worked before.
mixer, dsp and sndstat are seperate devices - give them their own cdevsws
instead of demuxing requests sent to a single cdevsw.
use the si_drv1/si_drv2 fields in dev_t structures for holding information
specific to an open instance of mixer/dsp.
nuke /dev/{dsp,dspW,audio}[0-9]* links - this functionality is now provided
using cloning.
various locking fixes.
ports later on.
This includes the basic MI interface routines as well as a console driver.
The MD code is kept in the MD directories.
Reviewed by: obrien
built in, or as an addon card (My Japanese isn't quite good enough to
know which). [FreeBSD98-testers 5098] contains all the details.
Submitted by: Kawanobe Koh-san <kawanobe@st.rim.or.jp>
The DP83820/83821 has an undocumented limitation concerning jumbo frames
and TX checksum offload. In order for TX checksum offload to work, the
outgoing frame must fit entirely within the TX FIFO, which is 8192 bytes
in size. This isn't a problem, until you try to send a 9000-byte frame,
at which point the TX DMA engine goes to sleep. It turns out that if
you want to send a jumbo frame larger than 8170 bytes (8192 - 64), you
have to turn off the TX checksum support.
As a workaround, I changed nge_ioctl() so that if the user selects an
MTU larger than 8152 bytes, we clear the if_hwassist flags. The flags
will be set again once the MTU is reduced to a smaller value.
we want the checksums calculated on a per-packet basis using control bits
in the extsts field of the DMA descriptor structure. For TX, the chip
seems to want these bits set in the field of the first descriptor in
a fragment chain, not the last.
vinumhdr.h:80: warning: redundant redeclaration of `vinum_cdevsw'
vinumext.h:239: warning: previous declaration of `vinum_cdevsw'
in each of the following files:
vinum.c, vinumconfig.c, vinumdaemon.c, vinuminterrupt.c, vinumio.c,
vinumioctl.c, vinumlock.c, vinummemory.c, vinumraid5.c, vinumrequest.c,
vinumrevive.c, vinumstate.c, vinumutil.c
musycc.c:449: warning: long unsigned int format, unsigned int arg (arg 3)
musycc.c:449: warning: long unsigned int format, unsigned int arg (arg 4)
musycc.c:453: warning: long unsigned int format, unsigned int arg (arg 3)
musycc.c:453: warning: long unsigned int format, unsigned int arg (arg 4)
musycc.c:453: warning: long unsigned int format, unsigned int arg (arg 5)
These warnings used to be confined to the alpha but are on all now.
554: passing arg 4 of `resource_string_value' from incompatible pointer type
576: passing arg 4 of `resource_string_value' from incompatible pointer type
593: passing arg 4 of `resource_string_value' from incompatible pointer type
commands that complete (with no apparent error) after
we receive a LIP. This has been observed mostly on
Local Loop topologies. To be safe, let's just mark
all active commands as dead if we get a LIP and we're
on a private or public loop.
MFC after: 4 weeks
Replace the a.out emulation of 'struct linker_set' with something
a little more flexible. <sys/linker_set.h> now provides macros for
accessing elements and completely hides the implementation.
The linker_set.h macros have been on the back burner in various
forms since 1998 and has ideas and code from Mike Smith (SET_FOREACH()),
John Polstra (ELF clue) and myself (cleaned up API and the conversion
of the rest of the kernel to use it).
The macros declare a strongly typed set. They return elements with the
type that you declare the set with, rather than a generic void *.
For ELF, we use the magic ld symbols (__start_<setname> and
__stop_<setname>). Thanks to Richard Henderson <rth@redhat.com> for the
trick about how to force ld to provide them for kld's.
For a.out, we use the old linker_set struct.
NOTE: the item lists are no longer null terminated. This is why
the code impact is high in certain areas.
The runtime linker has a new method to find the linker set
boundaries depending on which backend format is in use.
linker sets are still module/kld unfriendly and should never be used
for anything that may be modular one day.
Reviewed by: eivind
- Replace some very poorly thought out API hacks that should have been
fixed a long while ago.
- Provide some much more flexible search functions (resource_find_*())
- Use strings for storage instead of an outgrowth of the rather
inconvenient temporary ioconf table from config(). We already had a
fallback to using strings before malloc/vm was running anyway.
. remove stale comments and a stale #define (from the old days of ft(4))
. make MAX_SEC_SIZE (used in isa_dmainit()) a #define
. fix a typo in a string
. use 0 as the blocksize in devstat_add_entry(), since the actual blocksize
is unknown (devstat(9) suggests to use 0 in that case)
around, use a common function for looking up and extracting the tunables
from the kernel environment. This saves duplicating the same function
over and over again. This way typically has an overhead of 8 bytes + the
path string, versus about 26 bytes + the path string.
use of the extsts field in DMA descriptors. We need this to tell the chip
to calculate TCP/IP checksums in hardware on a per-packet basis.
- Fix the unions in DMA descriptor structures. Breakage on alpha led
me to realize I'd done it wrong the first time.
that device add/remove will work without usbd running. usbd is still
used for execing stuff, but that is all now. Ideally it could be replaced
by a devd some day. Until now, usbd had to be running so that the
USB_DISCOVER ioctl could be called to walk the tree when an attachment
status change was noticed.
Among the changes:
- when a detach happens, remove any pending 'attach' messages or the system
suffers from whiplash from exec moused / kill moused loops if you do lots
of attach/detach and later start usbd.
- tweaks related to kthread differences
- disable the select handler for the old interface (never return success).
I have not removed it yet or old usbd's will abort. That can get removed
later once usbd is cleaned up and things have stabilized for a few weeks.
- get Giant in the kthread.
- a couple of minor potential bug fixes (usb_nevents vs malloc failure etc)
Pre-approved by: n_hibma (ages and ages ago)
ep driver. The rest of the patch will wait until I can put the time
into it to get it righter than the kludge it is.
This protects us against card eject problems at all times,e xecpt when
we're in the epintr ISR.