This random address can be matched (with some probability) with another
sleep addresses from other drivers, which can cause strange sleep/wakeup
sequence. Rewrite this ugly code to do the right thing.
Add more features to the one remaining to handle the job:
+ signed quantity.
# alternate format
- left padding
* read width as next arg.
n numeric in (argument specified) default radix.
Fix the DDB debugger to use these.
Use vprintf in debug routine in pcvt.
The warnings from gcc may become more wrong and intolerable because
of this.
Warning: I have not checked the entire source for unsupported or
changed constructs, but generally belive that there are only a few.
Suggested by: bde
it out fixes my problem but hoses the GUS MAX probe messages. Check what
device we have and print things appropriately for each.
Pointed out by: Jim Lowe <james@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
variants, idea taken from NetBSD clock.c.
At least year calculation was wrong, pointed by Bruce.
Use different strategy to store year for BIOS without RTC_CENTURY
in the future, these drivers won't need to maintain an array of
configured units. They still need to because ISA interrupt handlers
take a unit number. :(
Pass "softc" pointers instead of unit numbers to many functions that
did a conversion of unit->softc anyway.
whether of not to automatically #define EXCLUDE_AUDIO; MSS is a real
audio device and we should not #define EXCLUDE_AUDIO if we have one.
(And I want it because it's the only mixer-capable audio driver that I
can use with my crummy Packard Bell (nee Aztech) audio board.)
This fixes the very confusing condition where having all of this:
mss0 at 0x530 irq 10 drq 1 on isa
gus0: <MS Sound System (CS4231)>
opl0 at 0x388 on isa
opl0: <Yamaha OPL-3 FM>
mpu0 at 0x300 irq 9 drq 0 on isa
mpu0: <MPU-401 MIDI Interface 0.0 >
will still give you this:
% cat /dev/sndstat
SoundCard Error: The soundcard system has not been configured
Also remove an unnecessary newline in the printf() message for the
'gus0' device shown above so that we don't wind up printing a blank
line between mss0 and gus0.
was overlapping with another file, and making some undesirable behavior a
little worse - it's triggering a bug in config that appears to have been
there for some time (before the options files, anyway.)
enough nodes for the number of ports on the last module, not the number
of ports _total_ that the driver is managing...
Submitted by: Robert Sanders <rsanders@mindspring.com>
looking at a high resolution clock for each of the following events:
function call, function return, interrupt entry, interrupt exit,
and interesting branches. The differences between the times of
these events are added at appropriate places in a ordinary histogram
(as if very fast statistical profiling sampled the pc at those
places) so that ordinary gprof can be used to analyze the times.
gmon.h:
Histogram counters need to be 4 bytes for microsecond resolutions.
They will need to be larger for the 586 clock.
The comments were vax-centric and wrong even on vaxes. Does anyone
disagree?
gprof4.c:
The standard gprof should support counters of all integral sizes
and the size of the counter should be in the gmon header. This
hack will do until then. (Use gprof4 -u to examine the results
of non-statistical profiling.)
config/*:
Non-statistical profiling is configured with `config -pp'.
`config -p' still gives ordinary profiling.
kgmon/*:
Non-statistical profiling is enabled with `kgmon -B'. `kgmon -b'
still enables ordinary profiling (and distables non-statistical
profiling) if non-statistical profiling is configured.
we can see if it's a small distance beyond the end, or way out. This may
give some clues as to whether it is being caused by something coalescing
the transfers in spite of the bounce buffers, or simply because of buffer
corruption. (The BT driver seems to occasionally get hit by from this too,
except that it does not trap the transfer, and the system panics later
with vm_bounce_page_free.) This "event" usually happens to me during a
savecore (on the rare occasion that a kernel coredump is actually taken
after a crash - the lack of kernel core dumps is another problem...).
feature of the ICU. auto-EOI on the slave is not safe, however, so it
remains an option. Killed religious FASTER_NOP when writing the ICU.
Reviewed by: bde
part of the DMA channel 0 address and wasn't random in the intended
way.
Submitted by: KATO Takenori <kato@eclogite.eps.nagoya-u.ac.jp>
Disable interrupts while reading the clock. This probably isn't
important (allowing interrupts probably increased randomness in
the usual case).
Removed __i386__ ifdef. This file is in an i386 directory and has
other i386 dependencies.
unintentionally committed):
- the fifo was completely disabled for low speeds. Apart from being
unnecessarily inefficient, this invalidated com->tx_fifo_size.
- `ftl' became a bogus name.
- the 16650 probe breaks the COM_NOFIFO() case and has other bugs
(disabled, not fixed).
Fixed bogus change of the fifo settings for the non-speed of 0. This
bug made the above fifo bug occur even at non-low speeds.
Fixed the modes of the cua devices. It isn't possible to set the uid
and gid correctly since the kernel can't know who uucp.dialer is.
Register the devswitch at device attach time. SYSINIT() is not
the right way to initialize devswitches (if anything :->).
Eventually, the devswitch should be deregistered at device detach
and/or unload time and reregistered at device attach time ... Then
some com->gone tests could be removed.
Cleaned up some other recent changes.
overflows.
It sure would be nice if there was an unmapped page between the PCB and
the stack (and that the size of the stack was configurable!). With the
way things are now, the PCB will get clobbered before the double fault
handler gets control, making somewhat of a mess of things. Despite this,
it is still fairly easy to poke around in the overflowed stack to figure
out the cause.
Unstaticize a function in scsi/scsi_base that was used, with an undocumented
option.
My last count on the LINT kernel shows:
Total symbols: 3647
unref symbols: 463
undef symbols: 4
1 ref symbols: 1751
2 ref symbols: 485
Approaching the pain threshold now.
#includes to get prototypes.
pci now uses a different interrupt handler type for interrupts that it
dispatches and the isa interrupt handler type for the interrupts that
it handles.
getmajorbyname() which were a better (sigh) temporary interface to
the going-away devswitches.
Note that SYSINIT()s to initialize the devswitches would be fatal
in syscons.c and pcvt_drv.c (and are bogus elsewhere) because they
get called independently of whether the device is attached; thus
devices that share a major clobber each other's devswitch entries
until the last one wins.
conf.c:
Removed stale #includes and comments.
all the other bt_XXX() functions in i386/scsi/bt*.
This the important effect of forcing a link error if the user is
still using the old "vector btintr" which is dangerously wrong
after Justin's updates to the driver.
The correct isa vector line for the bt driver is "vector bt_isa_intr".
Justin mentioned this in the commit message and updated LINT and
GENERIC. This change is to enforce that.. :-)
device must be configured. It's hard to tell whether a reset function
should be noreset or nullreset since reset functions are never called.
Most drivers use nullreset but noreset has the advantage of complaining
if somehow gets called).
Removed old aliases d_rdwr_t and d_ttycv_t for d_read_t/d_write_t and
d_devtotty_t.
Sorted declarations of switch functions into switch order.
Removed duplicated comments and declarations of nonexistent switch
functions.
most devsw referenced functions are now static, as they are
in the same file as their devsw structure. I've also added DEVFS
support for nearly every device in the system, however
many of the devices have 'incorrect' names under DEVFS
because I couldn't quickly work out the correct naming conventions.
(but devfs won't be coming on line for a month or so anyhow so that doesn't
matter)
If you "OWN" a device which would normally have an entry in /dev
then search for the devfs_add_devsw() entries and munge to make them right..
check out similar devices to see what I might have done in them in you
can't see what's going on..
for a laugh compare conf.c conf.h defore and after... :)
I have not doen DEVFS entries for any DISKSLICE devices yet as that will be
a much more complicated job.. (pass 5 :)
pass 4 will be to make the devsw tables of type (cdevsw * )
rather than (cdevsw)
seems to work here..
complaints to the usual places.. :)
for the particular card in use. At the moment, I've set it to any of
the bt445S VLB cards (not the bt445C which apparently work) and the
bt5xx series (isa cards). The 742 and PCI cards should not need it. :-)
It may be useful to have something like this:
#ifndef BOUNCE_BUFFERS
if (bounce_buffers_required && more_than_16MB_ram)
panic("this card requires bounce buffers for more than 16MB ram!")
#endif
to get the definitions of TRUE and FALSE which happen to be defined in
a deeply nested include.
Added nearby #includes of <sys/conf.h> where appropriate.
Fixed two cases of "=" that should have been "==" in card type comparison.
Simplified expression that checks for interface up/down.
Moved ed_ring_copy to before its first use so that it's inlined as intended.
Change mbuf allocation policy so that a received packet is stored in just
an mbuf header (no cluster) if it will fit in one.
Removed ifnet.if_init and ifnet.if_reset as they are generally unused.
Change the parameter passed to if_watchdog to be a ifnet * rather than
a unit number. All of this is an attempt to move toward not needing an
array of softc pointers (which is usually static in size) to point to
the driver softc.
if_ed.c:
Changed some of the argument passing to some functions to make a little
more sense.
if_ep.c, if_vx.c:
Killed completely bogus use of if_timer. It was being set in such a way
that the interface was being reset once per second (blech!).
but also IT ACTUALLY WORKS!
FreeBSD with options JREMOD now runs with no entries in the devsw tables
prior to the devices puting their own entries there..
Thanks to bde and terry for thoughts and comments.
next stop 'Real' devfs support in devices.
- Don't print out meaningless iCOMP numbers, those are for droids.
- Use a shorter wait to determine clock rate to avoid deficiencies
in DELAY().
- Use a fixed-point representation with 8 bits of fraction to store
the rate and rationalize the variable name. It would be
possible to use even more fraction if it turns out to be
worthwhile (I rather doubt it).
