NAME
rtw88
—
Realtek IEEE 802.11n/ac wireless
network driver
SYNOPSIS
The driver will auto-load without any user interaction using devmatch(8) if enabled in rc.conf(5).
Only if auto-loading is explicitly disabled, place the following lines in rc.conf(5) to manually load the driver as a module at boot time:
kld_list="${kld_list} if_rtw88"
It is discouraged to load the driver from loader(8).
DESCRIPTION
The rtw88
driver is derived from Realtek's
Linux rtw88 driver.
This driver requires firmware to be loaded before it will work. The package wifi-firmware-rtw88-kmod from the ports/net/wifi-firmware-rtw88-kmod port needs to be installed before the driver is loaded. Otherwise no wlan(4) interface can be created using ifconfig(8). One can use fwget(8) to install the correct firmware package.
The driver uses the linuxkpi_wlan and linuxkpi compat framework to bridge between the Linux and native FreeBSD driver code as well as to the native net80211(4) wireless stack.
While rtw88
supports all 802.11 a/b/g/n
and ac the compatibility code currently only supports 802.11 a/b/g modes.
Support for 802.11 n/ac is to come.
LOADER TUNABLES
- compat.linuxkpi.skb.mem_limit
- If you are running a 64bit system with more than 4GB of main memory you need to set this tunable to 1 in loader.conf(5) and reboot once to make it effective. This tunable will work around a problem with DMA and limit allocations for network buffer memory to the lower 32bit of physical memory and make the driver work.
HARDWARE
The rtw88
driver supports PCIe devices
with the following chipsets:
- Realtek 802.11n wireless 8723de (RTL8723DE)
- Realtek 802.11ac wireless 8821ce (RTL8821CE)
- Realtek 802.11ac wireless 8822be (RTL8822BE)
- Realtek 802.11ac wireless 8822ce (RTL8822CE)
BUGS
Certainly.
Does not seem to work (reliably) on machines with more than 4GB of main memory. See in the LOADER TUNABLES section above.
SEE ALSO
rtw88fw(4), wlan(4), fwget(8), ifconfig(8), wpa_supplicant(8)
HISTORY
The rtw88
driver first appeared in
FreeBSD 13.2.