macros) to the signal handler, for old-style BSD signal handlers as
the second (int) argument, for SA_SIGINFO signal handlers as
siginfo_t->si_code. This is source-compatible with Solaris, except
that we have no <siginfo.h> (which isn't even mentioned in POSIX
1003.1b).
An rather complete example program is at
http://www3.cons.org/cracauer/freebsd-signal.c
This will be added to the regression tests in src/.
This commit also adds code to disable the (hardware) FPU from
userconfig, so that you can use a software FP emulator on a machine
that has hardware floating point. See LINT.
ethernet controllers based on the AIC-6915 "Starfire" controller chip.
There are single port, dual port and quad port cards, plus one 100baseFX
card. All are 64-bit PCI devices, except one single port model.
The Starfire would be a very nice chip were it not for the fact that
receive buffers have to be longword aligned. This requires buffer
copying in order to achieve proper payload alignment on the alpha.
Payload alignment is enforced on both the alpha and x86 platforms.
The Starfire has several different DMA descriptor formats and transfer
mechanisms. This driver uses frame descriptors for transmission which
can address up to 14 packet fragments, and a single fragment descriptor
for receive. It also uses the producer/consumer model and completion
queues for both transmit and receive. The transmit ring has 128
descriptors and the receive ring has 256.
This driver supports both FreeBSD/i386 and FreeBSD/alpha, and uses newbus
so that it can be compiled as a loadable kernel module. Support for BPF
and hardware multicast filtering is included.
Translated from: a similar fix in ufs_readwrite.c rev.1.61.
Don't forget to set DE_ACCESS for short reads.
Check for invalid (negative) offsets before checking for reads of
0 bytes, as in ufs, although checking for invalid offsets at all
is probably a bug.
Set IN_ACCESS for successful reads of 0 bytes (except for requests to
read 0 bytes). This was broken in rev.1.42.
PR: misc/10148
Don't set IN_ACCESS for requests to read 0 bytes.
Don't set IN_ACCESS for unsuccessful reads.
Change "void *" to "volatile TYPE *", improving type safety
and eliminating some warnings (e.g., mp_machdep.c rev 1.106).
cpufunc.h:
Eliminate setbits. As defined, it's not precisely correct;
and it's redundant. (Use atomic_set_int instead.)
ipl_funcs.c:
Use atomic_set_int instead of setbits.
systm.h:
Include atomic.h.
Reviewed by: bde
the loop and not set an error, so we would then try to access an invalid
mbuf...
PR: 12780
Submitted by: bright@rush.net aka zb^3
a new record in length a pr was open... only about a half hour...
critical mbuf fields to sane values. Simplify the use of ETHER_ALIGN to
enforce payload alignment, and turn it on on the x86 as well as alpha
since it helps with NFS which wants the payload to be longword aligned
even though the hardware doesn't require it.
This fixes a problem with the ti driver causing an unaligned access trap
on the Alpha due to m_adj() sometimes not setting the alignment correctly
because of incomplete mbuf initialization.
the driver_t declaration should be "skc" not "sk". Technically, "skc"
is the parent PCI device (the SysKonnect GEnesis controller) and "sk0"
and "sk1" are the network interfaces that get attached to it.
been booted works too -- very neat. However I don't want the system to
stop for 5 seconds when the MII autoprobe is triggered in the xl and
tl drivers since that's lame. Instead, only use the hard delay when
we've been cold booted. If not, use the timeout mechanism instead.
(The SysKonnect driver doesn't use the same autonegotiation scheme, so
no change is required there.)
the device numbers are now minor number only, so that we can still
compare them after dev_t has turned into a blob.
Broken-by: dev_t changes
Reported-by: Vallo Kallaste <vallo@matti.ee>
"Niels Chr. Bank-Pedersen" <ncbp@bank-pedersen.dk>
When creating new processes (or performing exec), the new page
directory is initialized too early. The kernel might grow before
p_vmspace is initialized for the new process. Since pmap_growkernel
doesn't yet know about the new page directory, it isn't updated, and
subsequent use causes a failure.
The fix is (1) to clear p_vmspace early, to stop pmap_growkernel
from stomping on memory, and (2) to defer part of the initialization
of new page directories until p_vmspace is initialized.
PR: kern/12378
Submitted by: tegge
Reviewed by: dfr
- In isa_dmastart() and isa_dmadone(), cache flush.
- Correct current word register address.
Submitted by (partial): Toshikazu Kaho <kaho@elam.kais.kyoto-u.ac.jp>
by removing a floppy that as being operated on.
