on locale.
o Allow use of "G" in label editor to stand for gigabytes. This
is actually an unrelated patch which I meant to commit separately
but what the heck, it's late.
Partially submitted by: phk
straight into debug mode if you boot -v. Also conditionalize some
annoying debugging output now that we have this ability.
Partially submitted by: msmith
Approved by: jkh [to make certain wise-acres happy ;)]
a distribution, recognize it and treat as fatal media error. This
happens in the case of a timeout on FTP installations where the
user chooses not to select another FTP site, and resulted in
segmentation fault.
Approved by: jkh
structure.
These changes have been discussed with Greg Lehey and posted on
freebsd-small (most things in the PicoBSD tree were already broken
so things can only improve!)
Approved-By: jordan
Applied modified patch, since ATA/ATAPI is the keyword nowadays.
PR: 16507
Submitted by: Dan Papasian <bugg@bugg.strangled.net>
No need for an OK since we can exercise our divine rights as docpersons
according to: jkh
Oh why did I select a first project that needed to touch release/Makefile..
The fact that my release-building Alpha panics on me does not help either :(
in [i386,alpha]HARDWARE.TXT. This particular file is destined to be
the generic HARDWARE.TXT. In [i386,alpha]HARWDARE.TXT the machdep
information will live from now on. This should fix the make release
failures people were experiencing.
Reviewed by: Peter Wemm
and concat these to the corresponding generic *.TXT living in ./texts
This is currently aimed at HARDWARE.TXT but works for things like RELNOTES.TXT
too.
Reviewed by: jkh
NICs. (Finally!) The PCMCIA, ISA and PCI varieties are all supported,
though only the ISA and PCI ones will work on the alpha for now.
PCCARD, ISA and PCI attachments are all provided. Also provided an
ancontrol(8) utility for configuring the NIC, man pages, and updated
pccard.conf.sample. ISA cards are supported in both ISA PnP and hard-wired
mode, although you must configure the kernel explicitly to support the
hardwired mode since you have to know the I/O address and port ahead
of time.
Special thanks to Doug Ambrisko for doing the initial newbus hackery
and getting it to work in infrastructure mode.
USB-EL1202A chipset. Between this and the other two drivers, we should
have support for pretty much every USB ethernet adapter on the market.
The only other USB chip that I know of is the SMC USB97C196, and right
now I don't know of any adapters that use it (including the ones made
by SMC :/ ).
Note that the CATC chip supports a nifty feature: read and write combining.
This allows multiple ethernet packets to be transfered in a single USB
bulk in/out transaction. However I'm again having trouble with large
bulk in transfers like I did with the ADMtek chip, which leads me to
believe that our USB stack needs some work before we can really make
use of this feature. When/if things improve, I intend to revisit the
aue and cue drivers. For now, I've lost enough sanity points.
with kld etc just fine, but tracebacks would have less information and
nm /kernel wouldn't be so good).
- Just strip the kernel on the boot disk. This does not affect kld or
module loading, there are two symbol tables in a kernel. There is the
dynamic linking one (.dynsym+.strtab) with just global symbols and a user
symbol table (.symtab+.strtab) with all symbols. BTW; objdump lies and
hides the second one. There's a good half a meg or so that can be saved
from an average kernel by stripping it.
ethernet adapters that are supported by the aue and kue drivers.
There are actually a couple more out there from Accton, Asante and
EXP Computer, however I was not able to find any Windows device
drivers for these on their servers, and hence could not harvest
their vendor/device ID info. If somebody has one of these things
and can look in the .inf file that comes with the Windows driver,
I'd appreciate knowing what it says for 'VID' and 'PID.'
Additional adapters include: the D-Link DSB-650 and DSB-650TX, the
SMC 2102USB, 2104USB and 2202USB, the ATen UC10T, and the Netgear EA101.
These are all mentioned in the man pages, relnotes and LINT.
Also correct the date in the kue(4) man page. I wrote this thing
on Jan, 4 2000, not 1999.
