Saturday, August 28, 2010

FreeBSD/MIPS: AR9132 porting

I decided to avoid work a little by porting FreeBSD/MIPS to the AR9132 in the TP-LINK WN-1043nd 802.11n wireless AP I have here. There's existing OpenWRT code for it so I figured the port wouldn't be that difficult.

It turns out I was right. The AR91xx support took a couple of days to massage into a form which was good enough to commit to FreeBSD-HEAD. I also included some basic AR713x SoC support - not enough to be completely useful, but enough to get a head-start on porting.

I broke out various CPU specific operations into a set of function pointers which a CPU detection function sets up early during the MIPS init code. The main differences between the SoCs are:

* Different base frequencies for setting up RAM, peripheral bus (eg UART), etc
* Different register locations for a few things
* The AR713x has a PCIe bus; the AR71xx has a PCI bus; the AR91xx doesn't have a PCI bus
* The AR9132 has different PLL values for the gigabit ethernet MACs
* Each SoC has a different USB peripheral setup path
* Each SoC has different GPIO layouts
* There's slightly different on-board peripheral reset registers

I've tested the code on the AR71xx and AR9132 and things work fine. I now need to port the AR9100 wireless MAC support from Linux ath9k to complete things. The AR9100 looks a lot like the AR5416/AR9160 (802.11n, 3 radio chains) but it has a few annoying differences:

* It isn't on a PCI bus, so it has to be manually attached;
* A few registers differ in locations (one of which returns 0xdeadbeef if the AR5416 register location is read!)
* The EEPROM is not in the same location(s) as the AR5416 - it needs to be copied and then shoe-horned into the AR5416 eeprom access code.

Also, there's an RTL8133RB gigabit switch device on-board. There's also code in Linux/OpenWRT to support this. I'll look at porting this once the AR9100 support is done.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Satellite instead of NBN? Hello latency..

Today's NBN politik comes thanks to the IT Wire:

http://www.itwire.com/it-policy-news/government-tech-policy/41422-newsat-woos-independents-attacks-nbn

In particular:

"Mr Ballantine today argued that for most of Australia’s geography broadband delivered over satellite would be faster and cheaper. What was right for the city he argued was not necessarily good for the outback."

Maybe for download throughput, sure. But latency plays a huge part in satellite (and 3G style solutions) and it will be noticable.

Satellite IP doesn't scale. Sorry guys.