Clarified GUS DMA Settings.
Other misc. changes.
This should hold us over until I can finish cleaning up TASD, and finish
reintegrating all of the FreeBSD changes to the sound driver. At that time
this document will be removed, and it's information moved to the handbook.
fd and wt drivers need bounce buffers, so this normally saves 32K-1K
of kernel memory.
Keep track of which DMA channels are busy. isa_dmadone() must now be
called when DMA has finished or been aborted.
Panic for unallocated and too-small (required) bounce buffers.
fd.c:
There will be new warnings about isa_dmadone() not being called after
DMA has been aborted.
sound/dmabuf.c:
isa_dmadone() needs more parameters than are available, so temporarily
use a new interface isa_dmadone_nobounce() to avoid having to worry
about panics for fake parameters. Untested.
Save 112K for SB, 64K for PAS and 64K for MSS.
Since PAS use SB emulation, 176K normally saved for it.
Few minor optimizations added like in Linux driver.
When you start tracker and produce some heavy disk activity,
output interrupts becomes lost and I don't know how to solve it
finally. Newly added code at least allows recovery after timeout.
2) Use CURSIG(curproc) in PROCESS_ABORTING instead of junk code was there.
3) Reanimate timeout code in DO_SLEEP by setting WK_TIMEOUT flag
which is never set in old code.
4) DO_SLEEP: set aborting flag on interrupting singnals as supposed, not
on signals which do nothing as in old code.
5) Cleanup WAKE_UP macro, WK_WAKEUP not used.
6) Remove wrong typecasts in sleep/wakeup code.
This random address can be matched (with some probability) with another
sleep addresses from other drivers, which can cause strange sleep/wakeup
sequence. Rewrite this ugly code to do the right thing.
it out fixes my problem but hoses the GUS MAX probe messages. Check what
device we have and print things appropriately for each.
Pointed out by: Jim Lowe <james@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
whether of not to automatically #define EXCLUDE_AUDIO; MSS is a real
audio device and we should not #define EXCLUDE_AUDIO if we have one.
(And I want it because it's the only mixer-capable audio driver that I
can use with my crummy Packard Bell (nee Aztech) audio board.)
This fixes the very confusing condition where having all of this:
mss0 at 0x530 irq 10 drq 1 on isa
gus0: <MS Sound System (CS4231)>
opl0 at 0x388 on isa
opl0: <Yamaha OPL-3 FM>
mpu0 at 0x300 irq 9 drq 0 on isa
mpu0: <MPU-401 MIDI Interface 0.0 >
will still give you this:
% cat /dev/sndstat
SoundCard Error: The soundcard system has not been configured
Also remove an unnecessary newline in the printf() message for the
'gus0' device shown above so that we don't wind up printing a blank
line between mss0 and gus0.
most devsw referenced functions are now static, as they are
in the same file as their devsw structure. I've also added DEVFS
support for nearly every device in the system, however
many of the devices have 'incorrect' names under DEVFS
because I couldn't quickly work out the correct naming conventions.
(but devfs won't be coming on line for a month or so anyhow so that doesn't
matter)
If you "OWN" a device which would normally have an entry in /dev
then search for the devfs_add_devsw() entries and munge to make them right..
check out similar devices to see what I might have done in them in you
can't see what's going on..
for a laugh compare conf.c conf.h defore and after... :)
I have not doen DEVFS entries for any DISKSLICE devices yet as that will be
a much more complicated job.. (pass 5 :)
pass 4 will be to make the devsw tables of type (cdevsw * )
rather than (cdevsw)
seems to work here..
complaints to the usual places.. :)
That's EVERY SINGLE driver that has an entry in conf.c..
my next trick will be to define cdevsw[] and bdevsw[]
as empty arrays and remove all those DAMNED defines as well..
Each of these drivers has a SYSINIT linker set entry
that comes in very early.. and asks teh driver to add it's own
entry to the two devsw[] tables.
some slight reworking of the commits from yesterday (added the SYSINIT
stuff and some usually wrong but token DEVFS entries to all these
devices.
BTW does anyone know where the 'ata' entries in conf.c actually reside?
seems we don't actually have a 'ataopen() etc...
