Print type of pci bridge we find.
Force the IRQ of pci bridges upon all its children.
Allocate the resources on behalf of the bridge when we're testing to see if
they exist.
This should help people who don't read updating instructions very well.
This patch started out with an idea from Shigeru Yamamoto-san in -current.
told to use IRQ 6, progam the pcic to use irq 7 instead. Evidentally,
at least some of the cards are wired this way. If you want to use irq
6, configure it. All the mapping is done just before we set the
interrupt registers. See [FreeBSD98-testers 5064] for details.
Added commentary about valid interrupts on some CBUS pc98 CL PD6722
based cards.
Submitted by: Hiroshi TSUKADA-san <hiroshi@kiwi.ne.jp>
higher chips. Treat it as if it were a 113x. This is correct as far
as 16-bit cards go, at least how we're using it.
# It appears that my TI-1031 based pci card that YAMAMOTO shigeru-san gave
# me on my trip to Japan now works.
elected to do this in the probe rather than the attach so that we don't
disturb things which this might reset. different cards have different
quirks, according to their datasheets.
This should fix the "I booted in windows and rebooted to FreeBSD and
now things don't work" problem.
PR: 4847, 20670
card bus bridges.
We now always use pci interrupts for pci cards. This will allow us to
more easily configure things. You must change your IRQ lines in
/etc/pccard.conf to match what we've probed. I'm not sure the right
way to deal with this right now.
Development of pci pcmcia has been funded by Monzoon Networks AG. I
am grateful for their generosity.
for card change interrupts is different than the pci stuff that's
coming soon. Set the management irq in different ways. If
pci_parallel interrutp routing, then use the PCI way of getting
interrupts. Move polling mode into pcic_isa since when we're routing
via pci polling doesn't work because many bridges (systems hang solid).
If we're routing interrupts via pci, they can be shared, so flag them
as such.
Note, this doesn't actually change anything since the pci attachment
isn't quite ready to be committed.
csc_route and func_route to hold the way that each interrupt is
routed. csc is Card Status Change in the datasheets and standard, but
is called "Management Interrupt" in FreeBSDese. There are three types
of interrupt routing: ISA parallel, PCI parallel and ISA serial (some
chipsets support other types as well, but I don't plan on supporting
them).
When we try to allocate an interrupt, and the type for that interrupt
is pci_parallel, allow it to be shared by oring in RF_SHAREABLE to the
flags argument. Introduce pcic_alloc_resource to allow this to
happen.
interrupts on other buses. Right now it isn't used, but will be for
the pci attachment.
# Add copyright by me for this year since I've changed so much.
o If the class is PCIC_BRIDGE, subclass is PCIS_BRIDGE_PCMCIA and
programming interface is 0, assume that it is a generic PCMCIA PCI
chip we can program. I don't think there are any of these that
we don't know about, but you never know.
o If the class is PCIC_BRIDGE, subclass is PCIS_BRIDGE_CARDBUS and
programming interface is 0, assume that it is a YENTA cardbus bridge
that we know how to cope with. There are likely some cardbus bridges
that haven't it made it in here yet.
pcic_{get,put}b_io. There are some pci bridges (the CL-PD6729 and
maybe others) that do not have memory mapped registers, so we'll need
these in both places. Declare them in pcicvar.h.
have a slightly different 3.3V support than the other clones, so
compensate as best we can. Note: 3.3V support is untested since I do
not have any 3.3V cards that I know of to test it with.
Work through the various power commands and convert them from a "is
this a foo controller or a foo' controller or a foo''' controller" to
a cabability based scheme. We have bits in the softc that tell us
what kind of power control scheme the controller uses, rather than
relying on being able to enumerate them all. Cardbus bridges are
numerous, but nearly all implement the i82365sl-DF scheme (well, a few
implement cirrus CL-PD67xx, but those were made by Cirrus Logic!).
