Don't try to flush buffers if the drive says it has none.
More error checking and reporting.
Hack: if drive hangs, it can be reset by issuing a mt -f device offline.
I've been able to make several 4G backups. However there is still problems
with some configurations. It is not clear if it is hardware or driver
problems yet.
on the IOAPIC being connected to the 8254 timer interrupt.
Verify that timer interrupts are delivered. If they aren't, attempt
a fallback to mixed mode (i.e. routing the timer interrupt via the 8259 PIC).
interrupts are masked, and EOI is sent iff the corresponding ISR bit
is set in the local apic. If the CPU cannot obtain the interrupt
service lock (currently the global kernel lock) the interrupt is
forwarded to the CPU holding that lock.
Clock interrupts now have higher priority than other slow interrupts.
the signal handling latency for cpu-bound processes that performs very
few system calls.
The IPI for forcing an additional software trap is no longer dependent upon
BETTER_CLOCK being defined.
It does endeed work, but there is still some problems to solve.
I get a "nonrecovered data error" from time to time, but besides
this it has backed up several Gigs allready.
Please report any success/failure directly to me.
Thanks to Warner Losh for providing a drive to use in writing
this driver!
it runs at a constant frequency. This was less of an issue before,
because the TSC only interpolated in the HZ intervals, but now where
the timecounter is used all the way, this becomes much more visible.
Nit: Fix a printf which triggered the bde-filter.
signals delivered to a process writing to the audio device the
system: if you try
cat /dev/zero > /dev/dsp (or cat /dev/zero > /dev/pcaudio)
and press Ctrl-C : for a second or two the system appears to freeze
(e.g. the cursor will disappear if you move the mouse, xclock
blocks, etc.). I think that interrupts etc. still run so the problem
is not too terrible, but still annoying
[ The problems appears to also be in isa/pcaudio.c, though that is ignored ]
Submitted by: Luigi Rizzo <luigi@labinfo.iet.unipi.it>
Highlights:
* Simple model for underlying hardware.
* Hardware basis for timekeeping can be changed on the fly.
* Only one hardware clock responsible for TOD keeping.
* Provides a real nanotime() function.
* Time granularity: .232E-18 seconds.
* Frequency granularity: .238E-12 s/s
* Frequency adjustment is continuous in time.
* Less overhead for frequency adjustment.
* Improves xntpd performance.
Reviewed by: bde, bde, bde
select/poll and DEVFS changes, which are limited to an include/define
in sound.h and the actual select/poll implementation in sound.c
[ This commit is blind, but the code is similar enough that there will
hopefully be no problems. ]
The differences Terrys patch and this patch are:
* Remove a lot of un-needed comments.
* Don't put l_hotchar at the front of stuct linesw, there is no need to.
* Use the #defines for the hotchar in the SLIP and PPP line disciplines
with macros. This breaks if the functions are replaced by macros with
unsuitable semantics. Define a MAX() macro unconditionally instead.
max() is unsuitable since we need a constant expression. Don't define
MIN() - we never used min().
is "acquired". This fixes a TSC biasing error of about 10 msec when
pcaudio is active.
Update `time' before calling hardclock() when timer0 is being released.
This is not known to be important.
Added some delays in writertc(). Efficiency is not critical here, unlike
in rtcin(), and we already use conservative delays there.
Don't touch the hardware when machdep.i8254_freq is being changed but
the maximum count wouldn't change. This fixes jitter of up to 10 msec
for most small adjustments to machdep.i8254_freq. When the maximum
count needs to change, the hardware should be adjusted more carefully.
this using option "-b" to the boot blocks. It is smartest to compile
a font into your kernel (See LINT), but not mandatory, but apart from
the cursor you will see nothing on the screen until you load a font.
This mode allows XF86_VGA16 to run in 800x600 mode on otherwise unsupported
graphics hardware.
A number of buglets in the cursor handling in syscons may become
visible this way.
actually faster (more than 20% faster for zeroing 1 MB at boot time).
This fixes pessimized copying and zeroing on K6's and perhaps on other
CPUs that are misclassified as i586's.
mode switch in ioctl.
Possibly related to PR: kern/4271
- A kludge: initialize scp->xpixel and ypixel even in the text mode.
