parameter a char ** instead of a const char **. This make these
kernel routines consistent with the corresponding libc userland
routines.
Which is actually 'correct' is debatable, but consistency and
following the spec was deemed more important in this case.
Reviewed by (in concept): phk, bde
pci_probe_nomatch, so it won't be in the way when loading USB as a module.
The reason for them being there in the first place is that every
motherboard comes with USB kit and this way it looks more pretty (peter).
The real solution will be to define some method of detaching a driver
after it has attached.
out of the PCI CLASS reg and store it in the softc. Use the getenv_quad
function to get a WWN override from the environment. Look for a config
value for same. Make slightly less lame the wwn seed construction.
is documented to be 0x18 in the Adaptec manual, however there appears to
be a newer board rev with code 0x19. I added a #define for this and
updated the probe code so that this board will be properly identified
in the probe messages. (Currently it's just identified generically as
an AIC-6915 chip.)
"rw" argument, rather than hijacking B_{READ|WRITE}.
Fix two bugs (physio & cam) resulting by the confusion caused by this.
Submitted by: Tor.Egge@fast.no
Reviewed by: alc, ken (partly)
- Fix a bug in rl_rxeof() handler: in the case where the packet wraps
from the end of the receive buffer back to the beginning, we need to
insure that at least sizeof(ether_header) bytes make it into the first
mbuf. If we don't, then doing eh = mtod(m, struct ether_header *)
loses. To avoid this, we use m_pullup() to suck at least MHLEN -
RL_ETHER_ALIGN bytes into the first mbuf, which should also help
small packets fit into a single mbuf.
Pointed out by: Philip A. Prindeville <philipp@zembu.com>
- Make the transmit threshold autotuning: start off with a small value
and jack it up when TX underruns are detected.
- Also improve TX error recovery: kick the chip in the head with a
reset/init sequence to make sure it recovers afer a transmit error.
have you is prototyped). Removed code versions in md struct- not used
any more. Allocate transfer dma maps and xflist stuff in mbxdmasetup based
upon isp->isp_maxcmds. Allow for multiple calls to mbxdmasetup (for
isp_reset cases).
In order to make this work, I created a pseudo-PHY driver to deal with
Macronix chips that use the built-in NWAY support and symbol mode port.
This is actually all of them, with the exception of the original MX98713
which presents its NWAY support via the MII serial interface.
The mxphy driver actually manipulates the controller registers directly
rather than using the miibus_readreg()/miibus_writereg() bus interface
since there are no MII registers to read. The mx driver itself pretends
that the NWAY interface is a PHY locayed at MII address 31 for the sole
purpose of allowing the mxphy_probe() routine to know when it needs to
attach to a host controller.
- When setting/clearing promisc mode, just update the filter, don't
reset the whole interface.
- Call xl_init() in xl_ifmedia_upd() when setting miibus media modes. This
fixes a problem with the 3c905B-COMBO where switching from 10base5/AUI
or 10base2/BNC to a 10/100 mode doesn't always work right.
- Attempt to reset the interface in xl_init() so that we know we're getting
the receive and transmit rings reset properly.
* Change the hack used on the alpha for mapping devices into DENSE or
BWX memory spaces to a simpler one. Its still a hack and should be
a seperate api to explicitly map the resource.
* Add $FreeBSD$ as necessary.
Rather than teaching pci_ioctl about hoses, we just pass down a magic number
& let the platform code figure out what the hose is based on what the bus
number is.
concept approved by dfr
The old algorithm was:
if class == storage and subclass != SCSI device must be IDE
This results in claiming 'raid' and 'other' storage devices as IDE,
which is typically not the case.
Reviewed by: sos
- Move intrhook stuff into kernel.h
- Remove all occurrences of #device <device.h>
- Add kernel.h were necessary (nowhere)
- delete device.h
This file contained the structures for cfdata (old style config) and is no
longer used. It was included by most drivers.
It confuses the remote debugger as the definition of 'struct device' in
device.h is found before the one in bus_private.h.
For unknown devices the output will now be
pci0: unknown card (vendor=0x109e, dev=0x0878) at 14.1 irq 19
instead of
pci0: unknown card DD^0878 (vendor=0x109e, dev=0x0878) at 14.1 irq 19
Before this change, the code used to take the PCI vendor id and translate it
into a three letter ASCII name.
For PnP devices, the vendor id _does_ map to a nice ASCII name
(eg Creative Labs PnP ID maps to "CTL", ESS PnP ID maps to "ESS")
But there is no such mapping for PCI devices, as can be seen by the
example above where the Brooktree PCI vendor ID maps to "DD^"
The PCI Special Interest Group confirmed they do not have any mappings
from vendor ID to ASCII.
and/or when using the card.
o Convert the driver to using bus_space. This allows alphas with
fxp's to boot, rather than panic'ing because rman_get_virtual()
doesn't really return a virtual address on alphas.
o Fix an alpha unaligned access error caused by some misfeature of
gcc/egcs: if link_addr & rbd_addr in the fxp_rfa struct are 32 bit
quantities, egcs will assume they are naturally aligned. So it will do
a ldl & some shifty/masky to twiddle 16 bit values in fxp_lwcopy().
However, if they are 16-bit aligned, the ldl will actually be done on
a 16-bit aligned value & we will panic with an unaligned access
error... Changing their definition to an array of chars seems to fix
this. I obtained this from NetBSD.
I've tested this on both i386 & alpha.