If you want to add a new device in conf.c
please make sure I know
so I can keep it up to date too..
as before, this is all dependent on #if defined(JREMOD)
(and #ifdef DEVFS in parts)
o Add signed/unsigned functionality to the matrox meteor device driver.
o Apply a few fixes to the sound driver.
o Add a ``SPIGOT_UNSECURE'' compile time definition so, if one defines
SPIGOT_UNSECURE in their conf file, then they can use the spigot w/o
root. There is a warning that this allows users access to the IO
page which is probably not secure.
Submitted by: james
totally dynamic. (the first was about 7 weeeks ago)
this is only the devices in i386/isa
I'll do more tomorrow.
they're completely masked by #ifdef JREMOD at this stage...
the eventual aim is that every driver will do a SYSINIT
at startup BEFORE the probes, which will effectively
link it into the devsw tables etc.
If I'd thought about it more I'd have put that in in this set (damn)
The ioconf lines generated by config will also end up in the
device's own scope as well, so ioconf.c will eventually be gutted
the SYSINIT call to the driver will include a phase where the
driver links it's ioconf line into a chain of such. when this phase is done
then the user can modify them with the boot: -c
config menu if he wants, just like now..
config will put the config lines out in the .h file
(e.g. in aha.h will be the addresses for the aha driver to look.)
as I said this is a very small first step..
the aim of THIS set of edits is to not have to edit conf.c at all when
adding a new device.. the tabe will be a simple skeleton..
when this is done, it will allow other changes to be made,
all teh time still having a fully working kernel tree,
but the logical outcome is the complete REMOVAL of the devsw tables.
By the end of this, linked in drivers will be exactly the same as
run-time loaded drivers, except they JUST HAPPEN to already be linked
and present at startup..
the SYSINIT calls will be the equivalent of the "init" call
made to a newly loaded driver in every respect.
For this edit,
each of the files has the following code inserted into it:
obviously, tailored to suit..
----------------------somewhere at the top:
#ifdef JREMOD
#include <sys/conf.h>
#define CDEV_MAJOR 13
#define BDEV_MAJOR 4
static void sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD */
---------------------somewhere that's run during bootup: EVENTUALLY a SYSINIT
#ifdef JREMOD
sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD*/
-----------------------at the bottom:
#ifdef JREMOD
struct bdevsw sd_bdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, sdstrategy, sdioctl, /*4*/
sddump, sdsize, 0 };
struct cdevsw sd_cdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, rawread, rawwrite, /*13*/
sdioctl, nostop, nullreset, nodevtotty,/* sd */
seltrue, nommap, sdstrategy };
static sd_devsw_installed = 0;
static void sd_devsw_install()
{
dev_t descript;
if( ! sd_devsw_installed ) {
descript = makedev(CDEV_MAJOR,0);
cdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_cdevsw,NULL);
#if defined(BDEV_MAJOR)
descript = makedev(BDEV_MAJOR,0);
bdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_bdevsw,NULL);
#endif /*BDEV_MAJOR*/
sd_devsw_installed = 1;
}
}
#endif /* JREMOD */
misplaced extern declarations (mostly prototypes of interrupt handlers)
that this exposed. The prototypes should be moved back to the driver
sources when the functions are staticalized.
Added idempotency guards to <machine/conf.h>. "ioconf.h" can't be
included when building LKMs so define a wart in bsd.kmod.mk to help
guard against including it.
to <machine/conf.h>. conf.h was mechanically generated by
`grep ^d_ conf.c >conf.h'. This accounts for part of its ugliness. The
prototypes should be moved back to the driver sources when the functions
are staticalized.
Amancio. There is some SoundSource support here that is primitive and
probably doesn't work, but I'll let the two submitters let me know
how my integration of that was since I don't have this card to test.
I've only tested this on my GUS MAX since it's all I have.
This all probably needs to be re-done anyway since we're widely variant
from the original VOXWARE source in the current layout.
Submitted by: Amancio Hasty and Jim Lowe
Obtained from: Hannu Savolainen
This finishes making the kernel compile without -O.
The "optimized" asm version of the function being inlined
(translate_bytes()) uses slow instructions. On a 486, assuming
everything is in the cache (unlikely), it is 21/15 times slower
than the dumb C version and 21/3 times slower than the best
possible bytewise method.
notice, performed all of the structural changes necessary to get this thing
to work with the unidirectional-DMA version of voxware.
This work is -not- complete, but it's in far better shape than it was, and
I may not touch it again for another few months.