Commit Graph

525 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bill Paul
c1972c49a8 Add winx32_wrap.S to files.i386 for the NDISulator. 2005-04-11 16:23:13 +00:00
John Baldwin
c6a37e8413 Divorce critical sections from spinlocks. Critical sections as denoted by
critical_enter() and critical_exit() are now solely a mechanism for
deferring kernel preemptions.  They no longer have any affect on
interrupts.  This means that standalone critical sections are now very
cheap as they are simply unlocked integer increments and decrements for the
common case.

Spin mutexes now use a separate KPI implemented in MD code: spinlock_enter()
and spinlock_exit().  This KPI is responsible for providing whatever MD
guarantees are needed to ensure that a thread holding a spin lock won't
be preempted by any other code that will try to lock the same lock.  For
now all archs continue to block interrupts in a "spinlock section" as they
did formerly in all critical sections.  Note that I've also taken this
opportunity to push a few things into MD code rather than MI.  For example,
critical_fork_exit() no longer exists.  Instead, MD code ensures that new
threads have the correct state when they are created.  Also, we no longer
try to fixup the idlethreads for APs in MI code.  Instead, each arch sets
the initial curthread and adjusts the state of the idle thread it borrows
in order to perform the initial context switch.

This change is largely a big NOP, but the cleaner separation it provides
will allow for more efficient alternative locking schemes in other parts
of the kernel (bare critical sections rather than per-CPU spin mutexes
for per-CPU data for example).

Reviewed by:	grehan, cognet, arch@, others
Tested on:	i386, alpha, sparc64, powerpc, arm, possibly more
2005-04-04 21:53:56 +00:00
Scott Long
d0885ac3cf Glue the arcmsr driver into the tree. 2005-03-31 20:21:43 +00:00
Nate Lawson
bc4c871230 Add powernow to kernel build target. 2005-03-27 21:50:30 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
1b1a07ad8b FreeBSD consumer bits of the nForce MCP NIC binary blob.
Demanded by:	DES
Encouraged by:	scottl
Obtained from:	q@onthenet.com.au (partially)
KNF'ed by:	obrien
2005-03-12 00:29:30 +00:00
Scott Long
d38d9c9e5e Move all of the hptmv files to /sys/dev/hptmv so that they won't be mistaken
for being on a CVS vendor branch.  The files were moved via a repo-copy.
2005-03-02 05:14:28 +00:00
Bill Paul
63ba67b69c - Correct one aspect of the driver_object/device_object/IRP framework:
when we create a PDO, the driver_object associated with it is that
  of the parent driver, not the driver we're trying to attach. For
  example, if we attach a PCI device, the PDO we pass to the NdisAddDevice()
  function should contain a pointer to fake_pci_driver, not to the NDIS
  driver itself. For PCI or PCMCIA devices this doesn't matter because
  the child never needs to talk to the parent bus driver, but for USB,
  the child needs to be able to send IRPs to the parent USB bus driver, and
  for that to work the parent USB bus driver has to be hung off the PDO.

  This involves modifying windrv_lookup() so that we can search for
  bus drivers by name, if necessary. Our fake bus drivers attach themselves
  as "PCI Bus," "PCCARD Bus" and "USB Bus," so we can search for them
  using those names.

  The individual attachment stubs now create and attach PDOs to the
  parent bus drivers instead of hanging them off the NDIS driver's
  object, and in if_ndis.c, we now search for the correct driver
  object depending on the bus type, and use that to find the correct PDO.

  With this fix, I can get my sample USB ethernet driver to deliver
  an IRP to my fake parent USB bus driver's dispatch routines.

- Add stub modules for USB support: subr_usbd.c, usbd_var.h and
  if_ndis_usb.c. The subr_usbd.c module is hooked up the build
  but currently doesn't do very much. It provides the stub USB
  parent driver object and a dispatch routine for
  IRM_MJ_INTERNAL_DEVICE_CONTROL. The only exported function at
  the moment is USBD_GetUSBDIVersion(). The if_ndis_usb.c stub
  compiles, but is not hooked up to the build yet. I'm putting
  these here so I can keep them under source code control as I
  flesh them out.
2005-02-24 21:49:14 +00:00
Nate Lawson
badee853c0 Remove CPU_ENABLE_TCC and hook the cpufreq p4tcc up to the build. 2005-02-23 16:43:44 +00:00
Nate Lawson
f5a3ee3088 Hook EST up to the build. 2005-02-20 20:29:04 +00:00
Warner Losh
969eaf2179 Break out obscure ISA cards into their own files, as well as ne2000
and wd80x3 support.  Make the obscure ISA cards optional, and add
those options to NOTES on i386 (note: the ifdef around the whole code
is for module building).  Tweak pc98 ed support to include wd80x3 too.
Add goo for alpha too.

