Xircom had an unfortunate habit of re-using PCMCIA IDs for quite different
cards - the xe driver knows about this and uses the first byte of 'extra'
PCMCIA ID info to identify cards with ambiguous IDs.
Reviewed by: imp (mentor)
can more easily be used INSTEAD OF the hard-working Yarrow.
The only hardware source used at this point is the one inside
the VIA C3 Nehemiah (Stepping 3 and above) CPU. More sources will
be added in due course. Contributions welcome!
o Save and restore bars for suspend/resume as well as for D3->D0
transitions.
o preallocate resources that the PCI devices use to avoid resource
conflicts
o lazy allocation of resources not allocated by the BIOS.
o set unattached drivers to state D3. Set power state to D0
before probe/attach. Right now there's two special cases
for this (display and memory devices) that need work in other
areas of the tree.
Please report any bugs to me.
Reference objects changed from ACPI_TYPE_ANY to ACPI_TYPE_LOCAL_REFERENCE
in Oct. 2002, this may help systems where switching the cooler on failed.
We support both types for now until this sorts out.
some machines to enable wake events for more devices although I haven't
seen a system yet that uses this form. Also, introduce acpi_GetReference()
which retrieves an object reference from various types.
address discovery and caching (similar to inet ARP). Use a single
global mutex, aarptab_mtx, to protect the table. Remove spl/spx.
Tested by: Bob Bishop <rb@gid.co.uk>
mode (where the forked thread is the one and only thread and
is marked as system scope), set the system scope flag before
initializing the signal mask. This prevents trying to use
internal locks that haven't yet been initialized.
Reported by: Dan Nelson <dnelson at allantgroup.com>
Reviewed by: davidxu
While I'm here, add a couple of extra sanity-checks to
the argument parsing (reject -j -z, for instance) and
update the docs a bit.
Requested by: most everyone ;-)
the reduction of the pager map's size by 8M bytes. In other words, eight
megabytes of largely wasted KVA are returned to the kernel map for use
elsewhere.
side effect of that change caused headers to not be sent if a 0 byte
file was passed to sendfile. This change fixes that behavior, allowing
sendfile to send out the headers even with a 0 byte file again.
Noticed by: Dirk Engling
equal to the process ID) is still present when we dump a core. It
already may have been destroyed. In that case we would end up
dereferencing a NULL pointer, so specifically test for that as well.
Reported & tested by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
Remove spurious whitespace, add indent protection, fix punctuation,
remove initialization of static variables to zero, put wakeup_ctr
and wakeup_needed in the correct order. (reported by bde)
This doesn't fix all the style bugs I introduced, but the remaining
style bugs make it easier for me to understand what I did here.