Add a pointer back to the softc in each pcic_slot so we can access
these flags.
Add comments that talk about the issues here. Also note in passing
that there are two differ Vpp schemes in use and that we may need to
adjust the code to deal with both of them. Note why it usually works
now.
We have 5 power management modes right now: KING, AB, DF, PD and VG.
AB is for the i82365 stpes A, B and C. DF is for step DF. PD is the
cirrus logic extensions for 3.3V while VG is the VADEM extensions for
3.3V. KING is for the IBM KING controller found on some old cards.
# I'm looking for one of those old cards or a laptop that has the KING
# bridge in it.
We have to still cheat and treat the AB parts like the DF parts
because pci isn't here yet. As far as I can tell, this is harmless
for actual old parts and necessary to work with 3.3V cards in some
laptops.
This almost eliminates all tests for controller in the code. There
are still a few unrelated to power that need taming as well.
o Introduce flags word to the softc. This will be used to control various
aspects of the driver. Right now there are two bits defined, PCIC_IO_MAPPED
and PCIC_MEM_MAPPED. One for ISA cards that are I/O mapped, the other is
for PCI cards that are memory mapped. Only the ISA side is implemented
with this commit.
o Introduce a pcic_dealloc which will cleanly dealloc resources used. Right
now it is only supported when called from probe/attach.
o Keep track of resources allocated in the pcic_softc.
o move pcictimeout_ch to the softc so we can support multiple devices
in polling mode.
o In ISA probe, set PCIC_IO_MAPPED.
o Introduce and compute the slot mask. This will be used later when
we expand the number of slots on ISA from 2 to 4. In such a case, we
appear to have to use polling mode otherwise we get two different cards
trying to drive the same interrupt line. I don't have hardware to
test this configuration, so I'll stop here.
o Add defines for the VS[12]# bits in register 0x16.
o Add comment about what we're doing reading register 0x16 (PCIC_CDGC)
in the DF case.
o Check bit VS1# rather than a random bit I was checking due to a bogus
transcrition on my part from nakagawa-san's article.
o Add note about IBM KING and 3.3V operation from information larned from
wildboard.
things to get 3.3V. It appears that some cardbus chipsets have id
registers that say they are C step parts, but they really support the
DF step 3.3V functionality.
# Need to verify that IBM KING is handled properly since the MISC1
# register is really a cirrus logic only register.
82C146. The Intel i82365SL-DF supports 3.3V cards. The Step A/B/C
parts do not appear to support this. This is hard to know for sure
since it was deduced from "compatible" parts' data sheets and the
article mentioned below.
Rework the VLSI detection to be a little nicer and not depend on
scanning cards twice. This would allow bad VLSI cards to coexist with
a good intel card, for example. We now detect i82365SL-DF cards where
before we'd detect a VLSI. For the most part, this is good, but we
run a small chance of detecting a single slot 82C146 as a i82365SL-DF.
Since I can't find a datasheet for the 82c146, I don't know if this is
a problem or not.
This work is based on an excellent article, in Japanese, by NAKAGAWA,
Yoshihisa-san that appeared in FreeBSD Press Number 4. He provided a
patch against PAO3 in his article. Since the pcic.c code has changed
some since then, I've gone ahead and cleaned up his patch somewhat and
changed how the code detects the buggy '146 cards.
I also removed the comment asking if there were other cards that
matched the 82C146 since we found one and additional information isn't
necessary.
soon attach directly to pcic rather than the kludge pci-pcic device we
have now.
In some ways, this is similar to the work PAO3 did to try to support
cardbus bridges. In some ways different. This and future commits
will be taking from the spirit of many of those changes. pcicvar.h is
completely different from the pcicvar.h that appeared in PAO3, but
similar in concept.
controller found in many of the early NOTE98 machines that were
produced. This controller is completely unlike the intel 82365, so
I've separated it out from the main pcic driver.
have bad grounding characteristics which allow small static discharges
(or sunspots, we're not 100% sure which) to reach the bridge chip.