The question of source code arrangement remains unaddressed.
conflicted with S3 graphics cards. Now users should put sio[2-3]
in the config file if the hardware exisst, even if the probe is
certain to fail due to an interrupt conflict. Otherwise, ports
sharing the interrupt may fail the probe if the system is warm
booted while sio[2-3] are active (perhaps under another OS). The
same problem for nonstandard ports is now handled better than
before.
That's EVERY SINGLE driver that has an entry in conf.c..
my next trick will be to define cdevsw[] and bdevsw[]
as empty arrays and remove all those DAMNED defines as well..
Each of these drivers has a SYSINIT linker set entry
that comes in very early.. and asks teh driver to add it's own
entry to the two devsw[] tables.
some slight reworking of the commits from yesterday (added the SYSINIT
stuff and some usually wrong but token DEVFS entries to all these
devices.
BTW does anyone know where the 'ata' entries in conf.c actually reside?
seems we don't actually have a 'ataopen() etc...
If you want to add a new device in conf.c
please make sure I know
so I can keep it up to date too..
as before, this is all dependent on #if defined(JREMOD)
(and #ifdef DEVFS in parts)
o Add signed/unsigned functionality to the matrox meteor device driver.
o Apply a few fixes to the sound driver.
o Add a ``SPIGOT_UNSECURE'' compile time definition so, if one defines
SPIGOT_UNSECURE in their conf file, then they can use the spigot w/o
root. There is a warning that this allows users access to the IO
page which is probably not secure.
Submitted by: james
totally dynamic. (the first was about 7 weeeks ago)
this is only the devices in i386/isa
I'll do more tomorrow.
they're completely masked by #ifdef JREMOD at this stage...
the eventual aim is that every driver will do a SYSINIT
at startup BEFORE the probes, which will effectively
link it into the devsw tables etc.
If I'd thought about it more I'd have put that in in this set (damn)
The ioconf lines generated by config will also end up in the
device's own scope as well, so ioconf.c will eventually be gutted
the SYSINIT call to the driver will include a phase where the
driver links it's ioconf line into a chain of such. when this phase is done
then the user can modify them with the boot: -c
config menu if he wants, just like now..
config will put the config lines out in the .h file
(e.g. in aha.h will be the addresses for the aha driver to look.)
as I said this is a very small first step..
the aim of THIS set of edits is to not have to edit conf.c at all when
adding a new device.. the tabe will be a simple skeleton..
when this is done, it will allow other changes to be made,
all teh time still having a fully working kernel tree,
but the logical outcome is the complete REMOVAL of the devsw tables.
By the end of this, linked in drivers will be exactly the same as
run-time loaded drivers, except they JUST HAPPEN to already be linked
and present at startup..
the SYSINIT calls will be the equivalent of the "init" call
made to a newly loaded driver in every respect.
For this edit,
each of the files has the following code inserted into it:
obviously, tailored to suit..
----------------------somewhere at the top:
#ifdef JREMOD
#include <sys/conf.h>
#define CDEV_MAJOR 13
#define BDEV_MAJOR 4
static void sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD */
---------------------somewhere that's run during bootup: EVENTUALLY a SYSINIT
#ifdef JREMOD
sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD*/
-----------------------at the bottom:
#ifdef JREMOD
struct bdevsw sd_bdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, sdstrategy, sdioctl, /*4*/
sddump, sdsize, 0 };
struct cdevsw sd_cdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, rawread, rawwrite, /*13*/
sdioctl, nostop, nullreset, nodevtotty,/* sd */
seltrue, nommap, sdstrategy };
static sd_devsw_installed = 0;
static void sd_devsw_install()
{
dev_t descript;
if( ! sd_devsw_installed ) {
descript = makedev(CDEV_MAJOR,0);
cdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_cdevsw,NULL);
#if defined(BDEV_MAJOR)
descript = makedev(BDEV_MAJOR,0);
bdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_bdevsw,NULL);
#endif /*BDEV_MAJOR*/
sd_devsw_installed = 1;
}
}
#endif /* JREMOD */
totally dynamic.
this is only the devices in i386/isa
I'll do more tomorrow.
they're completely masked by #ifdef JREMOD at this stage...
the eventual aim is that every driver will do a SYSINIT
at startup BEFORE the probes, which will effectively
link it into the devsw tables etc.
If I'd thought about it more I'd have put that in in this set (damn)
The ioconf lines generated by config will also end up in the
device's own scope as well, so ioconf.c will eventually be gutted
the SYSINIT call to the driver will include a phase where the
driver links it's ioconf line into a chain of such. when this phase is done
then the user can modify them with the boot: -c
config menu if he wants, just like now..
config will put the config lines out in the .h file
(e.g. in aha.h will be the addresses for the aha driver to look.)
as I said this is a very small first step..
the aim of THIS set of edits is to not have to edit conf.c at all when
adding a new device.. the tabe will be a simple skeleton..
when this is done, it will allow other changes to be made,
all teh time still having a fully working kernel tree,
but the logical outcome is the complete REMOVAL of the devsw tables.
By the end of this, linked in drivers will be exactly the same as
run-time loaded drivers, except they JUST HAPPEN to already be linked
and present at startup..
the SYSINIT calls will be the equivalent of the "init" call
made to a newly loaded driver in every respect.
For this edit,
each of the files has the following code inserted into it:
obviously, tailored to suit..
----------------------somewhere at the top:
#ifdef JREMOD
#include <sys/conf.h>
#define CDEV_MAJOR 13
#define BDEV_MAJOR 4
static void sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD */
---------------------somewhere that's run during bootup: EVENTUALLY a SYSINIT
#ifdef JREMOD
sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD*/
-----------------------at the bottom:
#ifdef JREMOD
struct bdevsw sd_bdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, sdstrategy, sdioctl, /*4*/
sddump, sdsize, 0 };
struct cdevsw sd_cdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, rawread, rawwrite, /*13*/
sdioctl, nostop, nullreset, nodevtotty,/* sd */
seltrue, nommap, sdstrategy };
static sd_devsw_installed = 0;
static void sd_devsw_install()
{
dev_t descript;
if( ! sd_devsw_installed ) {
descript = makedev(CDEV_MAJOR,0);
cdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_cdevsw,NULL);
#if defined(BDEV_MAJOR)
descript = makedev(BDEV_MAJOR,0);
bdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_bdevsw,NULL);
#endif /*BDEV_MAJOR*/
sd_devsw_installed = 1;
}
}
#endif /* JREMOD */
it `const' to inhibit compiler warnings.
Added #include of <pccard/driver.h> to get prototypes. <pccard/slot.h>
is still necessary for its side effect of exporting non-slot things.
HD64570 chip. Both the 2 and 4 port cards is supported and auto detected.
Line speeds of up to 2Mbps is possible. At this speed about 85% of the
bandwidth is usable with 486DX processors.
The standard FreeBSD sppp code is used for the link level layer. The
default protocol used is PPP. The Cisco HDLC protocol can be used by
adding "link2" to the ifconfig line in /etc/sysconfig or where ever
ifconfig is run.
At the moment only the V.35 and X.21 interfaces is supported. The others
may need tweaks to the clock selection code.
Submitted by: John Hay <jhay@mikom.csir.co.za>
bit set. I broke stat_imask in Dec 1994 and update_intr_masks() has
copied the breakage to intr_mask[8] since Mar 1995. This can cause
the RTC to stop interrupting in rare cases (under loads heavy enough
for a new RTC interrupt to occur at a critical time just before Xintr8
finishes handling the previous one) and may have caused worse problems.
Convert the remaining sysctl stuff to the new way of doing things.
the devconf stuff is the reason for the large number of files.
Cleaned up some compiler warnings while I were there.
almost every time someone uses an address. This file is probably not
the right place to keep track of the unused addresses (or used
addresses :->).
Fixed comments on #endif's to match code.
Added defines for ASC and GSC sizes. This file is not the right place
to keep track of scanner addresses, but while there here and we
pretend to keep track of unused addresses, the sizes need to be here
too.
Sorted IO_*SIZE defines.
floppies must have been random in 2.x since we reintroduced sorting
on b_pblkno on 1995/03/18. Drivers still initialize b_cylin/b_resid
although this is no longer used.
Removed unused, wrong function fdsize(). (Returning 0 means that the
device exists and has size 0, not that the device doesn't exist.
swaponvp() allows for size 0 by stupidly calling the d_psize function
twice if the size isn't 0. setdumpdev() doesn't allow for it.)
Continued removing /* ARGSUSED */ from drivers.
from a string to an identifier so that it can be used to generate
declarations and strings. It's much easier to stringize an identifier
than to identifize a string. A uniform naming scheme must be used
for the automatically generated things to apply. This is a feature.
Used the module identifer to generate prototypes for the module load,
unload and stat functions. Removed the few prototypes for these that
already existed.
Used the module identifier to generate a unique struct tag in MOD_DEV().
This should probably be done for all the MOD_*() macros.
Moved the trailing semicolon from the MOD_*() macro definitions to the
macro invocations that didn't already (bogusly) have it.
Staticized the module load and unload functions.
Added function return types for the module load, unload and stat functions.
lkm/ibcs2/ibcs2.c:
Included <sys/sysproto.h> to get everything prototyped.
Cleaned up #includes.
lkm/ibcs2/ipfw.c:
Cleaned up #includes.
lkm/linux/linux.c:
The module name had to change from "linux_emulator" to "linux_mod" to
be automatically generated.
Cleaned up #includes.
lkm/syscons/*/*_saver.c:
Completed delcarations of function pointers.
sys/i386/isa/atapi.c:
The module name had to change from "atapi" to "atapi_mod" to be
automatically generated.
sys/i386/isa/wcd.c:
Used the fixed MOD_DEV(). This module has two devices and expanded the
macro in the source instead of fixing it.
