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freebsd/sys/i386/isa/syscons.c

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/*-
* Copyright (c) 1992-1997 S<EFBFBD>ren Schmidt
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
1994-09-29 08:29:21 +00:00
* in this position and unchanged.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
* derived from this software withough specific prior written permission
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
* OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
* INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
* NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
* THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
* $Id: syscons.c,v 1.210 1997/04/20 16:05:33 bde Exp $
*/
#include "sc.h"
#include "apm.h"
1996-01-04 21:13:23 +00:00
#include "opt_ddb.h"
#include "opt_syscons.h"
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#if NSC > 0
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/conf.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/signalvar.h>
#include <sys/tty.h>
#include <sys/uio.h>
#include <sys/callout.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/syslog.h>
#include <sys/errno.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#ifdef DEVFS
#include <sys/devfsext.h>
#endif
#include <machine/clock.h>
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
#include <machine/cons.h>
#include <machine/console.h>
#include <machine/md_var.h>
#include <machine/psl.h>
#include <machine/frame.h>
#include <machine/pc/display.h>
#include <machine/apm_bios.h>
#include <machine/random.h>
#include <vm/vm.h>
#include <vm/vm_param.h>
#include <vm/pmap.h>
#include <i386/isa/isa.h>
#include <i386/isa/isa_device.h>
#include <i386/isa/timerreg.h>
#include <i386/isa/kbdtables.h>
#include <i386/isa/kbdio.h>
#include <i386/isa/syscons.h>
1993-10-28 05:27:36 +00:00
#if !defined(MAXCONS)
#define MAXCONS 16
#endif
#define COLD 0
#define WARM 1
1996-12-19 00:26:22 +00:00
/* this may break on older VGA's but is useful on real 32 bit systems */
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
/* XXX use sc_bcopy where video memory is concerned */
#define bcopyw bcopy
#define sc_bcopy generic_bcopy
extern void generic_bcopy(const void *, void *, size_t);
static default_attr user_default = {
(FG_LIGHTGREY | BG_BLACK) << 8,
(FG_BLACK | BG_LIGHTGREY) << 8
};
static default_attr kernel_default = {
(FG_WHITE | BG_BLACK) << 8,
(FG_BLACK | BG_LIGHTGREY) << 8
};
static scr_stat main_console;
static scr_stat *console[MAXCONS];
#ifdef DEVFS
static void *sc_devfs_token[MAXCONS];
#endif
scr_stat *cur_console;
static scr_stat *new_scp, *old_scp;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
static term_stat kernel_console;
static default_attr *current_default;
static int flags = 0;
static int sc_port = IO_KBD;
static KBDC sc_kbdc = NULL;
static char init_done = COLD;
static u_short sc_buffer[ROW*COL];
static char switch_in_progress = FALSE;
static char write_in_progress = FALSE;
static char blink_in_progress = FALSE;
static int blinkrate = 0;
u_int crtc_addr = MONO_BASE;
char crtc_vga = FALSE;
static u_char shfts = 0, ctls = 0, alts = 0, agrs = 0, metas = 0;
static u_char nlkcnt = 0, clkcnt = 0, slkcnt = 0, alkcnt = 0;
static const u_int n_fkey_tab = sizeof(fkey_tab) / sizeof(*fkey_tab);
static int delayed_next_scr = FALSE;
static long scrn_blank_time = 0; /* screen saver timeout value */
int scrn_blanked = FALSE; /* screen saver active flag */
static long scrn_time_stamp;
u_char scr_map[256];
u_char scr_rmap[256];
char *video_mode_ptr = NULL;
int fonts_loaded = 0;
char font_8[256*8];
char font_14[256*14];
char font_16[256*16];
char palette[256*3];
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
static char vgaregs[64];
static char *cut_buffer;
static u_short mouse_and_mask[16] = {
0xc000, 0xe000, 0xf000, 0xf800,
0xfc00, 0xfe00, 0xff00, 0xff80,
0xfe00, 0x1e00, 0x1f00, 0x0f00,
0x0f00, 0x0000, 0x0000, 0x0000
};
static u_short mouse_or_mask[16] = {
0x0000, 0x4000, 0x6000, 0x7000,
0x7800, 0x7c00, 0x7e00, 0x6800,
0x0c00, 0x0c00, 0x0600, 0x0600,
0x0000, 0x0000, 0x0000, 0x0000
};
static void none_saver(int blank) { }
void (*current_saver)(int blank) = none_saver;
int (*sc_user_ioctl)(dev_t dev, int cmd, caddr_t data,
int flag, struct proc *p) = NULL;
/* OS specific stuff */
#ifdef not_yet_done
#define VIRTUAL_TTY(x) (sccons[x] = ttymalloc(sccons[x]))
struct CONSOLE_TTY (sccons[MAXCONS] = ttymalloc(sccons[MAXCONS]))
struct MOUSE_TTY (sccons[MAXCONS+1] = ttymalloc(sccons[MAXCONS+1]))
struct tty *sccons[MAXCONS+2];
#else
#define VIRTUAL_TTY(x) &sccons[x]
#define CONSOLE_TTY &sccons[MAXCONS]
#define MOUSE_TTY &sccons[MAXCONS+1]
static struct tty sccons[MAXCONS+2];
#endif
#define SC_MOUSE 128
#define SC_CONSOLE 255
#define MONO_BUF pa_to_va(0xB0000)
#define CGA_BUF pa_to_va(0xB8000)
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
u_short *Crtat;
static const int nsccons = MAXCONS+2;
#define WRAPHIST(scp, pointer, offset)\
((scp->history) + ((((pointer) - (scp->history)) + (scp->history_size)\
+ (offset)) % (scp->history_size)))
#define ISSIGVALID(sig) ((sig) > 0 && (sig) < NSIG)
/* prototypes */
static int scattach(struct isa_device *dev);
static int scparam(struct tty *tp, struct termios *t);
static int scprobe(struct isa_device *dev);
static void scstart(struct tty *tp);
static void scmousestart(struct tty *tp);
static void scinit(void);
static u_int scgetc(u_int flags);
#define SCGETC_CN 1
#define SCGETC_NONBLOCK 2
static scr_stat *get_scr_stat(dev_t dev);
static scr_stat *alloc_scp(void);
static void init_scp(scr_stat *scp);
static int get_scr_num(void);
static timeout_t scrn_timer;
static void clear_screen(scr_stat *scp);
static int switch_scr(scr_stat *scp, u_int next_scr);
static void exchange_scr(void);
static inline void move_crsr(scr_stat *scp, int x, int y);
static void scan_esc(scr_stat *scp, u_char c);
static void draw_cursor_image(scr_stat *scp);
static void remove_cursor_image(scr_stat *scp);
static void ansi_put(scr_stat *scp, u_char *buf, int len);
static u_char *get_fstr(u_int c, u_int *len);
static void history_to_screen(scr_stat *scp);
static int history_up_line(scr_stat *scp);
static int history_down_line(scr_stat *scp);
static int mask2attr(struct term_stat *term);
static void set_keyboard(int command, int data);
static void update_leds(int which);
static void set_vgaregs(char *modetable);
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
static void read_vgaregs(char *buf);
static int comp_vgaregs(u_char *buf1, u_char *buf2);
static void dump_vgaregs(u_char *buf);
static void set_font_mode(void);
static void set_normal_mode(void);
static void set_destructive_cursor(scr_stat *scp);
static void set_mouse_pos(scr_stat *scp);
static void mouse_cut_start(scr_stat *scp);
static void mouse_cut_end(scr_stat *scp);
static void mouse_paste(scr_stat *scp);
static void draw_mouse_image(scr_stat *scp);
static void remove_mouse_image(scr_stat *scp);
static void draw_cutmarking(scr_stat *scp);
static void remove_cutmarking(scr_stat *scp);
static void save_palette(void);
static void do_bell(scr_stat *scp, int pitch, int duration);
static timeout_t blink_screen;
#ifdef SC_SPLASH_SCREEN
static void toggle_splash_screen(scr_stat *scp);
#endif
struct isa_driver scdriver = {
scprobe, scattach, "sc", 1
};
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
static d_open_t scopen;
static d_close_t scclose;
static d_read_t scread;
static d_write_t scwrite;
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
static d_ioctl_t scioctl;
static d_devtotty_t scdevtotty;
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
static d_mmap_t scmmap;
#define CDEV_MAJOR 12
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
static struct cdevsw scdevsw = {
scopen, scclose, scread, scwrite,
scioctl, nullstop, noreset, scdevtotty,
ttselect, scmmap, nostrategy, "sc", NULL, -1 };
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
/*
* These functions need to be before calls to them so they can be inlined.
*/
static inline void
draw_cursor_image(scr_stat *scp)
{
u_short cursor_image, *ptr = Crtat + (scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
/* do we have a destructive cursor ? */
if (flags & CHAR_CURSOR) {
cursor_image = *scp->cursor_pos;
scp->cursor_saveunder = cursor_image;
/* modify cursor_image */
if (!(flags & BLINK_CURSOR)||((flags & BLINK_CURSOR)&&(blinkrate & 4))){
set_destructive_cursor(scp);
cursor_image &= 0xff00;
cursor_image |= DEAD_CHAR;
}
}
else {
cursor_image = (*(ptr) & 0x00ff) | *(scp->cursor_pos) & 0xff00;
scp->cursor_saveunder = cursor_image;
if (!(flags & BLINK_CURSOR)||((flags & BLINK_CURSOR)&&(blinkrate & 4))){
if ((cursor_image & 0x7000) == 0x7000) {
cursor_image &= 0x8fff;
if(!(cursor_image & 0x0700))
cursor_image |= 0x0700;
} else {
cursor_image |= 0x7000;
if ((cursor_image & 0x0700) == 0x0700)
cursor_image &= 0xf0ff;
}
}
}
*ptr = cursor_image;
}
static inline void
remove_cursor_image(scr_stat *scp)
{
*(Crtat + (scp->cursor_oldpos - scp->scr_buf)) = scp->cursor_saveunder;
}
static inline void
move_crsr(scr_stat *scp, int x, int y)
{
if (x < 0)
x = 0;
if (y < 0)
y = 0;
if (x >= scp->xsize)
x = scp->xsize-1;
if (y >= scp->ysize)
y = scp->ysize-1;
scp->xpos = x;
scp->ypos = y;
scp->cursor_pos = scp->scr_buf + scp->ypos * scp->xsize + scp->xpos;
}
1995-12-10 13:40:44 +00:00
static int
scprobe(struct isa_device *dev)
{
int codeset;
int c = -1;
int m;
sc_port = dev->id_iobase;
sc_kbdc = kbdc_open(sc_port);
if (!kbdc_lock(sc_kbdc, TRUE)) {
/* driver error? */
printf("sc%d: unable to lock the controller.\n", dev->id_unit);
return ((dev->id_flags & DETECT_KBD) ? 0 : IO_KBDSIZE);
}
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
/* discard anything left after UserConfig */
empty_both_buffers(sc_kbdc, 10);
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
/* save the current keyboard controller command byte */
m = kbdc_get_device_mask(sc_kbdc) & ~KBD_KBD_CONTROL_BITS;
c = get_controller_command_byte(sc_kbdc);
if (c == -1) {
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
/* CONTROLLER ERROR */
printf("sc%d: unable to get the current command byte value.\n",
dev->id_unit);
goto fail;
}
if (bootverbose)
printf("sc%d: the current keyboard controller command byte %04x\n",
dev->id_unit, c);
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
#if 0
/* override the keyboard lock switch */
c |= KBD_OVERRIDE_KBD_LOCK;
#endif
/* enable the keyboard port, but disable the keyboard intr. */
if (!set_controller_command_byte(sc_kbdc,
KBD_KBD_CONTROL_BITS,
KBD_ENABLE_KBD_PORT | KBD_DISABLE_KBD_INT)) {
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
/* CONTROLLER ERROR
* there is very little we can do...
*/
printf("sc%d: unable to set the command byte.\n", dev->id_unit);
goto fail;
}
/*
* Check if we have an XT keyboard before we attempt to reset it.
* The procedure assumes that the keyboard and the controller have
* been set up properly by BIOS and have not been messed up
* during the boot process.
*/
codeset = -1;
if (dev->id_flags & XT_KEYBD)
/* the user says there is a XT keyboard */
codeset = 1;
#ifdef DETECT_XT_KEYBOARD
else if ((c & KBD_TRANSLATION) == 0) {
/* SET_SCANCODE_SET is not always supported; ignore error */
if (send_kbd_command_and_data(sc_kbdc, KBDC_SET_SCANCODE_SET, 0)
== KBD_ACK)
codeset = read_kbd_data(sc_kbdc);
}
if (bootverbose)
printf("sc%d: keyboard scancode set %d\n", dev->id_unit, codeset);
#endif /* DETECT_XT_KEYBOARD */
/* reset keyboard hardware */
if (!reset_kbd(sc_kbdc)) {
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
/* KEYBOARD ERROR
* Keyboard reset may fail either because the keyboard doen't exist,
* or because the keyboard doesn't pass the self-test, or the keyboard
* controller on the motherboard and the keyboard somehow fail to
* shake hands. It is just possible, particularly in the last case,
* that the keyoard controller may be left in a hung state.
* test_controller() and test_kbd_port() appear to bring the keyboard
* controller back (I don't know why and how, though.)
*/
empty_both_buffers(sc_kbdc, 10);
test_controller(sc_kbdc);
test_kbd_port(sc_kbdc);
/* We could disable the keyboard port and interrupt... but,
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
* the keyboard may still exist (see above).
*/
if (bootverbose)
printf("sc%d: failed to reset the keyboard.\n", dev->id_unit);
goto fail;
}
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
/*
* Allow us to set the XT_KEYBD flag in UserConfig so that keyboards
* such as those on the IBM ThinkPad laptop computers can be used
* with the standard console driver.
*/
if (codeset == 1) {
if (send_kbd_command_and_data(
sc_kbdc, KBDC_SET_SCANCODE_SET, codeset) == KBD_ACK) {
/* XT kbd doesn't need scan code translation */
c &= ~KBD_TRANSLATION;
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
} else {
/* KEYBOARD ERROR
* The XT kbd isn't usable unless the proper scan code set
* is selected.
*/
printf("sc%d: unable to set the XT keyboard mode.\n", dev->id_unit);
goto fail;
}
}
/* enable the keyboard port and intr. */
if (!set_controller_command_byte(sc_kbdc,
KBD_KBD_CONTROL_BITS | KBD_TRANSLATION | KBD_OVERRIDE_KBD_LOCK,
(c & (KBD_TRANSLATION | KBD_OVERRIDE_KBD_LOCK))
| KBD_ENABLE_KBD_PORT | KBD_ENABLE_KBD_INT)) {
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
/* CONTROLLER ERROR
* This is serious; we are left with the disabled keyboard intr.