This causes the bridge chip to wedge/reset itself. There's no known
cure short of rebooting.
The bug manifests itself by the STAT_CHG return 0xff when read. This
is impossible because the upper bits are reserved (and therefore
zero). In addition, some of the lower bits are one only for memory
cards, which OLDCARD doesn't support, so if they are set, something
seriously foobar'd is going on.
So far we've seen this in exactly one brand of pcmcia <-> isa bridge
which plug and play identifies only as "VIA PCMCIA CARD". This card
just has buffers on the isa card and the actual bridge chip on the
remote slot, which is connected by long ribbon cables. We think this
long cable run, coupled with the lack of coupling capacitors is a
major reason why it is so static sensitive while its bretheren aren't.
Work Supported by: Timing Solutions, Inc.
MFC After: 3 days
For memory for the pccard attribute/common memory mapping allocate on
the pccard. For other allocations, use whatever is the parent of this
device. There's no doubt other issues lurking, but this should make
things closer to being independent.
the resource activation if we're dealing with our grandchild.
Otherwise, we run into two problems. One, if the pccard layer wanted
to allocate and activate something, we'd wind up trying to do the
wrong thing twice: the ivars are wrong and we don't want the bridge to
map the resource to the slot. If we're more than a grandchild, then
who knows what kind of ivar is present. In either of these cases, we
just pass it up the food chain.
when PC98 is defined. This is in perparation for a mecia driver
separate from pcic, assuming that all goes well with that effort.
MECIA_SUPPORT won't be removed until after that support is working.
of the pcic class of devices. Go ahead and move it to the "usual"
place. I say "usual" in quotes since it isn't exactly right (not in
dev/blah), but it is closer than before.
softc.
o Store pointers to softc in dev_t in si_drv1.
o Change 'kludge version' to 'classic version' since things are getting less
kludgy.
o Minor code shuffling so that we probe and attach the pccard slots.
o Minor style(9) changes.
machdep.pccard.pcic_mem_start
machdep.pccard.pcic_mem_end
and default the range to IOM_BEGIN/IOM_END.
This may prove useful to if_ray users (and others) on more modern
hardware that maps BIOS stuff into 0xd000-0xdffff.
MFC: after 1 week
Approved by: imp
chip to the one that the Japanese use. Now we get insert/remove
events on my PC-9821Ne. More work in bus space is needed to make
drivers work.
MFC after: 3 days
layer. This fixes an ordering problem that would cause the ISR for
the device to run with now power applied to the device. Most cards
failed to deal with this gracefully, and thus would hang on card
eject.
The power down event, for those keeping score, is what causes the
interrupt for the card.
Many folks in the Japanese nomads list have reported this, so I'll be
MFCing quickly for their benefit.
Submitted by: Masayuki FUKUI
MFC after: 2 days
means that the pcic98 functionality might now work (I've tested it on
my pcic machine, but not the pcic98). Since these functions are
rarely called, it is unlikely that this will have a measurable impact
on performance.
FreeBSD. This code doesn't work just yet, but does compile. We need
to start indirecting via the cinfo pointers, rather than directly
calling pcic_*. There may be other issues as well, but you gotta
start somewhere.
Obtained from: PAO3
parts. This is based on the newcard code that turns it off :-). We
can now reboot after NEWCARD or Windows and have OLDCARD work. Add
support for the RL5C466 while I'm at it.
Treat TI1031 the same as the CLPD6832. It doesn't work yet, but sucks
less than it did before.
Also add a few #defines for other changes in the pipe.
region for CIS reading" problem:
Use bus_alloc_resource to get the memory that we'll be using. Also
has the benefit of doing usage checking as well. This gets rid of the
ugly kludge that we had before for mapping pmem to vmem.
