Commit Graph

13350 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tony Ackerman
54fa8c991d Latest README to correspond to latest Intel version 2.1.7 2005-05-26 23:33:24 +00:00
Tony Ackerman
7e518cf0e8 Changes to update driver with latest Intel driver version 2.1.7
- Changed from using explicit devices id to using descriptive labels.
- Added support for 82573 and 82546 Quad adapters.
- Corrected support for 82547EI and 82541ER (mac_type was not assigned)
- Removed #ifdef DBG_STATS and extraneous code.

if_em_hw.c/if_em_hw.h
- Added support for 82573 and 82546 Quad adapters.
- Brought forward Intel's most current mac and phy changes.
2005-05-26 23:32:02 +00:00
Hartmut Brandt
07d9fa4c2e Add a missing comma which prevents compilation with debugging enabled.
Spotted by:	Donatas <donatas@lrtc.net>
2005-05-25 13:33:58 +00:00
Olivier Houchard
0f470b07d2 Don't set the tuner type to TUNER_MT2032 if BKTR_OVERRIDE_TUNER is defined or
if hw.bt848.tuner has been set, so that we can force the tuner.
2005-05-24 21:12:49 +00:00
Olivier Houchard
c9d9582d9f Fix one more misuse of u_long when uint32_t is actually meant.
Submitted by:	oliver
MFC after:	3 days
2005-05-24 20:42:08 +00:00
Pyun YongHyeon
c21880a7df Make snd_maestro3(4) mpsafe
- Let m3_pchan_trigger()/m3_rchan_trigger() acquire lock and call
   m3_pchan_trigger_locked()/m3_rchan_trigger_locked() respectivly.
 - Mark interrupt handler INTR_MPSAFE.
 - Add locks in sound/channel interface.

Tested by:	nork
2005-05-23 06:27:07 +00:00
Pyun YongHyeon
264166b8bb According to STP2002QFP User's Guide, it seems that driver should
program RXMAC to discard frames with SA field matching the stations's
MAC address. Experimentation shows that HME receives its own frames
when it operates at 10Mbps half-duplex. With this change HME runs at
10Mbps half-duplx should work with IPv6.
(No more "DAD detected duplicate IPv6 address".)

Reported by:	jacques brierre <jbrierre AT bellsouth DOT net>
Reviewed by:	marius
2005-05-23 05:45:36 +00:00
Damien Bergamini
acea42415f o Clear device-specific PCI register 0x41 (Retry Timeout) during attach
and on resume (reported to fix issues with ACPI)
o Add monitor mode support
o Add WPA (802.11i) support (not tested extensively though!)
o Add a device specific sysctl to control the tx antenna (default to
  antenna diversity)
o Fix sensitivity setting
o Fix setting of the capinfo field when associating
o Temporarly disable 802.11a channels scanning that was causing firmware
  panics with 2915ABG adapters until I find a better fix.  This breaks
  802.11a support.
o Temporarly switch back to software WEP until I implement hardware
  encryption for AES and TKIP too.