The affected cards are the 3Com 3C503, HP LAN+ and SIC (whatever that
is).  I couldn't find any of these for sale on ebay, so they are
untested.  If you have one of these cards, and send it to me, I'll
ensure that you have no future problems with it...

Minor cleanups as well by using functions rather than cut and paste
code for some probing operations (where the function call overhead is
lost in the noise).

Remove use of kvtop, since they aren't required anymore.  This driver
needs to get its memory mapped act together, however, and use bus
space.  It doesn't right now.

This reduces the size of if_ed.ko from about 51k to 33k on my laptop.
2005-02-09 20:03:40 +00:00
Bill Paul
b545a3b822 Next step on the road to IRPs: create and use an imitation of the
Windows DRIVER_OBJECT and DEVICE_OBJECT mechanism so that we can
simulate driver stacking.

In Windows, each loaded driver image is attached to a DRIVER_OBJECT
structure. Windows uses the registry to match up a given vendor/device
ID combination with a corresponding DRIVER_OBJECT. When a driver image
is first loaded, its DriverEntry() routine is invoked, which sets up
the AddDevice() function pointer in the DRIVER_OBJECT and creates
a dispatch table (based on IRP major codes). When a Windows bus driver
detects a new device, it creates a Physical Device Object (PDO) for
it. This is a DEVICE_OBJECT structure, with semantics analagous to
that of a device_t in FreeBSD. The Windows PNP manager will invoke
the driver's AddDevice() function and pass it pointers to the DRIVER_OBJECT
and the PDO.

The AddDevice() function then creates a new DRIVER_OBJECT structure of
its own. This is known as the Functional Device Object (FDO) and
corresponds roughly to a private softc instance. The driver uses
IoAttachDeviceToDeviceStack() to add this device object to the
driver stack for this PDO. Subsequent drivers (called filter drivers
in Windows-speak) can be loaded which add themselves to the stack.
When someone issues an IRP to a device, it travel along the stack
passing through several possible filter drivers until it reaches
the functional driver (which actually knows how to talk to the hardware)
at which point it will be completed. This is how Windows achieves
driver layering.

Project Evil now simulates most of this. if_ndis now has a modevent
handler which will use MOD_LOAD and MOD_UNLOAD events to drive the
creation and destruction of DRIVER_OBJECTs. (The load event also
does the relocation/dynalinking of the image.) We don't have a registry,
so the DRIVER_OBJECTS are stored in a linked list for now. Eventually,
the list entry will contain the vendor/device ID list extracted from
the .INF file. When ndis_probe() is called and detectes a supported
device, it will create a PDO for the device instance and attach it
to the DRIVER_OBJECT just as in Windows. ndis_attach() will then call
our NdisAddDevice() handler to create the FDO. The NDIS miniport block
is now a device extension hung off the FDO, just as it is in Windows.
The miniport characteristics table is now an extension hung off the
DRIVER_OBJECT as well (the characteristics are the same for all devices
handled by a given driver, so they don't need to be per-instance.)
We also do an IoAttachDeviceToDeviceStack() to put the FDO on the
stack for the PDO. There are a couple of fake bus drivers created
for the PCI and pccard buses. Eventually, there will be one for USB,
which will actually accept USB IRP.s

Things should still work just as before, only now we do things in
the proper order and maintain the correct framework to support passing
IRPs between drivers.

