This driver was merged to HEAD one week prior to Exar publicly announcing they
had left the Ethernet market. It is not known to be used and has various code
quality issues spotted by Brooks and Hiren. Retire it in preparation for
FreeBSD 12.0.
Submitted by: kbowling
Reviewed by: brooks imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15442
This driver was for an early and uncommon legacy PCI 10GbE for a single
ASIC, Intel 82597EX. Intel quickly shifted to the long lived ixgbe family.
Submitted by: kbowling
Reviewed by: brooks imp jeffrey.e.pieper@intel.com
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Limelight Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15234
This driver supports legacy, 32-bit PCI devices, and had an ambiguous
license. Supported devices were already reported to be rare in 2003
(when an earlier version of the driver was removed in r123201).
Reviewed by: rgrimes
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15245
compile options. Remove doxygen pointers to now deleted files. Remove
EISA and VME as examples in bus_space.9.
Retained EISA mode code for IO PIC and MPTABLES because that's not
EISA bus, per se, and some people have abused EISA to mean "EISA-like
behavior as opposed to ISA" rather than using it for EISA add-in
cards.
Relnotes: yes
machines, only a few 486 machines that used it, and those haven't had
enough memory to run FreeBSD for quite some time (often limited to
16MB).
Not to be confused with the Machine Check Architecture, which is still
very much alive and used (and untouched by this commit).
No Objection From: arch@
The wl(4) driver supports pre-802.11 PCCard wireless adapters that
are slower than 802.11b. They do not work with any of the 802.11
framework and the driver hasn't been reported to actually work in a
long time.
Relnotes: yes
The si(4) driver supported multiport serial adapters for ISA, EISA, and
PCI buses. This driver does not use bus_space, instead it depends on
direct use of the pointer returned by rman_get_virtual(). It is also
still locked by Giant and calls for patch testing to convert it to use
bus_space were unanswered.
Relnotes: yes
one linuxulator (32/64bit) and as such may have a space
between both linuxulator locations.
Noticed by: Miltiadis Margaronis <mmargaron@gmail.com>
Tested by: Miltiadis Margaronis <mmargaron@gmail.com>
No cross-referencing was added to the configs, so no
automatic linking to the documentation of other subsystems.
Drivers which already contain doxygen markup:
agp ath bktr bxe cxgb cxgbe dpt drm e1000 iir
ixgbe mwl nxge ofw pccard siba wpi xen
- Add linprocfs and linsysfs to the linuxulator dox.
- Take the generated includes from the .m files from a subdirectory
instead of putting everything into $(.OBJDIR). This imporves the
human readbility of the source directory contents a lot, if you do not
create a separate OBJDIR.
- Assume UTF-8 encoding for every input file.
- Strip the source and dest path from the output, we are not interested
in the absolute location on the machine where the docs are created,
relative the the root of the FreeBSD source is what interests us.
- Exclude .svn directories.
- Switch to alphabetic index.
- Use one line per INCLUDE_PATH member in the common dox-config.
- Bump the __FreeBSD__ version to 9. [MFC: to 8]
- Switch from hardcoded .m files to an run-time generated one. Takes
a little bit more time to get started with actual work, but at least
is more future-proof. If you generate dox for all subsystems, the
time to find all .m files in the source is magnitutes lower than
producing the docs.
- Make the *DEST_PATH overidable from the environment. This allows to
produce the output directly in the docroot of a webserver.
- Fix the path when telling the user where he can find the API docs.
MFC after: 1 month (after 8.0)
parts relied on the now removed NET_NEEDS_GIANT.
Most of I4B has been disconnected from the build
since July 2007 in HEAD/RELENG_7.
This is what was removed:
- configuration in /etc/isdn
- examples
- man pages
- kernel configuration
- sys/i4b (drivers, layers, include files)
- user space tools
- i4b support from ppp
- further documentation
Discussed with: rwatson, re
It uses doxygen to generate the API documentation. For each subsystem
a very small (about 20 lines with comments) subsystem specific Doxyfile
has to be written (have a look at the README for more). All common doxygen
options are specified in a separate file.
The framework is configured to not only generate the HTML version, but also
a PDF version (the paper size is hardcoded to DIN A4 currently and depending
on the subsystem you have to increase some limits in the latex configuration
of your system, the README tells more about this).
It also allows cross-references between the subsystems (it generates doxygen
tag files).
Currently the docs are generated in OBJDIR, but this may change after
coordination with doc@. The makefile is prepared to generate/move various
parts of the generated docs to different destinations.
TARGET_ARCH is respected and some env-vars are set for architecture specific
handling of the source (the README tells more).
Subsystems for which docs are generated:
- cam - crypto - dev_pci
- dev_sound - dev_usb - geom
- i4b - kern - libkern
- linux - net80211 - netgraph
- netinet - netinet6 - netipsec
- opencrypto - vm
Requested by: gnn