whether of not to automatically #define EXCLUDE_AUDIO; MSS is a real
audio device and we should not #define EXCLUDE_AUDIO if we have one.
(And I want it because it's the only mixer-capable audio driver that I
can use with my crummy Packard Bell (nee Aztech) audio board.)
This fixes the very confusing condition where having all of this:
mss0 at 0x530 irq 10 drq 1 on isa
gus0: <MS Sound System (CS4231)>
opl0 at 0x388 on isa
opl0: <Yamaha OPL-3 FM>
mpu0 at 0x300 irq 9 drq 0 on isa
mpu0: <MPU-401 MIDI Interface 0.0 >
will still give you this:
% cat /dev/sndstat
SoundCard Error: The soundcard system has not been configured
Also remove an unnecessary newline in the printf() message for the
'gus0' device shown above so that we don't wind up printing a blank
line between mss0 and gus0.
was overlapping with another file, and making some undesirable behavior a
little worse - it's triggering a bug in config that appears to have been
there for some time (before the options files, anyway.)
to enable IP forwarding, use sysctl(8). Also did the same for IPX,
which involved inventing a completely new MIB from whole cloth (which
I may not quite have correct); be aware of this if you use IPX forwarding.
(The two should never have been controlled by the same option anyway.)
Simplify the initialization of adapters by pulling all card specific
initialization to the card specific modules.
Update comments and fix formating.
Pass struct ahc_data*'s to functions instead of unit numbers.
Take advantage of the quad word alignment of SCB fields.
Adapt to new sequencer changes:
1) Waiting scb list no longer has a tail.
2) Fill the message buffer as appropriate during a parity error.
3) Count all of the SGs involved in a residual instead of just
the current one.
The reset/abort code still needs a lot of work.
Reviewed by: David Greenman <davidg@FreeBSd.org>
aic7770.c:
Simplify the initialization of adapters by pulling all card specific
initialization to the card specific modules.
eisaconf.c:
outb 0x80 instead of 0xc80. The top byte is truncated anyway, and 0x80
was what was intended.
enough nodes for the number of ports on the last module, not the number
of ports _total_ that the driver is managing...
Submitted by: Robert Sanders <rsanders@mindspring.com>
Nobody in our regular source tree, or in the non-distfile part of the
ports tree does use /dev/io anyway, so this might be replaced by
another scenario some day.
looking at a high resolution clock for each of the following events:
function call, function return, interrupt entry, interrupt exit,
and interesting branches. The differences between the times of
these events are added at appropriate places in a ordinary histogram
(as if very fast statistical profiling sampled the pc at those
places) so that ordinary gprof can be used to analyze the times.
gmon.h:
Histogram counters need to be 4 bytes for microsecond resolutions.
They will need to be larger for the 586 clock.
The comments were vax-centric and wrong even on vaxes. Does anyone
disagree?
gprof4.c:
The standard gprof should support counters of all integral sizes
and the size of the counter should be in the gmon header. This
hack will do until then. (Use gprof4 -u to examine the results
of non-statistical profiling.)
config/*:
Non-statistical profiling is configured with `config -pp'.
`config -p' still gives ordinary profiling.
kgmon/*:
Non-statistical profiling is enabled with `kgmon -B'. `kgmon -b'
still enables ordinary profiling (and distables non-statistical
profiling) if non-statistical profiling is configured.
we can see if it's a small distance beyond the end, or way out. This may
give some clues as to whether it is being caused by something coalescing
the transfers in spite of the bounce buffers, or simply because of buffer
corruption. (The BT driver seems to occasionally get hit by from this too,
except that it does not trap the transfer, and the system panics later
with vm_bounce_page_free.) This "event" usually happens to me during a
savecore (on the rare occasion that a kernel coredump is actually taken
after a crash - the lack of kernel core dumps is another problem...).
bzero.
Deprecated blkclr (removed it).
Removed some old cruft from cpufunc.h.
The optimized bzero was submitted by Torbjorn Granlund <tege@matematik.su.se>
The kernel adaption and other changes by me.
bzero.
Deprecated blkclr (removed it).
Removed some old cruft from cpufunc.h.
