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>
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. :-))
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
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.)
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
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).
- Correctly observe the variable `extra_history_size' when changing
the size of history (scroll back) buffer.
- Added sc_free_history_buffer().
Pointed out by: des
in ti_rxeof() instead. This doesn't really seem to provide much in the
way of a performance boost, and I'm pretty sure it can cause mbuf leakage
in some extreme cases.
frames (or just insane received packet lengths generated due to errors
reading from the NIC's internal buffers). Anything too large to fit
safely into an mbuf cluster buffer is discarded and an error logged.
I have not observed this problem with my own cards, but on user has
reported it and adding the sanity test seems reasonable in any case.
Problem noted and patch provided by: Per Andersson <per@cdg.chalmers.se>
isp_io_map, isp_no_fwload, isp_fwload, isp_no_nvram, isp_fcduplex
which are all bitmaps of isp instances that should or shouldn't
map memory space, I/O space, not load f/w, load f/w, ignore nvram,
not ignore nvarm, set full duplex mode. Also have an isp_seed value
that we can use to generate a pseudo seed for a synthetic WWN.
Other minor cosmetic cleanup. Add in support for the Qlogic ISP
2200. Very important change where we actually check now to see
whether we were successful in mapping request and response queues
(and fibre channel scratch space).
not having SCSI_ISP_SCCLUN config defined if we don't have f/w for
the 2200- it's resident firmware uses SCCLUN (65535 luns)). Change
the way the default LoopID is gathered (it's now a platform specific
define so that some attempt at a synthetic WWN can be made in case
NVRAM isn't readable).
Change initialization of options a bit- don't use ADISC. Set
FullDuplex mode if config options tells us to do so. Do not use
FULL_LOGIN after LIP- it's the right thing to do but it causes too
much loop disruption (Loop Resets). Sanity check some default
values. Redo construction of port and node WWNs based upon what we
have- if we have 2 in the top nibble, we can have distinct port
and node WWNs. Clean up some SCCLUN related code that we obviously
had never compiled (:-(). Audit commands coming int ispscsicmd and
don't throw commands at Fibre devices that do not have Class 3
service parameters TARGET ROLE defined.
Clean up f/w initialization a bit. Add Fabric support (or at least
the first blush of it). Whew - way too much to describe here.
Basically, after a LIP, hang out until we see a Loop Up or a Port
DataBase Change async event, then see if we're on a Fabric
(GET_PORT_NAME of FL_PORT_ID). If we are, try and scan the fabric
controller for fabric devices using the GetAllNext SNS subcommand.
As we find devices, announce them to the outer layer. Try and do
some guard code for broken (Brocade) SNS servers (that get stuck
in loops- gotta maybe do this a different way using the GP_ID3 cmd
instead). Then do a scan of the lower (local loop) ids using a
GET_PORT_NAME to see if the f/w has logged into anything at that
loop id. If so, then do a GET_PORT_DATABASE command. Do this scan
into a local database. At this point we can say the loop is 'Ready'.
After this, we merge our local loop port database with our stored
port database- in a as yet to be really fully exercised fashion we
try and follow the logic of something having moved around. The
first time we see something at a Loop ID, we fix it, for the purpose
of this system instance, at that Loop ID. If things shift around
so it ends up somewhere else, we still keep it at this Loop ID (our
'Target') but use the new (moved) Loop ID when we actually throw
commands at it. Check for insane cases of different Loop IDs both
claiming to have the same WWN- if that happens, invalidate both.
Notify the outer layer of devices that have arrived and devices
that have gone away. *Finally*, when this is done, search the
softc's database of Fabric devices and perform logout/login actions.
The Qlogic f/w maintains logout/login for all local loop devices.
We have to maintain logout/login for fabric devices- total PITA.
Expect to see this area undergo more change over time.
Change some fcp parameter structures such that we can get the portid
(24 bit value), get both node and port WWN, know whether we're on a fabric
or not, note whether we've ever seen the loop up, and note the current
state of the loop.