Approved by:    silby (mentor)
2005-05-22 18:55:32 +00:00
Damien Bergamini
150bb7c348 Fix WPA (802.11i) support.
Approved by:	silby (mentor)
2005-05-22 18:34:20 +00:00
Damien Bergamini
0e22d2c550 Clear device-specific PCI register 0x41 during attach and on resume.
Appoved by:	silby (mentor)
2005-05-22 18:31:08 +00:00
Mike Silbersack
c3615d48b7 Add PCI ID for BCM5789.
Submitted by:	S. Aeschbacher
2005-05-22 03:16:45 +00:00
Marius Strobl
0a710885bd Add machfb(4), a driver for ATI Mach64 graphics chips intended for
use with syscons(4) on sparc64. It's based on the respective NetBSD
driver with some additional info (initialisation/hardware cursor)
obtained from the Xorg 'ati' driver and some ideas taken from
creator(4). ATI Mach64 chips ("ATI Rage") are quite common as low-
end graphics chips in PCI-based sun4u machines and are used on-board
in e.g. Blade 100 and a couple of OEM products. Most if not all of
the Sun PGX add-on cards family (descriptions of the PGX32 are
conflicting but most say it's a Rage Pro) are also based on these
chips. Depending on the version of the OBP Mach64 cards destined for
use in i386 machines also work in sun4u machines.
The driver uses pixel mode with hardware acceleration as far as
syscons(4) currently permits on sparc64 so text mode is already
quite fast. The hardware cursor is used for the mouse pointer;
for one because this is a "restriction" induced in syscons(4) on
sparc64 by creator(4) and also because of issues with mapping
the aperture when used as a low-level early during boot. Due to
insufficiencies in the available documentation I didn't manage to
get mode switch work properly (sync problems), yet. So for now
this driver relies on the OBP having initialised a mode (as does
creator(4)). On all of the tested machines is even true when using
a serial console (and also not only when the OBP switched to a
serial console because no keyboard is present). In general however
the states the Mach64 chips are left in by the OBP vary a lot
depending on the version of the OBP. This e.g. includes the aperture
not being mapped in even when used as the console and the OBP just
barfing when asked to map it. The latter is also the reason for the
existence of this native driver in FreeBSD rather than taking an
OFW frambuffer approach.
Xorg is also happy to talk to these chips by mmap'ing them through
this driver. For some hardware configs like on the Blade 100 a fix
for the Xorg sparc64 MD bus code is however needed (added in version
6.8.2_2 of the xorg-server port).
The video driver font loading and saving methods are not implemented,
yet, as syscons(4) needs more work in that area to work viable on
sparc64.
With minor modifications machfb(4) would most likely also work on
powerpc, when #ifdef'ing the OFW and possibly implementing mode
setting probably also on the other archs. The latter is however
not very practible at the moment as it would conflict with vga(4).

Tested/developed with:	Rage II+ add-on card on AX1105 and AXi board,
			AXe board (on-board Rage Pro)
Additional testing by:	marcel (Ultra 5 w/ on-board Rage Pro),
			scottl (Naturetech GENIALstation 777S w/ on-board
			Rage Mobility M1),
			Michiel Boland and Ilmar S. Habibulin (Blade 100
			w/ on-board Rage XL)
2005-05-21 20:47:38 +00:00
Marius Strobl
ff706bdfcf o creator(4):
- Use register macros instead of magic values in the code. [1]
  - Check the return values of OF_getprop() and other stuff that actually
    can fail.
  - Let the unimplemented video driver methods return ENODEV rather
    than 0 so other code isn't tricked into thinking a certain operation
    was successfull. In case of e.g. the video driver creator_ioctl()
    this caused vidcontrol(1) to return random garbage information.
    Remove the TODO macros in the unimplemented video driver methods
    which did a printf("%s: unimplemented\n", __func__). Under certain
    circumstances these managed to invoke a printf() when a low-level
    console device wasn't attached, yet, causing a Fast Data Access MMU
    Miss. These macros were only really usefull for development anyway.
  - Set the struct video_adapter and struct video_info va_flags and
    vi_flags etc. as appropriate.
  - In creator_configure() don't rely on hitting the node which is the
    chosen console device first when searching the OFW tree for adapters
    compatible with this driver. Instead just check whether the chosen
    console device is a viable target for this driver. Targets that are
    not the console (including additional cards in multi-head configs)
    will be attached through creator_upa_attach(). I think this how the
    code in creator_configure() was actually meant to work.
    Honour the VIO_PROBE_ONLY flag and don't initialise and register the
    console device twice when creator_configure() is called a second time
    during sc_probe_unit().
    Let creator_configure() return the number of the found adapters,
    i.e. 1 in case probing succeeds, as it's expected. The return values
    of video adapter configure functions however currently aren't checked
    so this doesn't make a difference at the moment.
  - In creator_upa_attach() don't rely on probing and attaching the
    adapter which is the console first, in case there are multiple
    adpaters and one of them is the console this could lead into using
    the video adapter unit 0 twice.
  - Make the check for DACs with inverted cursor control a bit more
    precise and actually honour that information when turning the cursor
    on or off. Add a helper function creator_cursor_enable() for this
    in order to keep code duplication low. [1]
  - Don't bother with faking a hardware cursor in case a device is the
    console. Apparently this was meant to start kernel output right after
    where the firmware left. In general this isn't worth the fuzz and
    also had no real effect as creator_set_mode() did clear the screen
    in any case, not just in case a device was not the console.
  - Implement creator_fill_rect() and use it to actually blank the
    display in creator_blank_display() when the mode is V_DISPLAY_BLANK,
    moving blanking the display out of creator_set_mode(). Use it also
    to implement creator_set_border() so the border can be re-drawn
    when switching to a VTY from X, exiting X, etc. (which leaves us
    with a black border most of the time).
  - Implement the video driver creator_ioctl(), moving the implementation
    of the IOCTL interface from the fbN CDEV version of creator_ioctl()
    into the video driver version and use the latter to implement the
    former. Use fb_commonioctl() to handle most of the FBIO IOCTLs.
    This gives programs like vidcontrol(1) which use the video driver
    creator_ioctl() a chance of working.
    Implement turning off the cursor via the FBIOSCURSOR IOCTL, which
    Xorg uses to in order to inform the OS that it's taking over the
    cursor. In creator_putm() check whether the cursor is enabled and
    (re-)install it if necessary, moving installing the cursor out of
    creator_init() and into a helper function creator_cursor_install().
    This fixes the missing mouse pointer when switching to a VTY from X,
    exiting X, etc.
  - Some clean-up (remove unused/useless code, etc.).

