like a valid range. We already do this in the memory case (although
the code there is somewhat different than the I/o case because we have
to deal with different kinds of memory). Since most laptops don't
have non-subtractive bridges, this wasn't seen in practice.
Evidentally the Compaq R3000 hits this problem with PC Cards.
Some minor style fixes while I'm here.
Submitted by: Jung-uk Kim
driver. This used to be handled by cpufreq_drv_settings() but it's
useful to get the type/flags separately from getting the settings.
(For example, you don't have to pass an array of cf_setting just to find
the driver type.)
Use this new method in our in-tree drivers to detect reliably if acpi_perf
is present and owns the hardware. This simplifies logic in drivers as well
as fixing a bug introduced in my last commit where too many drivers attached.
are equal to PCCARD_TPCE_FS_MEMSPACE_NONE, memspace will be zero, so
testing for this case inside of the if statement results in dead code.
We'd fail to set a value to zero that's already zero (since it is
initialized to 0 indirectly) with this code being there. Well, except
in the very rare case that we have a card that has a defualt entry
that includes a memory space followed by one that has no memory space
(these are extremely rare, I don't recall ever having seen one :-).
Fix this by setting num_memspace to 0 in a more appropriate place.
Submitted by: Coverity Prevent analysis tool
than the generic ne-2000 string. This should have no effect on the
actual support of the parts, just reporting what the part was.
Also, rename a few functins and symbols to reflect a more generic
part support that grew out of the early specific support.
or just offering info. In the former case, we don't probe/attach to allow
the ACPI driver precedence. A refinement of this would be to actually
use the info provided by acpi_perf(4) to get the real CPU clock rates
instead of estimating them but since all systems that support both
acpi_perf(4) and ichss(4) export the control registers to acpi_perf(4),
it can just handle the registers on its own.
aic7xxx.c:
Allow print_reg() to be called with a NULL column.
aic79xx.c:
Correct new usage of SCB_GET_TAG().
aic7xxx.c:
Fix stray ahd that snuck in here.
close holes in detecting busfrees that occur after a packetized target
transitions to a non-packetized phase. The most common case where this
occurs is when a target is externally reset so the controller believes
a packetzied negotiation agreement is still in effect. Unfortunately,
disabling this feature seems to cause problems for the 7901B. Re-enable
ehanced busfree detection for this part until I can get my hands on a
samble to figure out if the old workaround is necessary and, if so, how
to make it work correctly.
Ville-Pertti Keinonen (will at exomi dot comohmygodnospampleasekthx)
deserves a big thanks for submitting initial patches to make it
work. I have mangled his contributions appropriately.
The main gotcha with Windows/x86-64 is that Microsoft uses a different
calling convention than everyone else. The standard ABI requires using
6 registers for argument passing, with other arguments on the stack.
Microsoft uses only 4 registers, and requires the caller to leave room
on the stack for the register arguments incase the callee needs to
spill them. Unlike x86, where Microsoft uses a mix of _cdecl, _stdcall
and _fastcall, all routines on Windows/x86-64 uses the same convention.
This unfortunately means that all the functions we export to the
driver require an intermediate translation wrapper. Similarly, we have
to wrap all calls back into the driver binary itself.
The original patches provided macros to wrap every single routine at
compile time, providing a secondary jump table with a customized
wrapper for each exported routine. I decided to use a different approach:
the call wrapper for each function is created from a template at
runtime, and the routine to jump to is patched into the wrapper as
it is created. The subr_pe module has been modified to patch in the
wrapped function instead of the original. (On x86, the wrapping
routine is a no-op.)
There are some minor API differences that had to be accounted for:
- KeAcquireSpinLock() is a real function on amd64, not a macro wrapper
around KfAcquireSpinLock()
- NdisFreeBuffer() is actually IoFreeMdl(). I had to change the whole
NDIS_BUFFER API a bit to accomodate this.