The spagghetti is hardly understandable at all anymore, so i can't
100 % ascertain this is really the Right Thing to do, maybe our new
floppy driver maintainer, Jesus Monroy Jr can do this. :-))
numbers that we have been doing in the past, and read /etc/fstab off the
proposed root filesystem to determine the actual device name and vfs
type for the root filesystem. These are then exported to the kernel
via the environment variable vfs.root.mountfrom.
Also includes a workaround fro an apparent chip bug
where UDMA mode 2 can overpower the UDMA engine enough that it will
hog the PCI bus to the exclusion of the processor.
into a loadable module, and all of the platform dependencies are gone
(except for the alpha_XXX_dmamap() thing, which is another issue -- I
still don't know how to use the busdma stuff with a network driver).
Also increase the delay in xl_reset(); testing on a 486/66 with a 3c905C
shows that reading the EEPROM fails immediately after a reset. Waiting
a little longer after the reset completes seems to fix it.
also gets the device by st_rdev, which is alright except for the fact that
the sysctl kern.dumpdev passed out a char device. This is a workaround.
Sorry for not committing the fix earlier, before people started having
problems.
The structure is the right length, but some of the members (notably
wi_q_info) were off a bit. This causes the received signal strength
values to appear bogus.
vnodes referencing this device.
Details:
cdevsw->d_parms has been removed, the specinfo is available
now (== dev_t) and the driver should modify it directly
when applicable, and the only driver doing so, does so:
vn.c. I am not sure the logic in checking for "<" was right
before, and it looks even less so now.
An intial pool of 50 struct specinfo are depleted during
early boot, after that malloc had better work. It is
likely that fewer than 50 would do.
Hashing is done from udev_t to dev_t with a prime number
remainder hash, experiments show no better hash available
for decent cost (MD5 is only marginally better) The prime
number used should not be close to a power of two, we use
83 for now.
Add new checkalias2() to get around the loss of info from
dev2udev() in bdevvp();
The aliased vnodes are hung on a list straight of the dev_t,
and speclisth[SPECSZ] is unused. The sharing of struct
specinfo means that the v_specnext moves into the vnode
which grows by 4 bytes.
Don't use a VBLK dev_t which doesn't make sense in MFS, now
we hang a dummy cdevsw on B/Cmaj 253 so that things look sane.
Storage overhead from all of this is O(50k).
Bump __FreeBSD_version to 400009
The next step will add the stuff needed so device-drivers can start to
hang things from struct specinfo
- Support for setting memory range attributes on SMP systems using the
new SMP rendezvous function
- Don't print the confusing default memory type message.
- Allow legal overlapping range types.
- Turn interrupts back on after setting MTRRs in UP mode (whoops)
- Don't waste time calling invltlb() after wbinvd(); it's not
SMP-compatible (interrupts are off) and unncessary because
wbinvd already flushes the TLB.
This code is now essentially feature-complete.
the caller to specify a function to be guarded between an entry and exit
barrier, as well as pre- and post-barrier functions.
The primary use for this function is synchronised update of per-cpu private
data. The implementation is almost (but not quite) MI; with a better
mechanism for masking per-CPU interrupts it could probably be hoisted.
Reviewed by: peter (partially)
Only know casualy of this is swapinfo/pstat which should be fixes
the right way: Store the actual pathname in the kernel like mount
does. [Volounteers sought for this task]
The road map from here is roughly: expand struct specinfo into struct
based dev_t. Add dev_t registration facilities for device drivers and
start to use them.
but broken, since tsc_timecounter is not initialised in that case,
and updating an uninitialised timecounter is fatal.
Fixed style bugs in the machdep.i8254_freq and machdep.tsc_freq
sysctls.
Reviewed by: phk
used for timecounting. The possible values are the names of the
physically present harware timecounters ("i8254" and "TSC" on i386's).
Fixed some nearby bitrot in comments in <sys/time.h>.
Reviewed by: phk
interrupts that were scheduled. Testing shows it didn't really do very much
and it makes the code a little more complicated (which is never a good thing).
Also fix the rambuffer offset initialization for the 512K/64K SRAM case
(512K total using 64K chips). It should be 0. The only case with a
non-standard rambuffer offset address is 1024K/64K according to the
SysKonnect manual. (My card has the 1024/64 configuration and I don't know
which card uses the 512/64 configuration, if any, so I'm not sure that
this was really a problem for anyone.)
/sys/ddb/db_input.c rev 1.19 to recognize syscons's cursor keycodes.
It is unnecessary now that scgetc() in syscons returns the escape
sequence for the cursor keys rather than their raw, internal key
codes.
been set for a mount point. Insert missing checks to ensure that all
write operations are done asynchronously when the MNT_ASYNC option
has been requested.