o sparc64/creator/creator_upa.c / sparc64/sparc64/sc_machdep.c:
  - Attach syscons(4) as an own pseudo-device on the nexus rather than
    directly in creator_upa_attach(), similiar to attaching syscons(4)
    as a pseudo-device on isa(4) on other archs. This makes it a whole
    lot easier to do the right thing in multi-head configs, especially
    with different types of graphics adapters. [2]
  - Set SC_AUTODETECT_KBD by default so USB keyboards work out of the
    box. [2]

Based on/obtained from:	Xorg 'ffb' driver [1]
Based on/obtained from:	FreeBSD/powerpc [2]
2005-05-21 20:38:26 +00:00
Marius Strobl
fef24b8589 - Remove duplicate FBSDID.
- Start copyright comments with /*- where missing.
2005-05-21 20:34:22 +00:00
Marius Strobl
c9367f6c37 - Not every architecture defaults to a black background (e.g. sparc64
uses white) so base the color of the border on SC_NORM_ATTR rather
  than hardcoding BG_BLACK.
- Use SC_DRIVER_NAME rather than hardcoding 'sc' in message strings
  (see also sys/dev/syscons/syscons.h rev. 1.82).
2005-05-21 20:32:27 +00:00
Marius Strobl
fc0e49bd50 On sparc64 use 'syscons' rather than 'sc' for SC_DRIVER_NAME so
syscons(4) and its pseudo-devices don't get confused (including by
other device drivers) with the system controller devices which are
also termed 'sc' in the OFW tree (and which we probably want to
interface with hwpmc(4) one day).
2005-05-21 20:29:58 +00:00
Marius Strobl
ae240fafb2 Remove superfluous braces and add #ifndef __sparc64__ around the
VTB_FRAMEBUFFER specific code. On sparc64 we don't use a buffer of
type VTB_FRAMEBUFFER (see syscons.c) and excluding the respective
code here allows to compile syscons(4) without isa(4).