*/
printf("sc%d: unable to enable the keyboard port and intr.\n",
dev->id_unit);
goto fail;
}
succeed:
kbdc_set_device_mask(sc_kbdc, m | KBD_KBD_CONTROL_BITS),
kbdc_lock(sc_kbdc, FALSE);
return (IO_KBDSIZE);
fail:
Alot of fixes from kazu: 1. All the suggestions earlier made by Bruce: renaming some symbols, stricter error checking, removing redundant code, etc. 2. The `psm' driver preserves the default counter resolution and report rate, whatever they are after reset. (Based on reports and suggestion from Nate and Rob Bolin). 3. The `psm' driver now does not check the so-called sync. bit in the first byte of the data packet by default, so that the tapping feature of ALPUS GlidePoint works (based on reports from Louis Mamakos). I tested the code with ALPUS Desktop GlidePoint (M/N GP101) and found no problem; tapping worked. It appears ALPUS produces several models of GlidePoint. I hope the other models are OK too. The check code can still be activated by defining the PSM_CHECKSYNC option in the config file. (The bit checking slightly reduces, if not completely eliminates, weird mouse behavior cased by unsynchronized mouse data packets. It also helps us to detect if the mouse interrupt can ever be lost. But, well, if there are devices which cannot be supported this way...) 4. The `psm' driver does not include the protocol emulation code by default. The code can still be compiled in if the PSM_EMULATION option is specified in the config file. Louis Mamakos suggests the emulation code is putting too much in the kernel, and `moused' works well. I will think about this later and decide if the entire emulation code should be removed. 5. And, of course, the fix in `scprobe()' from Bruce to cure the UserConfig problem. My code in `kbdio.c' is slightly different from his patch, but has the same effect. There still is a possibility that `scprobe()' gets confused, if, for whatever reasons, the user holds down a key for very long time during the boot process. But we cannot cope with everything, can we? Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA (yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp)
1996-12-01 19:05:50 +00:00
if (c != -1)
/* try to restore the command byte as before, if possible */
set_controller_command_byte(sc_kbdc, 0xff, c);
kbdc_set_device_mask(sc_kbdc,
(dev->id_flags & DETECT_KBD) ? m : m | KBD_KBD_CONTROL_BITS);
kbdc_lock(sc_kbdc, FALSE);
return ((dev->id_flags & DETECT_KBD) ? 0 : IO_KBDSIZE);
}
#if NAPM > 0
static int
scresume(void *dummy)
{
shfts = ctls = alts = agrs = metas = 0;
return 0;
}
#endif
1995-12-10 13:40:44 +00:00
static int
scattach(struct isa_device *dev)
{
scr_stat *scp;
dev_t cdev = makedev(CDEV_MAJOR, 0);
#ifdef DEVFS
int vc;
#endif
scinit();
flags = dev->id_flags;
scp = console[0];
if (crtc_vga) {
cut_buffer = (char *)malloc(scp->xsize*scp->ysize, M_DEVBUF, M_NOWAIT);
}
scp->scr_buf = (u_short *)malloc(scp->xsize*scp->ysize*sizeof(u_short),
M_DEVBUF, M_NOWAIT);
/* copy temporary buffer to final buffer */
bcopyw(sc_buffer, scp->scr_buf, scp->xsize * scp->ysize * sizeof(u_short));
scp->cursor_pos = scp->cursor_oldpos =
scp->scr_buf + scp->xpos + scp->ypos * scp->xsize;
scp->mouse_pos = scp->mouse_oldpos =
scp->scr_buf + ((scp->mouse_ypos/scp->font_size)*scp->xsize +
scp->mouse_xpos/8);
/* initialize history buffer & pointers */
scp->history_head = scp->history_pos = scp->history =
(u_short *)malloc(scp->history_size*sizeof(u_short),
M_DEVBUF, M_NOWAIT);
bzero(scp->history_head, scp->history_size*sizeof(u_short));
/* initialize cursor stuff */
if (!(scp->status & UNKNOWN_MODE)) {
draw_cursor_image(scp);
if (crtc_vga && (flags & CHAR_CURSOR))
set_destructive_cursor(scp);
}
/* get screen update going */
scrn_timer(NULL);
update_leds(scp->status);
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
if (bootverbose) {
printf("sc%d: BIOS video mode:%d\n",
dev->id_unit, *(u_char *)pa_to_va(0x449));
printf("sc%d: VGA registers upon power-up\n", dev->id_unit);
dump_vgaregs(vgaregs);
printf("sc%d: video mode:%d\n", dev->id_unit, scp->mode);
if (video_mode_ptr != NULL) {
printf("sc%d: VGA registers for mode:%d\n",
dev->id_unit, scp->mode);
dump_vgaregs(video_mode_ptr + (64*scp->mode));
}
}
printf("sc%d: ", dev->id_unit);
if (crtc_vga)
if (crtc_addr == MONO_BASE)
printf("VGA mono");
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else
printf("VGA color");
else
if (crtc_addr == MONO_BASE)
printf("MDA/hercules");
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
else
printf("CGA/EGA");
printf(" <%d virtual consoles, flags=0x%x>\n", MAXCONS, flags);
#if NAPM > 0
scp->r_hook.ah_fun = scresume;
scp->r_hook.ah_arg = NULL;
scp->r_hook.ah_name = "system keyboard";
scp->r_hook.ah_order = APM_MID_ORDER;
apm_hook_establish(APM_HOOK_RESUME , &scp->r_hook);
#endif
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
cdevsw_add(&cdev, &scdevsw, NULL);
#ifdef DEVFS
for (vc = 0; vc < MAXCONS; vc++)
sc_devfs_token[vc] = devfs_add_devswf(&scdevsw, vc, DV_CHR, UID_ROOT,
GID_WHEEL, 0600, "ttyv%n", vc);
#endif
return 0;
}
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struct tty
*scdevtotty(dev_t dev)
{
int unit = minor(dev);
if (init_done == COLD)
return(NULL);
if (unit == SC_CONSOLE)
return CONSOLE_TTY;
if (unit == SC_MOUSE)
return MOUSE_TTY;
if (unit >= MAXCONS || unit < 0)
return(NULL);
return VIRTUAL_TTY(unit);
}
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int
scopen(dev_t dev, int flag, int mode, struct proc *p)
{
struct tty *tp = scdevtotty(dev);
if (!tp)
return(ENXIO);
tp->t_oproc = (minor(dev) == SC_MOUSE) ? scmousestart : scstart;
tp->t_param = scparam;
tp->t_dev = dev;
if (!(tp->t_state & TS_ISOPEN)) {
ttychars(tp);
/* Use the current setting of the <-- key as default VERASE. */
/* If the Delete key is preferable, an stty is necessary */
tp->t_cc[VERASE] = key_map.key[0x0e].map[0];
tp->t_iflag = TTYDEF_IFLAG;
tp->t_oflag = TTYDEF_OFLAG;
tp->t_cflag = TTYDEF_CFLAG;
tp->t_lflag = TTYDEF_LFLAG;
tp->t_ispeed = tp->t_ospeed = TTYDEF_SPEED;
scparam(tp, &tp->t_termios);
ttsetwater(tp);
Obtained from: partly from ancient patches of mine via 1.1.5 Introduce TS_CONNECTED and TS_ZOMBIE states. TS_CONNECTED is set while a connection is established. It is set while (TS_CARR_ON or CLOCAL is set) and TS_ZOMBIE is clear. TS_ZOMBIE is set for on to off transitions of TS_CARR_ON that occur when CLOCAL is clear and is cleared for off to on transitions of CLOCAL. I/o can only occur while TS_CONNECTED is set. TS_ZOMBIE prevents further i/o. Split the input-event sleep address TSA_CARR_ON(tp) into TSA_CARR_ON(tp) and TSA_HUP_OR_INPUT(tp). The former address is now used only for off to on carrier transitions and equivalent CLOCAL transitions. The latter is used for all input events, all carrier transitions and certain CLOCAL transitions. There are some harmless extra wakeups for rare connection- related events. Previously there were too many extra wakeups for non-rare input events. Drivers now call l_modem() instead of setting TS_CARR_ON directly to handle even the initial off to on transition of carrier. They should always have done this. l_modem() now handles TS_CONNECTED and TS_ZOMBIE as well as TS_CARR_ON. gnu/isdn/iitty.c: Set TS_CONNECTED for first open ourself to go with bogusly setting CLOCAL. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c: We fake carrier, so don't also fake CLOCAL. kern/tty.c: Testing TS_CONNECTED instead of TS_CARR_ON fixes TIOCCONS forgetting to test CLOCAL. TS_ISOPEN was tested instead, but that broke when we disabled the clearing of TS_ISOPEN for certain transitions of CLOCAL. Testing TS_CONNECTED fixes ttyselect() returning false success for output to devices in state !TS_CARR_ON && !CLOCAL. Optimize the other selwakeup() call (this is not related to the other changes). kern/tty_pty.c: ptcopen() can be declared in traditional C now that dev_t isn't short.
1995-07-31 21:02:00 +00:00
(*linesw[tp->t_line].l_modem)(tp, 1);
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}
else
if (tp->t_state & TS_XCLUDE && p->p_ucred->cr_uid != 0)
return(EBUSY);
if (minor(dev) < MAXCONS && !console[minor(dev)]) {
console[minor(dev)] = alloc_scp();
}
if (minor(dev)<MAXCONS && !tp->t_winsize.ws_col && !tp->t_winsize.ws_row) {
tp->t_winsize.ws_col = console[minor(dev)]->xsize;
tp->t_winsize.ws_row = console[minor(dev)]->ysize;
}
return ((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_open)(dev, tp));
}
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int
scclose(dev_t dev, int flag, int mode, struct proc *p)
{
struct tty *tp = scdevtotty(dev);
struct scr_stat *scp;
if (!tp)
return(ENXIO);
if (minor(dev) < MAXCONS) {
scp = get_scr_stat(tp->t_dev);
if (scp->status & SWITCH_WAIT_ACQ)
wakeup((caddr_t)&scp->smode);
#if not_yet_done
if (scp == &main_console) {
scp->pid = 0;
scp->proc = NULL;
scp->smode.mode = VT_AUTO;
}
else {
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free(scp->scr_buf, M_DEVBUF);
free(scp->history, M_DEVBUF);
free(scp, M_DEVBUF);
console[minor(dev)] = NULL;
}
#else
scp->pid = 0;
scp->proc = NULL;
scp->smode.mode = VT_AUTO;
#endif
}
spltty();
(*linesw[tp->t_line].l_close)(tp, flag);
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ttyclose(tp);
spl0();
return(0);
}
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int
scread(dev_t dev, struct uio *uio, int flag)
{
struct tty *tp = scdevtotty(dev);
if (!tp)
return(ENXIO);
return((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_read)(tp, uio, flag));
}
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int
scwrite(dev_t dev, struct uio *uio, int flag)
{
struct tty *tp = scdevtotty(dev);
if (!tp)
return(ENXIO);
return((*linesw[tp->t_line].l_write)(tp, uio, flag));
}
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void
scintr(int unit)
{
static struct tty *cur_tty;
int c, len;
u_char *cp;
/* make screensaver happy */
scrn_time_stamp = time.tv_sec;
if (scrn_blanked) {
(*current_saver)(FALSE);
mark_all(cur_console);
}
1993-10-28 05:27:36 +00:00
/*
* Loop while there is still input to get from the keyboard.
* I don't think this is nessesary, and it doesn't fix
* the Xaccel-2.1 keyboard hang, but it can't hurt. XXX
*/
while ((c = scgetc(SCGETC_NONBLOCK)) != NOKEY) {
cur_tty = VIRTUAL_TTY(get_scr_num());
if (!(cur_tty->t_state & TS_ISOPEN))
if (!((cur_tty = CONSOLE_TTY)->t_state & TS_ISOPEN))
continue;
switch (c & 0xff00) {
case 0x0000: /* normal key */
(*linesw[cur_tty->t_line].l_rint)(c & 0xFF, cur_tty);
break;
case FKEY: /* function key, return string */
if (cp = get_fstr((u_int)c, (u_int *)&len)) {
while (len-- > 0)
(*linesw[cur_tty->t_line].l_rint)(*cp++ & 0xFF, cur_tty);
}
break;
case MKEY: /* meta is active, prepend ESC */
(*linesw[cur_tty->t_line].l_rint)(0x1b, cur_tty);
(*linesw[cur_tty->t_line].l_rint)(c & 0xFF, cur_tty);
break;
case BKEY: /* backtab fixed sequence (esc [ Z) */
(*linesw[cur_tty->t_line].l_rint)(0x1b, cur_tty);
(*linesw[cur_tty->t_line].l_rint)('[', cur_tty);
(*linesw[cur_tty->t_line].l_rint)('Z', cur_tty);
break;
}
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}
if (cur_console->status & MOUSE_ENABLED) {
cur_console->status &= ~MOUSE_VISIBLE;
remove_mouse_image(cur_console);
}
}
1995-12-10 13:40:44 +00:00
static int
scparam(struct tty *tp, struct termios *t)
{
tp->t_ispeed = t->c_ispeed;
tp->t_ospeed = t->c_ospeed;
tp->t_cflag = t->c_cflag;
return 0;
}
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int
scioctl(dev_t dev, int cmd, caddr_t data, int flag, struct proc *p)
{
int error;
u_int i;
struct tty *tp;
struct trapframe *fp;
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scr_stat *scp;
tp = scdevtotty(dev);
if (!tp)
return ENXIO;
scp = get_scr_stat(tp->t_dev);
/* If there is a user_ioctl function call that first */
if (sc_user_ioctl) {
if (error = (*sc_user_ioctl)(dev, cmd, data, flag, p))
return error;
}
switch (cmd) { /* process console hardware related ioctl's */
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case GIO_ATTR: /* get current attributes */
*(int*)data = (scp->term.cur_attr >> 8) & 0xFF;
return 0;
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case GIO_COLOR: /* is this a color console ? */
if (crtc_addr == COLOR_BASE)
*(int*)data = 1;
else
*(int*)data = 0;
return 0;
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case CONS_CURRENT: /* get current adapter type */
if (crtc_vga)
*(int*)data = KD_VGA;
else
if (crtc_addr == MONO_BASE)
*(int*)data = KD_MONO;
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else
*(int*)data = KD_CGA;
return 0;
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case CONS_GET: /* get current video mode */
*(int*)data = scp->mode;
return 0;
case CONS_BLANKTIME: /* set screen saver timeout (0 = no saver) */
scrn_blank_time = *(int*)data;
return 0;
case CONS_CURSORTYPE: /* set cursor type blink/noblink */
if ((*(int*)data) & 0x01)
flags |= BLINK_CURSOR;
else
flags &= ~BLINK_CURSOR;
if ((*(int*)data) & 0x02) {
if (!crtc_vga)
return ENXIO;
flags |= CHAR_CURSOR;
set_destructive_cursor(scp);
} else
flags &= ~CHAR_CURSOR;
return 0;
case CONS_BELLTYPE: /* set bell type sound/visual */
if (*data)
flags |= VISUAL_BELL;
else
flags &= ~VISUAL_BELL;
return 0;
case CONS_HISTORY: /* set history size */
if (*data) {
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free(scp->history, M_DEVBUF);
scp->history_size = *(int*)data;
if (scp->history_size < scp->ysize)
scp->history = NULL;
else {
scp->history_size *= scp->xsize;
scp->history_head = scp->history_pos = scp->history =
(u_short *)malloc(scp->history_size*sizeof(u_short),
M_DEVBUF, M_WAITOK);
bzero(scp->history_head, scp->history_size*sizeof(u_short));
}
return 0;
}
else
return EINVAL;
case CONS_MOUSECTL: /* control mouse arrow */
{
mouse_info_t *mouse = (mouse_info_t*)data;
if (!crtc_vga)
return ENXIO;
switch (mouse->operation) {
case MOUSE_MODE:
if (ISSIGVALID(mouse->u.mode.signal)) {
scp->mouse_signal = mouse->u.mode.signal;
scp->mouse_proc = p;
scp->mouse_pid = p->p_pid;
}
else {
scp->mouse_signal = 0;
scp->mouse_proc = NULL;
scp->mouse_pid = 0;
}
break;
case MOUSE_SHOW:
if (!(scp->status & MOUSE_ENABLED)) {
scp->status |= (MOUSE_ENABLED | MOUSE_VISIBLE);
scp->mouse_oldpos = scp->mouse_pos;
mark_all(scp);
}
else
return EINVAL;
break;
case MOUSE_HIDE:
if (scp->status & MOUSE_ENABLED) {
scp->status &= ~(MOUSE_ENABLED | MOUSE_VISIBLE);
mark_all(scp);
}
else
return EINVAL;
break;
case MOUSE_MOVEABS:
scp->mouse_xpos = mouse->u.data.x;
scp->mouse_ypos = mouse->u.data.y;
set_mouse_pos(scp);
break;
case MOUSE_MOVEREL:
scp->mouse_xpos += mouse->u.data.x;
scp->mouse_ypos += mouse->u.data.y;
set_mouse_pos(scp);
break;
1994-10-17 22:12:06 +00:00
case MOUSE_GETINFO:
mouse->u.data.x = scp->mouse_xpos;
mouse->u.data.y = scp->mouse_ypos;
mouse->u.data.buttons = scp->mouse_buttons;
break;
1994-10-17 22:12:06 +00:00
case MOUSE_ACTION:
/* this should maybe only be settable from /dev/consolectl SOS */
/* send out mouse event on /dev/sysmouse */
if (cur_console->status & MOUSE_ENABLED)
cur_console->status |= MOUSE_VISIBLE;