Kawasaki LSI KL5KUSB101B chip, including the LinkSys USB10T, the
Entrega NET-USB-E45, the Peracom USB Ethernet Adapter, the 3Com
3c19250 and the ADS Technologies USB-10BT. This device is 10mbs
half-duplex only, so there's miibus or ifmedia support. This device
also requires firmware to be loaded into it, however KLSI allows
redistribution of the firmware images (I specifically asked about
this; they said it was ok).
Special thanks to Annelise Anderson for getting me in touch with
KLSI (eventually) and thanks to KLSI for providing the necessary
programming info.
Highlights:
- Add driver files to /sys/dev/usb
- update usbdevs and regenerate attendate files
- update usb_quirks.c
- Update HARDWARE.TXT and RELNOTES.TXT for i386 and alpha
- Update LINT, GENERIC and others for i386, alpha and pc98
- Add man page
- Add module
- Update sysinstall and userconfig.c
USB ethernet chip. Adapters that use this chip include the LinkSys
USB100TX. There are a few others, but I'm not certain of their
availability in the U.S. I used an ADMtek eval board for development.
Note that while the ADMtek chip is a 100Mbps device, you can't really
get 100Mbps speeds over USB. Regardless, this driver uses miibus to
allow speed and duplex mode selection as well as autonegotiation.
Building and kldloading the driver as a module is also supported.
Note that in order to make this driver work, I had to make what some
may consider an ugly hack to sys/dev/usb/usbdi.c. The usbd_transfer()
function will use tsleep() for synchronous transfers that don't complete
right away. This is a problem since there are times when we need to
do sync transfers from an interrupt context (i.e. when reading registers
from the MAC via the control endpoint), where tsleep() us a no-no.
My hack allows the driver to have the code poll for transfer completion
subject to the xfer->timeout timeout rather that calling tsleep().
This hack is controlled by a quirk entry and is only enabled for the
ADMtek device.
Now, I'm sure there are a few of you out there ready to jump on me
and suggest some other approach that doesn't involve a busy wait. The
only solution that might work is to handle the interrupts in a kernel
thread, where you may have something resembling a process context that
makes it okay to tsleep(). This is lovely, except we don't have any
mechanism like that now, and I'm not about to implement such a thing
myself since it's beyond the scope of driver development. (Translation:
I'll be damned if I know how to do it.) If FreeBSD ever aquires such
a mechanism, I'll be glad to revisit the driver to take advantage of
it. In the meantime, I settled for what I perceived to be the solution
that involved the least amount of code changes. In general, the hit
is pretty light.
Also note that my only USB test box has a UHCI controller: I haven't
I don't have a machine with an OHCI controller available.
Highlights:
- Updated usb_quirks.* to add UQ_NO_TSLEEP quirk for ADMtek part.
- Updated usbdevs and regenerated generated files
- Updated HARDWARE.TXT and RELNOTES.TXT files
- Updated sysinstall/device.c and userconfig.c
- Updated kernel configs -- device aue0 is commented out by default
- Updated /sys/conf/files
- Added new kld module directory
working. It was, as I predicted, a stupid bug and thanks to the
submitter for spotting it. I'll also re-roll some 3.4-RELEASE install
floppies for this.
originally done to track down yet another case of lost init, and is
not strictly necessary, but it seems more logical to have binaries in
/sbin than in /stand. Previously /sbin and /bin were symlinks to
/stand. Now /bin and /stand are symlinks to /sbin.
as a preprocessor variable only. This broke the build of ppp. This
problem still exists in the old-style directories.
Debugging-help-supplied-by: brian
originally done to track down yet another case of lost init, and is
not strictly necessary, but it seems more logical to have binaries in
/sbin than in /stand. Previously /sbin and /bin were symlinks to
/stand. Now /bin and /stand are symlinks to /sbin.
only way to be sure the build works correctly is to do a 'make all'.
But with these changes, it's easier to test individual targets. In
particular, ensure that the vnode file systems are mounted before
writing to them.
Ensure that we don't get CVS directories on our floppies.
Use kgzip instead of kzip to compress the loader. This saves a few
kB.
Remove some test cruft.
Kill duplicates for programs that have been in the boot crunched image
as well as on the fixit floppy (pwd, newfs, hostname, test). Our
space is really too valuable to have them around there twice. I doubt
pwd needs to be there at all since it's a builtin into sh(1) anyway
(oh, and the same applies to test(1) IIRC), but heck, leave them by
now.