Requested by:	joerg, marcel, yongari
2005-05-21 20:28:15 +00:00
Marius Strobl
3b8c3ece32 - Sprinkle some KBD_IS_* and KBD_*_DONE macros in sunkbd_configure() as
a band-aid allowing to call this function savely multiple times, e.g.
  during sckbdprobe() and sc_probe_unit(). Otherwise calling it a second
  time results in a non-working keyboard. This needs a lot of more work
  to actually do the right thing and work like expected.
- Let sunkbd_configure() return the number of the found keyboards, i.e.
  1 in case probing succeeds, as it's expected. The return values of the
  keyboard configure functions however currently aren't checked so this
  doesn't make a difference at the moment.
- Use FBSDID.
2005-05-21 20:26:30 +00:00
Marius Strobl
912dd06aed For sparc64 conditionalize the compilation of the gfb_cursor() variant
which doesn't assume a hardware cursor on __sparc64__ rather than on
DEV_CREATOR. If we want to include more than one framebuffer driver in
e.g. the GENERIC kernel all drivers have to work the same way. Now that
DEV_CREATOR is no longer used remove it from options.sparc64.
2005-05-21 20:15:14 +00:00
Maksim Yevmenkin
4f39f90f5f Fix yet another cut-and-paste bug.
kbd was allocated from M_VKBD not from M_DEVBUF
2005-05-20 23:29:55 +00:00
Marius Strobl
c44123e174 Recognize the integrated (though not necessarily enabled) FireWire
controllers of Sun PCIO-2 chips which are used onboard in most of
the newer PCI-based sun4u machines (cosmetic change as they were also
already probed as generic FWOHCI without this). As with gem(4), hme(4)
and ohci(4) detect whether their intpin register is valid and correct
it if necessary, i.e. set the respective IVAR to the right value for
allocating the IRQ resource, as some of them come up having it set
to 0 (in fact in all machines I'm currently aware of the FireWire
part being enabled). This fixes attaching affected controllers.

Apporved by:	simokawa
Tested by:	Michiel Boland <michiel@boland.org>
MFC after:	1 month
2005-05-20 12:37:16 +00:00
Nate Lawson
1c9ec53854 If devclass_get_devices() returns success but a count of 0, free the
pointer.  If kernel malloc(0) returns a valid pointer, it needs to be
freed.  If it returns NULL, it's ok to free this also.

Submitted by:	pjd
Reviewed by:	imp, dfr
Obtained from:	Coverity Prevent
2005-05-20 05:00:43 +00:00
Bill Paul
450a94af7a Deal with a few bootstrap issues:
We can't call KeFlushQueuedDpcs() during bootstrap (cold == 1), since
the flush operation sleeps to wait for completion, and we can't sleep
here (clowns will eat us).

On an i386 SMP system, if we're loaded/probed/attached during bootstrap,
smp_rendezvous() won't run us anywhere except CPU 0 (since the other CPUs
aren't launched until later), which means we won't be able to set up
the GDTs anywhere except CPU 0. To deal with this case, ctxsw_utow()
now checks to see if the TID for the current processor has been properly
initialized and sets up the GTD for the current CPU if not.

Lastly, in if_ndis.c:ndis_shutdown(), do an ndis_stop() to insure we
really halt the NIC and stop interrupts from happening.

Note that loading a driver during bootstrap is, unfortunately, kind of
a hit or miss sort of proposition. In Windows, the expectation is that
by the time a given driver's MiniportInitialize() method is called,
the system is already in 'multiuser' state, i.e. it's up and running
enough to support all the stuff specified in the NDIS API, which includes
the underlying OS-supplied facilities it implicitly depends on, such as
having all CPUs running, having the DPC queues initialized, WorkItem
threads running, etc. But in UNIX, a lot of that stuff won't work during
bootstrap. This causes a problem since we need to call MiniportInitialize()
at least once during ndis_attach() in order to find out what kind of NIC
we have and learn its station address.

What this means is that some cards just plain won't work right if
you try to pre-load the driver along with the kernel: they'll only be
probed/attach correctly if the driver is kldloaded _after_ the system
has reached multiuser. I can't really think of a way around this that
would still preserve the ability to use an NDIS device for diskless
booting.
2005-05-20 04:00:50 +00:00
Bill Paul
cebddbda3b In ndis_halt_nic(), invalidate the miniportadapterctx early to try and
prevent anything from making calls to the NIC while it's being shut down.
This is yet another attempt to stop things like mdnsd from trying to
poke at the card while it's not properly initialized and panicking
the system.