The optimized bzero was submitted by Torbjorn Granlund <tege@matematik.su.se>
The kernel adaption and other changes by me.
bcopy:
Be smarter about handling overlapped copies and only go backwards if it
is really necessary. Going backwards on a P6 is much slower than forwards
and it's a little slower on a P5. Also moved the count mask and 'std'
down a few lines - it's a couple percent faster this way on a P5.
libkern.a are now specified by listing their source files in
files.${MACHINE}. The list is machine-dependent to save space.
All the necessary object for each machine must be linked into the
kernel in case an lkm wants one.
feature of the ICU. auto-EOI on the slave is not safe, however, so it
remains an option. Killed religious FASTER_NOP when writing the ICU.
Reviewed by: bde
or deleted.
Motivated by: `int doclusteread = 1;' in ext2_vnops.c redefined
doclusterread if DEBUG is defined, so it could not have worked.
This was fixed by staticizing things before it caused problems.
I didn't find any more cases like this.
wasteful, but better than clobbering the variables below the stack.
About 300 bytes of variables were clobbered when I examined double
faults using ddb. Perhaps a page that is known not to be accessed by
the double fault handler could be used. Such pages are not easy to
find, since the double fault handler calls panic() which calls sync()
and possibly dumpsys().
part of the DMA channel 0 address and wasn't random in the intended
way.
Submitted by: KATO Takenori <kato@eclogite.eps.nagoya-u.ac.jp>
Disable interrupts while reading the clock. This probably isn't
important (allowing interrupts probably increased randomness in
the usual case).
Removed __i386__ ifdef. This file is in an i386 directory and has
other i386 dependencies.
unintentionally committed):
- the fifo was completely disabled for low speeds. Apart from being
unnecessarily inefficient, this invalidated com->tx_fifo_size.
- `ftl' became a bogus name.
- the 16650 probe breaks the COM_NOFIFO() case and has other bugs
(disabled, not fixed).
Fixed bogus change of the fifo settings for the non-speed of 0. This
bug made the above fifo bug occur even at non-low speeds.
Fixed the modes of the cua devices. It isn't possible to set the uid
and gid correctly since the kernel can't know who uucp.dialer is.
Register the devswitch at device attach time. SYSINIT() is not
the right way to initialize devswitches (if anything :->).
Eventually, the devswitch should be deregistered at device detach
and/or unload time and reregistered at device attach time ... Then
some com->gone tests could be removed.
Cleaned up some other recent changes.
redistribute a few last routines to beter places and shoot the file
I haven't act actually 'deleted' the file yet togive people time
to
have done a config.. I.e. they are likely to have done one in a week or so
so I'll remove it then..
it's now empty.
makes the question of a USL copyright rather moot.
about decoding trap/syscall/interrupt frames and generally works better
than the previous stuff.
Removed some special (incorrect) frobbing of the frame pointer that
was messing some things up with the new traceback code.
overflows.
It sure would be nice if there was an unmapped page between the PCB and
the stack (and that the size of the stack was configurable!). With the
way things are now, the PCB will get clobbered before the double fault
handler gets control, making somewhat of a mess of things. Despite this,
it is still fairly easy to poke around in the overflowed stack to figure
out the cause.
Unstaticize a function in scsi/scsi_base that was used, with an undocumented
option.
My last count on the LINT kernel shows:
Total symbols: 3647
unref symbols: 463
undef symbols: 4
1 ref symbols: 1751
2 ref symbols: 485
Approaching the pain threshold now.
prototypes don't go missing again. Also added -Winline so that some
doubtful (non-)inlines get fixed.
bsd.kmod.mk:
Also added `-Wreturn-type -Wimplicit -Wnested-externs' to catch up
with the kernel.
#includes to get prototypes.
pci now uses a different interrupt handler type for interrupts that it
dispatches and the isa interrupt handler type for the interrupts that
it handles.
successfully run linux netscape 2.0b3 with a QMAGIC ld.so and libc/libm
that I found on some linux machine that I _think_ is running slackware 3.0.