If the console enters the `unknown' graphics mode via the ioctl KDSETMODE
(KD_GRAPHICS), these fields are not set (because syscons cannot know
the correct values), but set_mouse_pos() need to refer to these field
to adjust the mouse position.
- Turn off MOUSE_VISIBLE when switching video mode by ioctl.
- another new option: SC_MOUSE_CHAR
Define the first character code of four consecutive codes to be used for
the mouse cursor. Default codes are 0xd0 through 0xd3. Beware that
if you decide to use any codes outside the range of 0xc0-0xdf,
the mouse cursor may not look good, because of the way VGA displays
characters in 9-dot-wide character cells.
Requested by several people.
(This patch was tested by a person who recently reported, in the -current
ML, a page fault problem in the kernel (draw_mouse_iamge()) after
X server shutdown. The patch cured his problem.)
Don't touch/update the screen while manipulating font data.
Possibly related to PR: kern/4271
- Set up VGA in alphanumeric mode rather than graphics mode when
loading font into video memory. This will drastically reduce flicker.
PR: bin/2977
- Set up scp->font_size properly during video mode switch caused by
ioctl.
separate routine: scupdate() called from scrn_timer().
- Make sure that the screen is updated for the low-level console
routines sccngetc() and sccncheckc(). A new routine, sccnupdate(),
is introduced and will call scupdate() above.
Requested by: bde and msmith
OKed by: sos
from the low-level console routines sccngetc() and sccncheckc().
Submitted by: bde (a long time ago)
- Don't try to ring bell and immediately return from do_bell() while
device probe is in progress at boot time; the timeout queue is not
functional yet.
PR: kern/2424
- Stop running the screen saver after panic() is called: check
if `panicstr' is non-NULL during scrn_timer().
PR: kern/5314
- A new option: SC_DISABLE_REBOOT
The reboot key (usually Ctl-Alt-Del) will be ignored if this option
is defined. You may still have the reboot key defined in the keymap and
it won't cause error when the keymap is loaded, but it will be quietly
treated as nop.
OKed by: sos
prematurely when there was a hole (for a cdrom or an unused
interface) in the sequence of wd drives. This caused non-free
wd units to be probed as atapi drives. There was no problem
provided the atapi probe failed correctly.
All known versions of this drive (firmware 21.* and 23.*) will lock up
if presented with a read/write request of > 64 blocks. In the presence
of such a unit, I/O requests of > 64 blocks are fragmented to avoid
this.
This introduce an xxxFS_BOOT for each of the rootable filesystems.
(Presently not required, but encouraged to allow a smooth move of option *FS
to opt_dontuse.h later.)
LFS is temporarily disabled, and will be re-enabled tomorrow.
so that existing programs which were compiled before the introduction
of the new mouse code and use these ioctls will run unmodified.
Suggested by msmith.
This is Junichi's v1.0 driver.
NOTE: Major device numbers have been changed to avoid conflict with other
FreeBSD 3.0 devices. The new numbers should be considered "official."
This driver is still considered "beta" quality, although we have been
playing with it. Please submit bugs to junichi and myself.
Submitted by: junichi@astec.co.jp
(accent_key + space does still print the accent letter too, as in
the previous commit.)
Requested by a couple of users.
- Clear the accent flag when the next_screen key is pressed.
- Added some comment lines regarding accent key processing.
This will not make any of object files that LINT create change; there
might be differences with INET disabled, but hardly anything compiled
before without INET anyway. Now the 'obvious' things will give a
proper error if compiled without inet - ipx_ip, ipfw, tcp_debug. The
only thing that _should_ work (but can't be made to compile reasonably
easily) is sppp :-(
This commit move struct arpcom from <netinet/if_ether.h> to
<net/if_arp.h>.
- IIR_TXRDY is never off even if reading a IIR register.
- Know as PIAFS "Palido 321S", "DC-*S" oemed by Sharp corp.
2. Omiting a restrict probing if it's already probed by pccardd.
Note: Define a new id_flags as follows
0x40000 - NO PROBE (Already probed as serial)
0x80000 - Has a bogus IIR_TXRDY register
Sato Junichi <junichi@astec.co.jp>
Nrihiro Kumagai <kuma@slab.tnr.sharp.co.jp>
Hirao Tetsuya <ai.cs.fujitsu.co.jp>
Toshiharu Asai <asai@mbc.infoshere.or.jp>
Shin'ya Kumabuchi <kumabu@t3.rim.or.jp>
Freebsd-users-jp@jp.freebsd.orgbsd-nomads@ai.cs.fujitsu.co.jp
With a keymap with accent key definitions loaded to syscons, you press
an accent key followed by a regular letter key to produce an accented
letter. Press an accent key followed by the space bar to get the
accent letter itself.
