capabilities are: AF, AB, cm, ho, me, cd. The code is hidden behind
-DTERM_EMU - should it cause any problems, you can remove this define
to get back the old behaviour.
You'll find some examples how to use it in src/share/examples/bootforth.
Reviewed by: jkh
and will bypass transfers for more than 8k. Blocks are invalidated after
2 seconds, so removable media should not confuse the cache.
The 8k threshold is a compromise; all UFS transfers performed by
libstand are 8k or less, so large file reads thrash the cache.
However many filesystem metadata operations are also performed using
8k blocks, so using a lower threshold gives poor performance.
Those of you with an eye for cache algorithms are welcome to tell me
how badly this one sucks; you can start with the 'bcachestats' command
which will print the contents of the cache and access statistics.
filesystems.
- New 'help' command and data in the help.* files (not yet installed),
provides topic and subtopic help, indexes, etc.
- Don't crash if the user tries to set an invalid console. Be helpful
instead.
- Expand tabs (badly) on the i386 video console.
- Some minor cosmetic changes.
Cosmetic change to the init-time character eater (like, make it increment
the index counter - if there's a problem, it would sit there in an infinite
loop instead of only running 10 times).
Also, make sure we set %dx each time around otherwise the commands
suddenly start trying to work on things like com92 instead of com1.
Make sure comc_init() is only run once.
Cosmetic change to init-time character eater.
should be MD code since one day we'll have to recover pages from deleted
preload data. MI code can't be expected to know how to deal with pmap
internals, assuming it gets done via pmap that is. :-)
Do a much better job of DWIM with partial device specifications.
Fix the module metadata build process, which was completely broken.
Use a larger read buffer when copying large objects in; this
improves performance marginally and will avoid flushning any small caches
we might choose to implement.
Strip any device name information from the kernel name
before passing it in.
biosdisk.c
Be more strict about matching device names to slice entries.
Only allow unsliced syntax on unsliced disks.
Allocate space for, and copy, NDOSPART slice entries from the
MBR, not just one. Add some extra debugging while we're at it.
elf_freebsd.c
Initialise the symbol table start/end pointers in case we don't
have them.
Use bd_getdev() to work out a dev_t for the root device.
Allow $rootdev to override $currdev as the root device.
biosdisk.c
Save the slice table and disklabel when opening a disk.
Add bd_getdev(), which attempts to return a dev_t corresponding
to a given device. Cases which it still doesn't get right:
- The inevitable da-when-wd-also-exists
- Disks with no slice table (the slice number is not set correctly)
The first is difficult to get right, the second will be
fixed in an upcoming commit.
comconsole.c
vidconsole.c
getchar() should return an 8-bit value; some BIOSsen pack extra
information in %eax.
libi386.h
Remove some stale prototypes, add new ones.
of the ..umm.. "wierd" way binutils lays out the file. The section
headers are nearly at the end of the file and this is a problem when
loading from a .gz file which can't seek backwards (or has a limited
reverse seek, ~2K from memory).
This is intended to be compatable with the ddb/db_elf.c code and the
alpha/libalpha/elf_freebsd.c layout. I've studied these (which are NetBSD
derived) but did it a bit differently. Naturally the process is similar
since it's supposed to end up with the same result.
bootblocks, the kernel shows up as the primary module:
[3:24am]~-100# kldstat
Id Refs Address Size Name
1 1 0xf0100000 ff00000 /kernel
^^^^ oops.. :-)
Based heavily on aout_freebsd.c. Hmm.. There's so much in common that
these could probably be combined and just check the metadata to see which
format it is.
Presumably VTOP doesn't work for static objects.
The easiest way to get it working was to reserve some space after the
environment strings and copy the bootinfo struct there.
Also, set RB_BOOTINFO, it's needed.
I got the code to load and run an unmolested kernel OK for the first time
with this system a few minutes ago - at last!. I did have to stop it
looking at the floppy though as BTX was trapping a mode 14 fault when
it look for /boot/boot.conf when no disk was in the drive. (I'm booting
from a scsi disk (bios disk 0x80)).
Now to teach it about ELF and modules :-)
* Fix a raft of warnings, printf and otherwise.
* Allocate the correct amount in mod_searchmodule to prevent an overflow.
* Fix the makefiles so they work outside my home directory (oops).
- Make the "what do we do with a drunken disklabel" if-then-else-regardless
tangle easier to read.
- Don't count on the v86 structure being preserved between loop iterations,
as it may be trampled eg. by the DEBUG call.