Also, remove unneeded debug message from if_ndis.c.
2005-05-20 02:35:43 +00:00
Marius Strobl
cf87ad7afd Recognize the integrated USB controllers of Sun PCIO-2 chips which
are used onboard in most of the newer PCI-based sun4u machines
(cosmetic change as they were also already probed as generic OHCI
without this). Detect whether their intpin register is valid and
correct it if necessary, i.e. set the respective IVAR to the right
value for allocating the IRQ resource, as some of them come up
having it set to 0 (mainly those used in Blade 100 and the first
one on AX1105 boards). This fixes attaching affected controllers.
Correcting the intpin value might be better off in the PCI code
via a quirk table but on the other hand gem(4) and hem(4) also
correct it themselves and at least for the USB controller part
the intpin register is truely hardwired to 0 and can't be changed.
This means that we would have to hook up the quirk information
in a lot of places in the PCI code (i.e. whenever the value of the
intpin register is read from or written to the pci_devinfo of the
respective device) in order to do it the right way.

MFC after:	1 month
2005-05-19 23:00:46 +00:00
Marius Strobl
003daaea5f o mc146818(4):
- Add locking.
  - Account for if the MC146818_NO_CENT_ADJUST flag is set we don't need
    to check wheter year < POSIX_BASE_YEAR.
  - Add some comments about mapping the day of week from the range the
    generic clock code uses to the range the chip uses and which I meant
    to add in the initial version.
  - Minor clean-up, use __func__ instead of hardcoded function names in
    error strings.

o in the rtc(4) front-end additionally:
  - Don't leak resources in case mc146818_attach() fails.
  - Account for ebus(4) defaulting to SYS_RES_MEMORY for the memory
    resources since ebus.c rev. 1.22.
2005-05-19 21:20:42 +00:00
Marius Strobl
fb596371a9 - Add locking.
- Add support for storing the century in MK48TXX_WDAY_CB on MK48Txx with
  extended registers when the MK48TXX_NO_CENT_ADJUST flag is set (and which
  is termed somewhat confusing as it actually means don't manually adjust
  the century in the driver).
- Add the MI part of interfacing the watchdog functionality of MK48Txx with
  extended registers with watchdog(9). This is inspired by the SunOS/Solaris
  drivers for the 'eeprom' devices also having watchdog support. I actually
  expected this to work out of the box on Sun Exx00 machines with 'eeprom'
  devices which have a 'watchdog-enable' property. On terminal count of the
  the watchdog timer however only the MK48TXX_FLAGS_WDF bit rises but the
  reset signal and the interrupt respectively (depending on whether the
  MK48TXX_WDOG_WDS bit of the chip and the MK48TXX_WDOG_ENABLE_WDS flag
  of the driver respectively is set) goes nowhere. Apparently passing the
  reset signal on to the WDR line of the CPUs has to be enabled somewhere
  else but we don't have documentation for the Exx00 specific controllers.
  I decided to commit this nevertheless so it can be enabled in the eeprom(4)
  front-end later in e.g. 6.0-STABLE without breaking the API. Besides the
  Exx00 the watchdog part of the MK48Txx should also work on E250 and E450.
  Possibly also without extra fiddling on these machines but I haven't
  found someone willing to give it a try on such a machine so far.
- Use uintXX_t instead of u_intXX_t, use __func__ instead of hardcoded
  function names in error strings.
2005-05-19 21:16:50 +00:00
Paul Saab
419c028b36 Support the 5714C
Submitted by:	John Cagle <john dot cagle at hp dot com>
2005-05-19 21:08:59 +00:00
Marius Strobl
437bc968c0 Take advantage of ebus(4) having switched to SYS_RES_MEMORY for the
memory resources in ebus.c rev. 1.22 and treat both the EBus and SBus
variants alike in this regard.