if ((MOUSE_TTY)->t_state & TS_ISOPEN) {
u_char buf[5];
int i;
buf[0] = 0x80 | ((~mouse->u.data.buttons) & 0x07);
buf[1] = (mouse->u.data.x & 0x1fe >> 1);
buf[3] = (mouse->u.data.x & 0x1ff) - buf[1];
buf[2] = -(mouse->u.data.y & 0x1fe >> 1);
buf[4] = -(mouse->u.data.y & 0x1ff) - buf[2];
for (i=0; i<5; i++)
(*linesw[(MOUSE_TTY)->t_line].l_rint)(buf[i],MOUSE_TTY);
}
cur_console->mouse_xpos += mouse->u.data.x;
cur_console->mouse_ypos += mouse->u.data.y;
if (cur_console->mouse_signal) {
cur_console->mouse_buttons = mouse->u.data.buttons;
/* has controlling process died? */
if (cur_console->mouse_proc &&
(cur_console->mouse_proc != pfind(cur_console->mouse_pid))){
cur_console->mouse_signal = 0;
cur_console->mouse_proc = NULL;
cur_console->mouse_pid = 0;
}
else
psignal(cur_console->mouse_proc, cur_console->mouse_signal);
}
else {
/* process button presses */
if (cur_console->mouse_buttons != mouse->u.data.buttons) {
cur_console->mouse_buttons = mouse->u.data.buttons;
if (!(cur_console->status & UNKNOWN_MODE)) {
if (cur_console->mouse_buttons & LEFT_BUTTON)
mouse_cut_start(cur_console);
else
mouse_cut_end(cur_console);
if (cur_console->mouse_buttons & RIGHT_BUTTON ||
cur_console->mouse_buttons & MIDDLE_BUTTON)
mouse_paste(cur_console);
}
}
}
if (mouse->u.data.x != 0 || mouse->u.data.y != 0)
set_mouse_pos(cur_console);
break;
default:
return EINVAL;
}
/* make screensaver happy */
scrn_time_stamp = time.tv_sec;
if (scrn_blanked) {
(*current_saver)(FALSE);
mark_all(cur_console);
}
return 0;
}
case CONS_GETINFO: /* get current (virtual) console info */
{
vid_info_t *ptr = (vid_info_t*)data;
if (ptr->size == sizeof(struct vid_info)) {
ptr->m_num = get_scr_num();
ptr->mv_col = scp->xpos;
ptr->mv_row = scp->ypos;
ptr->mv_csz = scp->xsize;
ptr->mv_rsz = scp->ysize;
ptr->mv_norm.fore = (scp->term.std_color & 0x0f00)>>8;
ptr->mv_norm.back = (scp->term.std_color & 0xf000)>>12;
ptr->mv_rev.fore = (scp->term.rev_color & 0x0f00)>>8;
ptr->mv_rev.back = (scp->term.rev_color & 0xf000)>>12;
ptr->mv_grfc.fore = 0; /* not supported */
ptr->mv_grfc.back = 0; /* not supported */
ptr->mv_ovscan = scp->border;
ptr->mk_keylock = scp->status & LOCK_KEY_MASK;
return 0;
}
return EINVAL;
}
case CONS_GETVERS: /* get version number */
*(int*)data = 0x200; /* version 2.0 */
return 0;
/* VGA TEXT MODES */
case SW_VGA_C40x25:
case SW_VGA_C80x25: case SW_VGA_M80x25:
case SW_VGA_C80x30: case SW_VGA_M80x30:
case SW_VGA_C80x50: case SW_VGA_M80x50:
case SW_VGA_C80x60: case SW_VGA_M80x60:
case SW_B40x25: case SW_C40x25:
case SW_B80x25: case SW_C80x25:
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case SW_ENH_B40x25: case SW_ENH_C40x25:
case SW_ENH_B80x25: case SW_ENH_C80x25:
case SW_ENH_B80x43: case SW_ENH_C80x43:
if (!crtc_vga || video_mode_ptr == NULL)
return ENXIO;
switch (cmd & 0xff) {
case M_VGA_C80x60: case M_VGA_M80x60:
if (!(fonts_loaded & FONT_8))
return EINVAL;
scp->xsize = 80;
scp->ysize = 60;
break;
case M_VGA_C80x50: case M_VGA_M80x50:
if (!(fonts_loaded & FONT_8))
return EINVAL;
scp->xsize = 80;
scp->ysize = 50;
break;
case M_ENH_B80x43: case M_ENH_C80x43:
if (!(fonts_loaded & FONT_8))
return EINVAL;
scp->xsize = 80;
scp->ysize = 43;
break;
case M_VGA_C80x30: case M_VGA_M80x30:
scp->xsize = 80;
scp->ysize = 30;
break;
default:
if ((cmd & 0xff) > M_VGA_CG320)
return EINVAL;
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else
scp->xsize = *(video_mode_ptr+((cmd&0xff)*64));
scp->ysize = *(video_mode_ptr+((cmd&0xff)*64)+1)+1;
break;
}
scp->mode = cmd & 0xff;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
free(scp->scr_buf, M_DEVBUF);
scp->scr_buf = (u_short *)
malloc(scp->xsize*scp->ysize*sizeof(u_short), M_DEVBUF, M_WAITOK);
scp->cursor_pos = scp->cursor_oldpos =
scp->scr_buf + scp->xpos + scp->ypos * scp->xsize;
scp->mouse_pos = scp->mouse_oldpos =
scp->scr_buf + ((scp->mouse_ypos/scp->font_size)*scp->xsize +
scp->mouse_xpos/8);
free(cut_buffer, M_DEVBUF);
cut_buffer = (char *)malloc(scp->xsize*scp->ysize, M_DEVBUF, M_NOWAIT);
cut_buffer[0] = 0x00;
if (scp == cur_console)
set_mode(scp);
scp->status &= ~UNKNOWN_MODE;
clear_screen(scp);
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
if (tp->t_winsize.ws_col != scp->xsize
|| tp->t_winsize.ws_row != scp->ysize) {
tp->t_winsize.ws_col = scp->xsize;
tp->t_winsize.ws_row = scp->ysize;
pgsignal(tp->t_pgrp, SIGWINCH, 1);
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
return 0;
/* GRAPHICS MODES */
case SW_BG320: case SW_BG640:
case SW_CG320: case SW_CG320_D: case SW_CG640_E:
case SW_CG640x350: case SW_ENH_CG640:
case SW_BG640x480: case SW_CG640x480: case SW_VGA_CG320:
if (!crtc_vga || video_mode_ptr == NULL)
return ENXIO;
scp->mode = cmd & 0xFF;
scp->xpixel = (*(video_mode_ptr + (scp->mode*64))) * 8;
scp->ypixel = (*(video_mode_ptr + (scp->mode*64) + 1) + 1) *
(*(video_mode_ptr + (scp->mode*64) + 2));
if (scp == cur_console)
set_mode(scp);
scp->status |= UNKNOWN_MODE; /* graphics mode */
/* clear_graphics();*/
if (tp->t_winsize.ws_xpixel != scp->xpixel
|| tp->t_winsize.ws_ypixel != scp->ypixel) {
tp->t_winsize.ws_xpixel = scp->xpixel;
tp->t_winsize.ws_ypixel = scp->ypixel;
pgsignal(tp->t_pgrp, SIGWINCH, 1);
}
return 0;
case VT_SETMODE: /* set screen switcher mode */
{
struct vt_mode *mode;
mode = (struct vt_mode *)data;
if (ISSIGVALID(mode->relsig) && ISSIGVALID(mode->acqsig) &&
ISSIGVALID(mode->frsig)) {
bcopy(data, &scp->smode, sizeof(struct vt_mode));
if (scp->smode.mode == VT_PROCESS) {
scp->proc = p;
scp->pid = scp->proc->p_pid;
}
return 0;
} else
return EINVAL;
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case VT_GETMODE: /* get screen switcher mode */
bcopy(&scp->smode, data, sizeof(struct vt_mode));
return 0;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case VT_RELDISP: /* screen switcher ioctl */
switch(*data) {
case VT_FALSE: /* user refuses to release screen, abort */
if (scp == old_scp && (scp->status & SWITCH_WAIT_REL)) {
old_scp->status &= ~SWITCH_WAIT_REL;
switch_in_progress = FALSE;
return 0;
}
return EINVAL;
case VT_TRUE: /* user has released screen, go on */
if (scp == old_scp && (scp->status & SWITCH_WAIT_REL)) {
scp->status &= ~SWITCH_WAIT_REL;
exchange_scr();
if (new_scp->smode.mode == VT_PROCESS) {
new_scp->status |= SWITCH_WAIT_ACQ;
psignal(new_scp->proc, new_scp->smode.acqsig);
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
else
switch_in_progress = FALSE;
1993-10-28 05:27:36 +00:00
return 0;
}
return EINVAL;
1993-10-28 05:27:36 +00:00
case VT_ACKACQ: /* acquire acknowledged, switch completed */
if (scp == new_scp && (scp->status & SWITCH_WAIT_ACQ)) {
scp->status &= ~SWITCH_WAIT_ACQ;
switch_in_progress = FALSE;
return 0;
}
return EINVAL;
default:
return EINVAL;
}
/* NOT REACHED */
case VT_OPENQRY: /* return free virtual console */
for (i = 0; i < MAXCONS; i++) {
tp = VIRTUAL_TTY(i);
if (!(tp->t_state & TS_ISOPEN)) {
*data = i + 1;
return 0;
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
}
return EINVAL;
case VT_ACTIVATE: /* switch to screen *data */
return switch_scr(scp, (*data) - 1);
case VT_WAITACTIVE: /* wait for switch to occur */
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if (*data > MAXCONS || *data < 0)
return EINVAL;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
if (minor(dev) == (*data) - 1)
return 0;
if (*data == 0) {
if (scp == cur_console)
return 0;
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
else
scp = console[(*data) - 1];
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
while ((error=tsleep((caddr_t)&scp->smode, PZERO|PCATCH,
"waitvt", 0)) == ERESTART) ;
return error;
case VT_GETACTIVE:
*data = get_scr_num()+1;
return 0;
case KDENABIO: /* allow io operations */
error = suser(p->p_ucred, &p->p_acflag);
if (error != 0)
return error;
if (securelevel > 0)
return EPERM;
fp = (struct trapframe *)p->p_md.md_regs;
fp->tf_eflags |= PSL_IOPL;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
return 0;
case KDDISABIO: /* disallow io operations (default) */
fp = (struct trapframe *)p->p_md.md_regs;
fp->tf_eflags &= ~PSL_IOPL;
return 0;
case KDSETMODE: /* set current mode of this (virtual) console */
switch (*data) {
case KD_TEXT: /* switch to TEXT (known) mode */
/* restore fonts & palette ! */
if (crtc_vga) {
if (fonts_loaded & FONT_8)
copy_font(LOAD, FONT_8, font_8);
if (fonts_loaded & FONT_14)
copy_font(LOAD, FONT_14, font_14);
if (fonts_loaded & FONT_16)
copy_font(LOAD, FONT_16, font_16);
if (flags & CHAR_CURSOR)
set_destructive_cursor(scp);
load_palette(palette);
}
/* FALL THROUGH */
case KD_TEXT1: /* switch to TEXT (known) mode */
/* no restore fonts & palette */
if (crtc_vga && video_mode_ptr)
set_mode(scp);
scp->status &= ~UNKNOWN_MODE;
clear_screen(scp);
return 0;
case KD_GRAPHICS: /* switch to GRAPHICS (unknown) mode */
scp->status |= UNKNOWN_MODE;
return 0;
default:
return EINVAL;
}
/* NOT REACHED */
case KDGETMODE: /* get current mode of this (virtual) console */
*data = (scp->status & UNKNOWN_MODE) ? KD_GRAPHICS : KD_TEXT;
return 0;
case KDSBORDER: /* set border color of this (virtual) console */
if (!crtc_vga)
return ENXIO;
scp->border = *data;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
if (scp == cur_console)
set_border(scp->border);
return 0;
case KDSKBSTATE: /* set keyboard state (locks) */
if (*data >= 0 && *data <= LOCK_KEY_MASK) {
scp->status &= ~LOCK_KEY_MASK;
scp->status |= *data;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
if (scp == cur_console)
update_leds(scp->status);
return 0;
}
return EINVAL;
case KDGKBSTATE: /* get keyboard state (locks) */
*data = scp->status & LOCK_KEY_MASK;
return 0;
case KDSETRAD: /* set keyboard repeat & delay rates */
if (*data & 0x80)
return EINVAL;
if (sc_kbdc != NULL)
set_keyboard(KBDC_SET_TYPEMATIC, *data);
return 0;
case KDSKBMODE: /* set keyboard mode */
switch (*data) {
case K_RAW: /* switch to RAW scancode mode */
scp->status |= KBD_RAW_MODE;
return 0;
case K_XLATE: /* switch to XLT ascii mode */
if (scp == cur_console && scp->status & KBD_RAW_MODE)
shfts = ctls = alts = agrs = metas = 0;
scp->status &= ~KBD_RAW_MODE;
return 0;
default:
return EINVAL;
}
/* NOT REACHED */
case KDGKBMODE: /* get keyboard mode */
*data = (scp->status & KBD_RAW_MODE) ? K_RAW : K_XLATE;
return 0;
case KDMKTONE: /* sound the bell */
if (*(int*)data)
do_bell(scp, (*(int*)data)&0xffff,
(((*(int*)data)>>16)&0xffff)*hz/1000);
else
do_bell(scp, scp->bell_pitch, scp->bell_duration);
return 0;
case KIOCSOUND: /* make tone (*data) hz */
if (scp == cur_console) {
if (*(int*)data) {
int pitch = timer_freq / *(int*)data;
/* set command for counter 2, 2 byte write */
if (acquire_timer2(TIMER_16BIT|TIMER_SQWAVE))
return EBUSY;
/* set pitch */
outb(TIMER_CNTR2, pitch);
outb(TIMER_CNTR2, (pitch>>8));
/* enable counter 2 output to speaker */
outb(IO_PPI, inb(IO_PPI) | 3);
}
else {
/* disable counter 2 output to speaker */
outb(IO_PPI, inb(IO_PPI) & 0xFC);
release_timer2();
}
}
return 0;
case KDGKBTYPE: /* get keyboard type */
*data = 0; /* type not known (yet) */
return 0;
case KDSETLED: /* set keyboard LED status */
if (*data >= 0 && *data <= LED_MASK) {
scp->status &= ~LED_MASK;
scp->status |= *data;
if (scp == cur_console)
update_leds(scp->status);
return 0;
}
return EINVAL;
case KDGETLED: /* get keyboard LED status */
*data = scp->status & LED_MASK;
return 0;
case GETFKEY: /* get functionkey string */
if (*(u_short*)data < n_fkey_tab) {
fkeyarg_t *ptr = (fkeyarg_t*)data;
bcopy(&fkey_tab[ptr->keynum].str, ptr->keydef,
fkey_tab[ptr->keynum].len);
ptr->flen = fkey_tab[ptr->keynum].len;
return 0;
}
else
return EINVAL;
case SETFKEY: /* set functionkey string */
if (*(u_short*)data < n_fkey_tab) {
fkeyarg_t *ptr = (fkeyarg_t*)data;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
bcopy(ptr->keydef, &fkey_tab[ptr->keynum].str,
min(ptr->flen, MAXFK));
fkey_tab[ptr->keynum].len = min(ptr->flen, MAXFK);
return 0;
}
else
return EINVAL;
case GIO_SCRNMAP: /* get output translation table */
bcopy(&scr_map, data, sizeof(scr_map));
return 0;
case PIO_SCRNMAP: /* set output translation table */
bcopy(data, &scr_map, sizeof(scr_map));
for (i=0; i<sizeof(scr_map); i++)
scr_rmap[scr_map[i]] = i;
return 0;
case GIO_KEYMAP: /* get keyboard translation table */
bcopy(&key_map, data, sizeof(key_map));
return 0;
case PIO_KEYMAP: /* set keyboard translation table */
bcopy(data, &key_map, sizeof(key_map));
return 0;
case PIO_FONT8x8: /* set 8x8 dot font */
if (!crtc_vga)
return ENXIO;
bcopy(data, font_8, 8*256);
fonts_loaded |= FONT_8;
copy_font(LOAD, FONT_8, font_8);
if (flags & CHAR_CURSOR)
set_destructive_cursor(scp);
return 0;
case GIO_FONT8x8: /* get 8x8 dot font */
if (!crtc_vga)
return ENXIO;
if (fonts_loaded & FONT_8) {
bcopy(font_8, data, 8*256);
return 0;
}
else
return ENXIO;
case PIO_FONT8x14: /* set 8x14 dot font */
if (!crtc_vga)
return ENXIO;
bcopy(data, font_14, 14*256);
fonts_loaded |= FONT_14;
copy_font(LOAD, FONT_14, font_14);
if (flags & CHAR_CURSOR)
set_destructive_cursor(scp);
return 0;
case GIO_FONT8x14: /* get 8x14 dot font */
if (!crtc_vga)
return ENXIO;
if (fonts_loaded & FONT_14) {
bcopy(font_14, data, 14*256);
return 0;
}
else
return ENXIO;
case PIO_FONT8x16: /* set 8x16 dot font */
if (!crtc_vga)
return ENXIO;
bcopy(data, font_16, 16*256);
fonts_loaded |= FONT_16;
copy_font(LOAD, FONT_16, font_16);
if (flags & CHAR_CURSOR)
set_destructive_cursor(scp);
return 0;
case GIO_FONT8x16: /* get 8x16 dot font */
if (!crtc_vga)
return ENXIO;
if (fonts_loaded & FONT_16) {
bcopy(font_16, data, 16*256);
return 0;
}
else
return ENXIO;
default:
break;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
}
error = (*linesw[tp->t_line].l_ioctl)(tp, cmd, data, flag, p);
if (error >= 0)
return(error);
error = ttioctl(tp, cmd, data, flag);
if (error >= 0)
return(error);
return(ENOTTY);
}
1995-12-10 13:40:44 +00:00
static void
scstart(struct tty *tp)
{
struct clist *rbp;
1995-11-20 12:13:32 +00:00
int s, len;
u_char buf[PCBURST];
scr_stat *scp = get_scr_stat(tp->t_dev);
1993-10-28 05:27:36 +00:00
if (scp->status & SLKED || blink_in_progress)
return; /* XXX who repeats the call when the above flags are cleared? */
s = spltty();
if (!(tp->t_state & (TS_TIMEOUT | TS_BUSY | TS_TTSTOP))) {
tp->t_state |= TS_BUSY;
rbp = &tp->t_outq;
while (rbp->c_cc) {
len = q_to_b(rbp, buf, PCBURST);
splx(s);
ansi_put(scp, buf, len);
s = spltty();
}
tp->t_state &= ~TS_BUSY;
ttwwakeup(tp);
}
splx(s);
}
static void
scmousestart(struct tty *tp)
{
struct clist *rbp;
int s;
u_char buf[PCBURST];
s = spltty();
if (!(tp->t_state & (TS_TIMEOUT | TS_BUSY | TS_TTSTOP))) {
tp->t_state |= TS_BUSY;
rbp = &tp->t_outq;
while (rbp->c_cc) {
q_to_b(rbp, buf, PCBURST);
}
tp->t_state &= ~TS_BUSY;
ttwwakeup(tp);
}
splx(s);
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
void
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
sccnprobe(struct consdev *cp)
{
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
struct isa_device *dvp;
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
/*
* Take control if we are the highest priority enabled display device.