Second, move PIOCSRESOURCE to its own routine and make it conform more
to style(9) in the process.
pccard in the kernel for those drivers with pccard attachments. This
makes the compat layer a little larger by introducing some inlines,
but should almost make it possible to have independent attachments.
The pccard_match function are the only one left, which I will take
care of shortly.
routine instead of pccard_event(). This avoids spurious extra calls
to pccard_insert_beep() at insert or remove time which could occur
due to noise on the card-present lines.
Clean up some code in pccard_beep.c; we were depending on the order
of evaluation of function arguments, which is undefined in C. Also,
use `0' rather than `NULL' for integer values.
Reviewed by: sanpei, imp
o Attempt to disable the slot when we detect that there are problems with
it in our ISR. This should make polling mode work better for more cards,
but more work may be needed. This "disabling" sets the card interrupt
register to 0. This worked for me for lots of tests in polling mode.
o Now that I've found datasheets, fix a boatload of magic numbers in the
source to make it easier to understand.
o Use a table of names rather than a big case statement.
o Cull a few of the "unused" controller types that we map to other times
that were a vestiage of PAO code that we never merged in the same way.
o Enforce legal IRQs. You are no longer allowed to try to use IRQs that
will fail on all known ISA/PCI <-> PCMCIA bridges. The bridges do not
have pins for these illegal interrupts, and all of them are listed as
reserved and/or illegeal in the datasheets depending on which one you
look at.
o Add comments about how IBM-AT based computers and NEC PC-98 based computers
map these interrupts and which ones are valid.
o Always clear the bit that steers the management interrupt either to the
value listed in the PCIC_STAT_INT register. I've seen this bit get set
on suspend/resume and after windows boot, and it does't hurt to clear it.
NOTE: this might mean we can share this interrupt in the future.
one memory map. The memory window for the PCIC is identifed by the resource id
for NEWSBUS drivers. pccardd always uses window 0 and rid 0 when setting maps
up. This fix does not affect pccardd's handling of common memory for ed cards.
Reviewed by: imp
o Fix OLDCARD to use the new interface.
o Rename the offsetp argument to deltap to more closely reflect what it
is returning (it returns the delta from the requested value to the actual
value).
o Remove duplicate $FreeBSD$ in pccbb.c
o Allow deltap to be NULL.
o Convert new isa pcic driver and add XXX comments that this function isn't
actually implemented there (which means that NEWCARD pccard stuff won't
work there until it is).
o Revert attempts to make old inferface work in NEWCARD.
Subitted by: peter (Parts of the new version code)
<sys/proc.h> to <sys/systm.h>.
Correctly document the #includes needed in the manpage.
Add one now needed #include of <sys/systm.h>.
Remove the consequent 48 unused #includes of <sys/proc.h>.
- If resource which was allocated for pcic was
requested via this ioctl, bus_alloc_resource
would be succeeded and that resource was
returned as free resource. So check whether
requested resource was used for pcic or not
before bus_alloc_resource test.
- merge SYS_RES_IRQ routine into other SYS_RES_*
routine and clean up.
problem reported by: Yohei Terada <terada@jiro.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
o Add Vpp power at 5.0V rather than 0. Setting it to zero violates
the pccard spec. Most pcic devices in use today don't let us
violate the spec, but some older ones do. Bill Paul sent this to
me a long time ago and I thought I'd commit it before now.
o Add some debug stuff hidden behind bootverbose.
possible to have different probe/attach semantics between the two
systems and yet still use the same driver for both.
Compatibility methods for OLDCARD drivers. We use these routines to make
it possible to call the OLDCARD driver's probe routine in the context that
it expects. For OLDCARD these are implemented as pass throughs to the
device_{probe,attach} routines. For NEWCARD they are implemented such
such that probe becomes strictly a matching routine and attach does both
the old probe and old attach.
compat devices should use the following:
/* Device interface */
DEVMETHOD(device_probe), pccard_compat_probe),
DEVMETHOD(device_attach), pccard_compat_attach),
/* Card interface */
DEVMETHOD(card_compat_match, foo_match), /* newly written */
DEVMETHOD(card_compat_probe, foo_probe), /* old probe */
DEVMETHOD(card_compat_attach, foo_attach), /* old attach */
This will allow a single driver binary image to be used for both
OLDCARD and NEWCARD.