Replace the isp_pdb_t structure in fcparams with a reduced cost structure
that maintains a static relationship to 'Target', but can have the actual
loop ID used change (in case, post LIP, we discover things have moved
around). This also retains portid and node/port WWNs. This array gets
larger if we have fabric support compiled in.
Note special loop IDs that are invariate for this device- FL_PORT_ID
(0x7e) which tells us if there's a fabric controller present, FC_PORT_ID
and FC_SNS_ID (fabric controller port and fabric SNS server port). We don't
use the latter two for anything. IDs above FC_SNS_ID up through 255 are
available for mapping fabric devices to 'target' ids.
Add in a config define to set FC full duplex mode. Add in a define to
recognize the Qlogic 2200 boards. Add comments about ISPCTL commands.
Add and change some ISPASYNC enumes.
compiles cleanly on the Alpha. (On the alpha, the port type is an int,
not a short).
Cast a couple of pointers to ints via 'uintptr_t' rather than 'unsigned
int' since uintptr_t is long (64 bit) on Alpha, as are pointers.
Correct race condition between caller and daemon.
Tripped-over-by: Zach Heilig <zach@uffdaonline.net>
Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
Niels Chr. Bank-Pedersen <ncbp@bank-pedersen.dk>
lockmgr locks. This commit should be functionally equivalent to the old
semantics. That is, all buffer locking is done with LK_EXCLUSIVE
requests. Changes to take advantage of LK_SHARED and LK_RECURSIVE will
be done in future commits.
The atapi subsystem has gotten better error handeling and timeouts,
it also tries a REQUEST SENSE command when devices returns errors,
to give a little more info as to what went wrong. It might be a
little verbose for now, but I'm interested in as much feedback on
errors as possible, especially timeouts, as I'm a bit in doubt if
I've chosen resonable default values everywhere.
The disk driver has been changed a bit to prepare for tagged queing,
which is next on my list.
The disk driver has grown a dump routine, I got one implementation
from Darrell Anderson <anderson@cs.duke.edu> which also did
partial dumps (usefull on big memory machines) I left out the
partial stuff for now, and changed the rest alot to fit into the new
ad_request framework.
Some minor cleanups and rearrangements as well.
As usual USE AT YOUR OWN RISK!!, this is still pre alpha level code.
Especially the DMA support can hose your disk real bad if anything
goes wrong, again you have been warned :)
Notebook owners should be carefull that their machines dont suspend
as this might cause trouble...
But please tell me how it works for you!
Enjoy!
-Søren
and insertion should affect the line the cursor is on only.
This change should have been committed together with syscons.c rev 1.308.
(I forgot to do so, when I committed syscons.c :-(
Pointed out by: sos
If the drive goes down, queue a close to the daemon. In many cases
this function gets called in process context, so it could do it
directly, but it's more trouble finding out where we came from than
getting the daemon to do it.
Don't bzero the buffer structure, it's been done already by
allocrqg.
sdio:
Build up a correct buffer header, don't steal linkages from system
buffer headers.
Noticed-by: mckusick
* Conformance with Dingo specification. This includes:
Collision/error statistics gathering.
Multicast address filtering, eg. the hash filter.
Initialisation and interrupt handling sequences.
Note that I've started on some of this already in v1.20.
* The probe routine needs some more work, to identify oddities such as the
REM10.
* There are still problems with the autonegotiation code; specifically, it
won't autonegotiate with some 10/100 hubs. This might simply be the hardware
not getting along, in which case there's nothing we can do, but it's still
worth investigating
* CEM28/CEM33 support. Should be able to integrate this directly from the
Linux code.
* Performance enhancements:
Full-duplex on 10Mbit networks.
Virtual shared-memory mode.
Early send and receive modes.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
* Conformance with Dingo specification. This includes:
Collision/error statistics gathering.
Multicast address filtering, eg. the hash filter.
Initialisation and interrupt handling sequences.
Note that I've started on some of this already in v1.20.
* The probe routine needs some more work, to identify oddities such as the
REM10.