*/
dvp = find_display();
if (dvp == NULL || dvp->id_driver != &scdriver) {
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
cp->cn_pri = CN_DEAD;
return;
}
/* initialize required fields */
cp->cn_dev = makedev(CDEV_MAJOR, SC_CONSOLE);
cp->cn_pri = CN_INTERNAL;
sc_kbdc = kbdc_open(sc_port);
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
void
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
sccninit(struct consdev *cp)
{
scinit();
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
void
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
sccnputc(dev_t dev, int c)
{
u_char buf[1];
int s;
scr_stat *scp = console[0];
term_stat save = scp->term;
scp->term = kernel_console;
current_default = &kernel_default;
if (scp == cur_console && !(scp->status & UNKNOWN_MODE))
remove_cursor_image(scp);
buf[0] = c;
ansi_put(scp, buf, 1);
kernel_console = scp->term;
current_default = &user_default;
scp->term = save;
s = splclock();
if (scp == cur_console && !(scp->status & UNKNOWN_MODE)) {
if (/* timer not running && */ (scp->start <= scp->end)) {
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
sc_bcopy(scp->scr_buf + scp->start, Crtat + scp->start,
(1 + scp->end - scp->start) * sizeof(u_short));
scp->start = scp->xsize * scp->ysize;
scp->end = 0;
}
scp->cursor_oldpos = scp->cursor_pos;
draw_cursor_image(scp);
}
splx(s);
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
int
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
sccngetc(dev_t dev)
{
int s = spltty(); /* block scintr while we poll */
int c = scgetc(SCGETC_CN);
splx(s);
return(c);
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
int
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
sccncheckc(dev_t dev)
{
int c, s;
s = spltty();
c = scgetc(SCGETC_CN | SCGETC_NONBLOCK);
splx(s);
return(c == NOKEY ? -1 : c); /* c == -1 can't happen */
}
static scr_stat
*get_scr_stat(dev_t dev)
{
int unit = minor(dev);
if (unit == SC_CONSOLE)
return console[0];
if (unit >= MAXCONS || unit < 0)
return(NULL);
return console[unit];
}
static int
get_scr_num()
{
int i = 0;
while ((i < MAXCONS) && (cur_console != console[i]))
i++;
return i < MAXCONS ? i : 0;
}
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static void
scrn_timer(void *arg)
{
scr_stat *scp = cur_console;
int s = spltty();
/*
* With release 2.1 of the Xaccel server, the keyboard is left
* hanging pretty often. Apparently an interrupt from the
* keyboard is lost, and I don't know why (yet).
* This ugly hack calls scintr if input is ready for the keyboard
* and conveniently hides the problem. XXX
*/
/* Try removing anything stuck in the keyboard controller; whether
* it's a keyboard scan code or mouse data. `scintr()' doesn't
* read the mouse data directly, but `kbdio' routines will, as a
* side effect.
*/
if (kbdc_lock(sc_kbdc, TRUE)) {
/*
* We have seen the lock flag is not set. Let's reset the flag early;
* otherwise `update_led()' failes which may want the lock
* during `scintr()'.
*/
kbdc_lock(sc_kbdc, FALSE);
if (kbdc_data_ready(sc_kbdc))
scintr(0);
}
/* should we just return ? */
if ((scp->status&UNKNOWN_MODE) || blink_in_progress || switch_in_progress) {
timeout(scrn_timer, NULL, hz / 10);
splx(s);
return;
}
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if (!scrn_blanked) {
/* update screen image */
if (scp->start <= scp->end) {
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
sc_bcopy(scp->scr_buf + scp->start, Crtat + scp->start,
(1 + scp->end - scp->start) * sizeof(u_short));
}
/* update "pseudo" mouse pointer image */
if ((scp->status & MOUSE_VISIBLE) && crtc_vga) {
/* did mouse move since last time ? */
if (scp->status & MOUSE_MOVED) {
/* do we need to remove old mouse pointer image ? */
if (scp->mouse_cut_start != NULL ||
(scp->mouse_pos-scp->scr_buf) <= scp->start ||
(scp->mouse_pos+scp->xsize+1-scp->scr_buf) >= scp->end) {
remove_mouse_image(scp);
}
scp->status &= ~MOUSE_MOVED;
draw_mouse_image(scp);
}
else {
/* mouse didn't move, has it been overwritten ? */
if ((scp->mouse_pos+scp->xsize+1-scp->scr_buf) >= scp->start &&
(scp->mouse_pos - scp->scr_buf) <= scp->end) {
draw_mouse_image(scp);
}
}
}
/* update cursor image */
if (scp->status & CURSOR_ENABLED) {
/* did cursor move since last time ? */
if (scp->cursor_pos != scp->cursor_oldpos) {
/* do we need to remove old cursor image ? */
if ((scp->cursor_oldpos - scp->scr_buf) < scp->start ||
((scp->cursor_oldpos - scp->scr_buf) > scp->end)) {
remove_cursor_image(scp);
}
scp->cursor_oldpos = scp->cursor_pos;
draw_cursor_image(scp);
}
else {
/* cursor didn't move, has it been overwritten ? */
if (scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf >= scp->start &&
scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf <= scp->end) {
draw_cursor_image(scp);
} else {
/* if its a blinking cursor, we may have to update it */
if (flags & BLINK_CURSOR)
draw_cursor_image(scp);
}
}
blinkrate++;
}
if (scp->mouse_cut_start != NULL)
draw_cutmarking(scp);
scp->end = 0;
scp->start = scp->xsize*scp->ysize;
}
if (scrn_blank_time && (time.tv_sec > scrn_time_stamp+scrn_blank_time))
(*current_saver)(TRUE);
timeout(scrn_timer, NULL, hz / 25);
splx(s);
}
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static void
clear_screen(scr_stat *scp)
{
move_crsr(scp, 0, 0);
scp->cursor_oldpos = scp->cursor_pos;
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20], scp->scr_buf,
scp->xsize * scp->ysize);
mark_all(scp);
remove_cutmarking(scp);
}
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static int
switch_scr(scr_stat *scp, u_int next_scr)
{
if (switch_in_progress && (cur_console->proc != pfind(cur_console->pid)))
switch_in_progress = FALSE;
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if (next_scr >= MAXCONS || switch_in_progress ||
(cur_console->smode.mode == VT_AUTO
&& cur_console->status & UNKNOWN_MODE)) {
do_bell(scp, BELL_PITCH, BELL_DURATION);
return EINVAL;
}
/* is the wanted virtual console open ? */
if (next_scr) {
struct tty *tp = VIRTUAL_TTY(next_scr);
if (!(tp->t_state & TS_ISOPEN)) {
do_bell(scp, BELL_PITCH, BELL_DURATION);
return EINVAL;
}
}
/* delay switch if actively updating screen */
if (write_in_progress || blink_in_progress) {
delayed_next_scr = next_scr+1;
return 0;
}
switch_in_progress = TRUE;
old_scp = cur_console;
new_scp = console[next_scr];
wakeup((caddr_t)&new_scp->smode);
if (new_scp == old_scp) {
switch_in_progress = FALSE;
delayed_next_scr = FALSE;
return 0;
}
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/* has controlling process died? */
if (old_scp->proc && (old_scp->proc != pfind(old_scp->pid)))
old_scp->smode.mode = VT_AUTO;
if (new_scp->proc && (new_scp->proc != pfind(new_scp->pid)))
new_scp->smode.mode = VT_AUTO;
1996-12-19 00:26:22 +00:00
/* check the modes and switch appropriately */
if (old_scp->smode.mode == VT_PROCESS) {
old_scp->status |= SWITCH_WAIT_REL;
psignal(old_scp->proc, old_scp->smode.relsig);
}
else {
exchange_scr();
if (new_scp->smode.mode == VT_PROCESS) {
new_scp->status |= SWITCH_WAIT_ACQ;
psignal(new_scp->proc, new_scp->smode.acqsig);
}
else
switch_in_progress = FALSE;
}
return 0;
}
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static void
exchange_scr(void)
{
move_crsr(old_scp, old_scp->xpos, old_scp->ypos);
cur_console = new_scp;
if (old_scp->mode != new_scp->mode || (old_scp->status & UNKNOWN_MODE)){
if (crtc_vga && video_mode_ptr)
set_mode(new_scp);
}
move_crsr(new_scp, new_scp->xpos, new_scp->ypos);
if ((old_scp->status & UNKNOWN_MODE) && crtc_vga) {
if (flags & CHAR_CURSOR)
set_destructive_cursor(new_scp);
load_palette(palette);
}
if (old_scp->status & KBD_RAW_MODE || new_scp->status & KBD_RAW_MODE)
shfts = ctls = alts = agrs = metas = 0;
update_leds(new_scp->status);
delayed_next_scr = FALSE;
mark_all(new_scp);
}
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static void
scan_esc(scr_stat *scp, u_char c)
{
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static u_char ansi_col[16] =
{0, 4, 2, 6, 1, 5, 3, 7, 8, 12, 10, 14, 9, 13, 11, 15};
int i, n;
u_short *src, *dst, count;
if (scp->term.esc == 1) {
switch (c) {
case '7': /* Save cursor position */
scp->saved_xpos = scp->xpos;
scp->saved_ypos = scp->ypos;
break;
case '8': /* Restore saved cursor position */
if (scp->saved_xpos >= 0 && scp->saved_ypos >= 0)
move_crsr(scp, scp->saved_xpos, scp->saved_ypos);
break;
case '[': /* Start ESC [ sequence */
scp->term.esc = 2;
scp->term.last_param = -1;
for (i = scp->term.num_param; i < MAX_ESC_PAR; i++)
scp->term.param[i] = 1;
scp->term.num_param = 0;
return;
case 'M': /* Move cursor up 1 line, scroll if at top */
if (scp->ypos > 0)
move_crsr(scp, scp->xpos, scp->ypos - 1);
else {
bcopyw(scp->scr_buf, scp->scr_buf + scp->xsize,
(scp->ysize - 1) * scp->xsize * sizeof(u_short));
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20],
scp->scr_buf, scp->xsize);
mark_all(scp);
}
break;
#if notyet
case 'Q':
scp->term.esc = 4;
break;
#endif
case 'c': /* Clear screen & home */
clear_screen(scp);
break;
}
}
else if (scp->term.esc == 2) {
if (c >= '0' && c <= '9') {
if (scp->term.num_param < MAX_ESC_PAR) {
if (scp->term.last_param != scp->term.num_param) {
scp->term.last_param = scp->term.num_param;
scp->term.param[scp->term.num_param] = 0;
}
else
scp->term.param[scp->term.num_param] *= 10;
scp->term.param[scp->term.num_param] += c - '0';
return;
}
}
scp->term.num_param = scp->term.last_param + 1;
switch (c) {
case ';':
if (scp->term.num_param < MAX_ESC_PAR)
return;
break;
case '=':
scp->term.esc = 3;
scp->term.last_param = -1;
for (i = scp->term.num_param; i < MAX_ESC_PAR; i++)
scp->term.param[i] = 1;
scp->term.num_param = 0;
return;
case 'A': /* up n rows */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
move_crsr(scp, scp->xpos, scp->ypos - n);
break;
case 'B': /* down n rows */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
move_crsr(scp, scp->xpos, scp->ypos + n);
break;
case 'C': /* right n columns */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
move_crsr(scp, scp->xpos + n, scp->ypos);
break;
case 'D': /* left n columns */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
move_crsr(scp, scp->xpos - n, scp->ypos);
break;
case 'E': /* cursor to start of line n lines down */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
move_crsr(scp, 0, scp->ypos + n);
break;
case 'F': /* cursor to start of line n lines up */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
move_crsr(scp, 0, scp->ypos - n);
break;
case 'f': /* Cursor move */
case 'H':
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if (scp->term.num_param == 0)
move_crsr(scp, 0, 0);
else if (scp->term.num_param == 2)
move_crsr(scp, scp->term.param[1] - 1, scp->term.param[0] - 1);
break;
case 'J': /* Clear all or part of display */
if (scp->term.num_param == 0)
n = 0;
else
n = scp->term.param[0];
switch (n) {
case 0: /* clear form cursor to end of display */
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20],
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scp->cursor_pos,
scp->scr_buf + scp->xsize * scp->ysize - scp->cursor_pos);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->xsize * scp->ysize);
remove_cutmarking(scp);
break;
case 1: /* clear from beginning of display to cursor */
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20],
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scp->scr_buf,
scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
mark_for_update(scp, 0);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
remove_cutmarking(scp);
break;
case 2: /* clear entire display */
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20], scp->scr_buf,
scp->xsize * scp->ysize);
mark_all(scp);
remove_cutmarking(scp);
break;
}
break;
case 'K': /* Clear all or part of line */
if (scp->term.num_param == 0)
n = 0;
else
n = scp->term.param[0];
switch (n) {
case 0: /* clear form cursor to end of line */
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20],
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scp->cursor_pos,
scp->xsize - scp->xpos);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf +
scp->xsize - scp->xpos);
break;
case 1: /* clear from beginning of line to cursor */
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20],
scp->cursor_pos - scp->xpos,
scp->xpos + 1);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->ypos * scp->xsize);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
break;
case 2: /* clear entire line */
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20],
scp->cursor_pos - scp->xpos,
scp->xsize);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->ypos * scp->xsize);
mark_for_update(scp, (scp->ypos + 1) * scp->xsize);
break;
}
break;
case 'L': /* Insert n lines */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
if (n > scp->ysize - scp->ypos)
n = scp->ysize - scp->ypos;
src = scp->scr_buf + scp->ypos * scp->xsize;
dst = src + n * scp->xsize;
count = scp->ysize - (scp->ypos + n);
bcopyw(src, dst, count * scp->xsize * sizeof(u_short));
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20], src,
n * scp->xsize);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->ypos * scp->xsize);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->xsize * scp->ysize);
break;