Code is based on the ideas and work by jmrueda@diatel.upm.es and
totii@est.is.
PR: i386/4016
console.h
- Defined structures and constants for accent (dead) keys.
syscons.c, kbdtables.h
- When an accent key is pressed, set the corresponding index to
`accents'. If the next key is the space key, produce the accent char
itself. Otherwise search the accent key map entry, indexed by
`accents', for a matching pair of a regular char and an accented char.
- Added ioctl functions to set and get the accent key map (PIO_DEADKEYMAP
and GIO_DEADKEYMAP).
necessary to call it when the tty layer's output state has not been
changed, but siostop() sometimes changes the TS_BUSY state and then
calls comstart() mainly for its side effect of calling ttwwakeup().
need to do it directly, since ttwwakeup() is always called just before
returning from rpstart(). The brokenness was waking up the wrong address
after clearing TS_SO_OLOWAT. It's not clear how processes waiting for
output to drain below low water ever got woken up.
Found by: when I fixed longstanding warts in output watermark
handling, this was the only driver that knew too much
(anything) about the watermarks
It failed to recognize the PCI bus in a system that had only an
old chip-set (class code 000000) and a Cyclom multiport serial
card on PCI bus 0, but no VGA card or disk or network controller.
PR: i386/5300
Submitted by: Nickolay N. Dudorov <nnd@itfs.nsk.su>
The #ifdef IPXIP in netipx/ipx_if.h is OK (used from ipx_usrreq.c and
ifconfig.c only).
I also fixed a typo IPXTUNNEL -> IPTUNNEL (and #ifdef'ed out the code
inside, as it never could have compiled - doh.)
- A nonprofiling version of s_lock (called s_lock_np) is used
by mcount.
- When profiling is active, more registers are clobbered in
seemingly simple assembly routines. This means that some
callers needed to save/restore extra registers.
- The stack pointer must have space for a 'fake' return address
in idle, to avoid stack underflow.
(mutant) Crystal CSS4236 chip on the Intel PR440FX SMP motherboard.
XXX this uses some rather ugly PnP bootstrap code that is *NOT* compatable
with 'controller pnp0' or *ANY* other PnP devices. If you use some other
PnP devices, enabling css0 will burn your house down. :-] The
"simplified" PnP init sequence directly blats your config(8) settings onto
the chip. I'm pretty sure 'css0' will conflict with 'mss0', this whole
area desperately needs a cleanup.
I have been using the following with some success on the PR440FX:
controller snd0
device css0 at isa? port 0x534 irq 5 drq 1 flags 0x08 vector adintr
device opl0 at isa? port 0x388
device mpu0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 10 vector mpuintr
Wrappered and enabled by the define BETTER_CLOCK (on by default in smpyests.h)
apic_vector.s also contains a small change I (smp) made to eliminate
the double level INT problem. It seems stable, but I haven't the tools
in place to prove it fixes the problem.
Reviewed by: smp@csn.net
Submitted by: Tor Egge <Tor.Egge@idi.ntnu.no>
MS IntelliMouse, Kensington Thinking Mouse, Genius NetScroll,
Genius NetMouse, Genius NetMouse Pro, ALPS GlidePoint, ASCII
MieMouse, Logitech MouseMan+, FirstMouse+
- The `psm' driver is made to recognize various models of PS/2 mice
and enable their extra features so that their additional buttons and
wheel/roller are recognized. The name of the detected model will be
printed at boot time.
- A set of new ioctl functions are added to the `psm', `mse' and
`sysmouse' drivers so that the userland program (such as the X server)
can query device information and change driver settings.
- The wheel/roller movement is handled as the `Z' axis movement by the
mouse drivers and the moused daemon. The Z axis movement may be mapped
to another axis movement or buttons.
- The mouse drivers support a new, standard mouse data format,
MOUSE_PROTO_SYSMOUSE format which can encode x, y, and x axis movement
and up to 10 buttons.
/sys/i386/include/mouse.h
- Added some fields to `mousestatus_t' to store Z axis movement
and flag bits.