Use the new `fixit' target in MAKEDEV to create the /dev nodes on
the floppy, instead of including the kitchensink...
Finally, tune the values used for creating the floppy. I currently
end up with
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Avail Capacity iused ifree %iused
/dev/vnn0c 1363 1301 -47 104% 368 14 96%
...which is not quite ideal yet, but at least a working configuration
again.
as redoing all the menus to have proper, or at least non-hallucinogenic,
keyboard accelerators.
This requires my recent update to libdialog to work properly and will
probably also exhibit some other "interesting" behavior while the last
few missing screen clears are found (which is why I'm not going to MFC
immediately). At least now, however, sysinstall does not gratuitously
redraw random screens at the drop of a hat and drive serial console
installers out of their minds.
using make instead of custom scripts) and two floppies instead of
one. The resultant floppy can do everything that the individual
floppies (dial, net, install, isp, router) could do, modulo some bit
rot that has occurred since PicoBSD last compiled. It also includes
all the programs on the fixit floppy, which could thus also die.
/bin currently contains the following files:
-sh dump ln ns sps
[ ed login ping stty
badsect ex ls ps swapon
cat expr mkdir pwd sync
chgrp fdisk mknod pwd_mkdb sysctl
chmod find more rdump syslogd
chown fsck mount reboot tar
chroot ftp mount_cd9660 restore telnet
clri getty mount_msdos rlogin telnetd
cp grep mount_nfs rm test
date gunzip mount_std rmdir traceroute
dd gzip msg route umount
dev_mkdb hostname mt routed vi
df ifconfig mv rrestore view
dhclient inetd natd rsh vm
dhclient-script init netstat sed w
disklabel kget newfs sh zcat
dmesg kill nfs sleep
Structure is in place for using the same build for the other
directories, but I'm no longer sure we need this. The current first
floppy will run fine by itself, but the size of a compressed kernel
has increased by nearly 50% since 3.2, and there's not much space for
anything useful on the remainder of the floppy. The current method
creates a larger mfs and can read as many floppies as the user can
stand. The footprint appears to be round 14 MB.
using make instead of custom scripts) and two floppies instead of
one. The resultant floppy can do everything that the individual
floppies (dial, net, install, isp, router) could do, modulo some bit
rot that has occurred since PicoBSD last compiled. It also includes
all the programs on the fixit floppy, which could thus also die.
/bin currently contains the following files:
-sh dump ln ns sps
[ ed login ping stty
badsect ex ls ps swapon
cat expr mkdir pwd sync
chgrp fdisk mknod pwd_mkdb sysctl
chmod find more rdump syslogd
chown fsck mount reboot tar
chroot ftp mount_cd9660 restore telnet
clri getty mount_msdos rlogin telnetd
cp grep mount_nfs rm test
date gunzip mount_std rmdir traceroute
dd gzip msg route umount
dev_mkdb hostname mt routed vi
df ifconfig mv rrestore view
dhclient inetd natd rsh vm
dhclient-script init netstat sed w
disklabel kget newfs sh zcat
dmesg kill nfs sleep
Structure is in place for using the same build for the other
directories, but I'm no longer sure we need this. The current first
floppy will run fine by itself, but the size of a compressed kernel
has increased by nearly 50% since 3.2, and there's not much space for
anything useful on the remainder of the floppy. The current method
creates a larger mfs and can read as many floppies as the user can
stand. The footprint appears to be round 14 MB.
Work-sponsored-by: Sitara Networks Inc.
which it replaces. The new driver supports all of the chips supported
by the ones it replaces, as well as many DEC/Intel 21143 10/100 cards.
This also completes my quest to convert things to miibus and add
Alpha support.
mention of the various devices that are supported.
Add some text and entry to LINT for 'controller mca0'.
I'd like to turn this option on in GENERIC as well as it
isn't impacting and has a small footprint.
- Add AMI and Mylex RAID controllers
- Reflect the demise of the 'eg' and 'ft' drivers
- Various minor cleanups
- Add some initial Microchannel information (this could do with some
fleshing out)