* There are still problems with the autonegotiation code; specifically, it
won't autonegotiate with some 10/100 hubs. This might simply be the hardware
not getting along, in which case there's nothing we can do, but it's still
worth investigating
* CEM28/CEM33 support. Should be able to integrate this directly from the
Linux code.
* Performance enhancements:
Full-duplex on 10Mbit networks.
Virtual shared-memory mode.
Early send and receive modes.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
- Split syscons source code into manageable chunks and reorganize
some of complicated functions.
- Many static variables are moved to the softc structure.
- Added a new key function, PREV. When this key is pressed, the vty
immediately before the current vty will become foreground. Analogue
to PREV, which is usually assigned to the PrntScrn key.
PR: kern/10113
Submitted by: Christian Weisgerber <naddy@mips.rhein-neckar.de>
- Modified the kernel console input function sccngetc() so that it
handles function keys properly.
- Reorganized the screen update routine.
- VT switching code is reorganized. It now should be slightly more
robust than before.
- Added the DEVICE_RESUME function so that syscons no longer hooks the
APM resume event directly.
- New kernel configuration options: SC_NO_CUTPASTE, SC_NO_FONT_LOADING,
SC_NO_HISTORY and SC_NO_SYSMOUSE.
Various parts of syscons can be omitted so that the kernel size is
reduced.
SC_PIXEL_MODE
Made the VESA 800x600 mode an option, rather than a standard part of
syscons.
SC_DISABLE_DDBKEY
Disables the `debug' key combination.
SC_ALT_MOUSE_IMAGE
Inverse the character cell at the mouse cursor position in the text
console, rather than drawing an arrow on the screen.
Submitted by: Nick Hibma (n_hibma@FreeBSD.ORG)
SC_DFLT_FONT
makeoptions "SC_DFLT_FONT=_font_name_"
Include the named font as the default font of syscons. 16-line,
14-line and 8-line font data will be compiled in. This option replaces
the existing STD8X16FONT option, which loads 16-line font data only.
- The VGA driver is split into /sys/dev/fb/vga.c and /sys/isa/vga_isa.c.
- The video driver provides a set of ioctl commands to manipulate the
frame buffer.
- New kernel configuration option: VGA_WIDTH90
Enables 90 column modes: 90x25, 90x30, 90x43, 90x50, 90x60. These
modes are mot always supported by the video card.
PR: i386/7510
Submitted by: kbyanc@freedomnet.com and alexv@sui.gda.itesm.mx.
- The header file machine/console.h is reorganized; its contents is now
split into sys/fbio.h, sys/kbio.h (a new file) and sys/consio.h
(another new file). machine/console.h is still maintained for
compatibility reasons.
- Kernel console selection/installation routines are fixed and
slightly rebumped so that it should now be possible to switch between
the interanl kernel console (sc or vt) and a remote kernel console
(sio) again, as it was in 2.x, 3.0 and 3.1.
- Screen savers and splash screen decoders
Because of the header file reorganization described above, screen
savers and splash screen decoders are slightly modified. After this
update, /sys/modules/syscons/saver.h is no longer necessary and is
removed.
fix; it doesn't address the problem of removing the module. If you do
the following:
vinum stop
fsck /dev/vinum/VOLUME
you *will* get a system crash. What we need is a cdevsw_remove
corresponding to cdevsw_add, but that hasn't been written yet.
Submitted-by: phk
usbd_get_interface_descriptor
2) remove soft reset. It's been dropped from the USB Mass Storage Bulk-Only
Specification
3) move the clear feature halt to the reset routine.
positively not let ti_encap() fill up the TX ring all the way and wrap
around. This fixes a potential transmit lockup where a really fast
machine (or particular TX traffic pattern) can overrun the end of the
ring.
Reported by: John Plevyak <jplevyak@inktomi.com>
Also removed the BSDI support (for now)
This allows the driver to be loaded/unloaded as a KLD
and loaded in the boot loader phase whithout making a custom kernel.
corresponding variable `rc_wakeup_started' in rev.1.36 but broken
again in rev.1.37. This bug only caused excessive polling (it gave
NRC activations for each of the SWI handler and the timeout handler
instead of 1 of each).