- Added the field `model' to `mousehw_t' to store mouse model code.
Defined model codes.
- Extended `mousemode_t'.
- Added new protocols and some constants for them.
- Added new ioctl functions and structures.
- Removed obsolete ioctl definitions.
/sys/i386/include/console.h
- Added `dz' field to the structure `mouse_data' to pass Z axis movement
to `syscons/sysmouse'.
- Removed LEFT_BUTTON, MIDDLE_BUTTON and RIGHT_BUTTON. Use button bits
defined in `mouse.h' instead.
/sys/i386/isa/psm.c
- Added a set of functions to detect various mice which have additional
features (wheel and buttons) unavailable in the standard PS/2 mouse.
- Refined existing ioctl functions and added new ones. Most important
of all is MOUSE_SETLEVEL which manipulates the output level of the driver.
While the output level remains zero, the output from the `psm' driver is
in the standard PS/2 mouse format (three bytes long). When the level
is set to one, the `psm' driver will send data in the extended format.
At the level two the driver uses the format which is native to the
connected mouse is used. (Meaning that the output from the device is
passed to the caller as is, unmodified.) The `psm' driver will pass
such extended data format as is to the caller if the output level is
two, but emulates the standard format if the output level is zero.
- Added kernel configuration flags to set initial resolution
(PSM_CONFIG_RESOLUTION) and acceleration (PSM_CONFIG_ACCEL).
- Removed the compile options PSM_ACCEL, PSM_CHECKSYNC and PSM_EMULATION.
Acceleration ratio is now specified by the kernel configuration flags
stated above. Sync check logic is refined and now standard.
The sync check can be turned off by the new kernel configuration flags
PSM_CONFIG_NOCHECKSYNC (0x100). PSM_EMULATION has been of little use.
- Summer clean up :-) Removed unused code and obsolete comments.
/sys/i386/isa/mse.c
- Created mseioctl() to deal with ioctl functions MOUSE_XXXX.
Most importantly, the MOUSE_SETLEVEL ioctl will change the
output format from the 5 byte format to the new, extended format
so that the caller can take advantage of Z axis movement and additional
buttons.
- Use constants defined in `mouse.h' rather than magic numbers.
/sys/i386/isa/syscons.c
- Changed scioctl() to reflect the new `console.h' and some of the new
ioctls defined in `mouse.h'. Most importantly, the MOUSE_SETLEVEL
ioctl will change the `sysmouse' output format from the MouseSystems
5 byte format to the new, extended format so that the caller can
take advantage of Z axis movement and additional buttons.
- Added support for double/triple click actions of the left button and
single click action of the right button in the virtual console. The
left button double click will select a word under the mouse pointer.
The triple click will select a line and the single click of the right
button will extend the selected region to the current position of
the mouse pointer. This will make the cut/paste support more compatible
with xterm.
/sys/i386/isa/kbdio.h
- Added PSM_INTELLI_ID.
make isa_dmacascade, isa_dmastart, isa_dmadone, and find_isadev MUCH
easier to be found by starting them at the beginging of the line...
remove braces inside of ifdef RESOURCE_CHECK... found by % in vi...
Here are the remanding changes required to support the Ensoniq
Soundscape using FreeBSD 3.0-current.
Notes:
1) ad1848_init already has code to detect if DMA_DUPLEX should
be set so it is not necessary (and is in fact a mistake) to
hard code setting it. Not all soundcards (i.e. the current
sscape driver) are capable of using DMA_DUPLEX.
2) The other changes are hopefully self explanatory. Feel free
to let me know if you need additional information.
Submitted by: john@feith.com (John Wehle)
"high resolution" profiling. The available clocks are:
- the i8254 clock
- on non-SMP i586's and i686's: the TSC
- on systems with I586_PMC_GUPROF configured, and PERFMON configured
and available: all the performance counters.
This is unfinshed (there are problems with locking out the PERFMON
device driver, and with losing calibration after switching the clock),
but better than static configuration or writing to kmem.
Changed ifdefs to avoid generating code for non-working option
combinations.
there is a natural place to initialize `safepri' in a future commit.
Spinoffs:
- spl0() gets called in the unlikely event that isa is not configured.
- configure() has better control over enabling interrupts.
- it is now less unclear that interrupts aren't actually enabled early.