The module names had to change from "wcd" and "rwcd" to "wcd_mod" and
"rwcd_mod" to be automatically generated.
sys/pccard/pcic.c:
The module name had to change from "pcic" to "pcic_mod" to be
automatically generated.
Most of this is cleaning up, but there are some functional changes,
doc/comment improvements, error checking, gcc -Wall cleanups. Input buffer
flushing is enabled now, although I'm still not quite certain it's right.
in here to do some conflict detection. The new code doesn't do conflict
detection yet, but it will be implemented in another way.
aic7770.c moved to i386/eisa
misplaced extern declarations (mostly prototypes of interrupt handlers)
that this exposed. The prototypes should be moved back to the driver
sources when the functions are staticalized.
Added idempotency guards to <machine/conf.h>. "ioconf.h" can't be
included when building LKMs so define a wart in bsd.kmod.mk to help
guard against including it.
/dev/random is now a part of the kernel! you will need to make
the device in /dev: sh MAKEDEV random
and take a look at some test code in src/tools/test/random.
to <machine/conf.h>. conf.h was mechanically generated by
`grep ^d_ conf.c >conf.h'. This accounts for part of its ugliness. The
prototypes should be moved back to the driver sources when the functions
are staticalized.
the kernel. ppp_tty.c goes to some lengths to minimise the inter-layer
calling (including a soft ISR). ppp_tty.c takes care of the soft masking
that was needed still.
(I've discovered that bugs in this area show up within an hour if the
masking was not correct.. :-} This combination has proven stable on
specialix serial ports, although there was some concern about the softtty
parts of sio/cy and netisr colliding - but Bruce has fixed that now)
modularization of the wd/wcd/atapi driver is ugly.
Include cons.h from a less bogus place.
Removed an ARGSUSED. Unused args are normal for devswitch functions
and lint was informed about them for about 5 functions out of 1000.
Lint should be informed about them, if at all, in some other way.
Remove confusing backwards compatibility code that allowed driver to be
used in pre-4.4 releases. The 3COM card's use -link2 to switch tranceivers.
(no functional changes here)
This code will only be included in your kernel if you have
'options DEVRANDOM', but that will fall away in a couple of days.
Obtained from: Theodore Ts'o, Linux
Submitted by: Mike Mitchell, supervisor@alb.asctmd.com
This is a bulk mport of Mike's IPX/SPX protocol stacks and all the
related gunf that goes with it..
it is not guaranteed to work 100% correctly at this time
but as we had several people trying to work on it
I figured it would be better to get it checked in so
they could all get teh same thing to work on..
Mikes been using it for a year or so
but on 2.0
more changes and stuff will be merged in from other developers now that this is in.
Mike Mitchell, Network Engineer
AMTECH Systems Corporation, Technology and Manufacturing
8600 Jefferson Street, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87113 (505) 856-8000
supervisor@alb.asctmd.com
Fix the tests for being a console by reverting to the ones that
were used before the the RB_SERIAL changes. RB_SERIAL only needs
to be tested in one place. The initialization of comconsole was
wrong before the RB_SERIAL changes for the COMCONSOLE case. This
may have been the cause of the unnecessary changes.
Start eliminating #includes of <i386/i386/cons.h>. This header is
supposed to be included from <machine> although it should be
completely machine-independent and included from <sys>.
Remove a wrong XXX comment. `comconsole' is used to test for being
a console and even the tests for deciding the default termios state
are necessary (the semi-reentrant i/o routines don't handle ordinary
device i/o).
cy.c:
Sync with sio.c. The console tests are present but always fail.
accesses after the BIOS bus scan. The previous revision made the assumption,
that every PCI motherboard did ...
Change the test on the initial value of the CONF1_ADDR_PORT register in a way
that makes the probe succeed on triton based motherboards, without breaking
the EISA motherboard that has some non-PCI register at the same address.
Require the state of the configuration enable bits to be OFF assuming
that the BIOS left them that way, as it should anyway to avoid bad things
to happen.
The tests themselves are copied from the previous release, with the
exception of CONF1_ENABLE_MSK1 having the LSB set. This bit should be
read back as '0', since only DWORD addresses are legal.
I tried to solve the problem of IDE probing compatibility in this version.
When compiled without an ATAPI option, the wd driver is
fully backward compatible with 2.0.5. With ATAPI option,
the wdprobe becomes strictly weaker. That is, if wdprobe works
without ATAPI option, it will always work with it too.
Another problem was with the CD-ROM drive attached as a slave
in the IDE bus, where there is no master. All IDE CD-ROM
drives are shipped in slave configuration, and most users
just plug them in, never thinking about jumpers.
It works fine with ms-dos and ms-windows, and this
version of the driver supports it as well.
The eject op can now load disks. Just repeat it twice,
and the disk will be ejected and then loaded back.
The disc cannot be ejected if it is mounted.
Submitted by: Serge Vakulenko, <vak@cronyx.ru>
free-run and doing a subtract in microtime() rather than resetting the
counter to zero at every clock tick. In combination with the changes to
kern_clock.c, this should eliminate all the immediately obvious sources
of systematic jitter in timekeeping on Pentium machines.
match the board setting.
2) Fixed the warning message to properly print the irq mismatch (as opposed
to the bit encoded value).
3) Add irq autodetection if the kernel has "?" or no irq specified.
4) Add missing splimp protection in ixioctl().
1542 revs work by assuming the next few sequential ID codes are
new Adaptec boards and enabling them after printing a warning.
Conditionalize the informational boot messages with "if (bootverbose)".
were making and were no-brainers. However, the xcdplayer
eject button didn't work because xcdplayer gave up and didn't bother
to try the EJECT ioctl anyway when CDIOCALLOW was not available.
This all works now.
o A change so that xcdplayer gets TOC entry data for the lead-out area
on the disc. Xcdplayer can now play the last track on a CD, which
it would not do in earlier versions (but no one reported).
Cdplayer gets the TOC data differently and it works in old and new
versions.
o Eliminated a race condition that caused the driver to sleep forever
on very slow and heavily loaded systems on rare occasions when
the system was doing lots of audio-related ioctls to the drive.
o Fixed a problem where a locked drive could be unlocked by accessing
one of the non-locking devs. Door locking now follows the documented
rules.
o Made all wait channel strings unique to matcd.
Submitted by: Frank Durda IV <uhclem%nemesis@fw.ast.com>
scheduled for demolition. This is a first step: get rid of if_zereg.h,
by adding the five extra definitions to if_edreg.h.
Also add some definitions which will become needed when if_ze.c gets
replaced entirely by pccard and if_ed.c. (this is a 2.1.0 candidate)
with the driver's stability now. I've not had a single problem with it for
weeks.. All that remains is a bit of performance tuning, and finishing
the manpages.
Changes relative to 1.12:
- Put extra instruction between outl()/inl() sequence to prevent the
old value being read back because of the bus capacitance.
- Additional check for existence of register at CONF2_ENABLE_PORT.
there is a PCI bus at all) ...
- Do not expect the chip sets to follow even very clearly expressed
requirements of the PCI 2.0 spec.
- Do not read back the value just written to an I/O port without making
sure that some other data have crossed the bus in between ...
Add prototypes. Use static for function definitions to match existing
prototypes. Otherwise leave functions that should be static as extern.
TODO: declare everthing except sidriver and siintr as static. I use
some new cdevs registration functions to do this for syscons and pcvt.
Fix siintr() to match its prototype in ioconf.c (don't return anything).
This may break the eisa support, but Julian says that eisa interrupts
never worked anyway.
(EISA support was never tested anyway - Peter)
Submitted by: bde
the first one in the config has priority. They can be switched using
userconfig().
i386/i386/conf.c:
Initialize the shared syscons/pcvt cdevsw entry to `nx'.
Add cdevsw registration functions.
Use devsw functions of the correct type if they exist.
i386/i386/cons.c:
Add renamed syscons entry points to constab.
i386/i386/cons.h:
Declare the renamed syscons entry points.
i386/i386/machdep.c:
Repeat console initialization after userconfig() in case the current
console has become wrong. This depends on cn functions not wiring down
anything important.
sys/conf.h:
Declare new functions.
i386/isa/isa.[ch]:
Add a function to decide which display driver has priority. Should be
done better.
i386/isa/syscons.c:
Rename pccn* -> sccn*.
Initialize CRTC start address in case the previous driver has moved it.
i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/*
Initialize the bogusly shared variable Crtat dynamically in case the
stored value was changed by the previous driver.
Initialize cdevsw table from a template.
Don't grab the console if another display driver has priority.
i386/isa/syscons.h, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h:
Don't externally declare now-static cdevsw functions.
i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_hdr.h:
Set the sensitive hardware flag so that pcvt doesn't always have lower
priority than syscons. This also fixes the "stupid" detection of the
display after filling the display with text.
i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_out.c:
Don't be confused the off-screen cursor offset 0xffff set by syscons.
kern/subr_xxx.c:
Add enough nxio/nodev/null devsw functions of the correct type for syscons
and pcvt.
by me...
Original message:
This patch upgrades the ATAPI CD-ROM driver to version 1.3.
It has three bugs fixed:
1) The `controller not ready' message at startup and later.
It was caused by staled media change bit.
2) Incorrect shuffling of model string for some drives (NEC, Mitsumi).
3) Handling of drives which report itself as been of direct-access type,
instead of CD-ROM type.
There is one known bug which is not fixed yet -- probing
in absense of IDE disks. A work-around exists though (thanks Steve!).
If you have no IDE disks attached, then remove them from the kernel
config file to make the CD-ROM attach correctly.
Unfortunately, there is no way to disable them from the kernel
interactive config mode.
