is really EtherExpress or EEPro or what, but it does appear in a
couple of ethernet cards that have appeared recently on ebay. Silicom
appears to make these cards, and they have the 82595TX chipset in
them, and sometimes uarts. The ex driver needs some work to support
these cards, but I thought I'd get the device into pccarddevs.
o Fix MFC cards. We were bogusly setting CCR_IOBASE[01] and CCR_IOLIMIT.
now when we activate the resource, we adjust these for MFC cards, per the
spec.
o Change type of pf_mfc_* to be bus_addr_t, which is more correct than
long.
This makes my 3C362D/3C363D and 3CXEM556 cards work! Woo Hoo!
o minor optimization of cardbus_cis processing. Remove a bunch of generic
entries that are handled by generic.
o no longer need the card_get_type stuff.
routine of its own, and allows us to move the indentation back two
layers making the code more readable.
delete a prototype that should have been killed years ago in pccardvar.h.
# adding quirks here is way harder than it needs to be. :-(
1.186: onoe; Sony's PEGA-WL110 CF WLAN (which strangely has fujitsu's
vendor id)
1.185: ichiro; Quatech Inc, PCMCIA Enhanced Parallel Port Card
Also:
o update $NetBSD$
o minor tweaks to FUJITSU. We've tried to keep the CIS only entries seprate
from vendor id/product id.
such a card is ejected, we'd panic. Instead, just ignore it.
I should also add a sanity check in the FUNCID code as well, but this
isn't wrong since the check is cheap and happens infrequently.
compatibility routine, go ahead and accept that as 'success'. A
properly written compatible driver should return < 0 for both the
compat match and compat probe routines, so this will wind up doing the
right thing.
vendors that list the vendor ID in the proper byte order. The second
section is for vendors that get it backwards. The third is for what
appear to be 'random' ones (although 0xcxxx appears to be coherent
enough that maybe somebody else is assigning those numbers).
are all bogus, and the cards that don't decode things quite right
often have hundreds of them. This will fix starvation of small dmesg
buffers and allow better debugging to happen. I thought about adding
an override, but there is such a thing as too many knobs. :-)
to what is in NetBSD. I have a few cards that tickles this bug, and
this just keeps us from panicing. It doesn't actually fix the problem
(that will happen once I figure out why some cards hate the address
their CIS is mapped to high memory).