Rev.1.48 of autoconf.c seems to have done the opposite of what was
intended - moving the isa_configure() call delayed the spl0() side
effect.
Added some comments about the bogons. Removed the splhigh() call since
it is a no-op.
checking the BIOS video mode paramter table. Now syscons uses the
parameter table even if some bits in the table are different from the
current VGA register settings.
Even if comp_vgaregs() finds that the BIOS video parameter table looks
totally unfamiliar to it, syscons allows the user to change the
current video mode to some modes which are based on the VGA 80x25
mode. They are VGA 80x30, VGA 80x50, VGA 80x60. In this case the user
will be warned, during boot, that video mode switching is only
paritally supported on his machine.
PR: bin/4477
this mouse can correctly operate only in the high resolution mode.
If the mouse pointer jumps to the top or left edge or the top-left
corner of the screen, try defining PSM_MSCKLUDGE in the kernel
configuration file. This option will put the mouse in the high
resolution mode during device initialization.
and don't include <sys/fcntl.h>. (The select -> poll changes replaced
fcntl macros by poll macros.)
Use <machine/*.h> instead of <i386/include/*.h>.
Fail the probe instead of crashing in the unlikely event that malloc()
fails.
Fixed #include order. <i386/isa/isa_device.h> will soon be a prerequisite
for <i386/isa/pnp.h>. Including both in alphebetical order gets this
right naturally.
years and gives a "laugh"able number of compile-time errors (see the
comment). main() just printed the struct sizes. This can be done
better by compiling with -g and reading off the sizes from the stabs.
Sorted #includes.
Fixed an unsigned vs signed comparison.
actually offsets, they are offsets scaled by dividing by 2^cy_align.
I use different values for cy_align since the -current values are
unnaturally scaled, so I need different offsets, and the wrong
offsets got committed.
Reported by: nnd@itfs.nsk.su (N.Dudorov)
This corresponds to Voxware 3.5-alpha-<something> and Amancio's guspnp21.
There was a bit of a FUBAR during the commmit, so not all files are
mentioned in this commit's mail.
X-rant: I have just started to _*HATE*_ CVS...
changes:
o rip the old select from his distribution to prevent extra pollution
o the code now uses audio dma, helps reduce clicks
o improved card support, should work in full duplex on sb16 cards
o add better voxware ioctl support pointed out by Joao Carlos Mendes
Luis <jonny@coppe.ufrj.br>
o remove an unused file that I included for more complete history
o and MANY other changes
I have personally tested this code with a CS4237 based card and an AWE32
(non-PnP). Both cards worked fine in 8bit and 16bit mode.
Very rudimentary, lots of error checks missing, but it works.
Dont do an ls on two different CD's though, it will eat your
changer mechanism for lunch :), this clearly needs some more
thought. Until then this will enable those with changers to
mount their multible CD's and doing "sensible" work....
Thanks to Andrew Gordon <arg@arg1.demon.co.uk> for donating a drive
(a NEC CDR-C251 4x4) that makes this possible to develop.
to define it by including <sys/kernel.h>. That broke PC-CARD
support for this driver, producing the dreaded "device allocation
failed" message. Surprisingly, the missing include caused only
two compiler warnings. The compilation still "succeeded" anyway.
in <machine/cpu.h>. Moved the declarations to <machine/cputypes.h>.
Fixed style bugs in the moved code. Fixed everything that depended on
the nested include. Don't include <machine/cpu.h> (in the changed files)
unless something in it is used directly.
usage at 0x100. Quoted Justin's quotation from the manual as well, to
explain the technical background.
PR: kern/4559
Submitted by: Stephen J. Roznowski <sjr@home.net>
use a Linker Set. Note, if a driver is loaded as an LKM if will have
to use the function call, but since none of the existing drivers
are loadable, this made things cleaner and boot messages nicer.
Obtained from: PAO-970616
flicker won't occur when set_border() is called.
- Properly restore the border color when switching virtual consoles.
Pointed out by: tony@dell.com
OKed by: sos
* Kill individual drivers 'suspend' routines, since there's no simple/safe
way to suspend/resume a card w/out going through the complete probe
at initialization time.
* Default to using the apm_pccard_resume sysctl code, which basically
pretends the card was removed, and then re-inserted. Suspend/resume
is now 'emulated' with a fake insert/removal. (Hence we no longer
need the driver-specific suspend routines.)
follow.