Reviewed by: sos (Soren Schmidt)
Submitted by: vak@gw.cronyx.msk.su (Serge V.Vakulenko)
/*
+ * Code for MTERASE added by John Lind (john@starfire.mn.org) 95/09/02.
+ * This was very easy due to the excellent structure and clear coding
+ * of the original driver.
+ */
changes to allow devices that don't probe (e.g. /dev/mem)
to create devfs entries
this required giving 'configure' its own SYSINIT entry
so we could duck in just before it with a DEVFS init
and some device inits..
my devfs now looks like:
./misc
./misc/speaker
./misc/mem
./misc/kmem
./misc/null
./misc/zero
./misc/io
./misc/console
./misc/pcaudio
./misc/pcaudioctl
./disks
./disks/rfloppy
./disks/rfloppy/fd0.1440
./disks/rfloppy/fd1.1200
./disks/floppy
./disks/floppy/fd0.1440
./disks/floppy/fd1.1200
also some sligt cleanups.. DEVFS needs a lot of work
but I'm getting back to it..
This is still very green, but I have managed to get my modem working.
Lots of work still to do, but now at least we can commit it. /phk
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Andrew McRae <andrew@mega.com.au>
This change forces the controller drivers to allocate a scsibus_data struct
via a call to scsi_alloc_bus(), fill in the adapter_link field, and optionally
modify any other fields of the struct. Scsi_alloc_bus() initializes all fields
to the default, so the changes in most drivers are very minimal. For drivers
that support Wide controllers, the maxtarg field will have to be updated to
allow probing of all targets (for an example, look at the aic7xxx driver).
Scsi_attachdevs() now takes a scsibus_data* as its argument instead of an
sc_link*. This allows us to expand the role of the scsibus_data struct for
other bus level configuration setings (max number of transactions, current
transaction opennings, etc for better tagged queuing support).
Reviewed by: Rodney Grimes <rgrimes>, Peter Dufault <dufault>, Julian Elischer <julian>
Implement the slip/ppp "hotchar" detection to improve latency
Debug the L_RINT bypass code..
Fix an interesting feature that caused 8-bit chars to loose their top bit
in some circumstances..
This finishes the remaining outstanding problems that I'm aware of, with
the exception of efficiency... Optimizing can come later after it's fully
debugged.
Note, I tested this on a NEC Versa, IBM 750C, and a IBM 755CX w/out
problems. The card still works fine in TP mode.
Submitted by: schwarz@alpharel.com (Steve Schwarz)
Reviewed by: jleppek@suw2k.ess.harris.com (James Leppek)
actually a timeout only. The existing behaviour caused a
mcd0: timeout getreply
at halt/reboot time.
Submitted by: graichen@sirius.physik.fu-berlin.de (Thomas Graichen)
moved to the driver proper, so that <machine/si.h> can be #included by user
programs without needing to include stuff from /sys/i386/isa..
Various (now) redundant features removed, eg: the locks on IXANY and HWFLOW
as these are now done with the "initial" and "lock" termios devices.
Note that it still (for reasons unknown) appears to be masking data to
7-bit with ppp - hence the cleanup to support the debugging via 'sicontrol'
This was originally ported to BSDI by Andy Rutter <andy@acronym.co.uk>.
At the end of the day, this code has very little in common with Andy's
version, or the Specialix SYSV version. Essentially it has been gradually
and almost completely rewritten, with LOTS of advice and inspiration from
Bruce Evans. There are a couple of missing bits still, but they are minor.
The user-mode "sicontrol" program is in sad shape and will come in soon.
Transparent printing died a timely death.. Maybe later..
Jeremy Rolls @ Specialix (Development directory) has confirmed this is OK
to distribute, and Andy personally sent me his version that I started from.
Although this driver stood up to a nasty stress-test in this form, I am not
confident that there are no nasty bugs lurking.
People are welcome to try it, but dont go out and buy one just yet.. :-)
And *DONT* use it on a mission-critical machine... This is ALPHA QUALITY!
for return values. It just so happens that in the cases where it is likely
to fail, it is okay to change the M_NOWAIT to M_WAITOK -- and all will
be well. This problem was manfest as a panic very regularly on a 4MB
system right after bootup.
hardware. Set the sleep-on flag for the address so there is more
than a small chance that the sleep address is actually used (this
used to work by timing out). Don't bother clearing the sleep-on
flag after a timeout here or elsewhere since leaving it set just
generates a few null calls to wakeup().
Introduce TS_CONNECTED and TS_ZOMBIE states. TS_CONNECTED is set
while a connection is established. It is set while (TS_CARR_ON or
CLOCAL is set) and TS_ZOMBIE is clear. TS_ZOMBIE is set for on to
off transitions of TS_CARR_ON that occur when CLOCAL is clear and
is cleared for off to on transitions of CLOCAL. I/o can only occur
while TS_CONNECTED is set. TS_ZOMBIE prevents further i/o.
Split the input-event sleep address TSA_CARR_ON(tp) into TSA_CARR_ON(tp)
and TSA_HUP_OR_INPUT(tp). The former address is now used only for
off to on carrier transitions and equivalent CLOCAL transitions.
The latter is used for all input events, all carrier transitions
and certain CLOCAL transitions. There are some harmless extra
wakeups for rare connection- related events. Previously there were
too many extra wakeups for non-rare input events.
Drivers now call l_modem() instead of setting TS_CARR_ON directly
to handle even the initial off to on transition of carrier. They
should always have done this. l_modem() now handles TS_CONNECTED
and TS_ZOMBIE as well as TS_CARR_ON.
gnu/isdn/iitty.c:
Set TS_CONNECTED for first open ourself to go with bogusly setting
CLOCAL.
i386/isa/syscons.c, i386/isa/pcvt/pcvt_drv.c:
We fake carrier, so don't also fake CLOCAL.
kern/tty.c:
Testing TS_CONNECTED instead of TS_CARR_ON fixes TIOCCONS forgetting to
test CLOCAL. TS_ISOPEN was tested instead, but that broke when we disabled
the clearing of TS_ISOPEN for certain transitions of CLOCAL.
Testing TS_CONNECTED fixes ttyselect() returning false success for output
to devices in state !TS_CARR_ON && !CLOCAL.
Optimize the other selwakeup() call (this is not related to the other
changes).
kern/tty_pty.c:
ptcopen() can be declared in traditional C now that dev_t isn't short.
Use input buffer watermarks of TTYHOG-512 (high) and (high)*7/8
(low) instead of TTYHOG/2 (high) and TTYHOG/5 (low) to agree with
some drivers. 512 is magic and some things depended on TTYHOG/2
>= TTYHOG-512 to work; now they depend on the 512 magic not changing
and TTYHOG-512 being significantly larger than 0. This should be
handled in ttsetwater().
Separate the decision about whether to do input flow control from
doing it. ttyblock() now just starts input flow control (hardware
and/or software) and there is a new function ttyunblock() to stop
it. The decisions are the same except for the watermark changes
and allowing for input expansion for PARMRK.
When flushing input, try harder at first to send a start character
if required, but give up if the first attempt fails.
cy.c, rc.c, sio.c:
Simplify: let ttyinput() handle input flow control if it is not
being bypassed. Use ttyblock() to start flow control otherwise.
rc.c:
Use same input flow control test as elsewhere: test in a more
efficient order and start flow control at >= highwater instead of
at > highwater.
essential when I fix excessive wakeups for output-below-low-water.
In cy.c and sio.c, wake up via the driver start routine to also
eliminate duplicated code involving the clearing of TS_TTSTOP.
Always (except in code to be replaced soon) call driver start
routine directly instead of going through ttstart().
Amancio. There is some SoundSource support here that is primitive and
probably doesn't work, but I'll let the two submitters let me know
how my integration of that was since I don't have this card to test.
I've only tested this on my GUS MAX since it's all I have.
This all probably needs to be re-done anyway since we're widely variant
from the original VOXWARE source in the current layout.
Submitted by: Amancio Hasty and Jim Lowe
Obtained from: Hannu Savolainen
This finishes making the kernel compile without -O.
The "optimized" asm version of the function being inlined
(translate_bytes()) uses slow instructions. On a 486, assuming
everything is in the cache (unlikely), it is 21/15 times slower
than the dumb C version and 21/3 times slower than the best
possible bytewise method.
Declare `cheat' as static. It was bogusly shared between the aha1742 and
ultrastor drivers.
Even static variables should have unique names so that they can be
debugged, but fixing them can wait.
ttwwakeup(). The conditions for doing the wakeup will soon become
more complicated and I don't want them duplicated in all drivers.
It's probably not worth making ttwwakeup() a macro or an inline
function. The cost of the function call is relatively small when
there is a process to wake up. There is usually a process to wake
up for large writes and the system call overhead dwarfs the function
call overhead for small writes.
Temporarily nuke TS_WOPEN. It was only used for the obscure MDMBUF
flow control option in the kernel and for informational purposes
in `pstat -t'. The latter worked properly only for ptys. In
general there may be multiple processes sleeping in open() and
multiple processes that successfully opened the tty by opening it
in O_NONBLOCK mode or during a window when CLOCAL was set. tty.c
doesn't have enough information to maintain the flag but always
cleared it in ttyopen().
TS_WOPEN should be restored someday just so that `pstat -t' can
display it (MDMBUF is already fixed). Fixing it requires counting
of processes sleeping in open() in too many serial drivers.
Future Domain TMC-885 controllers. These beasts were just different enough in
a number of perverse ways to be recognised but not work with the seagate
stuff. I also whacked in blind transfers for DATAIN and DATAOUT phases - this
more than doubles my throughput. If you're dubious about that, comment out the
definition of SEA_BLINDTRANSFER. Anyway if you're running an ST01 or TMC-950
controller, please give this a go, I'd like to see if anything's broken for
those beasts.