Ok'ed by:	yongari
2005-05-19 18:13:49 +00:00
Marius Strobl
99998ae585 Sync with openfirm(4) and check the return value of malloc() although
this isn't exactly necessary with M_WAITOK.
2005-05-19 15:23:17 +00:00
Marius Strobl
2ad154205f Update the names of some member variables in comments to refect reality.
Apparently this was forgotten when this code was derived from the BSD
openprom(4).
2005-05-19 15:22:16 +00:00
Marius Strobl
65fb49a994 - Try to not leak resources in the attach functions of the esp(4) SBus
front-end and the LSI64854 and NCR53C9x code in case one of these
  functions fails. Add detach functions to these parts and make esp(4)
  detachable.
- Revert rev. 1.7 of esp_sbus.c, since rev. 1.34 of sbus.c the clockfreq
  IVAR defaults to the per-child values.
- Merge ncr53c9x.c rev. 1.111 from NetBSD (partial):
  On reset, clear state flags and the msgout queue.
  In NetBSD code to notify the upper layer (i.e. CAM in FreeBSD) on reset
  was also added with this revision. This is believed to be not necessary
  in FreeBSD and was not merged.
  This makes ncr53c9x.c to be in sync with NetBSD up to rev. 1.114.
- Conditionalize the LSI64854 support on sbus(4) only instead of sbus(4)
  and esp(4) as it's also required for the 'dma', 'espdma' and 'ledma'
  busses/devices as well as the 'SUNW,bpp' device (printer port) which
  all hang off of sbus(4).
- Add a driver for the 'dma', 'espdma' and 'ledma' (pseudo-)busses/
  devices. These busses and devices actually represent the LSI64854 DMA
  engines for the ESP SCSI and LANCE Ethernet controllers found on the
  SBus of Ultra 1 and SBus add-on cards. With 'espdma' and 'ledma' the
  'esp' and 'le' devices hang off of the respective DMA bus instead of
  directly from the SBus. The 'dma' devices are either also used in this
  manner or on some add-on cards also as a companion device to an 'esp'
  device which also hangs off directly from the SBus. With the latter
  variant it's a bit tricky to glue the DMA engine to the core logic of
  the respective 'esp' device. With rev. 1.35 of sbus.c we are however
  guaranteed that such a 'dma' device is probed before the respective
  'esp' device which simplifies things a lot. [1]
- In the esp(4) SBus front-end read the part-unique ID code of Fast-SCSI
  capable chips the right way. This fixes erroneously detecting some
  chips as FAS366 when in fact they are not. Add explicit checks for the
  FAS100A, FAS216 and FAS236 variants instead treating all of these as
  ESP200. That way we can correctly set the respective Fast-SCSI config
  bits instead of driving them out of specs. This includes adding the
  FAS100A and FAS236 variants to the NCR53C9x core code. We probably
  still subsume some chip variants as ESP200 while in fact they are
  another variant which however shouldn't really matter as this will
  only happen when these chips are driven at 25MHz or less which implies
  not being able to run Fast-SCSI. [3]
- Add a workaround to the NCR53C9x interrupt handler which ignores the
  stray interrupt generated by FAS100A when doing path inquiry during
  boot and which otherwiese would trigger a panic.
- Add support for the 'esp' devices hanging off of a 'dma' or 'espdma'
  busses or which are companions of 'dma' devices to esp(4). In case of
  the variants that hang off of a DMA device this is a bit hackish as
  esp(4) then directly uses the softc of the respective parent to talk
  to the DMA engine. It might make sense to add an interface for this
  in order to implement this in a cleaner way however it's not yet clear
  how the requirements for the LANCE Ethernet controllers are and the
  hack works for now. [2]
  This effectively adds support for the onboard SCSI controller in
  Ultra 1 as well as most of the ESP-based SBus add-on cards to esp(4).
  With this the code for supporting the Performance Technologies SBS430
  SBus SCSI add-on cards is also largely in place the remaining bits
  were however omitted as it's unclear from the NetBSD how to couple
  the DMA engine and the core logic together for these cards.

