without ever being changed to actually work with an i8251. Nobody is
working on this either at the moment, so it's not about to change
soon.
When the code necessary to support the i8251 is committed, this can
be reverted again.
clock found on the ISA bus (some USIIe, USIIi and USIIIi models) and
EBus (USIII models) instead of a MK48Txx clock.
Testet by: Matthew T. Lager" <freebsd@trinetworks.com> on Sun Fire V100,
Xavier Beaudouin <kiwi@oav.net> on Netra X1 (initial version)
respective NetBSD driver for use with the genclock interface.
It's first use will be on sparc64 but it was also tested on alpha with
a preliminary patch to switch alpha to use the genclock code together
with this driver instead of the respective code in alpha/alpha/clock.c
and the rather MD mcclock(4). Using it on i386 and amd64 won't be that
hard but some changes/extensions to improve the genclock code in general
should be done first, e.g. add locking and make it easier to access the
NVRAM usually coupled with RTCs.
i386 to dev/acpi_support. In theory, these devices could be found
other than in i386 machines only as amd64 becomes more popular. These
drivers don't appear to do anything i386 specific, so move them to
dev/acpi_support. Move config lines to files so that those
architectures that don't support kernel modules can build them into
the kernel. At the same time, rename acpi_snc to acpi_sony to follow
the lead of all the other specialty devices.
the tree. Small tweaks were made by myself to eliminate unnecessary
includes and some other minor issues. Last time I asked takawata-san
about this driver, he suggested I commit it.
Submitted by: takawata
an inordinate amount of synchronous console output that is fairly
undesirable on slower serial console. It's easily hit by accident
when frobbing other sysctls late at night.
on UltraSPARC workstations. The driver is based on OpenBSD's SBus
cs4231 driver and heavily modified to incorporate into sound(4)
infrastructure. Due to the lack of APCDMA documentation, the DMA
code of SBus cs4231 came from OpenBSD's driver.
The driver runs without Giant lock and supports both SBus and EBus
based CS4231 audio controller. Special thanks to marius for providing
feedbacks during the driver writing. His feedback made it possible
to write hiccup free playback code under high system loads.
Approved by: jake (mentor)
Reviewed by: marius (initial version)
Tested by: marius, kwm, Julian C. Dunn(jdunn AT opentrend DOT net)
jest, of most excellent fancy: he hath taught me lessons a thousand
times; and now, how abhorred in my imagination it is! my gorge rises
at it. Here were those hacks that I have curs'd I know not how
oft. Where be your kludges now? your workarounds? your layering
violations, that were wont to set the table on a roar?
Move the skeleton of specfs into devfs where it now belongs and
bury the rest.
followed by "make depend" shouldn't do anything. It doesn't
seem to be a problem anymore, and if someone finds it to break
again, please contact me so we can work on a real fix.
Reviewed by: bde
- Sort kmod.mk knobs in the documentation section.
- Fixed misuses of the word "KLD" which stands for
"kernel ld", or "kernel linker", where kernel
module is meant.
- Removed redundant uses of ${.OBJDIR}.
- Whitespace and indentation fixes.
- CLEANFILES cleanup.
- Target redefinition protection (install.debug).
Submitted by: bde, ru
Reviewed by: ru, bde
that was fixed by this should not normally happen, and since I did not
record the traces of my failed build attempt that had been solved with
that change, it's not entirely clear whether it hadn't been a pilot
error on my end. In dubio pro reo. :-)
be used to announce various system activity.
The auxio device provides auxiliary I/O functions and is found on various
SBus/EBus UltraSPARC models. At present, only front panel LED is
controlled by this driver.
Approved by: jake (mentor)
Reviewed by: joerg
Tested by: joerg
problem I had but it's happening in code that is messing around with
register windows - I'm willing to live with that piece being sensitive
to this and it looks like the other problems we had reported lately
are not fixed by using -O instead of -O2.
Sorry for the churn. Looks like I need a second pointy hat. Someone
tells me they stack well. :-))))
-O2 on kernel compiles after all. While working on adding a KASSERT
to sparc64/sparc64/rwindow.c I found that it was "position sensitive",
putting it above a call to flushw() instead of below caused corruption
of processes on the system. jake and jhb have both confirmed there is
no obvious explanation for that. The exact same kernel code does not
have the process corruption problem if compiled with -O instead of -O2.
There have been signs of similar issues floated on the sparc64@ mailing
list, lets see if this helps make them go away.
Note this isn't an optimal fix as far as the file format goes, if this
disgusts too many people I'll fix it the right way. Since compiling
with something other than -O is a known problem this format would prevent
a change to the default causing grief. And this may also help motivate
finding out what the compiler is doing wrong so we can shift back to
using -O2. :-)
My turn for the pointy hat... One of the florescent ones...
MFC after: 2 days
Allocation is always lowest free unit number.
A mixed range/bitmap strategy for maximum memory efficiency. In
the typical case where no unit numbers are freed total memory usage
is 56 bytes on i386.
malloc is called M_WAITOK but no locking is provided (yet). A bit of
experience will be necessary to determine the best strategy. Hopefully
a "caller provides locking" strategy can be maintained, but that may
require use of M_NOWAIT allocation and failure handling.
A userland test driver is included.