small part of a bug suite beginning in the SLICE probes but mostly in the
floppy driver. This is a quick fix: the auto case shouldn't be special;
DMA should also be stopped in isa_dma_release(); isa_dmastop() probably
shouldn't exist; common DMA registers should not be accessed without
locking.
controller reports a successful seek, it is very unlikely to report
seeking to a cylinder other than the one requested, but we check for
this, and botched the error handling for the requested_cylinder != 0
case. This error happened when the bug fixed in rev.1.52 of <sys/buf.h>
caused the head of buffer queue to change to one starting on a different
cylnder - the requested cylinder was found, but it wasn't what we
thought we requested. The fix is simply to arrange to reset the state
machine.
Corruption of the buffer queue seems to only have been a problem in the
floppy driver. Other drivers dequeue the head of the queue before doing
physical i/o on it, so the corruption at worse broke the elevator sort
order. Dequeueing breaks it anyway.
These asm statments are not quite as pessimal as when I complained
about them in rev.1.9 of audio.c. They seem to be only 40% slower
than the C version on P5's and the same speed on K6's.
to int32_t's and all unsigned longs to u_int32_t's. Fixed the one
printf format broken by this. The old math emulator now compiles
cleanly on i386's with 64-bit longs. It may even work, provided
suword() doesn't actually write a long.
suitable for holding object pointers (ptrint_t -> uintptr_t).
Added corresponding signed type (intptr_t). Changed/added
corresponding non-C9x types for function pointers to match. Don't
use nonstandard types to implement these types, and don't comment
on them in <machine/types.h>.
interupt level events. This needs a lot of cleanup, but has been working
here for a month or two.. originally needed for CAM integration
but that hasn't happenned yet. The probing state machines for each
handler should be replaced by a more generic state-service. It's
still quite messy in there..
mostly for objects that have the fewest dependencies on `Makefile'
(since they were mostly for utilities and objects generated from *.s
and these don't depend on profiling flags).
Give an explicit rule for building vnode_if.o. This fixes building
it without ${PROF}.
Use .ORDER instead of a stamp file to avoid building vnode_if.[ch]
concurrently.
Removed explicit dependencies that will be generated by `make' (.c.o)
or will be generated by mkdep.
Added missing dependencies of special objects on opt_global.h.
Use ${NORMAL_C} instead of special rules for special objects where
possible.
FIxed dependencies of vers.o.
just to ensure 32-bit variables. Doing so broke and/or pessimized
i386's with 64-bit longs (unnecessary use of 64-bit variables
caused remarkably few problems in C code, but the inline asm here
tended to fail because there are no 64-bit registers). Since the
interfaces here are very machine-dependent and shouldn't be used
outside of the kernel, use a standard types of "known" width instead
of fixed-width types.
Changed all quad_t's to u_int64_t's. quad_t isn't standard, and
using signed types for 64-bit registers was bogus (but made no
difference).
to ensure 32-bit variables. Doing so broke i386's with 64-bit
longs. Use fixed-size integral types instead of plain ints, shorts,
chars and pointers since the bootinfo struct layout is a binary
interface. The boot blocks could reasonably be implemented using
16-bit code.
least unsuitable for holding an object pointer. This should have been
used to fix warnings about casts between pointers and ints on alphas.
Moved corresponding existing general typedef (fptrint_t) for function
pointers from the i386 <machine/profile.h> to a kernel-only typedef
in <machine/types.h>. Kludged libc/gmon/mcount.c so that it can
still see this typedef.
is the kernel part of my commits, the userlevel stuff will be done in
a separate commit. Add the ability to suspend as well as hibernate to
syscons. Create a new virtual key like hibernate for suspend. Update
apm_bios.h to define more apm bios goodies.
There is only cdevsw (which should be renamed in a later edit to deventry
or something). cdevsw contains the union of what were in both bdevsw an
cdevsw entries. The bdevsw[] table stiff exists and is a second pointer
to the cdevsw entry of the device. it's major is in d_bmaj rather than
d_maj. some cleanup still to happen (e.g. dsopen now gets two pointers
to the same cdevsw struct instead of one to a bdevsw and one to a cdevsw).
rawread()/rawwrite() went away as part of this though it's not strictly
the same patch, just that it involves all the same lines in the drivers.
cdroms no longer have write() entries (they did have rawwrite (?)).
tapes no longer have support for bdev operations.
Reviewed by: Eivind Eklund and Mike Smith
Changes suggested by eivind.
Kapok Computer Co. notebook with AMI 'WinBIOS' which seems to insist
on having a short jump and nop as the first instructions in the
boot sector code. The prevailing theory is that the BIOS is doing
some sort of boot sector virus detection and refusing to run any
boot block that doesn't start with the same instruction sequence as
MS-DOG boot sector code. If this is the case, it would be nice if it
actually printed an error message to this effect instead of just
saying 'FAILED.'
This workaround has no effect on the boot sector code other than to
increase its size by three bytes.