case 'M': /* Delete n lines */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
if (n > scp->ysize - scp->ypos)
n = scp->ysize - scp->ypos;
dst = scp->scr_buf + scp->ypos * scp->xsize;
src = dst + n * scp->xsize;
count = scp->ysize - (scp->ypos + n);
bcopyw(src, dst, count * scp->xsize * sizeof(u_short));
src = dst + count * scp->xsize;
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20], src,
n * scp->xsize);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->ypos * scp->xsize);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->xsize * scp->ysize);
break;
case 'P': /* Delete n chars */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
if (n > scp->xsize - scp->xpos)
n = scp->xsize - scp->xpos;
dst = scp->cursor_pos;
src = dst + n;
count = scp->xsize - (scp->xpos + n);
bcopyw(src, dst, count * sizeof(u_short));
src = dst + count;
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20], src, n);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf + n + count);
break;
case '@': /* Insert n chars */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
if (n > scp->xsize - scp->xpos)
n = scp->xsize - scp->xpos;
src = scp->cursor_pos;
dst = src + n;
count = scp->xsize - (scp->xpos + n);
bcopyw(src, dst, count * sizeof(u_short));
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20], src, n);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf + n + count);
break;
case 'S': /* scroll up n lines */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
if (n > scp->ysize)
n = scp->ysize;
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bcopyw(scp->scr_buf + (scp->xsize * n),
scp->scr_buf,
scp->xsize * (scp->ysize - n) * sizeof(u_short));
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20],
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scp->scr_buf + scp->xsize * (scp->ysize - n),
scp->xsize * n);
mark_all(scp);
break;
case 'T': /* scroll down n lines */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
if (n > scp->ysize)
n = scp->ysize;
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bcopyw(scp->scr_buf,
scp->scr_buf + (scp->xsize * n),
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scp->xsize * (scp->ysize - n) *
sizeof(u_short));
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20],
scp->scr_buf, scp->xsize * n);
mark_all(scp);
break;
case 'X': /* erase n characters in line */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
if (n > scp->xsize - scp->xpos)
n = scp->xsize - scp->xpos;
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20],
scp->cursor_pos, n);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf + n);
break;
case 'Z': /* move n tabs backwards */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
if ((i = scp->xpos & 0xf8) == scp->xpos)
i -= 8*n;
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else
i -= 8*(n-1);
if (i < 0)
i = 0;
move_crsr(scp, i, scp->ypos);
break;
case '`': /* move cursor to column n */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
move_crsr(scp, n - 1, scp->ypos);
break;
case 'a': /* move cursor n columns to the right */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
move_crsr(scp, scp->xpos + n, scp->ypos);
break;
case 'd': /* move cursor to row n */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
move_crsr(scp, scp->xpos, n - 1);
break;
case 'e': /* move cursor n rows down */
n = scp->term.param[0]; if (n < 1) n = 1;
move_crsr(scp, scp->xpos, scp->ypos + n);
break;
case 'm': /* change attribute */
if (scp->term.num_param == 0) {
scp->term.attr_mask = NORMAL_ATTR;
scp->term.cur_attr =
scp->term.cur_color = scp->term.std_color;
break;
}
for (i = 0; i < scp->term.num_param; i++) {
switch (n = scp->term.param[i]) {
case 0: /* back to normal */
scp->term.attr_mask = NORMAL_ATTR;
scp->term.cur_attr =
scp->term.cur_color = scp->term.std_color;
break;
case 1: /* bold */
scp->term.attr_mask |= BOLD_ATTR;
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
case 4: /* underline */
scp->term.attr_mask |= UNDERLINE_ATTR;
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
case 5: /* blink */
scp->term.attr_mask |= BLINK_ATTR;
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
case 7: /* reverse video */
scp->term.attr_mask |= REVERSE_ATTR;
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
case 30: case 31: /* set fg color */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case 32: case 33: case 34:
case 35: case 36: case 37:
scp->term.attr_mask |= FOREGROUND_CHANGED;
scp->term.cur_color =
(scp->term.cur_color&0xF000) | (ansi_col[(n-30)&7]<<8);
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
case 40: case 41: /* set bg color */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case 42: case 43: case 44:
case 45: case 46: case 47:
scp->term.attr_mask |= BACKGROUND_CHANGED;
scp->term.cur_color =
(scp->term.cur_color&0x0F00) | (ansi_col[(n-40)&7]<<12);
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
}
}
break;
case 's': /* Save cursor position */
scp->saved_xpos = scp->xpos;
scp->saved_ypos = scp->ypos;
break;
case 'u': /* Restore saved cursor position */
if (scp->saved_xpos >= 0 && scp->saved_ypos >= 0)
move_crsr(scp, scp->saved_xpos, scp->saved_ypos);
break;
case 'x':
if (scp->term.num_param == 0)
n = 0;
else
n = scp->term.param[0];
switch (n) {
case 0: /* reset attributes */
scp->term.attr_mask = NORMAL_ATTR;
scp->term.cur_attr =
scp->term.cur_color = scp->term.std_color =
current_default->std_color;
scp->term.rev_color = current_default->rev_color;
break;
case 1: /* set ansi background */
scp->term.attr_mask &= ~BACKGROUND_CHANGED;
scp->term.cur_color = scp->term.std_color =
(scp->term.std_color & 0x0F00) |
(ansi_col[(scp->term.param[1])&0x0F]<<12);
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
case 2: /* set ansi foreground */
scp->term.attr_mask &= ~FOREGROUND_CHANGED;
scp->term.cur_color = scp->term.std_color =
(scp->term.std_color & 0xF000) |
(ansi_col[(scp->term.param[1])&0x0F]<<8);
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
case 3: /* set ansi attribute directly */
scp->term.attr_mask &= ~(FOREGROUND_CHANGED|BACKGROUND_CHANGED);
scp->term.cur_color = scp->term.std_color =
(scp->term.param[1]&0xFF)<<8;
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
case 5: /* set ansi reverse video background */
scp->term.rev_color =
(scp->term.rev_color & 0x0F00) |
(ansi_col[(scp->term.param[1])&0x0F]<<12);
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
case 6: /* set ansi reverse video foreground */
scp->term.rev_color =
(scp->term.rev_color & 0xF000) |
(ansi_col[(scp->term.param[1])&0x0F]<<8);
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
case 7: /* set ansi reverse video directly */
scp->term.rev_color =
(scp->term.param[1]&0xFF)<<8;
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
break;
}
break;
case 'z': /* switch to (virtual) console n */
if (scp->term.num_param == 1)
switch_scr(scp, scp->term.param[0]);
break;
}
}
else if (scp->term.esc == 3) {
if (c >= '0' && c <= '9') {
if (scp->term.num_param < MAX_ESC_PAR) {
if (scp->term.last_param != scp->term.num_param) {
scp->term.last_param = scp->term.num_param;
scp->term.param[scp->term.num_param] = 0;
}
else
scp->term.param[scp->term.num_param] *= 10;
scp->term.param[scp->term.num_param] += c - '0';
return;
}
}
scp->term.num_param = scp->term.last_param + 1;
switch (c) {
case ';':
if (scp->term.num_param < MAX_ESC_PAR)
return;
break;
case 'A': /* set display border color */
if (scp->term.num_param == 1)
scp->border=scp->term.param[0] & 0xff;
if (scp == cur_console)
set_border(scp->border);
break;
case 'B': /* set bell pitch and duration */
if (scp->term.num_param == 2) {
scp->bell_pitch = scp->term.param[0];
scp->bell_duration = scp->term.param[1]*10;
}
break;
case 'C': /* set cursor type & shape */
if (scp->term.num_param == 1) {
if (scp->term.param[0] & 0x01)
flags |= BLINK_CURSOR;
else
flags &= ~BLINK_CURSOR;
if (scp->term.param[0] & 0x02) {
flags |= CHAR_CURSOR;
set_destructive_cursor(scp);
} else
flags &= ~CHAR_CURSOR;
}
else if (scp->term.num_param == 2) {
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
scp->cursor_start = scp->term.param[0] & 0x1F;
scp->cursor_end = scp->term.param[1] & 0x1F;
if (flags & CHAR_CURSOR)
set_destructive_cursor(scp);
}
break;
case 'F': /* set ansi foreground */
if (scp->term.num_param == 1) {
scp->term.attr_mask &= ~FOREGROUND_CHANGED;
scp->term.cur_color = scp->term.std_color =
(scp->term.std_color & 0xF000)
| ((scp->term.param[0] & 0x0F) << 8);
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
}
break;
case 'G': /* set ansi background */
if (scp->term.num_param == 1) {
scp->term.attr_mask &= ~BACKGROUND_CHANGED;
scp->term.cur_color = scp->term.std_color =
(scp->term.std_color & 0x0F00)
| ((scp->term.param[0] & 0x0F) << 12);
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
}
break;
case 'H': /* set ansi reverse video foreground */
if (scp->term.num_param == 1) {
scp->term.rev_color =
(scp->term.rev_color & 0xF000)
| ((scp->term.param[0] & 0x0F) << 8);
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
}
break;
case 'I': /* set ansi reverse video background */
if (scp->term.num_param == 1) {
scp->term.rev_color =
(scp->term.rev_color & 0x0F00)
| ((scp->term.param[0] & 0x0F) << 12);
scp->term.cur_attr = mask2attr(&scp->term);
}
break;
}
}
scp->term.esc = 0;
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
static void
ansi_put(scr_stat *scp, u_char *buf, int len)
{
u_char *ptr = buf;
/* make screensaver happy */
if (scp == cur_console) {
scrn_time_stamp = time.tv_sec;
if (scrn_blanked) {
(*current_saver)(FALSE);
mark_all(scp);
}
}
write_in_progress++;
outloop:
if (scp->term.esc) {
scan_esc(scp, *ptr++);
len--;
}
else if (PRINTABLE(*ptr)) { /* Print only printables */
int cnt = len <= (scp->xsize-scp->xpos) ? len : (scp->xsize-scp->xpos);
u_short cur_attr = scp->term.cur_attr;
u_short *cursor_pos = scp->cursor_pos;
do {
/*
* gcc-2.6.3 generates poor (un)sign extension code. Casting the
* pointers in the following to volatile should have no effect,
* but in fact speeds up this inner loop from 26 to 18 cycles
* (+ cache misses) on i486's.
*/
#define UCVP(ucp) ((u_char volatile *)(ucp))
*cursor_pos++ = UCVP(scr_map)[*UCVP(ptr)] | cur_attr;
ptr++;
cnt--;
} while (cnt && PRINTABLE(*ptr));
len -= (cursor_pos - scp->cursor_pos);
scp->xpos += (cursor_pos - scp->cursor_pos);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
mark_for_update(scp, cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
scp->cursor_pos = cursor_pos;
if (scp->xpos >= scp->xsize) {
scp->xpos = 0;
scp->ypos++;
}
}
else {
switch(*ptr) {
case 0x07:
do_bell(scp, scp->bell_pitch, scp->bell_duration);
break;
case 0x08: /* non-destructive backspace */
if (scp->cursor_pos > scp->scr_buf) {
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
scp->cursor_pos--;
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
if (scp->xpos > 0)
scp->xpos--;
else {
scp->xpos += scp->xsize - 1;
scp->ypos--;
}
}
break;
case 0x09: /* non-destructive tab */
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
scp->cursor_pos += (8 - scp->xpos % 8u);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
if ((scp->xpos += (8 - scp->xpos % 8u)) >= scp->xsize) {
scp->xpos = 0;
scp->ypos++;
}
break;
case 0x0a: /* newline, same pos */
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
scp->cursor_pos += scp->xsize;
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
scp->ypos++;
break;
case 0x0c: /* form feed, clears screen */
clear_screen(scp);
break;
case 0x0d: /* return, return to pos 0 */
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
scp->cursor_pos -= scp->xpos;
mark_for_update(scp, scp->cursor_pos - scp->scr_buf);
scp->xpos = 0;
break;
case 0x1b: /* start escape sequence */
scp->term.esc = 1;
scp->term.num_param = 0;
break;
}
ptr++; len--;
}
/* do we have to scroll ?? */
if (scp->cursor_pos >= scp->scr_buf + scp->ysize * scp->xsize) {
remove_cutmarking(scp);
if (scp->history) {
bcopyw(scp->scr_buf, scp->history_head,
scp->xsize * sizeof(u_short));
scp->history_head += scp->xsize;
if (scp->history_head + scp->xsize >
scp->history + scp->history_size)
scp->history_head = scp->history;
}
bcopyw(scp->scr_buf + scp->xsize, scp->scr_buf,
scp->xsize * (scp->ysize - 1) * sizeof(u_short));
fillw(scp->term.cur_color | scr_map[0x20],
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
scp->scr_buf + scp->xsize * (scp->ysize - 1),
scp->xsize);
scp->cursor_pos -= scp->xsize;
scp->ypos--;
mark_all(scp);
}
if (len)
goto outloop;
write_in_progress--;
if (delayed_next_scr)
switch_scr(scp, delayed_next_scr - 1);
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
static void
scinit(void)
{
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
u_short volatile *cp;
u_short was;
u_int hw_cursor;
u_int i;
if (init_done != COLD)
return;
init_done = WARM;
/*
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
* Finish defaulting crtc variables for a mono screen. Crtat is a
* bogus common variable so that it can be shared with pcvt, so it
* can't be statically initialized. XXX.
*/
Crtat = (u_short *)MONO_BUF;
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
/*
* If CGA memory seems to work, switch to color.