Submitted by: Stephen Hocking <sysseh@devetir.qld.gov.au>
were two races:
- q_to_b() might unexpectedly return 0 (e.g, after a keyboard signal
flushes the output queue and isn't echoed). ansi_put() interprets
0 bytes as 4GB...
- more output (e.g. for echoes) might arrive afer q_to_b() returns 0.
Then scstart() returns presumably and the new output might not be
handled for a long time.
Remove unused function scxint().
Fix prototypes (foo() isn't a prototype).
syscons' output is now only about 4-5 times slower than I want.
It loses a factor of 2 for scrolling output by unnecessarily copying
the screen buffer, a factor of 4/3 for dumb OPOST processing, and
a factor of 3/2 for clist processing.
Adds support for non-Sound Blaster host adapters, including those
distributed by Reveal, Lasermate, IBM, Media Vision, Crystal and others.
The driver automatically senses the correct adapter type and you can
have both in the system at the same time.
(This change should eliminate a few complaints.)
Corrected bit-masking problem that prevented use on SB Vibra-16 boards.
Declared some internal data and functions static that should have been
that way all along.
Documentation changes reflect the new hardware support and change the
appearance version to 2.0.5 (was 2.1). Nice and tidy. :-)
Beta testers have verified functionality on SB16, Vibra-16, Media Vision
and Reveal adapters. -Wall still shows no warnings.
Frank Durda IV
uhclem%nemesis@fw.ast.com
Submitted by: Frank Durda IV <uhclem%nemesis@fw.ast.com>
- use pseudo-dma
- provide the same features and interface as sio
- support multiple boards
- fix bugs.
Some compile-time configuration constants are set to support higher
speeds and Cyclom-16Y's at a 30% relative cost in efficiency.
Cyclom-16Y support is untested.
form to do this than it is relying on individual subroutines (the logic
in epioctl is itself very minimal). Ideally, unnecessary splimp()'s should
now be removed if they exist; I'll leave this for a later date (a complete
code review of the driver needs to be done). Fixes a bug I noticed that
would show up when ifconfig'ing the interface down.
optimizations I have been working on yet, but does bring in some bug fixes
and performance improvments that were easy to regression test:
Setup the data fifo threshold and bus off timing correctly for 27/284x cards.
Users of these adapters with fast periferals (greater than 5MB/s) will notice
a big performance difference. (Sometimes as large as going from 3.7->8.3MB/s).
Fix handling of the active target flags. Some of the outbs where missing
the base offset in the abort code. The abort code still needs lots of work.
Support 3940 controllers, but only with 16 SCBs for now. Eventually I'll
add support for all 255, but I need to find a tester for the code first since
we have to enable the cards external SRAM to do this.
Add Dan Eischen's serial eeprom reading facilities. This allows the 2940
adapters to pull additional information left over from SCSI-Select right out
out of the configuration seeprom.
If the BIOS is disabled on 274x controllers, reset all target parameters
to there defaults since you can't rely on what is stored in scratch ram.
Report motherboard controllers as such.
Stick the first SG address and count into the SCB data and count areas for
all transfers in preparation of a later sequencer optimization.
Keep track of which targets can are allowed to have the disconnection
priveledge since this will be handled by the kernel driver in the future.
If a target issues a message reject in response to a tagged message,
disable tagged queuing for that target. Some seagates say they can do
tagged queuing, but lie, and its a shame to have to disable tagged queuing
on all devices just because you have one that can't cope.
fail on new hardware (Compaq Prolinea and Compaq Prosignea), and that
doesn't erroneously identify old mech. 2 chip sets as using mech. 1.
(See section 3.6.4.1.1 of the PCI bus specs rev. 2.0)
clearer. The "informational message" almost looks like an instruction to
the user to change settings on the card....
It's cosmetic, but...
Submitted by: peter@haywire.dialix.com
no ports are active, provided there are no polled ports and no
`LOSESOUTINTS' ports. Do a little more in the interrupt handler instead.
This is a little less efficient if there are are many active ports but
a little more efficient otherwise. Polled ports are ones with no irq
specified (as before). `LOSESOUTINTS' ports are ones with 0x08 set in
their config flags. Unless this flag is set, it will now take up to one
second to recover from lost output interrupts, if any. Some 8250s and
16450s lose output interrupts.
Improve output buffering: copy the clist buffer to 2 linear buffers if
necessary and possible instead of to 1. Handle an arbitrary queue of
buffers in the interrupt handler. Check for waking up sleepers after
copying characters out of the clist buffer instead of before.
Delay translation of TIOCM_DTR to MCR_DTR etc. so that the top level
routines are more machine independent.
Fix bogus device register in unused code.
Fix one such THING in code to match comment.
Sort IO_GSC* into numeric order and update comments about the gaps.
Sort common SCSI addresses into alphabetical order.
Remove bogus comments about com ports having i/o size 4.
Uniformize whitespace.
Uniformize case in hex digits.
This file is very incomplete. In particular, it doesn't mention any
network cards. This doesn't matter much for the base addresses, but
it means that the comments about which addresses are free are mostly
bogus. The i/o sizes are unreliable because of split address ranges
for many devices (VGA, wd). The i/o sizes are incomplete. In
particular, there are no sizes for SCSI controllers. The bt driver
still returns a truth value instead of a size.
the National Semiconductor InfoMover PCMCIA cards also. In tests on a
NE4100 on Jordan's laptop here, the ze driver works fine with that
card.
Reviewed by: Jordan Hubbard, Rod Grimes, and me
Submitted by: Gary Palmer
the 802.3 frames generated by the DC21040 (which does automatic padding
of less-than-minimum frames) and the frames generated by the 'ed'
driver, I've found that there is indeed a bug in the size of "ETHER_MIN_LEN"
as reported by several people, John Hay being the most recent. The driver
was actually setting the length to 6+6+2+50 (64 bytes), which when adding
in the CRC (which is automatically appended to the frame and not included
in the length), the minimum frame is 4 bytes larger than it is supposed to
be. All of this is confirmed by tcpdump showing 50 bytes of data for
minimum frames from the 'ed' cards and 46 bytes from 'de' cards. This
analysis has also revealed that there is garbage in the un-filled in
portion at the end of the minimum frames from the 'ed' driver; I don't
plan to fix this.
A phone call from Manfred quickly pointed up the fact that I got the conflict
check backwards. NOW we implement the conflict checking correctly! Wheesh!
to access it. setdelayed() actually ORs the bits in `idelayed' into
`ipending' and clears `idelayed'.
Call setdelayed() every (normal) clock tick to convert delayed
interrupts into pending ones.
Drivers can set bits in `idelayed' at any time to schedule an interrupt
at the next clock tick. This is more efficient than calling timeout().
Currently only software interrupts can be scheduled.
It closed the wrong device (usually the B partition instead of the C
partition).
It closed a device without having opened it.
It didn't open a device often enough. This caused swap partitions on
slices other than the first slice looked at to be unavailable for swapping.
It didn't check the device number sufficiently.
notice, performed all of the structural changes necessary to get this thing
to work with the unidirectional-DMA version of voxware.
This work is -not- complete, but it's in far better shape than it was, and
I may not touch it again for another few months.
The ``flags 1'' in the fdc line is now only needed for owners of an
Insight tape (perhaps there aren't any? Mine is disfunctional). All
other probes are safe wrt. to the motor-control line of floppy disk
drives. Document the flag in LINT finally.
to be `int' or smaller and some functions returned `int' instead
of `void'. The first bug was detected when console functions were
defined in a place central enough for type checking to actually
work and the second bug was introduced when the interface was
changed to match what the console functions in other drivers actually
return.
through the use of the config file flags as opposed to the option
"NSECS_MULTI". "NSECS_MULTI" has been removed from the driver.
The new capability allows boot-time modification of the config.
I made the changes I sent you before. In the interests of cleanliness, I made
modifications to /sys/i386/isa/tw.c to kill the warnings and make it compile
clean. While I was at it, I also made a bunch of internal functions static.
Submitted by: Gene Stark <gene@starkhome.cs.sunysb.edu>
higher level scsi code.
Spls should never be conditionalized, so don't do so here.
Restructure the get_ccb routine so that we can't get into an infinite
loop if the ccbs are exhausted and we are are called with SCSI_NOSLEEP set.
Other driver maintainer's that based their ccb allocation routines on Julian's
code should look at these changes and implement them for their driver.
Submitted by: John Dyson
Previously, this worked right if both AUTO_EOI_1 and AUTO_EOI_2 are
defined, but not if AUTO_EOI_1 is defined and AUTO_EOI_2 is not defined.
The latter case should be the default. DUMMY_NOPS should be the default
too. Currently there are only two NOPs slowing down rtcin() (although
there are no delays in writertc()) and several FASTER_NOPs slowing down
interrupt handling in vector.s.
Fix stack offsets for the (previously) unused untested
FAST_INTR_HANDLER_USES_ES case.
This should NOT go into 2.0.5 /phk
Support disk slices. This involves mainly replacing inline code with
function calls. Support for ST506 drives is temporarily broken since
the `setgeom' arg to dsopen() is not implemented completely enough to
use. The `setgeom' arg will go away and ST506 drives will be supported
in another way. A large amount of dead code is left in wdopen() as a
reminder of the problems here.
Close the device in wdsize(). Open tracking was broken on all drives
with a swap device.
Remove support for soft write protection. There are no ioctls to set
it. It was used to disable writing to unlabelled disks, but we want
to support writing to foreign partitions on unlabeled disks.
Use generic dkbad routines to do about 2/3 of the work for supporting
bad144.