Drivers wishing to not retain OLDCARD compatibility needn't do this.
ep driver minorly updated.
sn driver updated more than minorly. Add module dependencies to allow
module to load. Also change name to if_sn. Add some debugging code.
attempt to fix the cannot allocate memory problem I'd been seeing.
Minor formatting nits.
newbus for referencing device interrupt handlers.
- Move the 'struct intrec' type which describes interrupt sources into
sys/interrupt.h instead of making it just be a x86 structure.
- Don't create 'ithd' and 'intrec' typedefs, instead, just use 'struct ithd'
and 'struct intrec'
- Move the code to translate new-bus interrupt flags into an interrupt thread
priority out of the x86 nexus code and into a MI ithread_priority()
function in sys/kern/kern_intr.c.
- Remove now-uneeded x86-specific headers from sys/dev/ata/ata-all.c and
sys/pci/pci_compat.c.
memory space needed by the raylink driver (in progress, nearing
completion).
This is a minorly cleaned up diff from Duncan to help him reduce the
diffs from stock FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Duncan Barclay <dmlb@ragnet.demon.co.uk>
pcic_attach() got a wrong pointer to pcic_slots since device haven't
set correct unit number yet, so always accessed elements of pcic_slots
which belong to pcic0 (unit number 0).
Now we set unit number to pcic device first, then access to pcic_slots
based on the unit number we've just set.
incomplete, but will eventually allow the same drivers to function
with both oldcard and newcard.
o Remove include of opt_bus.h. It isn't needed and gets in the way of
module building.
- Fixed bogus CIS tuple dumping (Network node ID, IRQ modes and etc.)
- Include telling drivers ethernet address if Network node ID
tuple is available. This is usefull for some bogus ehter cards which
can't get correct ethernet address from CIS tupple.
Obtained from: PAO3
o Modify xe driver to use this.
There's still some issues with this code, so xe can't map the cis just
yet. I'm thinking about how to resolve the issue. pccard_nbk's
pccard_alloc_resource is getting in the way.
This don't hurt anything.
PCI/CardBus Bridge -> PCI-CardBus Bridge
Submitted by: Takeshi Shibagaki <sibagaki@lsi.melco.co.jp>
Obtained from: bsd-nomads ML in Japan
cardbus bridge init routine for all cardbuses. This routine attempts
to compensate for BIOSes that do not setup the cardbus bridge into
legacy mode. Since this is becoming more common, and cardbus pci
cards have appeared on the market, this makes sense.
Do some TI113x specific initialization. This came in as part of the
patch. Report TI1[1234]XX specific config registers protected by
bootverbose.
Minor code cleanup while I'm here. I've also removed the unused code
present in the original patches, and cleaned it up slightly in places
as well.
The original patches supported more than one card, but these patches
support just one. We should likely revisit this in the future.
This makes the Compaq card that Walnut Creek CD purchased for me work
in my bouncer box.
This is a MFC candidate. However, I'd like to get some airtime on
these patches on as many laptops as possible before doing the MFC. It
does change things somewhat. In theory, apart from the minor TI
tweaks, this shouldn't change anything if the bridge is in legacy mode
already.
Submitted by: sanpei@sanpei.org (MIHIRA Yoshiro)
o break out some of the probe routine the allocation of resources
into an attach routine
o Recognize PnP ids
o Allocate IRQ per card rather than per system
o Better polling reporting
o Remove unneeded include files in slot.h
o store a pseudo unit number on each device we find.
o Pass a unit number to interrupt/timeout routine and use it for polling
the hardware.