* Rename/reorder all of the pccard structures, change many of the member
names to be descriptive, and follow more closely other 'bus' drivers
naming schemes.
* Rename a bunch of parameter and local variable names to be more
consistant in the code.
* Renamed the PCCARD 'crd' device to be the 'card' device
* KNF and make the code consistant where it was obvious.
* ifdef'd out some unused code
check the value and caused kernel panic when a large value was given.
- Move the configuration option SC_HISTORY_SIZE from syscons.h to
syscons.c.
- Define the maximum total number of history lines of all consoles.
It is SC_HISTORY_SIZE*MAXCONS or 1000*MAXCONS; whichever is larger.
CONS_HISTORY will allow the user to set the history size up to
SC_HISTORY_SIZE unconditionally (or the current height of the console
if it is larger than SC_HISTORY_SIZE). If the user requests a larger
buffer, it will be granted only if the total number of all allocated
history lines and the requested number of lines won't exceed the maximum.
- Don't free the previous history buffer and leave the history buffer
pointer holding a invalid pointer. Set the pointer to NULL first, then
free the buffer.
PR: bin/4592
for a couple of external CD's (notably the Sony PRD-650).
Note: In order to get my CD recognized, I had to configure the CD under
Win95, but it seems to work now even if I turn it off.
Submitted by: PAO [minor mods by me]
floppy drive #0, regardless of what the CMOS says. This is intended
as a bandaid for those plagued with Compaq's idea to not announce the
floppy drive on their `Aero' notebook.
Using the device flags is not very nice (in particular since they
aren't per-drive but per-controller), but still looks a lot better to
me than the disgusting guesswork hack that was recently posted to
-hackers.
Doc update will follow shortly.
i was at it, do no longer insist on `PCVT_FREEBSD' being declared in
the config file, but default it to a reasonable value.
More cleanup to follow, but this part is safe for RELENG_2_2, too.
Distribute all but the most fundamental malloc types. This time I also
remembered the trick to making things static: Put "static" in front of
them.
A couple of finer points by: bde
shown to be harmful in that it results in the card not being detected
properly on warmboot due to the station address failing to be read
correctly from the NVRAM.
much like the scancode mode.
However the keys that (for no good reason) returns extension codes
etc, are translated into singlebyte codes.
Needed by libvgl. This makes life ALOT easier, also the XFree86
folks could use this.
It seems I didn't count my 0's properly when adding the new masks into
icu_vector.s pushing SWI_AST_MASK off the end of the array and screwing
up the indexing for SWI_CLOCK_MASK.
Fix the bug icu_vector.s and also reformat the code in both icu_vector.s and
apic_vector.s so that it will be much harder to make the same mistake in
the future.
Submitted by: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
machine generates an NMI for each floating point error, just like an old XT.
Since it is ISA only, reading the EISA status port yields 0xff, which would
give a spurious EISA panic. The simplest thing to do is to ignore the 0xff.
- some addition of comments (for readability)
- iso-2022 G0 designation support. This does almost nothing. Just for
avoiding garbled screen when got "ESC ( B".
(how about G1/2/3 designation? I'm not sure)
buffer queue so I missed this when I changed buf_queue_head.
This probably fixes Soren's problem too, but he never mentioned
which CD driver he was using. 8-)
Submitted by: dave adkins <adkin003@tc.umn.edu>
the normal CS4326 except that it's had it's ID's tweaked for some reason)
Also mark the device as alive in the attach routine so that the pnp system
doesn't think the attach failed.
of multiple PCI IDE controllers(Dyson), and some updates and cleanups from
John Hood, who originally made our IDE DMA stuff work :-).
I have run tests with 7 IDE drives connected to my system, all in DMA
mode, with no errors. Modulo any bugs, this stuff makes IDE look
really good (within it's limitations.)