Improve disk statistics: estimate 4MB/sec instead of 8MB/sec for
the transfer rate (ISA max is 4MB/sec, old IDE max is 3.3MB/sec);
fix dk_xfer[] (it counted sectors, not transfers); keep the estimate
dk_seek[] = dk_xfer[] (was sectors, is now transfers); only count
words actually transferred (the count is still too high after a
failed write and after retries). Remove wdxfer[].
Fix indentation in wdattach(). Fix resulting botched printing of the
disk size for ST506 drives. Print the disk geometry less cryptically.
Dropping into the debugger when a break comes down the serial line is a
>MISFEATURE (1st class)< and has been put under it's own #ifdef. This
should be a magic sequence of chars instead.
For those where it was easy, drivers were also fixed to call
dev_attach() during probe rather than attach (in keeping with the
new design articulated in a mail message five months ago). For
a few that were really easy, correct state tracking was added as well.
The `fd' driver was fixed to correctly fill in the description.
The CPU identify code was fixed to attach a `cpu' device. The code
was also massively reordered to fill in cpu_model with somethingremotely
resembling what identifycpu() prints out. A few bytes saved by using
%b to format the features list rather than lots of ifs.
new driver code, there are diffs to several other existing files
on the system and a man page.
This version of matcd implements the rest of the key ioctls related to
playing audio CDs and reading table of contents information from any
type of disc.
This update also corrects several problems detected since the original
version 1(10) was released. These include:
1. Jordons report on the kernel -c string problem.
2. A problem with the driver being confused by other types of
devices located at addresses it probes.
3. An old CD TOC wouldn't always be cleared after a disc change.
4. Cleaned up code so -Wall yields no warnings on 2.0 and later.
5. A problem with drive getting out of sync with the driver when
changing between CD-Data and CD-DA.
There have only been two reports from the field relating to problems
so either the first release isn't really being used or doesn't have
many problems.
If there are any problems with this submission, please let me know.
Submitted by: Frank Durda IV <uhclem%nemesis@fw.ast.com>
1.5 seconds in ftintr_wait().
Three people have reported that this fixes the problem they are having.
Submitted by: Steve Gerakines <steve2@genesis.tiac.net>
drivers to protect DDB from being invoked while the console is in
process-controlled (i.e., graphics) mode.
Implement the logic to use this hook from within pcvt. (I'm sure
Søren will do the syscons part RSN).
I've still got one occasion where the system stalled, but my attempts
to trigger the situation artificially resulted int the expected
behaviour. It's hard to track bugs without the console and DDB
available. :-/
old type (stty) ioctls can easily bypass locking bits.
It involves manual conversion from old ioctls to new ones,
large piece of code duplicated from tty_compat.c
after ttioctl too, because it can change t_line.
Remove (TS_CNTTB | TS_LNCH) test, it is always inherits from
old tty mode and can't be reach in currently setted mode.
o the includes are now properly done by <sys/foo.h> instead of "foo.h"
o a bunch of undeclared functions has been resolved
o pcvt finally supports devconfig
* to reduce the number of adapter failures. Transceiver select
* logic changed to use value from EEPROM. Autoconfiguration
* features added.
Submitted by: "Serge A. Babkin" <babkin@hq.icb.chel.su>
Etherlink III 'zp' on 2.0R, but it did not work with the -current.
Noriyuki Takahashi <hor@aecl.ntt.jp> san has fixed this bug.
Our alpha-testers are tested this driver with 3C589B-COMBO and
3C589B-TP. And it works fine.
I also fixed a little about the use of ZP_DEBUG symbol and beautified
the awful Frankenstein-style indent :-) with "indent -c0 -nfc1 -i4".
[Also merge with Bruce's last changes]
Submitted by: "HOSOKAWA Tatsumi" <hosokawa@mt.cs.keio.ac.jp>
update what has actually been touched. This should speed up
screen access on slow hardware.
Introduced setting of "destructive" cursor size, much like
the old hardware cursor.
if (tp->t_line != 0)
test when CS_ODONE, it fails for NTTYDISC, use
if (linesw[tp->t_line].l_start != ttstart)
instead.
Reviewed by:
Submitted by:
Obtained from:
CVS:
BREAK/parity/framing errors.
Term "correctly" assumes POSIX spec. and 4.4 ttyinput() behaviour.
1) Discard BREAK/parity at interrupt level when apropriate IGN*
is set in iflag. It helps "raw" mode works even IGN* is set.
2) Zero parity (if INPCK) and framing directly in buffer
before passing it to b_to_q() in "raw" mode.
Efficency:
interrupt level: if no error occurse, only two "test" commands added
"raw" mode: buf scan incc times for parity/framing added
Reviewed by:
Submitted by:
Obtained from:
CVS:
Report floppy/tape units on seperate lines as fdX:/ftX: to correct lots of
ways the current scheme failed to end the output with \n.
Add controller and/or drive designator to the fron of several messages
that come from this drive. [It's not fun to track down driver messages
using grep over the source tree.]
Reviewed by: joerg
- ignore the partition table if it is identical with the bogus one in
/usr/src/sys/i386/boot/biosboot/start.S. Honoring the bogus size
field was fatal. The error is detected but other compatibilty
cruft weakens the error handling too much for this case.
- weaken the partition entry checking to allow the following treatments
of C/H/S addresses when C should be >= 1024:
(1) allow C = 1023, H = max, S = max.
(2) allow C to be correct modulo 1024.
Other compatibilty cruft weakens the error handling to allow all
C/H/S addresses, but there too many errors were reported.
Improve error messages:
- print C/H/S addresses if relevant.
- distinguish primary partition table from extended partition tables.
- don't use diskerr() except for i/o errors.
NOT derived from the Linux code and is thus not GPL'd. It is the author's
express wish that the GPL copyrighted version be removed and this BSD copyright
version take its place. Considering our own stance on this, I'm certainly
not going to argue! [Note to NetBSD folks: You're free to grab it now :-)]
Submitted by: Mikael Hybsch <micke@dynas.se>
ultra14f.c and eliminate constants.
Correct EISA slot scan loops to look at slots 1 to 15 inclusive (off
by 1 errors all over the place). Other drivers need this, I will get
to it after a little more work.
Correct the ultrastore EISA probe so that it starts after the last
EISA slot probed instead of starting over from slot 0.
We need an eisa.h to move a lot of common constants into. I will
write it if someone tells me where it should go (sys/eisa?).
#include <i386/isa/isa.h>
return IO_EISASIZE instead of hard coded 0x1000.
if_ep.c:
Remove commented out disabling of interrupts that gave a
"comment withing a comment" warning.
Fixed the I/O statistics
Allow WD1007 type controllers to work
Support MULTI-BLOCK I/O
Correct delay to use port 0x84, reading the status register
might not be a long enough delay.
Changed probe message to match SCSI type devices.
with individual devices for each type of sound card:
opl, sb, sbxvi, sbmidi, pas, mpu, gus, gusxvi, gusmax, mss, uart
EXCLUDE_* options are no longer required to be included in the config file.
They are automatically determined by local.h depending on the devices
included.
Move #includes in local.h to os.h so files are included in the proper
order to avoid warnings.
soundcard.c now has additional code to reflect the device driver
routines needed.
Define new EXCLUDE_SB16MIDI for use in sb16_midi.c and dev_table.h.
#ifndef EXCLUDE_SEQUENCER or EXCLUDE_AUDIO have been added to
soundcard.c and sound_switch.c where appropriate.
Probe outputs changed to reflect new device names.
Readme.freebsd not needed. Update sound.doc with new config instructions.
Reviewed by: wollman
$Id$ information, and other code to make sound driver compile and work
correctly with FreeBSD.
Integrate changes obtained from Sujal Patel. These changes are:
o local.h: reverse option logic from EXCLUDE_* to AUDIO_*
o pas2_mixer.c: small addition
o ad1848.c: minor change with macro names
o sequencer.c: minor change with note check
o many spelling corrections in comments in about every other file
messages like this:
wdc0 at 0x1f0-0x1f7 irq 14 on isa
wdc0: unit 0 (wd0): <ST506>
wd0: size unknown, using BIOS values: 615 cyl, 4 head, 17 sec, bytes/sec 512
npx0 at 0xf0-0xff irq 13 on motherboard
npx0: changing root device to wd0a
^^^^^^
The spurious 'npx0: ' pops up if you have a 386 with a 387 FPU.
Make the sound configuration a little neater
(see /sys/i386/isa/sound/Readme.freebsd)
Add support for the Microsoft Sound Source.
Document the sound options again.
Submitted by: Sujal Patel <smpatel@wam.umd.edu>
Obtained from: Voxware
Let "grey delete" be a function key (default is 0x7f)
Fix the xor cursor again..
Made the backspace key generate del as default
Made CTRL-space generate nul as default.
compiler.
Be carefull about over usage of volatile, it really killed performance
in a few areas and there was a better place to make things volatile in
almost all cases. The driver can now receive at full speed without RNR
errors.
(a) bring back ttselect, now that we have xxxdevtotty() it isn't dangerous.
(b) remove all of the wrappers that have been replaced by ttselect
(c) fix formatting in syscons.c and definition in syscons.h
(d) add cxdevtotty
NOT DONE:
(e) make pcvt work... it was already broken...when someone fixes pcvt to
link properly, just rename get_pccons to xxxdevtotty and we're done
Include proper files for 2.x.
Remove old unused argument to ixreset (int uba)
Nolonger convert ether_type to host byte order.
Use arp_ifinit in place of arpwhohas.
Change cb_ias to be non volatile.
is close to 1000000 / 960 usec so the confusion probably didn't matter.
Test for COMCONSOLE before testing for RB_SERIAL so that the RB_SERIAL
test can be optimized away if COMCONSOLE is 1.