There are still problems.. ld.so claims the libraries are the wrong
format, but it still runs anyway.. :-/ The QMAGIC ld.so also screams
about needing ld.so.cache, and running a linux ldconfig is quite
educational. You soon learn to run "chroot /compat/linux /bin/ldconfig"
where ldconfig is living in /compat/linux/bin. :-]
(Lets just say that it puts loads of symlinks in /usr/lib otherwise :-)
getmajorbyname() which were a better (sigh) temporary interface to
the going-away devswitches.
Note that SYSINIT()s to initialize the devswitches would be fatal
in syscons.c and pcvt_drv.c (and are bogus elsewhere) because they
get called independently of whether the device is attached; thus
devices that share a major clobber each other's devswitch entries
until the last one wins.
conf.c:
Removed stale #includes and comments.
LINT: add a couple of new/missing/undocumented options
files.i386: add linux code so that you can compile a kernel with static
linux emulation ("options LINUX")
i386/*: use #if defined(COMPAT_LINUX) || defined(LINUX) to enable static
support of linux emulation (just like "IBCS2" makes ibcs2 static)
The main thing this is going to make obvious, is that the LINUX code
(when compiled from LINT) has a lot of warnings, some of which dont look
too pleasant..
all the other bt_XXX() functions in i386/scsi/bt*.
This the important effect of forcing a link error if the user is
still using the old "vector btintr" which is dangerously wrong
after Justin's updates to the driver.
The correct isa vector line for the bt driver is "vector bt_isa_intr".
Justin mentioned this in the commit message and updated LINT and
GENERIC. This change is to enforce that.. :-)
seems to work hre just fine though I can't check every file
that changed due to limmited h/w, however I've checked enught to be petty
happy withe hte code..
WARNING... struct lkm[mumble] has changed
so it might be an idea to recompile any lkm related programs
all buses.
Known problems:
-The PCI probe code has not been tested. Someone with a PCI Bt card will
have to validate it, but even if it is broken all cards the earlier version
of this driver found in ISA compatibility mode should still be found.
-Still missing the BT956 PCI ID, so it will be found as an ISA card until
someone suplies it.
-PCI interrupts go through an interrupt stub that returns an int until
we remove the edge-triggered PCI compatibiliity cruft.
-ISA interrupts go through an interrupt stub until they pass in (void *).
-The driver could support more mboxes and concurrent commands by allocating
structures separately and hanging them off the bt_data struct to get around
the 4K page limit. Someone with documentation should do this and also
enable tagged queuing.
can be found in ISA compatibility mode by the ISA driver, but since the
EISA and PCI probes are non-invasive, we prefer them to find the card first.
Since both EISA and PCI probes can rely on interrupts, enable them before
probing of any type is performed. All ISA probes are still "protected" by
splhigh().
allow one EISA/ISA/PCI/VL Buslogic controller to be probed. The driver
is almost fully dynamic. It just needs some kdc work and for the SCSI code
to stop passing unit numbers up in the scsi_xfer struct.
device must be configured. It's hard to tell whether a reset function
should be noreset or nullreset since reset functions are never called.
Most drivers use nullreset but noreset has the advantage of complaining
if somehow gets called).
Removed old aliases d_rdwr_t and d_ttycv_t for d_read_t/d_write_t and
d_devtotty_t.
Sorted declarations of switch functions into switch order.
Removed duplicated comments and declarations of nonexistent switch
functions.
most devsw referenced functions are now static, as they are
in the same file as their devsw structure. I've also added DEVFS
support for nearly every device in the system, however
many of the devices have 'incorrect' names under DEVFS
because I couldn't quickly work out the correct naming conventions.
(but devfs won't be coming on line for a month or so anyhow so that doesn't
matter)
If you "OWN" a device which would normally have an entry in /dev
then search for the devfs_add_devsw() entries and munge to make them right..
check out similar devices to see what I might have done in them in you
can't see what's going on..
for a laugh compare conf.c conf.h defore and after... :)
I have not doen DEVFS entries for any DISKSLICE devices yet as that will be
a much more complicated job.. (pass 5 :)
pass 4 will be to make the devsw tables of type (cdevsw * )
rather than (cdevsw)
seems to work here..
complaints to the usual places.. :)
for the particular card in use. At the moment, I've set it to any of
the bt445S VLB cards (not the bt445C which apparently work) and the
bt5xx series (isa cards). The 742 and PCI cards should not need it. :-)
It may be useful to have something like this:
#ifndef BOUNCE_BUFFERS
if (bounce_buffers_required && more_than_16MB_ram)
panic("this card requires bounce buffers for more than 16MB ram!")