Various changes:

- corrected the comments about IRQL handling in subr_hal.c to more
  accurately reflect reality
- update ndiscvt to make the drv_data symbol in ndis_driver_data.h a
  global so that if_ndis_pci.o and/or if_ndis_pccard.o can see it.
- Obtain the softc pointer from the miniport block by referencing
  the PDO rather than a private pointer of our own (nmb_ifp is no
  longer used)
- implement IoAttachDeviceToDeviceStack(), IoDetachDevice(),
  IoGetAttachedDevice(), IoAllocateDriverObjectExtension(),
  IoGetDriverObjectExtension(), IoCreateDevice(), IoDeleteDevice(),
  IoAllocateIrp(), IoReuseIrp(), IoMakeAssociatedIrp(), IoFreeIrp(),
  IoInitializeIrp()
- fix a few mistakes in the driver_object and device_object definitions
- add a new module, kern_windrv.c, to handle the driver registration
  and relocation/dynalinkign duties (which don't really belong in
  kern_ndis.c).
- made ndis_block and ndis_chars in the ndis_softc stucture pointers
  and modified all references to it
- fixed NdisMRegisterMiniport() and NdisInitializeWrapper() so they
  work correctly with the new driver_object mechanism
- changed ndis_attach() to call NdisAddDevice() instead of ndis_load_driver()
  (which is now deprecated)
- used ExAllocatePoolWithTag()/ExFreePool() in lookaside list routines
  instead of kludged up alloc/free routines
- added kern_windrv.c to sys/modules/ndis/Makefile and files.i386.
2005-02-08 17:23:25 +00:00
Matthew N. Dodd
1f005b6723 - Split out PCI support.
- Add previously removed ISA support.

Submitted by:	David S. Madole <david AT madole.net>
2005-02-03 23:01:01 +00:00
Warner Losh
1307b81e55 Sort entries.
Remove a couple of 'card' lines that were somehow missed when OLDCARD was
desupported.
2005-01-10 04:40:23 +00:00
Warner Losh
944d0f0ff2 move all the card entries to files.pc98
style change: regularize tabbing
2005-01-04 06:07:25 +00:00
Warner Losh
6c5c0a5ac1 Separate mse driver into a core driver and a bus attachments. Separate out
the ISA and CBUS (called isa on pc98) attachments.  Eliminate all PC98
ifdefs in the process (the driver in pc98/pc98/mse.c was a copy of the one
in i386/isa/mse.c with PC98 ifdefs).  Create a module for this driver.

I've tested this my PC-9821RaS40 with moused.  I've not tested this on i386
because I have no InPort cards, or similar such things.  NEC standardized
on bus mice very early, long before ps/2 mice ports apeared, so all PC-98
machines supported by FreeBSD/pc98 have bus mice, I believe.

Reviewed by: nyan-san
2004-12-12 20:05:50 +00:00
Sam Leffler
d487b9ed20 update for new ath hal 2004-12-08 18:20:53 +00:00
Warner Losh
685e700261 It appears that 'kbd' device has never been used and isn't needed.
Build tests show that this isn't used for GENERIC or LINT, and nobody
seemed to know why they existed.
2004-11-23 00:00:43 +00:00
Warner Losh
c2aed5122b After discussions with Nate, repo copy the acpi assist drivers from
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.
2004-11-15 05:54:15 +00:00
Warner Losh
c8c8f27a5d pbio has moved to dev/pbio
Prodded by: peter
2004-11-11 04:53:46 +00:00
Scott Long
085f35d6f3 Hook the hptmv driver up to the build. 2004-10-24 08:53:40 +00:00
Warner Losh
bacb482d94 Port pbio to HEAD.
OK'd by: dds
2004-10-07 16:21:03 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
3c749e3fb1 AMD64 on-CPU GART support.
This also applies to AMD64 HW running 'i386' OS.

Submitted by:	Jung-uk Kim <jkim@niksun.com>
Integration by:	obrien
2004-08-16 12:25:48 +00:00
Robert Watson
a632deec30 Add an "options MP_WATCHDOG" to i386. This option allows one of the
logical CPUs on a system to be used as a dedicated watchdog to cause a
drop to the debugger and/or generate an NMI to the boot processor if
the kernel ceases to respond.  A sysctl enables the watchdog running
out of the processor's idle thread; a callout is launched to reset a
timer in the watchdog.  If the callout fails to reset the timer for ten
seconds, the watchdog will fire.  The sysctl allows you to select which
CPU will run the watchdog.