Simplify and Uniformize style of previous commit.
(b) add a function callback vector to tty drivers that will return a pointer
to a valid tty structure based upon a dev_t
(c) make syscons structures the same size whether or not APM is enabled so
utilities don't crash if NAPM changes (and make the damn kernel compile!)
(d) rewrite /dev/snp ioctl interface so that it is device driver and i386
independant
Removed screensavers from syscons, they are now LKM's. This makes it
possible to do some really "interesting" screensavers...
Fixed bug that sometimes caused garbage to appear when leaving
"scroll-lock" history.
Reformattet indentation, it got too deep for a normal 80 pos screen.
Split up in syscons.c & syscons.h for use with the saver-lkm's.
Temporarily removed -s option from vidcontrol, savers should now
be loaded with modload.
returned to user mode without enabling ASTs. The problem fixed itself
at the next syscall or non-FPU trap, if any. It hung the system for
a test process that masked SIGFPE's and divided by zero. The faulting
division was returned to endlessly and this gave plently of opportunities
for the swi_ast_phantom case to be reached; after it was reached the
system hung because the ASTs for preemption and SIGINT handling were
disabled.
briefly over it, and see some serious architectural issues in this stuff.
On the other hand, I doubt that we will have any solution to these issues
before 2.1, so we might as well leave this in.
Most of the stuff is bracketed by #ifdef's so it shouldn't matter too much
in the normal case.
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: HOSOKAWA, Tatsumi <hosokawa@mt.cs.keio.ac.jp>
Slice 0 is now for the first BSD slice. The first BSD slice is
the first DOSpartition with id 0xa5 or the whole disk if their
are no DOSpartitions (except the latter is not yet implemented).
Existing partitions on it work the same as in 2.0 except the
'd' partition is no longer special and partitions are relative
to the skice.
Slice 1 is now for the whole disk and gets a read-only label
describing the disk. Previously, slice 0 was for the whole disk
and there was no label on it.
Slices 2-31 are for DOSpartitions. Slice 0 is an alias for one
of these if there is a BSD slice. Previously, slices 1-31 were
for DOSpartitions.
diskslice_machdep.c:
Expand whole disk slice to include all DOSpartitions. More work
is required for >1024 cylinders and to rewrite the label iff the
driver is unsure about the geometry.
subr_diskslice.c:
New function dsisopen() to help handle media changes.
when ttselect() is improved. This requires using an array of tty structs
and not using ttymalloc().
Fix an off by 1 error. Some caclulations seem to be off by a factor
of NCY. NCY defaults to 16, which gives 256 tty structs occupying
0xd000 bytes. The minor number encoding only allows 16 ttys.
Update the types of timeout functions to 2.0.
add a an ioctl call to set the transfer block size (SNDCTL_DSP_SETBLKSIZE)
and add the select system call to the drivers. They also fix a problem with
the #EXCLUDE macros for the PAS-16 card.
Submitted by: Jim Lowe <james@blatz.cs.uwm.edu>
adapted to FreeBSD by Heikki Suonsivu <hsu@cs.hut.fi>.
Submitted by: Andrew Werple <andrew@werple.apana.org.au> and
Heikki Suonsivu <hsu@cs.hut.fi>
Obtained from: NetBSD
You will normally have to have a VLB or other 32bit IDE "controller" for
this to work.
Depending on your setup, this may gain you 20-100 % speed from your disk.
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: vak@cronyx.ru
Display update method changed, now allways write in memory buffer,
then periodically update physical display.
Speed improvements (now > 5 times faster than the old syscons).
History now circular buffer, with changeable size.
History scroll by up/down line, up/down page, home and end.
Backtab proberly implemented.
Now space for 96 function keys, 63 allocated standard, default now
SCO/SYSV compat again as in the old days.
New keyboard definition files ~share/syscons/keymaps/*
Misc fixes for old "hacks" that broke SCO/SYSV compat.
More that I forgot before writing this...
Handles at least Trantor T130 and ProAudioSpectrum adapters.
The pas driver has consequently been removed.
This driver can be configured without without interrupts.
Manpage to follow when PAS16 has been edited in.
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Serge Vakulenko, <vak@cronyx.ru>
case, software cursor now optional case. Driver must provide
raw things (what hardware do for us, exactly) as default case,
all driver features must be _optional_. Modern VGAs have internal
configuration utilities to set cursor shape/blinking which stored
into cards ROM, and syscons nuke out such features completely
by forcing software cursor. Moreover, software cursor is hard
to distinguish on standouted (or near standouted) fields and
tends to disappearse from the screen.
Set "flags 0x4" to enable software cursor now.
o Cleanup screen savers.
o Don't draw cursor if saver or blinker is active.
o Duplicated code moved to functons.
o Add more checks for blinker in progress, character lost otherwise
when blinker restore old contents.
o Reduce blinking counter to 3, too slow in old variant.
o Fix timeout code in scrn_timer(), old variant can reenter iself,
if action takes too long time.
o Disable visual bell for scroll lock mode, saved screen
becomes overwritted otherwise.
(Boot with the -D flag if you want symbols.)
Make it easier to extend `struct bootinfo' without losing either forwards
or backwards compatibility.
ddb_aout.c:
Get the symbol table from wherever the loader put it.
Nuke db_symtab[SYMTAB_SPACE].
boot.c:
Enable loading of symbols. Align them on a page boundary. Add printfs
about the symbol table sizes.
Pass the memory sizes to the kernel.
Fix initialization of `unit' (it got moved out of the loop).
Fix adding the bss size (it got moved inside an ifdef).
Initialize serial port when RB_SERIAL is toggled on.
Fix comments.
Clean up formatting of recently added code.
io.c:
Clean up formatting of recently added code.
netboot/main.c, machdep.c, wd.c:
Change names of bootinfo fields.
LINT:
Nuke SYMTAB_SPACE.
Fix comment about DODUMP.
Makefile.i386:
Nuke use of dbsym.
Exclude gcc symbols from kernel unless compiling with -g.
Remove unused macro.
Fix comments and formatting.
genassym.c:
Generate defines for some new bootinfo fields. Change names of old ones.
locore.s:
Copy only the valid part of the `struct bootinfo' passed by the loader.
Reserve space for symbol table, if any.
machdep.c:
Check the memory sizes passed by the loader, if any. Don't use them yet.
bootinfo.h:
Add a size field so that we can resolve some mismatches between the loader
bootinfo and the kernel boot info. The version number is not so good for
this because of historical botches and because it's harder to maintain.
Add memory size and symbol table fields. Change the names of everything.
Hacks to save a few bytes:
asm.S, boot.c, boot2.S:
Replace `ouraddr' by `(BOOTSEG << 4)'.
boot.c:
Don't statically initialize `loadflags' to 0. Disable the "REDUNDANT"
code that skips the BIOS variables. Eliminate `total'. Combine some
more printfs.
boot.h, disk.c, io.c, table.c:
Move all statically initialzed data to table.c.
io.c:
Don't put the A20 gate bits in a variable.
in the PCnet/Lance family.
Fix attach so 32 bit cards don't call isa_dmacascade.
Add a workaround for 32 bit chips which incorrectly truncate the
ring buffer size.
Fix a bug where CRC errors were reported as framming errors.
Change copyright to a BSD style one.
Obtained from:
sio.c and sioreg.c changed to allow autodetecting the RB_SERIAL flag
passed by the boot blocks so that the kernel can switch to 'serial
console' mode automagically. 'options COMCONSOLE' can still be specified
to force the kernel to always use the serial port as a console.
CONUNIT and CONADDR can also be specified in the kernel config file
if the user wants to shift the console to a different port.
Put in the much shorter and cleaner version for the calibrate_cycle_counter
for the Pentium that Bruce suggested. Tested here on my Pentium and
it works okay.
properly from the beginning:
1) The `kern_devconf' struct should be a part of the driver's
`softc' structure (now it is).
2) The `description' should say what the device actually is,
rather than just giving a model number (now it does).
3) The device should be registered even if the probe fails, so
that it can be reconfigured later.
4) For netifs, the device state should follow the IFF_UP flag.
Other network interfaces should follow this example. (Please?) Eventually
there should be a rundown routine doing the equivalent of setting IFF_UP
off, and perhaps more if warranted.
protected drive at open() time has been *totally bogus*! The guy who
submitted it didn't understand all the implications of calling
set_motor(), and the `who' who included the patch into the tree did it
blindly... Pleeeeze, don't commit code to this driver unless you are
really going to understand what it does! This one caused me to pull
out even more hears, and those who know me do know that i ain't got
too many o'them. :-)
No kernel config options anymore besides keyboard language layout.
Virtual consoles are now dynamically allocated, no NCONS anymore.
Software cursor blinking/nonblinking.
Visual bell for laptops (don't beep at meetings :-).
Cursor/bell default type setable via config "flags" instead of as defines.
Cursor/bell type setable via ioctl's.
New video modes 80x30 80x60 for some laptops, and those with multisync monitors.
Scroll-lock history (length currently fixed at 100 lines).
Lots of cleanups, some only commented out for now (will goaway soon).
Support for new features in vidcontrol/kbdcontrol.
Updated manpages.
now marked busy as long as it's being in non-reset state, and the
drives are busy as long as at least one instance is open.
Also reformat everything to fit into 80 columns again.
Changed my mind wrt. error reporting for a write-protected drive and
an open() with write intent; ENXIO has been too weird, now return EIO.
Some portions of the code need to be rewritten to use tprintf()
instead of simple printf()'s, so the messages will also appear on the
session terminal, however.
Wangtek PC-02 QIC-02 controller with Cipher 150MB tape drive
Any attemp to open /dev/rwt0 hangs.