#endif
to get the definitions of TRUE and FALSE which happen to be defined in
a deeply nested include.
Added nearby #includes of <sys/conf.h> where appropriate.
is not real helpful since swapgeneric.c doesn't seem to be used, except
perhaps on a GENERIC kernel. (Sorry Paul.. :-)
I've moved it from swapgeneric.c to autoconf.c, since autoconf.c also deals
with dumpdev things. There may be a better place.....
but probably harmless. It's hard to tell because apparently no one runs
ity.
Fixed ity's d_reset entry. `nx' entries should never be used for existing
devices.
conf.c:
Moved a prototype to a better place.
Removed a stale #define.
sscselect(). Use the standard dummies nostrategy(), noread(),
nowrite() and noselect() instead.
sscread() and sscwrite() returned bogus errnos. It isn't possible
to return an error from a select routine so noselect() is just as
bogus as sscselect() (it's equivalent to nullselect()).
Fixed two cases of "=" that should have been "==" in card type comparison.
Simplified expression that checks for interface up/down.
Moved ed_ring_copy to before its first use so that it's inlined as intended.
Change mbuf allocation policy so that a received packet is stored in just
an mbuf header (no cluster) if it will fit in one.
Removed ifnet.if_init and ifnet.if_reset as they are generally unused.
Change the parameter passed to if_watchdog to be a ifnet * rather than
a unit number. All of this is an attempt to move toward not needing an
array of softc pointers (which is usually static in size) to point to
the driver softc.
if_ed.c:
Changed some of the argument passing to some functions to make a little
more sense.
if_ep.c, if_vx.c:
Killed completely bogus use of if_timer. It was being set in such a way
that the interface was being reset once per second (blech!).
Move a lot of variables home to their own code (In good time before xmas :-)
Introduce the string descrition of format.
Add a couple more functions to poke into these marvels, while I try to
decide what the correct interface should look like.
Next is adding vars on the fly, and sysctl looking at them too.
Removed a tine bit of defunct and #ifdefed notused code in swapgeneric.
Protected them with `#ifdef KERNEL' so that <sys/queue.h> is valid C++.
Added the necessary #includes of <sys/queue.h>.
These functions are bogus and should be replaced by the queue macros.
but also IT ACTUALLY WORKS!
FreeBSD with options JREMOD now runs with no entries in the devsw tables
prior to the devices puting their own entries there..
Thanks to bde and terry for thoughts and comments.
next stop 'Real' devfs support in devices.
- Don't print out meaningless iCOMP numbers, those are for droids.
- Use a shorter wait to determine clock rate to avoid deficiencies
in DELAY().
- Use a fixed-point representation with 8 bits of fraction to store
the rate and rationalize the variable name. It would be
possible to use even more fraction if it turns out to be
worthwhile (I rather doubt it).
The question of source code arrangement remains unaddressed.
conflicted with S3 graphics cards. Now users should put sio[2-3]
in the config file if the hardware exisst, even if the probe is
certain to fail due to an interrupt conflict. Otherwise, ports
sharing the interrupt may fail the probe if the system is warm
booted while sio[2-3] are active (perhaps under another OS). The
same problem for nonstandard ports is now handled better than
before.
add a few safety checks in specfs because
now it's possible to get entries in [cd]devsw[] which are ALL NULL
so it's better to discover this BEFORE jumping into the d_open() entry..
more check to come later.. this getsthe code to the stage where I
can start testing it, even if I haven't caught every little error case...
I guess I'll find them quick enough..
That's EVERY SINGLE driver that has an entry in conf.c..
my next trick will be to define cdevsw[] and bdevsw[]
as empty arrays and remove all those DAMNED defines as well..
Each of these drivers has a SYSINIT linker set entry
that comes in very early.. and asks teh driver to add it's own
entry to the two devsw[] tables.
some slight reworking of the commits from yesterday (added the SYSINIT
stuff and some usually wrong but token DEVFS entries to all these
devices.