*/
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
cp = (u_short *)CGA_BUF;
was = *cp;
*cp = (u_short) 0xA55A;
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
if (*cp == 0xA55A) {
Crtat = (u_short *)CGA_BUF;
crtc_addr = COLOR_BASE;
}
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
*cp = was;
/*
* Ensure a zero start address. This is mainly to recover after
1995-11-24 14:56:00 +00:00
* switching from pcvt using userconfig(). The registers are w/o
Make pcvt and syscons live in the same kernel. If both are enabled, then the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using userconfig(). i386/i386/conf.c: Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'. Add cdevsw registration functions. Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist. i386/i386/cons.c: Add renamed syscons entry points to constab. i386/i386/cons.h: Declare the renamed syscons entry points. i386/i386/machdep.c: Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down anything important. sys/conf.h: Declare new functions. i386/isa/isa.[ch]: Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be done better. i386/isa/syscons.c: Rename pccn* -> sccn*. Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it. i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/* Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the stored value was changed by the previous driver. Initialize cdevsw table from a template. Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority. i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h: Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the display after filling the display with text. i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c: Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons. kern/subr_xxx.c: Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons and pcvt.
1995-09-10 21:36:12 +00:00
* for old hardware so it's too hard to relocate the active screen
* memory.
*/
outb(crtc_addr, 12);
outb(crtc_addr + 1, 0);
outb(crtc_addr, 13);
outb(crtc_addr + 1, 0);
/* extract cursor location */
outb(crtc_addr, 14);
hw_cursor = inb(crtc_addr + 1) << 8;
outb(crtc_addr, 15);
hw_cursor |= inb(crtc_addr + 1);
/*
* Validate cursor location. It may be off the screen. Then we must
* not use it for the initial buffer offset.
*/
if (hw_cursor >= ROW * COL)
hw_cursor = (ROW - 1) * COL;
/* move hardware cursor out of the way */
outb(crtc_addr, 14);
outb(crtc_addr + 1, 0xff);
outb(crtc_addr, 15);
outb(crtc_addr + 1, 0xff);
/* is this a VGA or higher ? */
outb(crtc_addr, 7);
if (inb(crtc_addr) == 7) {
u_long pa;
u_long segoff;
crtc_vga = TRUE;
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
read_vgaregs(vgaregs);
/* Get the BIOS video mode pointer */
segoff = *(u_long *)pa_to_va(0x4a8);
pa = (((segoff & 0xffff0000) >> 12) + (segoff & 0xffff));
if (ISMAPPED(pa, sizeof(u_long))) {
segoff = *(u_long *)pa_to_va(pa);
pa = (((segoff & 0xffff0000) >> 12) + (segoff & 0xffff));
if (ISMAPPED(pa, 64))
video_mode_ptr = (char *)pa_to_va(pa);
}
}
current_default = &user_default;
console[0] = &main_console;
init_scp(console[0]);
cur_console = console[0];
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
/* discard the video mode table if we are not familiar with it... */
if (video_mode_ptr) {
if (comp_vgaregs(vgaregs, video_mode_ptr + 64*console[0]->mode))
video_mode_ptr = NULL;
}
/* copy screen to temporary buffer */
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
sc_bcopy(Crtat, sc_buffer,
console[0]->xsize * console[0]->ysize * sizeof(u_short));
console[0]->scr_buf = console[0]->mouse_pos = sc_buffer;
console[0]->cursor_pos = console[0]->cursor_oldpos = sc_buffer + hw_cursor;
console[0]->xpos = hw_cursor % COL;
console[0]->ypos = hw_cursor / COL;
for (i=1; i<MAXCONS; i++)
console[i] = NULL;
kernel_console.esc = 0;
kernel_console.attr_mask = NORMAL_ATTR;
kernel_console.cur_attr =
kernel_console.cur_color = kernel_console.std_color =
kernel_default.std_color;
kernel_console.rev_color = kernel_default.rev_color;
/* initialize mapscrn arrays to a one to one map */
for (i=0; i<sizeof(scr_map); i++) {
scr_map[i] = scr_rmap[i] = i;
}
/* Save font and palette if VGA */
if (crtc_vga) {
copy_font(SAVE, FONT_16, font_16);
fonts_loaded = FONT_16;
save_palette();
}
#ifdef SC_SPLASH_SCREEN
/*
* Now put up a graphics image, and maybe cycle a
* couble of palette entries for simple animation.
*/
toggle_splash_screen(cur_console);
#endif
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
static scr_stat
*alloc_scp()
{
scr_stat *scp;
scp = (scr_stat *)malloc(sizeof(scr_stat), M_DEVBUF, M_WAITOK);
init_scp(scp);
scp->scr_buf = scp->cursor_pos = scp->cursor_oldpos =
(u_short *)malloc(scp->xsize*scp->ysize*sizeof(u_short),
M_DEVBUF, M_WAITOK);
scp->mouse_pos = scp->mouse_oldpos =
scp->scr_buf + ((scp->mouse_ypos/scp->font_size)*scp->xsize +
scp->mouse_xpos/8);
scp->history_head = scp->history_pos = scp->history =
(u_short *)malloc(scp->history_size*sizeof(u_short),
M_DEVBUF, M_WAITOK);
bzero(scp->history_head, scp->history_size*sizeof(u_short));
/* SOS
if (crtc_vga && video_mode_ptr)
set_mode(scp);
*/
clear_screen(scp);
return scp;
}
static void
init_scp(scr_stat *scp)
{
if (crtc_vga)
if (crtc_addr == MONO_BASE)
scp->mode = M_VGA_M80x25;
else
scp->mode = M_VGA_C80x25;
else
if (crtc_addr == MONO_BASE)
scp->mode = M_B80x25;
else
scp->mode = M_C80x25;
scp->font_size = FONT_16;
scp->xsize = COL;
scp->ysize = ROW;
scp->xpos = scp->ypos = 0;
scp->saved_xpos = scp->saved_ypos = -1;
scp->start = scp->xsize * scp->ysize;
scp->end = 0;
scp->term.esc = 0;
scp->term.attr_mask = NORMAL_ATTR;
scp->term.cur_attr =
scp->term.cur_color = scp->term.std_color =
current_default->std_color;
scp->term.rev_color = current_default->rev_color;
scp->border = BG_BLACK;
scp->cursor_start = *(char *)pa_to_va(0x461);
scp->cursor_end = *(char *)pa_to_va(0x460);
scp->mouse_xpos = scp->xsize*8/2;
scp->mouse_ypos = scp->ysize*scp->font_size/2;
scp->mouse_cut_start = scp->mouse_cut_end = NULL;
scp->mouse_signal = 0;
scp->mouse_pid = 0;
scp->mouse_proc = NULL;
scp->bell_pitch = BELL_PITCH;
scp->bell_duration = BELL_DURATION;
scp->status = (*(char *)pa_to_va(0x417) & 0x20) ? NLKED : 0;
scp->status |= CURSOR_ENABLED;
scp->pid = 0;
scp->proc = NULL;
scp->smode.mode = VT_AUTO;
scp->history_head = scp->history_pos = scp->history = NULL;
scp->history_size = HISTORY_SIZE;
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
static u_char
*get_fstr(u_int c, u_int *len)
{
u_int i;
if (!(c & FKEY))
return(NULL);
i = (c & 0xFF) - F_FN;
if (i > n_fkey_tab)
return(NULL);
*len = fkey_tab[i].len;
return(fkey_tab[i].str);
}
static void
history_to_screen(scr_stat *scp)
{
int i;
for (i=0; i<scp->ysize; i++)
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
bcopyw(scp->history + (((scp->history_pos - scp->history) +
scp->history_size-((i+1)*scp->xsize))%scp->history_size),
scp->scr_buf + (scp->xsize * (scp->ysize-1 - i)),
scp->xsize * sizeof(u_short));
mark_all(scp);
}
static int
history_up_line(scr_stat *scp)
{
if (WRAPHIST(scp, scp->history_pos, -(scp->xsize*scp->ysize)) !=
scp->history_head) {
scp->history_pos = WRAPHIST(scp, scp->history_pos, -scp->xsize);
history_to_screen(scp);
return 0;
}
else
return -1;
}
static int
history_down_line(scr_stat *scp)
{
if (scp->history_pos != scp->history_head) {
scp->history_pos = WRAPHIST(scp, scp->history_pos, scp->xsize);
history_to_screen(scp);
return 0;
}
else
return -1;
}
/*
* scgetc(flags) - get character from keyboard.
* If flags & SCGETC_CN, then avoid harmful side effects.
* If flags & SCGETC_NONBLOCK, then wait until a key is pressed, else
* return NOKEY if there is nothing there.
*/
static u_int
scgetc(u_int flags)
{
struct key_t *key;
u_char scancode, keycode;
u_int state, action;
int c;
static u_char esc_flag = 0, compose = 0;
static u_int chr = 0;
next_code:
/* first see if there is something in the keyboard port */
if (flags & SCGETC_NONBLOCK) {
c = read_kbd_data_no_wait(sc_kbdc);
if (c == -1)
return(NOKEY);
} else {
do {
c = read_kbd_data(sc_kbdc);
} while(c == -1);
}
scancode = (u_char)c;
/* do the /dev/random device a favour */
if (!(flags & SCGETC_CN))
add_keyboard_randomness(scancode);
if (cur_console->status & KBD_RAW_MODE)
return scancode;
keycode = scancode & 0x7F;
switch (esc_flag) {
case 0x00: /* normal scancode */
switch(scancode) {
case 0xB8: /* left alt (compose key) */
if (compose) {
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
compose = 0;
if (chr > 255) {
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
do_bell(cur_console,
BELL_PITCH, BELL_DURATION);
chr = 0;
}
}
break;
case 0x38:
if (!compose) {
compose = 1;
chr = 0;
}
break;
case 0xE0:
case 0xE1:
esc_flag = scancode;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
goto next_code;
}
break;
case 0xE0: /* 0xE0 prefix */
esc_flag = 0;
switch (keycode) {
case 0x1C: /* right enter key */
keycode = 0x59;
break;
case 0x1D: /* right ctrl key */
keycode = 0x5A;
break;
case 0x35: /* keypad divide key */
keycode = 0x5B;
break;
case 0x37: /* print scrn key */
keycode = 0x5C;
break;
case 0x38: /* right alt key (alt gr) */
keycode = 0x5D;
break;
case 0x47: /* grey home key */
keycode = 0x5E;
break;
case 0x48: /* grey up arrow key */
keycode = 0x5F;
break;
case 0x49: /* grey page up key */
keycode = 0x60;
break;
case 0x4B: /* grey left arrow key */
keycode = 0x61;
break;
case 0x4D: /* grey right arrow key */
keycode = 0x62;
break;
case 0x4F: /* grey end key */
keycode = 0x63;
break;
case 0x50: /* grey down arrow key */
keycode = 0x64;
break;
case 0x51: /* grey page down key */
keycode = 0x65;
break;
case 0x52: /* grey insert key */
keycode = 0x66;
break;
case 0x53: /* grey delete key */
keycode = 0x67;
break;
/* the following 3 are only used on the MS "Natural" keyboard */
case 0x5b: /* left Window key */
keycode = 0x69;
break;
case 0x5c: /* right Window key */
keycode = 0x6a;
break;
case 0x5d: /* menu key */
keycode = 0x6b;
break;
default: /* ignore everything else */
goto next_code;
}
break;
case 0xE1: /* 0xE1 prefix */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
esc_flag = 0;
if (keycode == 0x1D)
esc_flag = 0x1D;
goto next_code;
/* NOT REACHED */
case 0x1D: /* pause / break */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
esc_flag = 0;
if (keycode != 0x45)
goto next_code;
keycode = 0x68;
break;
}
/* if scroll-lock pressed allow history browsing */
if (cur_console->history && cur_console->status & SLKED) {
int i;
cur_console->status &= ~CURSOR_ENABLED;
if (!(cur_console->status & BUFFER_SAVED)) {
cur_console->status |= BUFFER_SAVED;
cur_console->history_save = cur_console->history_head;
/* copy screen into top of history buffer */
for (i=0; i<cur_console->ysize; i++) {
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
bcopyw(cur_console->scr_buf + (cur_console->xsize * i),
cur_console->history_head,
cur_console->xsize * sizeof(u_short));
cur_console->history_head += cur_console->xsize;
if (cur_console->history_head + cur_console->xsize >
cur_console->history + cur_console->history_size)
cur_console->history_head=cur_console->history;
}
cur_console->history_pos = cur_console->history_head;
history_to_screen(cur_console);
}
switch (scancode) {
case 0x47: /* home key */
cur_console->history_pos = cur_console->history_head;
history_to_screen(cur_console);
goto next_code;
case 0x4F: /* end key */
cur_console->history_pos =
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
WRAPHIST(cur_console, cur_console->history_head,
cur_console->xsize*cur_console->ysize);
history_to_screen(cur_console);
goto next_code;
case 0x48: /* up arrow key */
if (history_up_line(cur_console))
do_bell(cur_console, BELL_PITCH, BELL_DURATION);
goto next_code;
case 0x50: /* down arrow key */
if (history_down_line(cur_console))
do_bell(cur_console, BELL_PITCH, BELL_DURATION);
goto next_code;
case 0x49: /* page up key */
for (i=0; i<cur_console->ysize; i++)
if (history_up_line(cur_console)) {
do_bell(cur_console, BELL_PITCH, BELL_DURATION);
break;
}
goto next_code;
case 0x51: /* page down key */
for (i=0; i<cur_console->ysize; i++)
if (history_down_line(cur_console)) {
do_bell(cur_console, BELL_PITCH, BELL_DURATION);
break;
}
goto next_code;
}
}
if (compose) {
switch (scancode) {
/* key pressed process it */
case 0x47: case 0x48: case 0x49: /* keypad 7,8,9 */
chr = (scancode - 0x40) + chr*10;
goto next_code;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case 0x4B: case 0x4C: case 0x4D: /* keypad 4,5,6 */
chr = (scancode - 0x47) + chr*10;
goto next_code;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case 0x4F: case 0x50: case 0x51: /* keypad 1,2,3 */
chr = (scancode - 0x4E) + chr*10;
goto next_code;
case 0x52: /* keypad 0 */
chr *= 10;
goto next_code;
/* key release, no interest here */
case 0xC7: case 0xC8: case 0xC9: /* keypad 7,8,9 */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case 0xCB: case 0xCC: case 0xCD: /* keypad 4,5,6 */
case 0xCF: case 0xD0: case 0xD1: /* keypad 1,2,3 */
case 0xD2: /* keypad 0 */
goto next_code;
case 0x38: /* left alt key */
break;
default:
if (chr) {
compose = chr = 0;
do_bell(cur_console, BELL_PITCH, BELL_DURATION);
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
goto next_code;
}
break;
}
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
state = (shfts ? 1 : 0 ) | (2 * (ctls ? 1 : 0)) | (4 * (alts ? 1 : 0));
if ((!agrs && (cur_console->status & ALKED))
|| (agrs && !(cur_console->status & ALKED)))
keycode += ALTGR_OFFSET;
key = &key_map.key[keycode];
if ( ((key->flgs & FLAG_LOCK_C) && (cur_console->status & CLKED))
|| ((key->flgs & FLAG_LOCK_N) && (cur_console->status & NLKED)) )
state ^= 1;
/* Check for make/break */
action = key->map[state];
if (scancode & 0x80) { /* key released */
if (key->spcl & 0x80) {
switch (action) {
case LSH:
shfts &= ~1;
break;
case RSH:
shfts &= ~2;
break;
case LCTR:
ctls &= ~1;
break;
case RCTR:
ctls &= ~2;
break;
case LALT:
alts &= ~1;
break;
case RALT:
alts &= ~2;
break;
case NLK:
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
nlkcnt = 0;
break;
case CLK:
clkcnt = 0;
break;
case SLK:
slkcnt = 0;
break;
case ASH:
agrs = 0;
break;
case ALK:
alkcnt = 0;
break;
case META:
metas = 0;
break;
}
}
if (chr && !compose) {
action = chr;
chr = 0;
return(action);
}
} else {
/* key pressed */
if (key->spcl & (0x80>>state)) {
switch (action) {
/* LOCKING KEYS */
case NLK:
#ifdef SC_SPLASH_SCREEN
toggle_splash_screen(cur_console); /* SOS XXX */
#endif
if (!nlkcnt) {
nlkcnt++;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
if (cur_console->status & NLKED)
cur_console->status &= ~NLKED;
else
cur_console->status |= NLKED;
update_leds(cur_console->status);
}
break;
case CLK:
if (!clkcnt) {
clkcnt++;
if (cur_console->status & CLKED)
cur_console->status &= ~CLKED;
else
cur_console->status |= CLKED;
update_leds(cur_console->status);
}
break;
case SLK:
if (!slkcnt) {
slkcnt++;
if (cur_console->status & SLKED) {
cur_console->status &= ~SLKED;
if (cur_console->status & BUFFER_SAVED){
int i;
u_short *ptr = cur_console->history_save;
for (i=0; i<cur_console->ysize; i++) {
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
bcopyw(ptr,
cur_console->scr_buf +
(cur_console->xsize*i),
cur_console->xsize * sizeof(u_short));
ptr += cur_console->xsize;
if (ptr + cur_console->xsize >
cur_console->history +
cur_console->history_size)
ptr = cur_console->history;
}
cur_console->status &= ~BUFFER_SAVED;
cur_console->history_head=cur_console->history_save;
cur_console->status |= CURSOR_ENABLED;
mark_all(cur_console);
}
scstart(VIRTUAL_TTY(get_scr_num()));
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
}
else
cur_console->status |= SLKED;
update_leds(cur_console->status);
}
break;
case ALK:
if (!alkcnt) {
alkcnt++;
if (cur_console->status & ALKED)
cur_console->status &= ~ALKED;
else
cur_console->status |= ALKED;
update_leds(cur_console->status);
}
break;
/* NON-LOCKING KEYS */
case NOP:
break;
case SPSC:
#ifdef SC_SPLASH_SCREEN
toggle_splash_screen(cur_console);
#endif
break;
case RBT:
shutdown_nice();
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
break;
case SUSP:
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
#if NAPM > 0
apm_suspend();
#endif
break;
case DBG:
#ifdef DDB /* try to switch to console 0 */
if (cur_console->smode.mode == VT_AUTO &&
console[0]->smode.mode == VT_AUTO)
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
switch_scr(cur_console, 0);
Debugger("manual escape to debugger");
1993-10-28 05:27:36 +00:00
#else
printf("No debugger in kernel\n");
1993-10-28 05:27:36 +00:00
#endif
break;
case LSH:
shfts |= 1;
break;
case RSH:
shfts |= 2;
break;
case LCTR:
ctls |= 1;
break;
case RCTR:
ctls |= 2;
break;
case LALT:
alts |= 1;
break;
case RALT:
alts |= 2;
break;
case ASH:
agrs = 1;
break;
case META:
metas = 1;
break;
case NEXT:
{
int next, this = get_scr_num();
for (next = this+1; next != this; next = (next+1)%MAXCONS) {
struct tty *tp = VIRTUAL_TTY(next);
if (tp->t_state & TS_ISOPEN) {
switch_scr(cur_console, next);
break;
}
}
}
break;
case BTAB:
return(BKEY);
default:
if (action >= F_SCR && action <= L_SCR) {
switch_scr(cur_console, action - F_SCR);
break;
1993-10-28 05:27:36 +00:00
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
if (action >= F_FN && action <= L_FN)
action |= FKEY;
return(action);
}
}
else {
if (metas)
action |= MKEY;
return(action);
}
}
goto next_code;
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
int
scmmap(dev_t dev, int offset, int nprot)
{
if (offset > 0x20000 - PAGE_SIZE)
return -1;
return i386_btop((VIDEOMEM + offset));
}
/*
* Calculate hardware attributes word using logical attributes mask and
* hardware colors
*/
static int
mask2attr(struct term_stat *term)
{
int attr, mask = term->attr_mask;
if (mask & REVERSE_ATTR) {
attr = ((mask & FOREGROUND_CHANGED) ?