Tested on: My VAIO and with the Linksys pccard reader.
Approved by: jkh
conversion to eliminate the compatability shims without making any
significant changes. This eliminates the shim warnings.
Obtained from: n_himba (tweaked by me, don't blame him for this)
Approved by: jkh
Many ed-based Ethernet PC-cards can't get correct MAC address without
this patch.
Submitted by: Takanori Watanabe <takawata@shidahara1.planet.sci.kobe-u.ac.jp>
Reviewed by: Warner Losh <imp@village.org>
For example, when /etc/pccard.conf had ed0 in config line, but kernel
refused this name and said
devclass_alloc_unit: ed0 already exists, using next availale unit
number
Kernel used ed1 as device name and it did not match with config and
insert/remove lines. Fortunately, dhclient was called without args,
and it works, but if we wanted to use static IP address for PC-card,
it did not work.
This modification makes pccardd to execute insert/remove lines with
the true device name that returns from kernel. (Last change to
etc/pccard.conf.sample eliminated all hardwired device name from
insert/remove lines in /etc/pccard.conf)
Stop the recurring feeling of deja vu
Stop the recurring feeling of deja vu
Stop the recurring feeling of deja vu
and debounce the eject messages. We now mark the socket empty in the
interrupt handler, rather than after we've disabled the socket which
happens "much later".
probes are at the 'chip' level and will get overridden by pcic_p if it is
compiled in. It's still nice to get the better probe message if it's not...
Requested by: imp
is an application space macro and the applications are supposed to be free
to use it as they please (but cannot). This is consistant with the other
BSD's who made this change quite some time ago. More commits to come.
the activate method to the setup_intr, and turn it off to
teardown_intr.
This makes the ed driver not enter its interrupt routine during the
probe. Apparently, an interrupt happens when you disable the
interrupts. There are other problems with ed still.
Should have no effect, but does make things a little cleaner. I
thought this was the race that was causing problems, but it turned out
to be in pccardd waking up after the empty/insert events had happened
and being confused.
Minor cleanup:
o Remove isahd from pccard_devinfo
o remove extra from controller
o formatting nits
o use PCCARD_DEVINFO(d) rather than a bare device_get_ivars(d)
as the unit argument instead of 0. disable_slot() calls
devclass_get_device() correctly, however because alloc_driver() does
it wrong, disable_slot() is unable to locate the child devices
attached to the pccard bus and thus fails to call device_delete_child()
on them. The end result is that when a card is removed, its detach
routine is never called, and re-insertion always fails.
With this fix (and the previous one to if_wi.c), I can now insert,
remove and re-insert my WaveLAN/IEEE card and things behave correctly.
kldunloading the if_wi.ko module also seems to work properly now.
Ok'ed by: imp
device_add_child_ordered(). 'ivars' may now be set using the
device_set_ivars() function.
This makes it easier for us to change how arbitrary data structures are
associated with a device_t. Eventually we won't be modifying device_t
to add additional pointers for ivars, softc data etc.
Despite my best efforts I've probably forgotten something so let me know
if this breaks anything. I've been running with this change for months
and its been quite involved actually isolating all the changes from
the rest of the local changes in my tree.
Reviewed by: peter, dfr
with the beep information it had (like ignoring it).
Submitted by: sanpei@sanpei.org (MIHIRA-san Yoshiro)
Add $FreeBSD$ to pccard_beep.c while I'm here.
problem.
o Create new timeout routine so we don't detach the card inside a ISR
but instead drop back to spl0 via a timeout of 0.
o Actually delete the child of the pccard device rather than just faking
it badly.
o Fix sio, ed and ep to have pccard detach routines that are int rather
than void.
o Fix ep and ed pccard detach routines to use if_detach rather than just
if_down. if_detach destroys the device, while if_down just marks it
down. In this incarnation of the pccard things, we map the disable
the slot action to detach the driver, which removes the driver from the
device tree. When that is done, a panic would soon follow as the
ifconfig tried to down the device.