BTW does anyone know where the 'ata' entries in conf.c actually reside?
seems we don't actually have a 'ataopen() etc...
If you want to add a new device in conf.c
please make sure I know
so I can keep it up to date too..
as before, this is all dependent on #if defined(JREMOD)
(and #ifdef DEVFS in parts)
o Add signed/unsigned functionality to the matrox meteor device driver.
o Apply a few fixes to the sound driver.
o Add a ``SPIGOT_UNSECURE'' compile time definition so, if one defines
SPIGOT_UNSECURE in their conf file, then they can use the spigot w/o
root. There is a warning that this allows users access to the IO
page which is probably not secure.
Submitted by: james
totally dynamic. (the first was about 7 weeeks ago)
this is only the devices in i386/isa
I'll do more tomorrow.
they're completely masked by #ifdef JREMOD at this stage...
the eventual aim is that every driver will do a SYSINIT
at startup BEFORE the probes, which will effectively
link it into the devsw tables etc.
If I'd thought about it more I'd have put that in in this set (damn)
The ioconf lines generated by config will also end up in the
device's own scope as well, so ioconf.c will eventually be gutted
the SYSINIT call to the driver will include a phase where the
driver links it's ioconf line into a chain of such. when this phase is done
then the user can modify them with the boot: -c
config menu if he wants, just like now..
config will put the config lines out in the .h file
(e.g. in aha.h will be the addresses for the aha driver to look.)
as I said this is a very small first step..
the aim of THIS set of edits is to not have to edit conf.c at all when
adding a new device.. the tabe will be a simple skeleton..
when this is done, it will allow other changes to be made,
all teh time still having a fully working kernel tree,
but the logical outcome is the complete REMOVAL of the devsw tables.
By the end of this, linked in drivers will be exactly the same as
run-time loaded drivers, except they JUST HAPPEN to already be linked
and present at startup..
the SYSINIT calls will be the equivalent of the "init" call
made to a newly loaded driver in every respect.
For this edit,
each of the files has the following code inserted into it:
obviously, tailored to suit..
----------------------somewhere at the top:
#ifdef JREMOD
#include <sys/conf.h>
#define CDEV_MAJOR 13
#define BDEV_MAJOR 4
static void sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD */
---------------------somewhere that's run during bootup: EVENTUALLY a SYSINIT
#ifdef JREMOD
sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD*/
-----------------------at the bottom:
#ifdef JREMOD
struct bdevsw sd_bdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, sdstrategy, sdioctl, /*4*/
sddump, sdsize, 0 };
struct cdevsw sd_cdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, rawread, rawwrite, /*13*/
sdioctl, nostop, nullreset, nodevtotty,/* sd */
seltrue, nommap, sdstrategy };
static sd_devsw_installed = 0;
static void sd_devsw_install()
{
dev_t descript;
if( ! sd_devsw_installed ) {
descript = makedev(CDEV_MAJOR,0);
cdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_cdevsw,NULL);
#if defined(BDEV_MAJOR)
descript = makedev(BDEV_MAJOR,0);
bdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_bdevsw,NULL);
#endif /*BDEV_MAJOR*/
sd_devsw_installed = 1;
}
}
#endif /* JREMOD */
totally dynamic.
this is only the devices in i386/isa
I'll do more tomorrow.
they're completely masked by #ifdef JREMOD at this stage...
the eventual aim is that every driver will do a SYSINIT
at startup BEFORE the probes, which will effectively
link it into the devsw tables etc.
If I'd thought about it more I'd have put that in in this set (damn)
The ioconf lines generated by config will also end up in the
device's own scope as well, so ioconf.c will eventually be gutted
the SYSINIT call to the driver will include a phase where the
driver links it's ioconf line into a chain of such. when this phase is done
then the user can modify them with the boot: -c
config menu if he wants, just like now..
config will put the config lines out in the .h file
(e.g. in aha.h will be the addresses for the aha driver to look.)
as I said this is a very small first step..
the aim of THIS set of edits is to not have to edit conf.c at all when
adding a new device.. the tabe will be a simple skeleton..
when this is done, it will allow other changes to be made,
all teh time still having a fully working kernel tree,
but the logical outcome is the complete REMOVAL of the devsw tables.