Moved cdevsw attachment from the driver probe routine to the driver
attach routine.
via an IBM PCI-PCI bridge (82351 or 82352 or 82353)
The driver must identify if it is on a secondary PCI bus, which is
created via the IBM PCI-PCI bridge. If it is, then it must initialise
the IBM PCI-PCI bridge correctly.
To do this, the following new functions are added.
Because they use the pcici_t tag, they are considered 2.2 compatibility APIs
pcici_t * pci_get_parent_from_tag(pcici_t tag);
int pci_get_bus_from_tag(pcici_t tag);
(The _from_tag suffix is used to prevent clashes with similarly named
newbus PCI API functions)
Submitted by: Anton Berezin <tobez@plab.ku.dk>
Reviewed by: Doug Rabson <dfr@nlsystems.com>
Reworked by: Me (roger)
The cdevsw_add() function now finds the major number(s) in the
struct cdevsw passed to it. cdevsw_add_generic() is no longer
needed, cdevsw_add() does the same thing.
cdevsw_add() will print an message if the d_maj field looks bogus.
Remove nblkdev and nchrdev variables. Most places they were used
bogusly. Instead check a dev_t for validity by seeing if devsw()
or bdevsw() returns NULL.
Move bdevsw() and devsw() functions to kern/kern_conf.c
Bump __FreeBSD_version to 400006
This commit removes:
72 bogus makedev() calls
26 bogus SYSINIT functions
if_xe.c bogusly accessed cdevsw[], author/maintainer please fix.
I4b and vinum not changed. Patches emailed to authors. LINT
probably broken until they catch up.
Reformat and initialize correctly all "struct cdevsw".
Initialize the d_maj and d_bmaj fields.
The d_reset field was not removed, although it is never used.
I used a program to do most of this, so all the files now use the
same consistent format. Please keep it that way.
Vinum and i4b not modified, patches emailed to respective authors.
of the current interrupt trasaction.
- Do not schedule the next interrupt transaction if the pipe is being
aborted or the last round of the interrupt transaction ended with error.
Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA <yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp>
- Call ums_disable() to abort the pipe.
- Do not wake up processes which has been waiting or polling for mouse
data. It won't be available anymore.
Submitted by: Kazutaka YOKOTA <yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp>
disable_intr() does non-recursive locking in the SMP case. This should
fix cy-driver-related panics when SMP is configured.
Broken in: rev.1.73 (3.1 and -current)
Allow chipset drivers to specify the direct-mapped DMA window's mask in
preparation for tsunami support. Previous chipsets' direct-mapped DMA
mask was always 1024*1024*1024. The Tsunami chipset needs it to be
2*1024*1024*1024
Reviewed by: Doug Rabson <dfr@nlsystems.com>
preparation for tsunami support. Previous chipsets' direct-mapped DMA
mask was always 1024*1024*1024. The Tsunami chipset needs it to be
2*1024*1024*1024
These changes should not affect the i386 port
Reviewed by: Doug Rabson <dfr@nlsystems.com>
only support 'mirroring' the vendor and device ids, so we don't
lose any information. Certain revisions of the aic7880 will not
perform the mirroring so to match all possiblities would double
the number of table entries. This change also allows us to match
things like the 2944B which I missed in the original table.
commands are outstanding. You'd think they'd just clear the IDLE bit,
but alas, no. Delay until all pending mailbox commands have completed
in aha_cmd to work around this.
Report sync rates correctly on Fast Adaptec cards. Clones may still be
reported incorrectly since there is no documenation on how they report
extended sync values.
Clean up some unused fields in the aha softc.
SIS/VIA/ OPTi chipset PCI bus workarounds.
These make the Bt878/879 chips stabler on certain
older and non-intel motherboards.
Use options BKTR_430_FX_MODE
or options BKTR_SIS_VIA_MODE
to enable these modes.