Submitted by: John Hood <cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us>
internal modems. Currently detects a USR modem, and a couple Supra
modems... vendor id's for sio capabile cards welcomed...
document new option EXTRA_SIO that will increase sio's internal data
structures to support X more serial ports... these are used by the
PnP part of sio for attaching... If you don't have it specified, it
will default to 2... This is defaulted to 0 if you don't have PnP
compiled into your kernel...
also document that if you set the PnP flags (pnp x flags y) to 0x1 that
the modem will be refused to be recognized by the sio driver... this
is for people that want the traditional isa driver to probe and attach
the modem... (for keeping legacy sio numbering)
these structs for conflics...
it still exist that two PnP cards can colide, but this is up to the user
to make sure it doesn't happen...
other modifications to pnp.c to format output properly, and hide more
output behind bootverbose flag...
fix some bugons in pnp.h that would of made it difficult for inclusion
in external programs (for import of pnpinfo)
number of dma overruns/underruns for systems under heavy dma load.
As a side effect, broken enhanced floppy controllers that sometimes
don't detect dma overruns/underruns will give less errors.
Reviewed by: j@uriah.heep.sax.de (J Wunsch)
Hide the bogus FDC ``chip type'' display behind a (mostly) undocumented
option, since people started to trust the bogus claim. Once we're going
to handle 2.88 MB controllers, we have to redo the chip detection, by
now just leave it hidden.
was 0.
PR: 4164
Submitted by: Joe Traister <traister@mojozone.org>
While i was at it, also fixed a broken return value for the VT_RELDISP
ioctl, iff the third arg was legally VT_TRUE, but the destination
screen was in process mode so the actual switch had to be deferred.
This was breaking the ability to directly toggle between two X servers
running on two VTs, since the server getting the bogus error return
was running wild, and competing with the other one for the hardware.
(Sigh, this was a very long-standing bug.)
PR: 4486
Submitted by: tegge@idi.ntnu.no (Tor Egge)
Implement a function is_adapter_memory() in order to determine what
should nto be dumped at all. Currently, only populated with the ``ISA
memory hole''. Adapter regions of other busses should be added.
This code has been submitted by Luigi Rizzo <luigi@labinfo.iet.unipi.it>,
based on work done by Sujal Patel.
This currnetly doesn't provide the ability to register the port address
of PnP cards assigned a PnP driver. As there aren't any PnP capible
drivers yet, this isn't much of a problem.
The code allows you, through USERCONFIG, configure what the cards port
bases, irqs, and dma's are like. Currently there isn't support to view
what cards are in the sytem.
It successfully configures my PnP Internal Modem and sio then sees the
card as a normal isa device.
man page will be committed shortly.
Approved-by: jkh
Submitted-by: Luigi Rizzo
delay that without this the performance is unacceptable. The 83C690,
83C790, and 83C795 chips which this affects are all designed to work
with 0 waitstates in 16bit mode.
Also cleaned up the toggling of 16bit access mode that occurs during
normal operation; the previous code may not have done the right thing
in all cases.
mode, the slash is a comment leader, while under non-elf it is a divide
symbol (what a concept! :-). Theoretically, #APP/#NO_APP can change this
but that doesn't seem to mesh too well with macros and line continuation.
size in terms of lines (instead of bytes). When changing video mode
in ioctl SW_XXX commands, syscons checks scp->history_size and
allocate a history buffer at least as large as the new screen size.
(This was unnecessary before, because HISTORY_SIZE was as large as 100
lines and this is bigger than the maximum screen size: 60 lines).
Similar adjustment is done in ioctl CONS_HISTORY command too.
PR: kern/4169
Reviewed by: sos
* lots of fixes to error handling-- mostly works now
* improve DMA timing config for Triton chipsets-- PIIX4 and UDMA drive
still untested
* generally improve DMA config in many ways-- mostly cleanup
* clean up boot-time messages
* rewrite PRD generation algorithm
* first wd timeout is now longer, to handle drive spinup
Submitted by: John Hood <cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us>
2) Added a non_blocking flag to the write routine.
3) Added a 3rd buffer (actually a ring buffer would be better)
Submitted by: Jim Lowe <james@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
and hardware.
There is now another simple_lock around clock data/hardware accesses in
clock.c and microtime.s. It is my belief that this is the only area
sio/cy might stumble into during an unblocked INTerrupt. Thus I separated
the sio/cy code from the generic disable_intr()/enable_intr() routines.
Controlled by smptests.h: USE_COMLOCK, ON by default.
Add a simplelock to deal with disable_intr()/enable_intr() as used in UP kernel.
UP kernel expects that this is enough to guarantee exclusive access to
regions of code bracketed by these 2 functions.
Add a simplelock to bracket clock accesses in clock.c: clock_lock.
Help from: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>