By the end of this, linked in drivers will be exactly the same as
run-time loaded drivers, except they JUST HAPPEN to already be linked
and present at startup..
the SYSINIT calls will be the equivalent of the "init" call
made to a newly loaded driver in every respect.
For this edit,
each of the files has the following code inserted into it:
obviously, tailored to suit..
----------------------somewhere at the top:
#ifdef JREMOD
#include <sys/conf.h>
#define CDEV_MAJOR 13
#define BDEV_MAJOR 4
static void sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD */
---------------------somewhere that's run during bootup: EVENTUALLY a SYSINIT
#ifdef JREMOD
sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD*/
-----------------------at the bottom:
#ifdef JREMOD
struct bdevsw sd_bdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, sdstrategy, sdioctl, /*4*/
sddump, sdsize, 0 };
struct cdevsw sd_cdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, rawread, rawwrite, /*13*/
sdioctl, nostop, nullreset, nodevtotty,/* sd */
seltrue, nommap, sdstrategy };
static sd_devsw_installed = 0;
static void sd_devsw_install()
{
dev_t descript;
if( ! sd_devsw_installed ) {
descript = makedev(CDEV_MAJOR,0);
cdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_cdevsw,NULL);
#if defined(BDEV_MAJOR)
descript = makedev(BDEV_MAJOR,0);
bdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_bdevsw,NULL);
#endif /*BDEV_MAJOR*/
sd_devsw_installed = 1;
}
}
#endif /* JREMOD */
it `const' to inhibit compiler warnings.
Added #include of <pccard/driver.h> to get prototypes. <pccard/slot.h>
is still necessary for its side effect of exporting non-slot things.
HD64570 chip. Both the 2 and 4 port cards is supported and auto detected.
Line speeds of up to 2Mbps is possible. At this speed about 85% of the
bandwidth is usable with 486DX processors.
The standard FreeBSD sppp code is used for the link level layer. The
default protocol used is PPP. The Cisco HDLC protocol can be used by
adding "link2" to the ifconfig line in /etc/sysconfig or where ever
ifconfig is run.
At the moment only the V.35 and X.21 interfaces is supported. The others
may need tweaks to the clock selection code.
Submitted by: John Hay <jhay@mikom.csir.co.za>
bit set. I broke stat_imask in Dec 1994 and update_intr_masks() has
copied the breakage to intr_mask[8] since Mar 1995. This can cause
the RTC to stop interrupting in rare cases (under loads heavy enough
for a new RTC interrupt to occur at a critical time just before Xintr8
finishes handling the previous one) and may have caused worse problems.
Convert the remaining sysctl stuff to the new way of doing things.
the devconf stuff is the reason for the large number of files.
Cleaned up some compiler warnings while I were there.
almost every time someone uses an address. This file is probably not
the right place to keep track of the unused addresses (or used
addresses :->).
Fixed comments on #endif's to match code.
Added defines for ASC and GSC sizes. This file is not the right place
to keep track of scanner addresses, but while there here and we
pretend to keep track of unused addresses, the sizes need to be here
too.
Sorted IO_*SIZE defines.
floppies must have been random in 2.x since we reintroduced sorting
on b_pblkno on 1995/03/18. Drivers still initialize b_cylin/b_resid
although this is no longer used.
Removed unused, wrong function fdsize(). (Returning 0 means that the
device exists and has size 0, not that the device doesn't exist.
swaponvp() allows for size 0 by stupidly calling the d_psize function
twice if the size isn't 0. setdumpdev() doesn't allow for it.)
Continued removing /* ARGSUSED */ from drivers.
introduced.
Fixed the device-driverness of atapi.c and spkr.c.
These changes are actually no-ops because ${DRIVER_C} is the same as
${NORMAL_C} for the i386. I could do without magic CFLAGS. Special
handling should be in the sources if possible.
boot to display "Booting the kernelel...done" instead of "Booting
the kernel".
Removed save and restore of BIOS memory. kzipped kernels haven't
ever overlaid the BIOS memory.