A sample "debug.leak_schedlock" is included, which causes a sysctl to
spin holding sched_lock in order to trigger the watchdog.  On my Xeons,
the watchdog is able to detect this failure mode and break into the
debugger, which cannot otherwise be done without an NMI button.

This option does not currently work with sched_ule due to ule's push
notion of scheduling, similar to machdep.hlt_logical_cpus failing to
work with that scheduler.

On face value, this might seem somewhat inefficient, but there are a
lot of dual-processor Xeons with HTT around, so using one as a watchdog
for testing is not as inefficient as one might fear.
2004-08-15 18:02:09 +00:00
Mark Murray
29fe871dae Oops. Didn't commit this as part of the mem module fix. 2004-08-04 20:49:43 +00:00
Mark Murray
8ab2f5ecc5 Break out the MI part of the /dev/[k]mem and /dev/io drivers into
their own directory and module, leaving the MD parts in the MD
area (the MD parts _are_ part of the modules). /dev/mem and /dev/io
are now loadable modules, thus taking us one step further towards
a kernel created entirely out of modules. Of course, there is nothing
preventing the kernel from having these statically compiled.
2004-08-01 11:40:54 +00:00
Yoshihiro Takahashi
ee6020c993 Add the ACPI Panasonic extras driver.
Submitted by:	OGAWA Takaya <t-ogawa@triaez.kaisei.org> and nyan
2004-07-21 14:47:54 +00:00
Nate Lawson
32cfa66575 Hook up fdc_acpi for the kernel build. 2004-07-15 16:43:52 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
ec712659ef Desupport M-Systems DiskOnChip driver "fla" 2004-07-13 17:43:03 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
5971a234e5 Hook the GDB backend into the build. 2004-07-10 23:31:17 +00:00
Warner Losh
8ade021a7c Break out the isa and pccard front ends to the fdc controller device.
This should allow us to more easily break out the acpi and 'legacy pc'
front ends as well (so only the bus front end would touch rtc, for
example).

This isn't a great separation, since isa dma routines are still called
from the MI code, but it is a start.
2004-07-07 22:29:33 +00:00
Nate Lawson
f1ca765c85 Move acpi_if.m to files.{amd64,i386,ia64}. This should fix the alpha build.
Pointed out by:	gallatin
2004-06-30 14:19:28 +00:00
Brooks Davis
14b3b2933d el(4) stopped needing to me a count device in December 2000. 2004-06-23 17:33:25 +00:00
Bruce Evans
30346936cf MFamd64:
Fixed profiling of trap, syscall and interrupt handlers and some
ordinary functions, essentially by backing out half of rev.1.106 of
i386/exception.s.  The handlers must be between certain labels for
the purposes of profiling, and this was broken by scattering them in
separately compiled .s files, especially for ordinary functions that
ended up between the labels.  Merge the files by #including them as
before, except with different pathnames and better comments and
organization.  Changes to the scattered files are minimal -- just
move the labels to the file that does the #includes.

This also partly fixes profiling of IPIs -- all IPI handlers are now
correctly classified as interrupt handlers, but many are still missing
mcount calls.

vm86bios.s is included as before, but it is now between the labels for
interrupt handlers again, which seems to be wrong since half of it is
for a non-interrupt handler.
2004-05-26 07:43:41 +00:00
Roman Kurakin
a18da9112d Connect Cronyx Tau-PCI to the system. 2004-05-17 08:15:59 +00:00
Warner Losh
6cd91141eb Move fdc from isa/fd.c to dev/fdc/fdc.c. The old files were
repocopied.  Soon there will be additional bus attachments and
specialization for isa, acpi and pccard (and maybe pc98's cbus).

This was approved by nate, joerg and myself.  bde dissented on the new
location, but appeared to be OK after some discussion.
2004-05-17 05:46:16 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
cae8da6164 Add a driver for the watchdog timer function present on the LPC interface
bridge in Intel ICH-series chipsets.