Submitted by: Craig A Soules <soules+@andrew.cmu.edu>
Reviewed by: Kirk McKusick <mckusick@mckusick.com>
with respect to interrupts on UP systems. (The upgrade from gcc 2.7.x
to egcs 1.1.2 produced at least one non-atomic code sequence in
swap_pager_getpages.)
In addition, the primitives are now SMP-safe, but only on SMPs. (For
portability between SMPs and UPs, modules are compiled with the SMP-safe
versions.)
Submitted by: dillon and myself
Reviewed by: bde
would make a difference. However, my previous diff _did_ change the
behavior in some way (not necessarily break it), so I'm fixing it.
Found by: bde
Submitted by: bde
Change number of VBI lines from 16 to 12 for NTSC formats.
Juha.Nurmela@quicknet.inet.fi found/fixed bug in VBI_SLEEP.
New features
MSP3430G DBX initialisation from Matt Brown <matt@dqc.org>
STB Bt878 card identification.
Hauppauge Model Number identification.
Changes to probeCard() for better eeprom identification.
Experimental TDA9850 initialisation code, from Linux bttv.
Cross Platform Changes
The driver has been reorgainsed based ideas from Brad Parker's port to Linux
to seperate OS Dependant and Independant sections.
I have backends for FreeBSD 2.2.x/3.x and 4.x newbus, BSDI, OpenBSD and NetBSD.
This commit has FreeBSD 2.2.8/2.2-stable/3.x and FreeBSD 4.x newbus backends.
Some code submitted by: Juha.Nurmela@quicknet.inet.fi
Matt Brown <matt@dqc.org>
Brad Parker <brad@parker.boston.ma.us>
Some code obtained from: Linux bttv driver
vm_map.c:
Don't set OBJ_ONEMAPPING on arbitrary vm objects. Only default
and swap type vm objects should have it set. vm_object_deallocate
already handles these cases.
vm_object.c:
If OBJ_ONEMAPPING isn't already clear in vm_object_shadow,
we are in trouble. Instead of clearing it, make it
an assertion that it is already clear.
1. Printing large quads in small bases overflowed the buffer if
sizeof(u_quad_t) > sizeof(u_long).
2. The sharpflag checks had operator precedence bugs due to excessive
parentheses in all the wrong places.
3. The explicit 0L was bogus in the quad_t comparison and useless in
the long comparision.
4. There was some more bitrot in the comment about ksprintn(). Our
ksprintn() handles bases up to 36 as well as down to 2.
Bruce has other complaints about using %q in kernel and would rather
we went towards using the C9X style %ll and/or %j. (I agree for that
matter, as long as gcc/egcs know how to deal with that.)
Submitted by: bde
not masked during handling of shared PCI interrupts. This resulted in
ASTs sometimes being discarded and softclock interrupts sometimes being
handled prematurely (sometimes = quite often on systems with shared PCI
interrupts, never on other systems).
Debugged by: gibbs and other people at plutotech.com
PR: 6944, maybe 12381
I don't know if it was intentional or not, but it would have printed out:
/compat/linux/foo/bar.so: interpreter not found
If it was, then I've broken it. De-constifying the 'interp' variable
or carrying the constness through to elf_load_file() are alternatives.
Alpha believes that %q is for long long, whereas our quad_t and int64_t
is only just a plain long. long long on the alpha is the same size (64
bit) as a long. It was requested, but I have not implemented yet, support
for C9X style %lld - it should be pretty easy though.
gigabit ethernet adapters. This includes two single port cards
(single mode and multimode fiber) and two dual port cards (also single
mode and multimode fiber). SysKonnect is currently the only
vendor with a dual port gigabit ethernet NIC.
The ports on dual port adapters are treated as separate network
interfaces. Thus, if you have an SK-9844 dual port SX card, you
should have both sk0 and sk1 interfaces attached. Dual port cards
are implemented using two XMAC II chips connected to a single
SysKonnect GEnesis controller. Hence, dual port cards are really
one PCI device, as opposed to two separate PCI devices connected
through a PCI to PCI bridge. Note that SysKonnect's drivers use
the two ports for failover purposes rather that as two separate
interfaces, plus they don't support jumbo frames. This applies to
their Linux driver too. :)
Support is provided for hardware multicast filtering, BPF and
jumbo frames. The SysKonnect cards support TCP checksum offload
however this feature is not currently enabled (hopefully it will
be once we get checksum offload support).
There are still a few things that need to be implemeted, like
the ability to communicate with the on-board LM80 voltage/temperature
monitor, but I wanted to get the driver under CVS control and into
-current so people could bang on it.
A big thanks for SysKonnect for making all their programming info
for these cards (and for their FDDI and token ring cards) available
without NDA (see www.syskonnect.com).