#include <i386/isa/isa_device.h>
#include <i386/eisa/eisaconf.h>
#include <pci/pcireg.h>
#include <pci/pcivar.h>
#include <scsi/scsi_all.h>
#include <scsi/scsiconf.h>
they are not needed, and slows down compilation.
from a string to an identifier so that it can be used to generate
declarations and strings. It's much easier to stringize an identifier
than to identifize a string. A uniform naming scheme must be used
for the automatically generated things to apply. This is a feature.
Used the module identifer to generate prototypes for the module load,
unload and stat functions. Removed the few prototypes for these that
already existed.
Used the module identifier to generate a unique struct tag in MOD_DEV().
This should probably be done for all the MOD_*() macros.
Moved the trailing semicolon from the MOD_*() macro definitions to the
macro invocations that didn't already (bogusly) have it.
Staticized the module load and unload functions.
Added function return types for the module load, unload and stat functions.
lkm/ibcs2/ibcs2.c:
Included <sys/sysproto.h> to get everything prototyped.
Cleaned up #includes.
lkm/ibcs2/ipfw.c:
Cleaned up #includes.
lkm/linux/linux.c:
The module name had to change from "linux_emulator" to "linux_mod" to
be automatically generated.
Cleaned up #includes.
lkm/syscons/*/*_saver.c:
Completed delcarations of function pointers.
sys/i386/isa/atapi.c:
The module name had to change from "atapi" to "atapi_mod" to be
automatically generated.
sys/i386/isa/wcd.c:
Used the fixed MOD_DEV(). This module has two devices and expanded the
macro in the source instead of fixing it.
The module names had to change from "wcd" and "rwcd" to "wcd_mod" and
"rwcd_mod" to be automatically generated.
sys/pccard/pcic.c:
The module name had to change from "pcic" to "pcic_mod" to be
automatically generated.
much as I'd like to, but the malloc stunt I tried for an interim for
sure does worse.
Now we can read and write from any kind of address-space, not only
user and kernel, using callbacks.
This may be over-generalization for now, but it's actually simpler.
Included <sys/sysproto.h> to get central declarations for syscall args
structs and prototypes for syscalls.
Ifdefed duplicated decentralized declarations of args structs. It's
convenient to have this visible but they are hard to maintain. Some
are already different from the central declarations. 4.4lite2 puts
them in comments in the function headers but I wanted to avoid the
large changes for that.
- collapsed #if-#elses that became null.
- removed dead comments.
Moved #defines that always have the same value to the tables.
Collapsed more #if-#elses that became null. None are left.
Removed repetitive comments.
Most of this is cleaning up, but there are some functional changes,
doc/comment improvements, error checking, gcc -Wall cleanups. Input buffer
flushing is enabled now, although I'm still not quite certain it's right.
Handle kdc registration correctly. Catch ISA devices that use eisa
registration and output probe information accordingly.
lsdev will have to be updated to handle EISA devices correctly.
aic7770.c:
Set kdc_isa0 as the parent for 284X cards since its a VL card.
Changed vnodep -> vp for consistency with the rest of the kernel, and
changed iparams -> imgp for brevity.
kern_exec.c:
Explicitly initialized some additional parts of the image_params struct
to avoid bzeroing it. Rewrote the set-id code to reduce the number of
logical tests. The rewrite exposed a mostly benign bug in the algorithm:
traced set-id images would get ktracing disabled even if the set-id didn't
happen for other reasons.
cards like the Adaptec 284x that use EISA ID registers for identification
even when in stalled in non-EISA systems.
Use one format throught the files.
-Wall fixes.
These functions went away:
enosys (hasn't been used for some time)
enxio
enodev
enoioctl (was used only once, actually for a vop)
if_tun.c:
Continued cleaning up...
conf.h:
Probably fixed the type of d_reset_t. It is hard to tell the correct
type because there are no non-dummy device reset functions.
Removed last vestige of ambiguous sleep message strings.
Start the revamp of the initialiation process. New routines include
ahc_alloc, ahc_free, and ahc_reset. These help divide the work of staring
up a board more logically between probe and attach.
ahcintr now takes a (void *) and returns int. The pci code uses it directly.
Until the PCI code for shared edged triggered interrupts is removed, the
eisa code uses a stub (ahc_eisa_intr) that throws away the int returned
by ahcintr.
Use MHz instead of MB/s for printing out sync rates.