Bugs fixed along the way:
- IoAllocateMdl() always returned NULL
- kern_windrv.c:windrv_unload() wasn't releasing private driver object
extensions correctly (found thanks to memguard)
This has only been tested with the driver for the Broadcom 802.11g
chipset, which was the only Windows/x86-64 driver I could find.
and into the bus front ends. For ISA and C-BUS cards, we always need
to grab it. For PC Card, already committed, we need to do some sanity
checking on the data that's in the ROMs before we decide that they are
OK to use. The PC Card code has already been committed and is
independent of this code (which also has to work on NE-1000 cards,
assuming that those cards still work :-).
with the latest changes. They actually have valid ROM data at location
0 of memory, just like a real NE-2000 ISA card. Use this data, if
the ROM passes a few basic tests, as an additional source for the MAC
address. Prefer the CIS over this source, but have it take precidence
over falling back to reading the attribtue memory.
o Minor cleanup of a few devices that we match on based on CIS string.
bridge between OLDCARD and NEWCARD for drivers to inquire after the
function number (eg, 0, 1, 2). Nobody ever used it, so retire it
with honors. NEWCARD never implemented it, and the same information
can be obtained by the pccard_get_function_number().
MFC After: 3 days
proper way, or at least the same way that NetBSD and Linux do things
(I've been unable to obtain datasheets for these parts to know for
sure). This has some marginal improvement in the DL10022 and DL10019
cards that I have. Also, report which type, exactly.
# There's one or two ed cards that I have which still don't work, but I think
# that's due to MII losage on the card that's not presently compensated
# for in the MII drivers.
tree since 2003/02/20, and I recently cleaned it up. I'd even closed
the PR that I obtained this from Fri Jul 18 23:25:08 MDT 2003 since
I looked at my p4 tree.
PR: 46889
Submitted by: HASEGAWA Tomoki
memory disk is larger than the number of available sf_bufs, this improves
performance on SMPs by eliminating interprocessor TLB shootdowns. For
example, with 6656 sf_bufs, the default on my test machine, and a 256MB
swap-backed memory disk, I see the command
"dd if=/dev/md0 of=/dev/null bs=64k" achieve ~489MB/sec with the default,
shared mappings, and ~587MB/sec with CPU private mappings.
base transfer speed to CAM. The actual value used (40MB/s) is fairly
arbitrary, but assumes the same 33% overhead as was implied by the
1MB/s figure we used for USB1 devices.
are not added to the list(s) of available settings. However, other drivers
can call the CPUFREQ_DRV_SETTINGS() method on those devices directly to
get info about available settings.
Update the acpi_perf(4) driver to use this flag in the presence of
"functional fixed hardware." Thus, future drivers like Powernow can
query acpi_perf for platform info but perform frequency transitions
themselves.
throttling, neglecting to do this kept the sysctls from appearing.
Attach an acpi_throttle device to each CPU that supports it.
Don't add a device if the P_BLK is invalid or if _PTC is not present.
This removes extraneous probe/attach failure messages on some machines.
Make the cpu throttle state local to the softc to account for partial
successes when changing the clock rate on MP machines.
for nodes hanging off of Central (untested), FireHose (untested) and
PCI (tested) busses.
- Add an additional parameter to OF_decode_addr() which specifies the
index of the register bank to decode.
These should allow to eventually add support for the Z8530 hanging off of
FireHose to uart(4) and to write support for PCI-based graphics adapters.
Suggested by: tmm (back in '03)
o Add a fallback location for the MAC address. Most of the early ne2000
PC Cards were built from the same parts, so most of them have the same
address in the CIS to grab the MAC from. Use this address as our
fallback if we don't find anything better.
o Add printf, in bootverbose, noting the MAC addresses that we find along
the way.
# Better sanity checking of the MAC address is needed. Will have to
# investigate using/creating a centralized function to do this as a number
# of other PC Card drivers each have their own ad-hoc tests.
1. Dependency on netgraph module was broken (wrong version).
2. Netgraph node type was never destroyed on unload. This
was masked by problem #1.
Fixed both by using NETGRAPH_INIT(). Now netgraph node type
is created on module load, as in the rest of netgraph modules.
at some offset. Unlike newer cards, the MAC address wasn't part of
the CIS as a specific FUNCE. These older cards were having their MAC
address show up as 0:2:4:6:8:a because that's what's in the ROM
locations that would be there in a real ne2000.
This patch allows one to specify the offset for the MAC address for
these cards. Specify one for the IBM Ethernet II card, as it is one
that has this problem. One shouldn't specify this unless the MAC
address really isn't in the CIS at all.
Side note: The novell probe likely shouldn't read the MAC address, and
that should be moved to the bus specific attach routine(s), maybe as a
convenience function in if_ed_novell.c.
My IBM Ethernet II (aka Info Mover) now has a believable MAC address.