The following patch to /sys/i386/isa/wt.c is derived from Mikael
Hybsch's wt driver.
Submitted by: Terry Lee <terry@uivlsi.csl.uiuc.edu>
shifting. Also correct the original code as Garrett noticed it in mail.
Leave the mishandled code in to use it later if future versions of gcc
are correct. The code was part of the calibrate_cyclecounter routine to
get the speed of the pentium chip.
floppy driver (or in the hardware?). It turned out to be caused by
spurious interrupts, right after an FDC reset.
Also major cleanup in the low-level structure, there are now functions
performing error-checks for the FDC I/O.
Submitted by: (mostly) Peter Dufault <dufault@FreeBSD.org>
no more DOS boots to start it up.
Simply did a localized nuke of the OUTB macro in this file. This is
a kludge, since it seems it may actually be necessary in other GUS
files (tbd).
Thanks to: Amancio Hasty & Ken Hornstein
correct console number for the VT_WAITACTIVE ioctl. Invalid console numbers
caused waiting on an invalid pointer.
Use bcopyw() instead of move_up() and move_down(). bcopyw() handles
overlapped copies and should be faster. Actually use bcopy(). bcopy()
is slightly faster if video memory is 16-bit and about twice as fast if
it is 32-bit. bcopy() is said to fail on someGA's, but syscons already
depends on it working for other accesses to video memory.
Remove bogus input operands for fnsave(), fnstcw() and fnstsw().
Change all fwait's to fnop's. This might help avoid hardware bugs.
Wait after fninit with an fnop. This should be safer now.
Fix some spelling and formatting errors.
Use natural sizes for control and status words (u_short, promotes to int).
Don't clobber the SWI_CLOCK_MASK bits in npx0_imask when using IRQ13.
Set the devconf state correctly (always busy, if configured). Improve
code for npx_registerdev() a little (gcc can't keep id->id_unit in a
register for some reason). Don't register a nonexistent npx device.
Print a useful message in npxattach() again (delete references to errors
and not the whole message). Don't print "387 emulator" if there is no
emulator in the kernel.
Use %p for pointers in error messages.
Don't clobber the FPU state when there is an FPU exception. Just clear
the exception flags (after saving the flags as before). This allows
debuggers and SIGFPE handlers to look at the full exception state.
SIGFPE handlers should normally return via longjmp(), which restores a
good FPU state (as before). Returning from a SIGFPE handler may leave
the FPU in the wrong state (as before).
Clear the busy latch _after_ clearing the exception flags so that there
is less chance of getting a bogus h/w interrupt for a control operation.
Clear the saved exception status word when the next FPU instruction is
excuted so that it doesn't stick around until the next exception.
Clear the busy latch after fnsave() in npxsave() in case it was set when
npxsave() was called.
values for syncronous negotiation. The 284x series adaptors can now be
supported without the Bios being enabled. If you disable the Bios on the
274x series adaptors, all configuration parameters revert to the default
since there is no way to retrieve them.
- /sys/i386/isa/if_ed.c doesn't quite know how to deal with SMC EtherEZ
ethernet cards. The EtherEZ looks just like the Elite Ultra, except it
has only 8K of shared memory. The only way to have it properly detected
is to zero and test a few bytes of memory just about the first 8K region.
If it clears properly, it's an Elite Ultra, otherwise it's an EtherEZ.
I've also got an EtherEZ patch for netboot (Makefile, ether.c and ether.h).
- /sys/i386/isa/syscons.c wraps at the next to the last column rather than
the last column, like it should. You don't really notice this unless you
use certain programs that write all the way out to, say, the 80th column,
like VMSmail. Along with a one-line fix for this are some changes to
implement a non-blinking cursor. Put 'options "NOBLINK_CURSOR"' in your
config file and give it a try. :)
Submitted by: wpaul
Would you please commit this two-line patch to /sys/i386/isa/b004.c
(the Transputer driver) so that it at least compiles under 2.x
Haven't tried if the driver is working properly, but a kernel with
compiled-in driver has been running for two days now with no apparent
problems.
Submitted by: luigi
This is new version of Seagate ST01/02, Future Domain TMC-885, TMC-950
SCSI driver for FreeBSD. I started from the 2.0R version and mostly
rewrote it. New features are:
1) New probe algorithm. Old driver read the BIOS region of the adapter
memory and find the copyright string. The problem was in the BIOS itself:
it conflicted with IDE disks. The solution was to unplug it and
make the probe algorithm to work without it.
2) Proper timeout handling in numerous places where the driver
polls waiting for some event.
3) Assembler flagments added in critical places, mostly for data transfer
to of from the target. It was possible to make it faster,
but at the price of decreasing reliability.
4) Target-dependent delays when waiting for REQ deassert event.
Some devices seem to be slower (CD-ROMS, some tape drives),
and some seem to be too fast (disks). The driver tests the REQ
deassert timeout for each target and then uses it for polling.
5) Device flags added for SCSI parity control and sense request
priority control.
6) Generic cleanup, after which the driver became much more readable
(at least by me:).
7) Target data parity error logging is limited to avoid log file overflow.
8) Manual page added.
Submitted by: serge
Move definition of `stat_imask' to clock.c.
clock.c:
Rename `rtcmask' to `stat_imask' and export it. Rename `clkmask' to
`clk_imask' for consistency.
Only calculate TIMER_DIV(hz) once.
Merge debugging and "garbage" code to produce debugging code and format the
output better.
Make writertc() static inline and use it everywhere. Now all accesses to
the clock registers go through rtcin() and writertc().
Move rtc initialization to cpu_initclocks().
Merge enablertclock() with cpu_initclocks() and remove enablertclock().
The extra entry point was just a leftover from 1.1.5.
for wd (they both count the number of sectors). The wpms stat is still
moderately bogus for all drivers. Even the count stat could be handled
better (partial blocks should be counted as full blocks; should errors
and retries be counted?).
Voxware hackers should feel free to work on this some more, it's by no means
a perfect product.
(I have patches for GUS users running 2.x to run their GUS with bidirectional
DMA (talk while listening. All other soundboards must use push-to-talk until
people learn to build real hardware).
Submitted by: amancio hasty & paul traina
<string.h> isn't supposed to be used by the kernel.
cronix.h is <machine/cronix.h>, not "cronyx.h" (ambiguous) or
<sys/cronyx.h> (nonexistent; caused compile to fail).
cxreg.h is <i386/isa/cxreg.h>, not "cxreg.h".
<i386/isa/cpufunc.h> shouldn't be included directly; it is always
included by <sys/systm.h>.
<i386/include/*.h> is <machine/*.h>
<systm.h> is <sys/systm.h>.
<kernel.h> is <sys/kernel.h>.
<bpfilter.h> is "bpfilter.h". It really is in the current directory.
>Description:
If a process attempts to open a floppy tape device when the
device has been configured in the kernel, but did not probe and attach
on bootup, then a panic will occur.
[Review: The current ft situation is a crock, and this only bandaids
an earlier wound inflicted by making the attach conditional. This urgently
requires a review]
Submitted by: gene
Keep track of interrupt nesting level. It is normally 0
for syscalls and traps, but is fudged to 1 for their exit
processing in case they metamorphose into an interrupt
handler.
i386/genassym.c;
Remove support for the obsolete pcb_iml and pcb_cmap2.
Add support for pcb_inl.
i386/swtch.s:
Fudge the interrupt nesting level across context switches and in
the idle loop so that the work for preemptive context switches
gets counted as interrupt time, the work for voluntary context
switches gets counted mostly as system time (the part when
curproc == 0 gets counted as interrupt time), and only truly idle
time gets counted as idle time.
Remove obsolete support (commented out and otherwise) for pcb_iml.
Load curpcb just before curproc instead of just after so that
curpcb is always valid if curproc is. A few more changes like
this may fix tracing through context switches.
Remove obsolete function swtch_to_inactive().
include/cpu.h:
Use the new interrupt nesting level variable to implement a
non-fake CLF_INTR() so that accounting for the interrupt state
works.
You can use top, iostat or (best) an up to date systat to see
interrupt overheads. I see the expected huge interrupt overheads
for ISA devices (on a 486DX/33, about 55% for an IDE drive
transferring 1250K/sec and the same for a WD8013EBT network card
transferring 1100K/sec). The huge interrupt overheads for serial
devices are unfortunately normally invisible.
include/pcb.h:
Remove the obsolete pcb_iml and pcb_cmap2. Replace them by
padding to preserve binary compatibility.
Use part of the new padding for pcb_inl.
isa/icu.s:
isa/vector.s:
Keep track of interrupt nesting level.
Now floppy tape support is *disabled* unless you specifically
request otherwise. Poul wanted it this way, and I guess I'm not going to argue
though it may seem counter-intuitive. We can always change it back, later.
flags & 0x1. Somebody should build a kernel with this and see if
the floppy-tape damaged people can turn it off properly with userconfig.
I can't reproduce the original problem here.
and into ether_input(). It was silly to have bpf want this one way and
ether_input want it another way. Ripped out trailer support from the few
remaining drivers that still had it.
That was the good news. The bad news is that bad144 is a proper mess,
and I don't have time to fix it now, so you will probably not be able to
use it anyway.
Sorry guys, go out and buy a 100Mb IDE drive and a paddleboard :-(
If somebody wants to pick up on this: bad144 needs to learn how to
stay inside our slice of the disk. That's the trick.
Somehow, I don't think this stuff was tested at all! :-(
I really hope that it actually works, though my hopes are steadily diminishing.
Anyone with 27xx/28xx boards in -current is *strongly encouraged* to give this
stuff a shot! Otherwise, I suspect that we'll be punting this out of
2.0. I haven't found a single part of Justin's commit that wasn't broken
in some way.