Print out "aic7880" instead of "aic7870" for the new aic7880 chips.
in here to do some conflict detection. The new code doesn't do conflict
detection yet, but it will be implemented in another way.
aic7770.c moved to i386/eisa
be the beginning of our move to a more dynamic (configuration manager)
based setup for all drivers. Everything seems to work except for
some devconf problems. Only the aic7xxx driver will be using this
interface until it is reviewed, revised and accepted as a good configuration
interface.
Adapt aic7770.c to use new eisaconf.
eisadevs.c is replaced by a linker set.
misplaced extern declarations (mostly prototypes of interrupt handlers)
that this exposed. The prototypes should be moved back to the driver
sources when the functions are staticalized.
Added idempotency guards to <machine/conf.h>. "ioconf.h" can't be
included when building LKMs so define a wart in bsd.kmod.mk to help
guard against including it.
/dev/random is now a part of the kernel! you will need to make
the device in /dev: sh MAKEDEV random
and take a look at some test code in src/tools/test/random.
incompatible with the type of a PCI interrupt handler. A new entry
point `ahc_pci_intr()' is used for PCI. ISA and PCI interrupts are
penalized equally (:-) by calling a common handler `ahc_intr()'. This
should be reorganized. Some strings now name the wrong function...
to <machine/conf.h>. conf.h was mechanically generated by
`grep ^d_ conf.c >conf.h'. This accounts for part of its ugliness. The
prototypes should be moved back to the driver sources when the functions
are staticalized.
the kernel. ppp_tty.c goes to some lengths to minimise the inter-layer
calling (including a soft ISR). ppp_tty.c takes care of the soft masking
that was needed still.
(I've discovered that bugs in this area show up within an hour if the
masking was not correct.. :-} This combination has proven stable on
specialix serial ports, although there was some concern about the softtty
parts of sio/cy and netisr colliding - but Bruce has fixed that now)
Submitted by: fgray@rice.edu
this driver hasn't been checked but as a separate module, bringing it in won't
break anything else and it't the best way of testing it......
julian
line discipline interrupt handlers more or less expect to be called at
spltty() == splimp(), although they have internal splimp()s that are
bogus if this expectation is satisfied. They are called at splsoftty()
from many tty drivers, so they were not protected from being reentered
from their own netisrs. They certainly don't expect that but are
apparently remarkably robust if it occurs. The problem in PR 798 seems
to be caused by pppstart() being reentered and finishing off the output
in progress by following the (stale) sc->sc_outm pointer. Then the
original pppstart() finds garbage in m2 after MFREE(m, m2). slstart()
doesn't have internal state like sc_outm so reentry of it probably only
causes out of order and dropped packets.
modularization of the wd/wcd/atapi driver is ugly.
Include cons.h from a less bogus place.
Removed an ARGSUSED. Unused args are normal for devswitch functions
and lint was informed about them for about 5 functions out of 1000.
Lint should be informed about them, if at all, in some other way.
Remove confusing backwards compatibility code that allowed driver to be
used in pre-4.4 releases. The 3COM card's use -link2 to switch tranceivers.
(no functional changes here)
This code will only be included in your kernel if you have
'options DEVRANDOM', but that will fall away in a couple of days.
Obtained from: Theodore Ts'o, Linux
the new seeprom format and negotiate up to 20MHz sync if set in SCSI-Select.
Reduce the complexity of the timeout code by running it at splhigh(). Fix
a bug that caused rescheduled timeouts at 0 clock ticks in the future causing
an infinite loop.
Obtained from: Timeout bug noticed by David Greenman and wcarchive.
Submitted by: Mike Mitchell, supervisor@alb.asctmd.com
This is a bulk mport of Mike's IPX/SPX protocol stacks and all the
related gunf that goes with it..
it is not guaranteed to work 100% correctly at this time
but as we had several people trying to work on it
I figured it would be better to get it checked in so
they could all get teh same thing to work on..
Mikes been using it for a year or so
but on 2.0
more changes and stuff will be merged in from other developers now that this is in.
Mike Mitchell, Network Engineer
AMTECH Systems Corporation, Technology and Manufacturing
8600 Jefferson Street, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87113 (505) 856-8000
supervisor@alb.asctmd.com