their HotRod controller and on SIIG PCI ultra DMA controller. These
changes also made lots of the Promise code go away, its all much more
generic this way.
Get rid of atapi_immed_cmd, instead use the queue to move atapi commands
from interrupt context if nessesary, the entire atapi layer has
gotten an overhaul.
Lots of fixes to utililize the new features in subr_disk.c etc, and
get rid of the last biots of softc arrays in the drivers, the
only one left is atadevices which cannot easily go away (yet).
Use our own malloc names, its a lot easier to track memory usage this way.
General cleanup overall.
- Work around a problem not yet solved in the tree (but solved in mine.)
device_get_ivars() should never be cast to a struct resource_list *
The solution, under review, involves the creation of a
device_get_resource_list() function. More later.
configuration information from a DPT card at a given port.
This is needed by the ISA bus front end (still to come) and the EISA
bus front end (which hasn't ever worked).
- Blow away dpt_eisa.h as the information it contains does not justify
an additional file.
- Convert dpt_eisa.c to use the onboard config instead of trying to
read the EISA configuration registers.
- Some cleanup and improvements in the uhci and ohci drivers
- Support for plugging and unplugging devices improved
- Now available is bulk transport over OHCI controllers
- Resume and suspend have been temporarily been disabled again. Proper
support for it is available in the uhci.c and ohci.c files but I have
not yet spent the brain cycles to use it.
- OpenBSD now uses the USB stack as well
- Add FreeBSD tags
Remove the use of ukbd_disconnect and replace it with direct
calls to disable.
Change printf to DPRINTF
Remove the use of usbd_lock, change it to splusb()/splx()
the AMI PCI controllers using the 8LD firmware interface (40LD firmware
will be supported as soon as I have hardware to test with).
These controllers are rebadged by Dell as the PERC, as well as by HP
and possibly other vendors.
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.
0x8024b04e) so that the cards description is used instead of overriding
it. While I'm here, add an ID for the SUP2080 and the SUP2030.
PR: kern/13983
Submitted by: Kurt D. Zeilenga <Kurt@OpenLDAP.Org> (SUP2030)
dfr (rest of change)
Reviewed by: dfr
Vendor ID SUP2480 (0x8024b04e), Serial Number 0x00001334
PnP Version 1.0, Vendor Version 0
Device Description: SupraExpress 56i Sp V.90
Reviewed by: dfr
kernel, but gcc provides a pessimal builtin for it.
Makefile.i386:
Added a variable (CONF_CFLAGS) for configuration-specific compiler flags.
LINT:
Use CONF_CFLAGS to inhibit use of gcc builtins.
Add debuging for all failure cases in aha_cmd().
Always check DATAIN_REG_READY even if we're ready to exit the
read loop.
The last fix allows the AHA-1640 MCA SCSI adapter to operate
correctly and likely fixes problems on a few other oddball
adapters. (I suspect my Dell Drive Array in 1540 mode needs this.)
Reviewed by: Warner Losh
apm_saver uses the apm_display() routine from the apm system to
"suspend" the "display" part of the machine.
This is beneficial for some laptops (or other machines with
non-traditional displays) that choke on the 'green' saver's
effect.
Another way of looking at this is that it's the same as a screen
saver that does an 'apm -d 0' to blank the display and an 'apm -d 1'
to bring it back. One probably ought to use these commands to make
sure the effect will be correct before using it unattended.
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.
of parity check and rebuild operations. This enables us
to stop the operation and restart at a later time.
enum parityop: Trivial enum to decide what parityops() is going to do.
could stand.
Define the correct return lengths for a number of ioctls.
Add ioctls VINUM_CHECKPARITY and VINUM_RESETPARITY, still to be fully
implemented.