Didn't fix:
o Should cache the pccard dev child's pointer in struct slot
o remove now unused parts of struct slot
o Any driver using softc after detach has been called. sio's softc used
to be statically allocated, so you could check sc->gone, but that is
now gone.
o Didn't remove gone from softc of drivers that use the old pccard method.
Didn't test:
o ed driver changes
o sio driver changes on pccards
o suspend (no laptop or apm support on my desktop)
o Gut the compatibility interface, you now must attach with newbus.
o Unit numbers from pccardd are now ignored. This may change the units
assigned to a card. It now uses the first available unit.
o kill old skeleton code that is now obsolete.
o Use newbus attachment code.
o cleanup interfile dependencies some.
o kill list of devices per slot. we use the device tree for what we need.
o Remove now obsolete code.
o The ep driver (and maybe ed) may need some config file tweaks to
allow it to attach. See config files that were committed for examples
on how to do this.
Drivers to be commited shortly.
This is an interrum fix until the new pccard. ed, ep and sio will be
supported by me with this release, although others are welcome to try
to support other devices before new pccard is working.
I plan on doing minimal further work on this code base. Be careful
when upgrading, since this code is known to work on my laptop and
those of a couple others as well, but your milage may vary.
BUGS TO BE FIXED:
o system memory isn't allocated yet, it will be soon.
o No devices actually have a pccard newbus attach in the tree.
BUGS THAT MIGHT BE FIXED:
o card removal, including suspend, usually hangs the system.
Many thanks to Peter Wemm and Doug Rabson for helping me to fill in
the missing bits of New Bus understanding at FreeBSD Con '99.
pc98 case that I missed before. Attempt to get the irq for the PCIC
first from the loader env var and second from the config system. I've
been able to boot my laptop with a kernel that hardwired the irq to
10. This should allow boot -c to finally start working for pcic irq,
but I've not tested that. Add $FreeBSD$ to slot.h.
floating before). Attach pccard devices to pcic, one per slot
(although this may change to one per pcic). pcic is now attached to
isa (to act as a bridge) and pccard is attached to pcic, cbb and
pc98ic (the last two are card bus bridge and the pc98ic version of
pcic, neither of which are in the tree yet). Move pccard compat code
into pccard/pccard_compat.c.
THIS REQUIRES A CONFIG FILE CHANGE. You must change your pcic/card
entries to be:
# PCCARD (PCMCIA) support
controller pcic0 at isa?
controller pcic1 at isa?
controller card0
The old system was upside down and this corrects that problem. It
will make it easier to add support for YENTA pccard/card bus bridges.
Much more cleanup needs to happen before newbus devices can have
pccard attachments. My previous commit's comments were premature.
devices. There may still be problems with said drivers, if so please
let me know.
o Move attach-like functionality to the nbk attach compatibility code.
o Smarter probe code: for the compatibility code probe succeeds if
strcmp succeeds, for noncompatibility you can do anything you like.
o Get rid of some compiler warnings introduced in last commit.
have been there in the first place. A GENERIC kernel shrinks almost 1k.
Add a slightly different safetybelt under nostop for tty drivers.
Add some missing FreeBSD tags
will allow newbus based drivers to have pccard attachments. Also
start printing out probe messages for pccards stating the resources
used and regularize many of the pccard printfs.
Reviewed by: Peter Wemm.
Diskslice/label code not yet handled.
Vinum, i4b, alpha, pc98 not dealt with (left to respective Maintainers)
Add the correct hook for devfs to kern_conf.c
The net result of this excercise is that a lot less files depends on DEVFS,
and devtoname() gets more sensible output in many cases.
A few drivers had minor additional cleanups performed relating to cdevsw
registration.