((term->cur_color & 0xF000) >> 4) :
(term->rev_color & 0x0F00)) |
((mask & BACKGROUND_CHANGED) ?
((term->cur_color & 0x0F00) << 4) :
(term->rev_color & 0xF000));
} else
attr = term->cur_color;
/* XXX: underline mapping for Hercules adapter can be better */
if (mask & (BOLD_ATTR | UNDERLINE_ATTR))
attr ^= 0x0800;
if (mask & BLINK_ATTR)
attr ^= 0x8000;
return attr;
}
static void
set_keyboard(int command, int data)
{
int s;
int c;
if (sc_kbdc == NULL)
return;
/* prevent the timeout routine from polling the keyboard */
if (!kbdc_lock(sc_kbdc, TRUE))
return;
/* disable the keyboard and mouse interrupt */
s = spltty();
#if 0
c = get_controller_command_byte(sc_kbdc);
if ((c == -1)
|| !set_controller_command_byte(sc_kbdc,
kbdc_get_device_mask(sc_kbdc),
KBD_DISABLE_KBD_PORT | KBD_DISABLE_KBD_INT
| KBD_DISABLE_AUX_PORT | KBD_DISABLE_AUX_INT)) {
/* CONTROLLER ERROR */
kbdc_lock(sc_kbdc, FALSE);
splx(s);
return;
}
/*
* Now that the keyboard controller is told not to generate
* the keyboard and mouse interrupts, call `splx()' to allow
* the other tty interrupts. The clock interrupt may also occur,
* but the timeout routine (`scrn_timer()') will be blocked
* by the lock flag set via `kbdc_lock()'
*/
splx(s);
#endif
if (send_kbd_command_and_data(sc_kbdc, command, data) != KBD_ACK)
send_kbd_command(sc_kbdc, KBDC_ENABLE_KBD);
#if 0
/* restore the interrupts */
if (!set_controller_command_byte(sc_kbdc,
kbdc_get_device_mask(sc_kbdc),
c & (KBD_KBD_CONTROL_BITS | KBD_AUX_CONTROL_BITS))) {
/* CONTROLLER ERROR */
}
#else
splx(s);
#endif
kbdc_lock(sc_kbdc, FALSE);
}
static void
update_leds(int which)
{
static u_char xlate_leds[8] = { 0, 4, 2, 6, 1, 5, 3, 7 };
/* replace CAPS led with ALTGR led for ALTGR keyboards */
if (key_map.n_keys > ALTGR_OFFSET) {
if (which & ALKED)
which |= CLKED;
else
which &= ~CLKED;
}
set_keyboard(KBDC_SET_LEDS, xlate_leds[which & LED_MASK]);
}
void
set_mode(scr_stat *scp)
{
char *modetable;
char special_modetable[64];
if (scp != cur_console)
return;
/* setup video hardware for the given mode */
switch (scp->mode) {
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case M_VGA_M80x60:
bcopyw(video_mode_ptr+(64*M_VGA_M80x25), &special_modetable, 64);
goto special_80x60;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case M_VGA_C80x60:
bcopyw(video_mode_ptr+(64*M_VGA_C80x25), &special_modetable, 64);
special_80x60:
special_modetable[2] = 0x08;
special_modetable[19] = 0x47;
goto special_480l;
case M_VGA_M80x30:
bcopyw(video_mode_ptr+(64*M_VGA_M80x25), &special_modetable, 64);
goto special_80x30;
case M_VGA_C80x30:
bcopyw(video_mode_ptr+(64*M_VGA_C80x25), &special_modetable, 64);
special_80x30:
special_modetable[19] = 0x4f;
special_480l:
special_modetable[9] |= 0xc0;
special_modetable[16] = 0x08;
special_modetable[17] = 0x3e;
special_modetable[26] = 0xea;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
special_modetable[28] = 0xdf;
special_modetable[31] = 0xe7;
special_modetable[32] = 0x04;
modetable = special_modetable;
goto setup_mode;
case M_ENH_B80x43:
bcopyw(video_mode_ptr+(64*M_ENH_B80x25), &special_modetable, 64);
goto special_80x43;
case M_ENH_C80x43:
bcopyw(video_mode_ptr+(64*M_ENH_C80x25), &special_modetable, 64);
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
special_80x43:
special_modetable[28] = 87;
goto special_80x50;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
case M_VGA_M80x50:
bcopyw(video_mode_ptr+(64*M_VGA_M80x25), &special_modetable, 64);
goto special_80x50;
case M_VGA_C80x50:
bcopyw(video_mode_ptr+(64*M_VGA_C80x25), &special_modetable, 64);
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
special_80x50:
special_modetable[2] = 8;
special_modetable[19] = 7;
modetable = special_modetable;
goto setup_mode;
case M_VGA_C40x25: case M_VGA_C80x25:
case M_VGA_M80x25:
case M_B40x25: case M_C40x25:
case M_B80x25: case M_C80x25:
case M_ENH_B40x25: case M_ENH_C40x25:
case M_ENH_B80x25: case M_ENH_C80x25:
modetable = video_mode_ptr + (scp->mode * 64);
setup_mode:
set_vgaregs(modetable);
scp->font_size = *(modetable + 2);
/* set font type (size) */
if (scp->font_size < FONT_14) {
if (fonts_loaded & FONT_8)
copy_font(LOAD, FONT_8, font_8);
outb(TSIDX, 0x03); outb(TSREG, 0x0A); /* font 2 */
} else if (scp->font_size >= FONT_16) {
if (fonts_loaded & FONT_16)
copy_font(LOAD, FONT_16, font_16);
outb(TSIDX, 0x03); outb(TSREG, 0x00); /* font 0 */
} else {
if (fonts_loaded & FONT_14)
copy_font(LOAD, FONT_14, font_14);
outb(TSIDX, 0x03); outb(TSREG, 0x05); /* font 1 */
}
if (flags & CHAR_CURSOR)
set_destructive_cursor(scp);
mark_all(scp);
break;
case M_BG320: case M_CG320: case M_BG640:
case M_CG320_D: case M_CG640_E:
case M_CG640x350: case M_ENH_CG640:
case M_BG640x480: case M_CG640x480: case M_VGA_CG320:
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
set_vgaregs(video_mode_ptr + (scp->mode * 64));
scp->font_size = FONT_NONE;
break;
default:
/* call user defined function XXX */
break;
}
/* set border color for this (virtual) console */
set_border(scp->border);
return;
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
void
set_border(u_char color)
{
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip-flop */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
outb(ATC, 0x11); outb(ATC, color);
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip-flop */
outb(ATC, 0x20); /* enable Palette */
}
static void
set_vgaregs(char *modetable)
{
int i, s = splhigh();
outb(TSIDX, 0x00); outb(TSREG, 0x01); /* stop sequencer */
outb(TSIDX, 0x07); outb(TSREG, 0x00); /* unlock registers */
for (i=0; i<4; i++) { /* program sequencer */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
outb(TSIDX, i+1);
outb(TSREG, modetable[i+5]);
}
outb(MISC, modetable[9]); /* set dot-clock */
outb(TSIDX, 0x00); outb(TSREG, 0x03); /* start sequencer */
outb(crtc_addr, 0x11);
outb(crtc_addr+1, inb(crtc_addr+1) & 0x7F);
for (i=0; i<25; i++) { /* program crtc */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
outb(crtc_addr, i);
if (i == 14 || i == 15) /* no hardware cursor */
outb(crtc_addr+1, 0xff);
else
outb(crtc_addr+1, modetable[i+10]);
}
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip-flop */
for (i=0; i<20; i++) { /* program attribute ctrl */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
outb(ATC, i);
outb(ATC, modetable[i+35]);
}
for (i=0; i<9; i++) { /* program graph data ctrl */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
outb(GDCIDX, i);
outb(GDCREG, modetable[i+55]);
}
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip-flop */
outb(ATC, 0x20); /* enable palette */
splx(s);
}
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
static void
read_vgaregs(char *buf)
{
int i, j;
int s;
bzero(buf, 64);
s = splhigh();
outb(TSIDX, 0x00); outb(TSREG, 0x01); /* stop sequencer */
outb(TSIDX, 0x07); outb(TSREG, 0x00); /* unlock registers */
for (i=0, j=5; i<4; i++) {
outb(TSIDX, i+1);
buf[j++] = inb(TSREG);
}
buf[9] = inb(MISC + 10); /* dot-clock */
outb(TSIDX, 0x00); outb(TSREG, 0x03); /* start sequencer */
for (i=0, j=10; i<25; i++) { /* crtc */
outb(crtc_addr, i);
buf[j++] = inb(crtc_addr+1);
}
for (i=0, j=35; i<20; i++) { /* attribute ctrl */
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip-flop */
outb(ATC, i);
buf[j++] = inb(ATC + 1);
}
for (i=0, j=55; i<9; i++) { /* graph data ctrl */
outb(GDCIDX, i);
buf[j++] = inb(GDCREG);
}
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip-flop */
outb(ATC, 0x20); /* enable palette */
buf[0] = *(char *)pa_to_va(0x44a); /* COLS */
buf[1] = *(char *)pa_to_va(0x484); /* ROWS */
buf[2] = *(char *)pa_to_va(0x485); /* POINTS */
buf[3] = *(char *)pa_to_va(0x44c);
buf[4] = *(char *)pa_to_va(0x44d);
splx(s);
}
static int
comp_vgaregs(u_char *buf1, u_char *buf2)
{
int i;
for(i = 0; i < 24; ++i) {
if (*buf1++ != *buf2++)
return 1;
}
buf1 += 2; /* skip the cursor position register value */
buf2 += 2;
for(i = 26; i < 64; ++i) {
if (*buf1++ != *buf2++)
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
static void
dump_vgaregs(u_char *buf)
{
int i;
for(i = 0; i < 64;) {
printf("%02x ", buf[i]);
if ((++i % 16) == 0)
printf("\n");
}
}
static void
set_font_mode()
{
int s = splhigh();
/* setup vga for loading fonts (graphics plane mode) */
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip-flop */
outb(ATC, 0x10); outb(ATC, 0x01);
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip-flop */
outb(ATC, 0x20); /* enable palette */
#if SLOW_VGA
outb(TSIDX, 0x02); outb(TSREG, 0x04);
outb(TSIDX, 0x04); outb(TSREG, 0x06);
outb(GDCIDX, 0x04); outb(GDCREG, 0x02);
outb(GDCIDX, 0x05); outb(GDCREG, 0x00);
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
outb(GDCIDX, 0x06); outb(GDCREG, 0x05);
#else
outw(TSIDX, 0x0402);
outw(TSIDX, 0x0604);
outw(GDCIDX, 0x0204);
outw(GDCIDX, 0x0005);
outw(GDCIDX, 0x0506); /* addr = a0000, 64kb */
#endif
splx(s);
}
static void
set_normal_mode()
{
char *modetable;
int s = splhigh();
switch (cur_console->mode) {
case M_VGA_M80x60:
case M_VGA_M80x50:
case M_VGA_M80x30:
modetable = video_mode_ptr + (64*M_VGA_M80x25);
break;
case M_VGA_C80x60:
case M_VGA_C80x50:
case M_VGA_C80x30:
modetable = video_mode_ptr + (64*M_VGA_C80x25);
break;
case M_ENH_B80x43:
modetable = video_mode_ptr + (64*M_ENH_B80x25);
break;
case M_ENH_C80x43:
modetable = video_mode_ptr + (64*M_ENH_C80x25);
break;
case M_VGA_C40x25: case M_VGA_C80x25:
case M_VGA_M80x25:
case M_B40x25: case M_C40x25:
case M_B80x25: case M_C80x25:
case M_ENH_B40x25: case M_ENH_C40x25:
case M_ENH_B80x25: case M_ENH_C80x25:
case M_BG320: case M_CG320: case M_BG640:
case M_CG320_D: case M_CG640_E:
case M_CG640x350: case M_ENH_CG640:
case M_BG640x480: case M_CG640x480: case M_VGA_CG320:
modetable = video_mode_ptr + (cur_console->mode * 64);
break;
default:
modetable = video_mode_ptr + (64*M_VGA_C80x25);
}
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
if (video_mode_ptr == NULL)
modetable = vgaregs;
/* setup vga for normal operation mode again */
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip-flop */
outb(ATC, 0x10); outb(ATC, modetable[0x10+35]);
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip-flop */
outb(ATC, 0x20); /* enable palette */
#if SLOW_VGA
outb(TSIDX, 0x02); outb(TSREG, modetable[0x02+4]);
outb(TSIDX, 0x04); outb(TSREG, modetable[0x04+4]);
outb(GDCIDX, 0x04); outb(GDCREG, modetable[0x04+55]);
outb(GDCIDX, 0x05); outb(GDCREG, modetable[0x05+55]);
outb(GDCIDX, 0x06); outb(GDCREG, modetable[0x06+55]);
if (crtc_addr == MONO_BASE) {
outb(GDCIDX, 0x06); outb(GDCREG,(modetable[0x06+55] & 0x03) | 0x08);
}
else {
outb(GDCIDX, 0x06); outb(GDCREG,(modetable[0x06+55] & 0x03) | 0x0c);
}
#else
outw(TSIDX, 0x0002 | (modetable[0x02+4]<<8));
outw(TSIDX, 0x0004 | (modetable[0x04+4]<<8));
outw(GDCIDX, 0x0004 | (modetable[0x04+55]<<8));
outw(GDCIDX, 0x0005 | (modetable[0x05+55]<<8));
if (crtc_addr == MONO_BASE)
outw(GDCIDX, 0x0006 | (((modetable[0x06+55] & 0x03) | 0x08)<<8));
else
outw(GDCIDX, 0x0006 | (((modetable[0x06+55] & 0x03) | 0x0c)<<8));
#endif
splx(s);
}
void
copy_font(int operation, int font_type, char* font_image)
{
int ch, line, segment, fontsize;
u_char val;
/* dont mess with console we dont know video mode on */
