address of the buffer. This clears the used bit, and
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puts the buffer on the free list of the pool. Note, that free buffers
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are NOT returned to the system.
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The function
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.Fn mbp_ext_free can be given to
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.Fn m_extadd
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as the free function. The user argument must be the pointer to
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the pool.
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.Pp
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Before useing the contents of a buffer returned by the card the driver
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must call
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.Fn mbp_sync
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with the appropriate parameters. This results in a call to
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.Fn bus_dmamap_sync
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for the buffer.
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.Pp
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All buffers in the pool that are currently in the on-card state can be freed
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with a call to
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.Fn mbp_card_free .
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This may be called by the driver when it stops the interface. Buffers in
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the used state are not freed by this call.
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.Pp
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For debugging it is possible to call
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.Fn mbp_count .
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This returns the number of buffers in the used and on-card states and
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the number of buffers on the free list.
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.Sh SEE ALSO
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.Xr mbuf 9
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.Sh CAVEATS
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The function
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.Fn mbp_sync
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is currently a NOP because
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.Fn bus_dmamap_sync
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is missing the offset and length parameters.
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.Sh AUTHOR
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.An Harti Brandt Aq harti@freebsd.org .
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