A few drivers don't register a cdevsw{} anymore, but only use make_dev().
o Add field to dev_desc for the size of the io port range. This isn't
used yet in the committed sources, but will make the transition easier
in the future.
If you build this into your kernel, you will need to rebuild pccardd.
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.
#define COMPAT_PCI_DRIVER(name,data) DATA_SET(pcidevice_set,data)
.. to 2.2.x and 3.x if people think it's worth it. Driver writers can do
this if it's not defined. (The reason for this is that I'm trying to
progressively eliminate use of linker_sets where it hurts modularity and
runtime load capability, and these DATA_SET's keep getting in the way.)
abuses its argument, which is supposed to be an integer unit number, as
a pointer to the head of the 'struct slot' list. When this code was
hacked^Wupdated for newbus, a new mechanism for registering slot_irq_handler()
was put in place and the significance of the unit number was overlooked.
When registering an interrupt, we have both device_id and unit. The unit
number is passed as 'unit' but /sys/i386/usa/intr_machdep.c:register_intr()
drops unit on the floor and uses device_id instead. Since pccard_alloc_intr()
always sets device_id to 0, this means the unit number is always zero, and
slot_irq_handler() is always called with 0, which becomes a NULL pointer
which slot_irq_handler() tries to dereference and the kernel explodes.
Result: if you assign a PCMCIA driver in the kernel config file like this:
device wi0 at isa? port? irq?
Then the system will panic the moment a PCMCIA device is attached and
an interrupt is triggered.
The quick fix: make pccard_alloc_intr() pass the unit number as both
the device_id and unit arguments to register_pcic_intr(). The correct fix
would be to rewrite /sys/pccard to be less disgusting.
so that the list of drivers is correct. This is a slightly
simplified version of the patch from the PR.
PR: misc/10544
Submitted by: Christophe Colle <colle@krtkg1.rug.ac.be>
1:
s/suser/suser_xxx/
2:
Add new function: suser(struct proc *), prototyped in <sys/proc.h>.
3:
s/suser_xxx(\([a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)->p_ucred, \&\1->p_acflag)/suser(\1)/
The remaining suser_xxx() calls will be scrutinized and dealt with
later.
There may be some unneeded #include <sys/cred.h>, but they are left
as an exercise for Bruce.
More changes to the suser() API will come along with the "jail" code.
in the not APIC_IO case. This should silence the warnings when
building pcic.c as well as the undefined functions when the kernel
links.
Noticed by: several people in -current and me building the kernel
This will trigger inserted()) to be called twice which confuses pccardd.
Add code to not process pcicitr())'s when in the middle of a resume
process. The real insertion of cards and the emulated one in the suspend/resume
code really do not mix up.
however is only marginally useful until the new-style bus (pci and isa)
stuff comes onboard to give us a better shot at actually pci and isa
drivers loadable (or preloadable anyway).
computer 'suspended', although the slot was powered off. There was a
race where the slow could be powered off *after* it was assigned a
new driver when the computer was 'resumed'.
Noticed by: Brian Somers <brian@Awfulhak.org>
We do the same thing we do with all the other Vadem chips and print the
right identification for these chips. Tested with the 365, and inferred
for the 465.
This allows the cheapo PCMCIA card that I got from necx to print the right
chip number on boot.
`void *' arg. Fixed or hid most of the resulting type mismatches.
Handlers can now be updated locally (except for reworking their
global declarations in isa_device.h).
FreeBSD/alpha. The most significant item is to change the command
argument to ioctl functions from int to u_long. This change brings us
inline with various other BSD versions. Driver writers may like to
use (__FreeBSD_version == 300003) to detect this change.
The prototype FreeBSD/alpha machdep will follow in a couple of days
time.
was really removed, or simply 'faked' by a suspend/resume. Keep track
of both current and previous state, and send that information to the
userland programs.
[
XXX - This breaks binary compatability with older pccardd programs, but
they don't work reliably. :(
]