The original implementation was by W. Daryl Hawkins of Texas A&M, but I
have made substantial modifications.
2004-05-11 18:21:38 +00:00
Bruce Evans
38f924484f Fixed some insertion sort errors. 2004-05-05 11:17:26 +00:00
Bruce Evans
7b829949b0 Fixed unformatting of svr4 entries in rev.1.326 and consistent misformatting
of them in rev.1.358.
2004-05-05 10:50:54 +00:00
John Baldwin
030b156bf0 Add a simple mini-driver for the ELCR register. Originally, the ELCR
register controlled the trigger mode and polarity of EISA interrupts.
However, it appears that most (all?) PCI systems use the ELCR to manage
the trigger mode and polarity of ISA interrupts as well since ISA IRQs used
to route PCI interrupts need to be level triggered with active low
polarity.  We check to see if the ELCR exists by sanity checking the value
we get back ensuring that IRQS 0 (8254), 1 (atkbd), 2 (the link from the
slave PIC), and 8 (RTC) are all clear indicating edge trigger and active
high polarity.

This mini-driver will be used by the atpic driver to manage the trigger and
polarity of ISA IRQs.  Also, the mptable parsing code will use this mini
driver rather than examining the ELCR directly.
2004-05-04 20:07:46 +00:00
Bruce Evans
e0871faf17 Switch to using the moved cy driver (adjust pathnames and remove "count"
parameter).

Keep using it only in the i386 NOTES for now.  It is fairly MI, but it
doesn't use bus-space and has a couple of i386 i/o instructions in pci
intitialization.
2004-05-02 05:21:29 +00:00
Philip Paeps
9a1fc77e3a Add the ACPI Asus extras driver. Provides support for cool ACPI-controled
gadgets (hotkeys, lcd, ...) on Asus laptops.  I aim to closely track the
acpi4asus project which implements these features in the Linux kernel.

If this breaks your laptop, please let me know how it does it :-)

Approved by:	njl (mentor)
2004-04-22 21:29:02 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
6292a18603 Unbreak alpha kernel build and unbreak any non-i386 runtime brokenness.
The VIA Nehemias is so obviously specific to i386 that it should not
be compiled on non-i386 platforms. The obviousness is in the fact that
all functions in nehemias.c are purely i386 inline assembly, guarded
by #ifdef __i386__
2004-04-10 19:43:15 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
7eb17244fa Move twa from files.i386 to files. This unbreaks LINT on !i386.
Pointy hat to:	vkashyap, ps
2004-04-01 10:02:50 +00:00
Vinod Kashyap
99635d6cdd Initial check-in of the device driver for 3ware's 9000 series
PATA/SATA RAID controllers.  This driver is a SIM under CAM, and
so, behaves like a driver for a SCSI controller.
2004-03-30 03:46:00 +00:00
Bill Paul
3ccc038a0b if_ndis.c no longer depends on either pci or pccard. Also, add an
extra entry for if_ndis_pci.c that depends on cardbus, just to cover
all the bases. (I don't think you can have cardbus without PCI, but
just in case...)
2004-03-22 18:00:39 +00:00
Alan Cox
00cfafd7db Add an implementation of uiomove_fromphys() for i386. This implementation
uses sf_buf_alloc() and sf_buf_free() to create and destroy the necessary
ephemeral mappings.
2004-03-21 20:28:36 +00:00
Max Khon
798f0e1603 Add arl(4): driver for Aironet Arlan 655 wireless adapters.
MFC after:	2 weeks
2004-03-15 22:24:28 +00:00
Warner Losh
69ef3621a2 Remove isa compat stuff.
Only cy, bs and wd in the tree still use it.  I have a replacement for
cy that I need to test on ISA and PCI cards.  bs and wd are pc98 only
drivers that appear to no longer be necessary.  I'll be removing them
when I hear back from the pc98 people.
2004-03-14 23:03:57 +00:00
Warner Losh
e9dd5834c6 The gsc driver uses the old COMPAT_ISA api. Retire it so we can
retire the COMPAT_ISA shims.  If someone were to redo this driver with
the new APIs and test it, it can return.
2004-03-14 22:42:54 +00:00
Warner Losh
721745e356 The rdp driver uses the COMPAT_OLD api. This is being retired, so
this driver is being retired.  Remove it from the tree.  If someone
wants to update it to the latest APIs and can test the hardware, it
can return to the tree.
2004-03-14 22:35:29 +00:00