Obtained from:	OpenBSD [1]
Obtained from:	NetBSD [2]
Clue from:	BSD/OS [3]
Reviewed by:	scottl (earlier version)
Tested with:	FSBE/S add-on card (FAS236), SSHA add-on card (ESP100A),
		Ultra 1 (onboard FAS100A), Ultra 2 (onboard FAS366)
2005-05-19 14:51:10 +00:00
Takanori Watanabe
b4b4c81522 Use General definition for general notify. 2005-05-19 09:13:26 +00:00
Alan Cox
66f27aca69 Convert to the faster bus_dmamap_load_mbuf_sg() interface.
MFC after: 1 week
2005-05-18 07:45:08 +00:00
Paul Saab
7caeec6a13 Support passthru ioctl commands from 32bit binaries. 2005-05-18 05:31:34 +00:00
Søren Schmidt
d78c6e89ae Make certain the the 48bit flag is reset if we dont translate LBA. 2005-05-17 12:31:54 +00:00
Maksim Yevmenkin
b4b485a5d8 Dont clear all flags in vkbd_clear_state_locked(). Clear only COMPOSE flag.
MFC after:	3 days
2005-05-16 17:21:10 +00:00
Bill Paul
02fa4220cd Correct type for workitem routines. 2005-05-16 16:50:52 +00:00
Søren Schmidt
ae337d1ee5 longer used (contents added to sys/ata.h) 2005-05-16 13:39:49 +00:00
Søren Schmidt
6667b30d15 Change the way ioctls are issue to ATA.
The most prominent part is that its now possible to issue ata_requests
directly to say acd0, instead of going through the cumbersome /dev/ata
device.
2005-05-16 13:07:27 +00:00
Warner Losh
ce86397a98 Add convenience functions to get port and interface. 2005-05-16 06:58:43 +00:00
Warner Losh
6b1fe67d59 Print a warning once when trying to bring up interface before firmware load. 2005-05-15 21:02:51 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
f4acf7e936 Remove old epson note support. 2005-05-15 09:07:42 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
6959aa373c - Add color tables for 16 colors mode and 8 colors mode, use a different
table on the pc98 console.
- Remove old epson note support.
2005-05-15 09:07:04 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
8763b97d37 - Mask an underline attribute on the pc98 console. It enables to use the same
color on the pc98 and the others.
- Remove old epson note support.
2005-05-15 08:59:00 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
b4d6f74dce Remove the ADJUST_CLOCK ioctl on pc98. It's not used at all. 2005-05-15 07:35:49 +00:00
Bill Paul
433d61bb56 Add support for NdisMEthIndicateReceive() and MiniportTransferData().
The Ralink RT2500 driver uses this API instead of NdisMIndicateReceivePacket().

Drivers use NdisMEthIndicateReceive() when they know they support
802.3 media and expect to hand their packets only protocols that want
to deal with that particular media type. With this API, the driver does
not manage its own NDIS_PACKET/NDIS_BUFFER structures. Instead, it
lets bound protocols have a peek at the data, and then they supply
an NDIS_PACKET/NDIS_BUFFER combo to the miniport driver, into which
it copies the packet data.

Drivers use NdisMIndicateReceivePacket() to allow their packets to
be read by any protocol, not just those bound to 802.3 media devices.

To make this work, we need an internal pool of NDIS_PACKETS for
receives. Currently, we check to see if the driver exports a
MiniportTransferData() method in its characteristics structure,
and only allocate the pool for drivers that have this method.

This should allow the RT2500 driver to work correctly, though I
still have to fix ndiscvt(8) to parse its .inf file properly.

Also, change kern_ndis.c:ndis_halt_nic() to reap timers before
acquiring NDIS_LOCK(), since the reaping process might entail sleeping
briefly (and we can't sleep with a lock held).
2005-05-15 04:27:59 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
914ee8ba4b Fix my copyright. 2005-05-14 10:51:16 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
dfe1941a9c cosmetic change. 2005-05-14 10:26:31 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
b22bf66063 - Move bus dependent defines to {isa,cbus}_dmareg.h.
- Use isa/isareg.h rather than <arch>/isa/isa.h.

Tested on: i386, pc98
2005-05-14 10:14:56 +00:00