Also rename 849 to 849A
in the transmit code: the TX descriptor ring, and a 'shadow' ring of mbuf
pointers, one for each TX descriptor. When transmitting a packet that
consists of several fragments in an mbuf chain, we link each fragment
to a descriptor in the TX ring, but we only save a pointer to the mbuf
chain. This pointer is saved in the shadow ring entry which corresponds
to the first fragment in the packet. Later, ti_txeof() can release the
whole chain with a single m_freem() call. (We need the second ring to
keep track of the virtual addresses of the mbuf chains.)
The problem with this is that the Tigon isn't actually through with the
mbuf chain until it reaches the last fragment (which has the TI_BDFLAG_END
bit set), however the current scheme releases the mbuf chain as soon as
the first fragment is consumed. This is wrong, since the mbufs can then
be yanked out from under the Tigon and modified before the other fragments
can be transmitted.
The fix is to make a one line change to ti_encap() so that it saves the
mbuf chain pointer in the shadow ring entry that corresponds to the last
fragment in TX ring instead of the first. This prevents the mbufs from
being released until the last fragment is transmitted.
Painstakingly diagnosed and fixed by: Robert Picco <picco@mail.wevinc.com>
Brought to my attention by: dg
manager and prevented IOPort allocation beyond the first EISA slot from
working. subr_rman.c should have trapped this on the way into the system
rather than tripping over the wreckage.
Head banged into wall repeatedly by: "Matthew N. Dodd" <winter@jurai.net>
Honor the 'bus reset at startup' option now that the XPT properly
handles transfer negotiation in this scenario.
Honor the sync rate settings on Ultra2 controllers. We would
always negotiate at the fastest speed. Oops.
aic7xxx.h:
Whitespace.
aic7xxx.seq:
Fix a minor nit that would cause the controller to miss the update
of the negotiation required bitmask causing the negotiation to
be delayed by a command.
driver lacks error recovery and still needs more testing, but it's
about time I got it under revision control.
Submitted by: Tekram Inc.
Bus Space/DMA and cleanup: gibbs
- Mention that the 6Mbps turbo adapters are supported in HARDWARE.TXT
and RELNOTES.TXT and the wi.4 man page
- Mention turbo adapters in the wicontrol.8 man page and provide a
complete table of available transmit speed settings
Implement priorities.
GENERIC, LINT, files:
Remove remarks about ordering of device names.
GENERIC, LINT:
Sort the devices alphabetically in LINT and GENERIC.
The specific intent of this commit is to pave the way for importing
Compaq XP1000 support. These changes should not affect the i386 port.
Reviewed by: Doug Rabson <dfr@nlsystems.com>
(actually, he walked me through most of it & deserves more than reviewd-by
credit )
Fixed problems:
LS120/ZIP drives still currupted data.
Reworked once again, buffered I/O is just ignoring any sizehints
it is given :(
Now the atapifd driver splits up requests for devices that has
limitted transfer size.
ISA only configs fails on boot with interrupt timeouts.
The new-bus integration introduced a bug where the softc ptr
was lost during the probe.
Some minor cleanups and rearrangements as well.
As usual USE AT YOUR OWN RISK!!, this is still pre alpha level code.
Especially the DMA support can hose your disk real bad if anything
goes wrong, again you have been warned :)
Notebook owners should be carefull that their machines dont suspend
as this might cause trouble...
But please tell me how it works for you!
Enjoy!
motherboard will have a card for the "motherboard" on slot 0.
eisa0: <EISA bus> on motherboard
mainboard0: <ASU5101 (System Board)> at slot 0 on eisa0
This should stop the probe "detecting" an EISA bus everywhere that has
a 'controller eisa0' line regardless of whether it's really there.
Change Intel GPIO mask to hopefully stop turning the Intel Camera off
Fixed tuner selection on Hauppauge card with tuner 0x0a
Replaced none tuner with no tuner for Theo de Raadt <deraadt@openbsd.org>.
Ivan Brawley <brawley@internode.com.au> added
the Australian channel frequencies.
Clean up the handling of failure modes in our attach so we don't free
resources twice. ahc_free() will do all of the work for us (as would
be required by an unload event) so we only need to handle resources that
the softc has not taken ownership of.
