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1 | /* |
2 | * Copyright (c) 2009 Atheros Communications Inc. | |
3 | * | |
4 | * Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any | |
5 | * purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above | |
6 | * copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. | |
7 | * | |
8 | * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES | |
9 | * WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF | |
10 | * MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR | |
11 | * ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES | |
12 | * WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN | |
13 | * ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF | |
14 | * OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. | |
15 | */ | |
16 | ||
17 | #include <asm/unaligned.h> | |
18 | ||
19 | #include "ath.h" | |
20 | #include "reg.h" | |
21 | ||
0a4528e2 LB |
22 | #define REG_READ (common->ops->read) |
23 | #define REG_WRITE (common->ops->write) | |
13b81559 LR |
24 | |
25 | /** | |
26 | * ath_hw_set_bssid_mask - filter out bssids we listen | |
27 | * | |
28 | * @common: the ath_common struct for the device. | |
29 | * | |
30 | * BSSID masking is a method used by AR5212 and newer hardware to inform PCU | |
31 | * which bits of the interface's MAC address should be looked at when trying | |
32 | * to decide which packets to ACK. In station mode and AP mode with a single | |
33 | * BSS every bit matters since we lock to only one BSS. In AP mode with | |
34 | * multiple BSSes (virtual interfaces) not every bit matters because hw must | |
35 | * accept frames for all BSSes and so we tweak some bits of our mac address | |
36 | * in order to have multiple BSSes. | |
37 | * | |
38 | * NOTE: This is a simple filter and does *not* filter out all | |
39 | * relevant frames. Some frames that are not for us might get ACKed from us | |
40 | * by PCU because they just match the mask. | |
41 | * | |
42 | * When handling multiple BSSes you can get the BSSID mask by computing the | |
43 | * set of ~ ( MAC XOR BSSID ) for all bssids we handle. | |
44 | * | |
45 | * When you do this you are essentially computing the common bits of all your | |
46 | * BSSes. Later it is assumed the harware will "and" (&) the BSSID mask with | |
47 | * the MAC address to obtain the relevant bits and compare the result with | |
48 | * (frame's BSSID & mask) to see if they match. | |
49 | * | |
50 | * Simple example: on your card you have have two BSSes you have created with | |
51 | * BSSID-01 and BSSID-02. Lets assume BSSID-01 will not use the MAC address. | |
52 | * There is another BSSID-03 but you are not part of it. For simplicity's sake, | |
53 | * assuming only 4 bits for a mac address and for BSSIDs you can then have: | |
54 | * | |
55 | * \ | |
56 | * MAC: 0001 | | |
57 | * BSSID-01: 0100 | --> Belongs to us | |
58 | * BSSID-02: 1001 | | |
59 | * / | |
60 | * ------------------- | |
61 | * BSSID-03: 0110 | --> External | |
62 | * ------------------- | |
63 | * | |
64 | * Our bssid_mask would then be: | |
65 | * | |
66 | * On loop iteration for BSSID-01: | |
67 | * ~(0001 ^ 0100) -> ~(0101) | |
68 | * -> 1010 | |
69 | * bssid_mask = 1010 | |
70 | * | |
71 | * On loop iteration for BSSID-02: | |
72 | * bssid_mask &= ~(0001 ^ 1001) | |
73 | * bssid_mask = (1010) & ~(0001 ^ 1001) | |
74 | * bssid_mask = (1010) & ~(1001) | |
75 | * bssid_mask = (1010) & (0110) | |
76 | * bssid_mask = 0010 | |
77 | * | |
78 | * A bssid_mask of 0010 means "only pay attention to the second least | |
79 | * significant bit". This is because its the only bit common | |
80 | * amongst the MAC and all BSSIDs we support. To findout what the real | |
81 | * common bit is we can simply "&" the bssid_mask now with any BSSID we have | |
82 | * or our MAC address (we assume the hardware uses the MAC address). | |
83 | * | |
84 | * Now, suppose there's an incoming frame for BSSID-03: | |
85 | * | |
86 | * IFRAME-01: 0110 | |
87 | * | |
88 | * An easy eye-inspeciton of this already should tell you that this frame | |
89 | * will not pass our check. This is beacuse the bssid_mask tells the | |
90 | * hardware to only look at the second least significant bit and the | |
91 | * common bit amongst the MAC and BSSIDs is 0, this frame has the 2nd LSB | |
92 | * as 1, which does not match 0. | |
93 | * | |
94 | * So with IFRAME-01 we *assume* the hardware will do: | |
95 | * | |
96 | * allow = (IFRAME-01 & bssid_mask) == (bssid_mask & MAC) ? 1 : 0; | |
97 | * --> allow = (0110 & 0010) == (0010 & 0001) ? 1 : 0; | |
98 | * --> allow = (0010) == 0000 ? 1 : 0; | |
99 | * --> allow = 0 | |
100 | * | |
101 | * Lets now test a frame that should work: | |
102 | * | |
103 | * IFRAME-02: 0001 (we should allow) | |
104 | * | |
105 | * allow = (0001 & 1010) == 1010 | |
106 | * | |
107 | * allow = (IFRAME-02 & bssid_mask) == (bssid_mask & MAC) ? 1 : 0; | |
108 | * --> allow = (0001 & 0010) == (0010 & 0001) ? 1 :0; | |
109 | * --> allow = (0010) == (0010) | |
110 | * --> allow = 1 | |
111 | * | |
112 | * Other examples: | |
113 | * | |
114 | * IFRAME-03: 0100 --> allowed | |
115 | * IFRAME-04: 1001 --> allowed | |
116 | * IFRAME-05: 1101 --> allowed but its not for us!!! | |
117 | * | |
118 | */ | |
119 | void ath_hw_setbssidmask(struct ath_common *common) | |
120 | { | |
121 | void *ah = common->ah; | |
122 | ||
123 | REG_WRITE(ah, get_unaligned_le32(common->bssidmask), AR_BSSMSKL); | |
124 | REG_WRITE(ah, get_unaligned_le16(common->bssidmask + 4), AR_BSSMSKU); | |
125 | } | |
126 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(ath_hw_setbssidmask); |