if (cur_console->status & UNKNOWN_MODE)
return;
switch (font_type) {
default:
case FONT_8:
segment = 0x8000;
fontsize = 8;
break;
case FONT_14:
segment = 0x4000;
fontsize = 14;
break;
case FONT_16:
segment = 0x0000;
fontsize = 16;
break;
}
outb(TSIDX, 0x01); val = inb(TSREG); /* disable screen */
outb(TSIDX, 0x01); outb(TSREG, val | 0x20);
set_font_mode();
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
for (ch=0; ch < 256; ch++)
for (line=0; line < fontsize; line++)
if (operation)
*(char *)pa_to_va(VIDEOMEM+(segment)+(ch*32)+line) =
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
font_image[(ch*fontsize)+line];
else
font_image[(ch*fontsize)+line] =
*(char *)pa_to_va(VIDEOMEM+(segment)+(ch*32)+line);
set_normal_mode();
outb(TSIDX, 0x01); outb(TSREG, val & 0xDF); /* enable screen */
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
static void
set_destructive_cursor(scr_stat *scp)
{
u_char cursor[32];
caddr_t address;
int i;
char *font_buffer;
if (scp->font_size < FONT_14) {
font_buffer = font_8;
address = (caddr_t)VIDEOMEM + 0x8000;
}
else if (scp->font_size >= FONT_16) {
font_buffer = font_16;
address = (caddr_t)VIDEOMEM;
}
else {
font_buffer = font_14;
address = (caddr_t)VIDEOMEM + 0x4000;
}
if (scp->status & MOUSE_VISIBLE) {
if ((scp->cursor_saveunder & 0xff) == 0xd0)
bcopyw(&scp->mouse_cursor[0], cursor, scp->font_size);
else if ((scp->cursor_saveunder & 0xff) == 0xd1)
bcopyw(&scp->mouse_cursor[32], cursor, scp->font_size);
else if ((scp->cursor_saveunder & 0xff) == 0xd2)
bcopyw(&scp->mouse_cursor[64], cursor, scp->font_size);
else if ((scp->cursor_saveunder & 0xff) == 0xd3)
bcopyw(&scp->mouse_cursor[96], cursor, scp->font_size);
else
bcopyw(font_buffer+((scp->cursor_saveunder & 0xff)*scp->font_size),
cursor, scp->font_size);
}
else
bcopyw(font_buffer + ((scp->cursor_saveunder & 0xff) * scp->font_size),
cursor, scp->font_size);
for (i=0; i<32; i++)
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
if ((i >= scp->cursor_start && i <= scp->cursor_end) ||
(scp->cursor_start >= scp->font_size && i == scp->font_size - 1))
cursor[i] |= 0xff;
#if 1
while (!(inb(crtc_addr+6) & 0x08)) /* wait for vertical retrace */ ;
#endif
set_font_mode();
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
sc_bcopy(cursor, (char *)pa_to_va(address) + DEAD_CHAR * 32, 32);
set_normal_mode();
}
static void
set_mouse_pos(scr_stat *scp)
{
static int last_xpos = -1, last_ypos = -1;
/*
* the margins imposed here are not ideal, we loose
* a couble of pixels on the borders..
*/
if (scp->mouse_xpos < 0)
scp->mouse_xpos = 0;
if (scp->mouse_ypos < 0)
scp->mouse_ypos = 0;
if (scp->mouse_xpos > (scp->xsize*8)-2)
scp->mouse_xpos = (scp->xsize*8)-2;
if (scp->mouse_ypos > (scp->ysize*scp->font_size)-2)
scp->mouse_ypos = (scp->ysize*scp->font_size)-2;
if (scp->status & UNKNOWN_MODE)
return;
if (scp->mouse_xpos != last_xpos || scp->mouse_ypos != last_ypos) {
scp->status |= MOUSE_MOVED;
scp->mouse_pos = scp->scr_buf +
((scp->mouse_ypos/scp->font_size)*scp->xsize + scp->mouse_xpos/8);
if ((scp->status & MOUSE_VISIBLE) && (scp->status & MOUSE_CUTTING)) {
u_short *ptr;
int i = 0;
mark_for_update(scp, scp->mouse_cut_start - scp->scr_buf);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->mouse_cut_end - scp->scr_buf);
scp->mouse_cut_end = scp->mouse_pos;
for (ptr = (scp->mouse_cut_start > scp->mouse_cut_end
? scp->mouse_cut_end : scp->mouse_cut_start);
ptr <= (scp->mouse_cut_start > scp->mouse_cut_end
? scp->mouse_cut_start : scp->mouse_cut_end);
ptr++) {
cut_buffer[i++] = *ptr & 0xff;
if (((ptr - scp->scr_buf) % scp->xsize) == (scp->xsize - 1)) {
cut_buffer[i++] = '\n';
}
}
cut_buffer[i] = 0x00;
}
}
}
static void
mouse_cut_start(scr_stat *scp)
{
int i;
if (scp->status & MOUSE_VISIBLE) {
if (scp->mouse_pos == scp->mouse_cut_start &&
scp->mouse_cut_start == scp->mouse_cut_end) {
cut_buffer[0] = 0x00;
remove_cutmarking(scp);
}
else {
scp->mouse_cut_start = scp->mouse_cut_end = scp->mouse_pos;
cut_buffer[0] = *scp->mouse_cut_start & 0xff;
cut_buffer[1] = 0x00;
scp->status |= MOUSE_CUTTING;
}
mark_all(scp);
/* delete all other screens cut markings */
for (i=0; i<MAXCONS; i++) {
if (console[i] == NULL || console[i] == scp)
continue;
remove_cutmarking(console[i]);
}
}
}
static void
mouse_cut_end(scr_stat *scp)
{
if (scp->status & MOUSE_VISIBLE) {
scp->status &= ~MOUSE_CUTTING;
}
}
static void
mouse_paste(scr_stat *scp)
{
if (scp->status & MOUSE_VISIBLE) {
struct tty *tp;
u_char *ptr = cut_buffer;
tp = VIRTUAL_TTY(get_scr_num());
while (*ptr)
(*linesw[tp->t_line].l_rint)(scr_rmap[*ptr++], tp);
}
}
static void
draw_mouse_image(scr_stat *scp)
{
caddr_t address;
int i;
char *font_buffer;
u_short buffer[32];
u_short xoffset, yoffset;
u_short *crt_pos = Crtat + (scp->mouse_pos - scp->scr_buf);
int font_size = scp->font_size;
if (font_size < FONT_14) {
font_buffer = font_8;
address = (caddr_t)VIDEOMEM + 0x8000;
}
else if (font_size >= FONT_16) {
font_buffer = font_16;
address = (caddr_t)VIDEOMEM;
}
else {
font_buffer = font_14;
address = (caddr_t)VIDEOMEM + 0x4000;
}
xoffset = scp->mouse_xpos % 8;
yoffset = scp->mouse_ypos % font_size;
/* prepare mousepointer char's bitmaps */
bcopyw(font_buffer + ((*(scp->mouse_pos) & 0xff) * font_size),
&scp->mouse_cursor[0], font_size);
bcopyw(font_buffer + ((*(scp->mouse_pos+1) & 0xff) * font_size),
&scp->mouse_cursor[32], font_size);
bcopyw(font_buffer + ((*(scp->mouse_pos+scp->xsize) & 0xff) * font_size),
&scp->mouse_cursor[64], font_size);
bcopyw(font_buffer + ((*(scp->mouse_pos+scp->xsize+1) & 0xff) * font_size),
&scp->mouse_cursor[96], font_size);
for (i=0; i<font_size; i++) {
buffer[i] = scp->mouse_cursor[i]<<8 | scp->mouse_cursor[i+32];
buffer[i+font_size]=scp->mouse_cursor[i+64]<<8|scp->mouse_cursor[i+96];
}
/* now and-or in the mousepointer image */
for (i=0; i<16; i++) {
buffer[i+yoffset] =
( buffer[i+yoffset] & ~(mouse_and_mask[i] >> xoffset))
| (mouse_or_mask[i] >> xoffset);
}
for (i=0; i<font_size; i++) {
scp->mouse_cursor[i] = (buffer[i] & 0xff00) >> 8;
scp->mouse_cursor[i+32] = buffer[i] & 0xff;
scp->mouse_cursor[i+64] = (buffer[i+font_size] & 0xff00) >> 8;
scp->mouse_cursor[i+96] = buffer[i+font_size] & 0xff;
}
scp->mouse_oldpos = scp->mouse_pos;
/* wait for vertical retrace to avoid jitter on some videocards */
#if 1
while (!(inb(crtc_addr+6) & 0x08)) /* idle */ ;
#endif
set_font_mode();
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
sc_bcopy(scp->mouse_cursor, (char *)pa_to_va(address) + 0xd0 * 32, 128);
set_normal_mode();
1995-11-20 12:13:32 +00:00
*(crt_pos) = (*(scp->mouse_pos)&0xff00)|0xd0;
*(crt_pos+scp->xsize) = (*(scp->mouse_pos+scp->xsize)&0xff00)|0xd2;
if (scp->mouse_xpos < (scp->xsize-1)*8) {
*(crt_pos+1) = (*(scp->mouse_pos+1)&0xff00)|0xd1;
*(crt_pos+scp->xsize+1) = (*(scp->mouse_pos+scp->xsize+1)&0xff00)|0xd3;
}
mark_for_update(scp, scp->mouse_pos - scp->scr_buf);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->mouse_pos + scp->xsize + 1 - scp->scr_buf);
}
static void
remove_mouse_image(scr_stat *scp)
{
u_short *crt_pos = Crtat + (scp->mouse_oldpos - scp->scr_buf);
*(crt_pos) = *(scp->mouse_oldpos);
*(crt_pos+1) = *(scp->mouse_oldpos+1);
*(crt_pos+scp->xsize) = *(scp->mouse_oldpos+scp->xsize);
*(crt_pos+scp->xsize+1) = *(scp->mouse_oldpos+scp->xsize+1);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->mouse_oldpos - scp->scr_buf);
mark_for_update(scp, scp->mouse_oldpos + scp->xsize + 1 - scp->scr_buf);
}
static void
draw_cutmarking(scr_stat *scp)
{
u_short *ptr;
u_short och, nch;
for (ptr=scp->scr_buf; ptr<=(scp->scr_buf+(scp->xsize*scp->ysize)); ptr++) {
nch = och = *(Crtat + (ptr - scp->scr_buf));
/* are we outside the selected area ? */
if ( ptr < (scp->mouse_cut_start > scp->mouse_cut_end ?
scp->mouse_cut_end : scp->mouse_cut_start) ||
ptr > (scp->mouse_cut_start > scp->mouse_cut_end ?
scp->mouse_cut_start : scp->mouse_cut_end)) {
if (ptr != scp->cursor_pos)
nch = (och & 0xff) | (*ptr & 0xff00);
}
else {
/* are we clear of the cursor image ? */
if (ptr != scp->cursor_pos)
nch = (och & 0x88ff) | (*ptr & 0x7000)>>4 | (*ptr & 0x0700)<<4;
else {
if (flags & CHAR_CURSOR)
nch = (och & 0x88ff)|(*ptr & 0x7000)>>4|(*ptr & 0x0700)<<4;
else
if (!(flags & BLINK_CURSOR))
nch = (och & 0xff) | (*ptr & 0xff00);
}
}
if (nch != och)
*(Crtat + (ptr - scp->scr_buf)) = nch;
}
}
static void
remove_cutmarking(scr_stat *scp)
{
scp->mouse_cut_start = scp->mouse_cut_end = NULL;
scp->status &= ~MOUSE_CUTTING;
mark_all(scp);
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
static void
save_palette(void)
{
int i;
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
outb(PALRADR, 0x00);
for (i=0x00; i<0x300; i++)
palette[i] = inb(PALDATA);
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip/flop */
}
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
void
load_palette(char *palette)
{
int i;
outb(PIXMASK, 0xFF); /* no pixelmask */
1995-05-30 08:16:23 +00:00
outb(PALWADR, 0x00);
for (i=0x00; i<0x300; i++)
outb(PALDATA, palette[i]);
inb(crtc_addr+6); /* reset flip/flop */
outb(ATC, 0x20); /* enable palette */
}
static void
do_bell(scr_stat *scp, int pitch, int duration)
{
if (flags & VISUAL_BELL) {
if (blink_in_progress)
return;
blink_in_progress = 4;
if (scp != cur_console)
blink_in_progress += 2;
blink_screen(cur_console);
timeout(blink_screen, cur_console, hz / 10);
} else {
if (scp != cur_console)
pitch *= 2;
sysbeep(pitch, duration);
}
}
static void
blink_screen(void *arg)
{
scr_stat *scp = arg;
if (blink_in_progress > 1) {
if (blink_in_progress & 1)
fillw(kernel_default.std_color | scr_map[0x20],
Crtat, scp->xsize * scp->ysize);
else
fillw(kernel_default.rev_color | scr_map[0x20],
Crtat, scp->xsize * scp->ysize);
blink_in_progress--;
timeout(blink_screen, scp, hz / 10);
}
else {
blink_in_progress = FALSE;
mark_all(scp);
if (delayed_next_scr)
switch_scr(scp, delayed_next_scr - 1);
}
}
#ifdef SC_SPLASH_SCREEN
static void
toggle_splash_screen(scr_stat *scp)
{
static int toggle = 0;
static u_char save_mode;
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
int s;
if (video_mode_ptr == NULL)
return;
Addresses the following two problems. 1) i586_bcopy() problem There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled. The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between non-video memory regions. PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134 2) video mode parameter table problem The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen corruption. The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression). The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen. This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with the problem. PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354 Reviewed by: sos Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
1997-04-27 09:03:10 +00:00
s = splhigh();
if (toggle) {
scp->mode = save_mode;
scp->status &= ~UNKNOWN_MODE;
set_mode(scp);
load_palette(palette);
toggle = 0;
}
else {
save_mode = scp->mode;
scp->mode = M_VGA_CG320;
scp->status |= UNKNOWN_MODE;
set_mode(scp);
/* load image */
toggle = 1;
}
splx(s);
}
#endif
#endif /* NSC */