Documentation Archive Developer
Search

ADC Home > Reference Library > Technical Q&As > Legacy Documents > Hardware & Drivers >

Legacy Documentclose button

Important: This document is part of the Legacy section of the ADC Reference Library. This information should not be used for new development.

Current information on this Reference Library topic can be found here:

Ethernet Driver Message Blocks


Q: I'm developing a PCI Ethernet driver, and I have two questions about receive buffer handling:

  1. The sample driver uses allocb to create a message block. After a period of time, allocb returns a NULL pointer. How should I handle this situation?

  2. How and when is the receive block deallocated? Should my driver handle this, or does something else in the stack handle it?

A:

  1. If you call allocb to create a message block and the call returns a null pointer, your driver has hit a low memory situation, which means it's time to start discarding packets.
  2. The client should deallocate message blocks when finished. In the case you describe, they are not yet finished.

In terms of networking services, everyone, including OpenTransport, is a client to the driver. As packets come in, you need to use allocb or esballoc to create the message block to pass along to Open Transport. Once it is passed along, a client, most likely OpenTransport, processes the packet and releases (deallocates) the memory for that packet.

The esballoc routine may be more suitable for your needs, since you can use it to allocate DMA memory and to pass along a notifier function that is called when the client is through using the memory. These are all standard STREAMS calls documented in Designing Cards and Drivers for PCI.

esballoc is used primarily to set up a message block for a buffer that is supplied by the driver (i.e., a DMA buffer). As part of the esballoc message, you pass a pointer to a free_rtn structure, which in turn points to a free routine.

On packet receipt, the driver needs to allocate a message block for use in passing the packet data to it's clients. In this case, it is the clients responsibility to call freemsg. To allocate a message block, there are two options: allocb and esballoc. In one case, the memory for the data buffer comes from the available system memory, while in the case of esballoc, memory is allocated for the message block only. It is the responsibility of the driver to provide the memory from DMA, e.g., for the data. As such, it is useful to attach a free_rtn parameter so that when the data has been processed, the driver will know memory is now available for use in processing another message.

[Jul 15 1995]