Fixed problems:
LS120 drives currupted data.
The workaround for drives not supporting upto 64K transfers
has been reworked. It works now both on LS120 & ZIP drives.
ISA only configs wont compile.
Fixed.
The ATA driver wont share interrupts.
Fixed.
The "unwanted interrupt" warning gave wrong controller.
Another lun<>unit messup from the newbus integration.
Some minor cleanups and rearrangements as well.
As usual USE AT YOUR OWN RISK!!, this is still pre alpha level code.
Especially the DMA support can hose your disk real bad if anything
goes wrong, again you have been warned :)
Notebook owners should be carefull that their machines dont suspend
as this might cause trouble...
But please tell me how it works for you!
Enjoy!
-Søren
docs don't seem to shed light on why this is needed, but reports from
the field indicate this helps prevent problems in this area. Ken's
changes seem to have exposed this bug, rather than caused it, as far
as I can tell.
Thanks to Jack O'Neill for tracking this down.
Submitted by: jack@germanium.xtalwind.net
Very strong 3.2 merge candidate.
Sync up device Ids with the master Adaptec list.
Add probe support for the 2940 Pro although it isn't obvious that
all of the termination support is correct for this adapter yet.
tell the sequencer to pause itself for a target msg variable update. This
avoids the pause race entirely as HS_MAILBOX can be accessed without
pausing the chip.
3.2 Merge candidate.
v1.19 (1999/04/15) updates the CEM56/REM56 support.
Current bugs & misfeatures
--------------------------
* CE2 cards still not working reliably. Unclear if this is related to
packet I/O code or interrupt handling.
* Autonegotiation support remains flaky. We're now OK with 10Mbit auto
hubs, but certain combination of hardware will fail to connect.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.19 (1999/04/15) updates the CEM56/REM56 support.
Current bugs & misfeatures
--------------------------
* CE2 cards still not working reliably. Unclear if this is related to
packet I/O code or interrupt handling.
* Autonegotiation support remains flaky. We're now OK with 10Mbit auto
hubs, but certain combination of hardware will fail to connect.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.18 (1999/04/08) adds support for CEM56 and REM56 multifunction cards.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.18 (1999/04/08) adds support for CEM56 and REM56 multifunction cards.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.17 (1999/03/28) has xperimental fixes to 10Mbit autonegotiation and
CE2 input lockup.
KNOWN BUGS
==========
* Media auto-negotiation is definitely not right. It will work in most
circumstances and seems to connect OK to most 100Mbit networks, however some
pathological combinations of hubs/networks/peers seem to confuse it.
* CE2 support is somewhat flakey (ranging from 'works perfectly' to 'hangs the
machine' so far). I've fixed the probe routine and a potential lockup in
the output routine, but a lot of people still report that they can't receive
or transmit.
* You won't be able to use the modem and Ethenet parts of a multifunction card
simultaneously. This is limitation the current FreeBSD PCMCIA support.
Likewise, there is no support for CardBus devices.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.17 (1999/03/28) has xperimental fixes to 10Mbit autonegotiation and
CE2 input lockup.
KNOWN BUGS
==========
* Media auto-negotiation is definitely not right. It will work in most
circumstances and seems to connect OK to most 100Mbit networks, however some
pathological combinations of hubs/networks/peers seem to confuse it.
* CE2 support is somewhat flakey (ranging from 'works perfectly' to 'hangs the
machine' so far). I've fixed the probe routine and a potential lockup in
the output routine, but a lot of people still report that they can't receive
or transmit.
* You won't be able to use the modem and Ethenet parts of a multifunction card
simultaneously. This is limitation the current FreeBSD PCMCIA support.
Likewise, there is no support for CardBus devices.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.16 (1999/03/08) fixed BPF input hang and infinite loop on CE2
short-packet output.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/
v1.16 (1999/03/08) fixed BPF input hang and infinite loop on CE2
short-packet output.
Developed by: Scott Mitchell <scott@uk.freebsd.org>
Obtained from: http://www.freebsd-uk.eu.org/~scott/xe_drv/