- add a dma hack similar to the NetBSD one
- change PDQ_OS_MEM{RD,WR} to use readl/writel rather than deref'ing
a 32 bit va.
Note that I did just enough to get this working on alpha. I probably
should have updated it to use busspace, but I was too lazy to navigate
the twisty minefield of ifdefs that make up this driver.
Tested by: wilko (on both x86 and alpha)
before adding/removing packets from the queue. Also, the if_obytes and
if_omcasts fields should only be manipulated under protection of the mutex.
IF_ENQUEUE, IF_PREPEND, and IF_DEQUEUE perform all necessary locking on
the queue. An IF_LOCK macro is provided, as well as the old (mutex-less)
versions of the macros in the form _IF_ENQUEUE, _IF_QFULL, for code which
needs them, but their use is discouraged.
Two new macros are introduced: IF_DRAIN() to drain a queue, and IF_HANDOFF,
which takes care of locking/enqueue, and also statistics updating/start
if necessary.
Note that __bsdi__s_/_i_/_os_/__ has moved this file to dev/ic/ and
has completely removed the non-compiling function from pdq_ifsubr.c and
has completely removed this function and placed it into netinet/if_ether.c
(if, in fact, it wasn't there the whole time). I was tempted to simply
remove this __bsdi__only__ function.
The function is arp_ifinit().
PR: kern/7903
Collect together the components of several drivers and export eisa from
the i386-only area (It's not, it's on some alphas too). The code hasn't
been updated to work on the Alpha yet, but that can come later.
Repository copies were done a while ago.
Moving these now keeps them in consistant place across the 4.x series
as the newbusification progresses.
Submitted by: mdodd
This means that we will not have to have a bpf and a non-bpf version
of our driver modules.
This does not open any security hole, because the bpf core isn't loadable
The drivers left unchanged are the "cross platform" drivers where the respective
maintainers are urged to DTRT, whatever that may be.
Add a couple of missing FreeBSD tags.
events, in order to pave the way for removing a number of the ad-hoc
implementations currently in use.
Retire the at_shutdown family of functions and replace them with
new event handler lists.
Rework kern_shutdown.c to take greater advantage of the use of event
handlers.
Reviewed by: green
eisa_add_intr() which now takes an additional arguement (one of
EISA_TRIGGER_LEVEL or EISA_TRIGGER_EDGE).
The flag RR_SHAREABLE has no effect when passed to
bus_alloc_resource(dev, SYS_RES_IRQ, ...) in an EISA device context as
the eisa_alloc_resource() call (bus_alloc_resource method) now deals
with this flag directly, depending on the device ivars.
This change does nothing more than move all the 'shared = inb(foo + iobsse)'
nonesense to the device probe methods rather than the device attach.
Also, print out 'edge' or 'level' in the IRQ announcement message.
Reviewed by: dfr
#define COMPAT_PCI_DRIVER(name,data) DATA_SET(pcidevice_set,data)
.. to 2.2.x and 3.x if people think it's worth it. Driver writers can do
this if it's not defined. (The reason for this is that I'm trying to
progressively eliminate use of linker_sets where it hurts modularity and
runtime load capability, and these DATA_SET's keep getting in the way.)
used in device attach routines. At least for attaches at boot time,
actually waiting, or actually failing for malloc(..., M_NOWAIT), are
almost equally unlikely and harmless, but using M_WAITOK interferes
with automatic detection of bogus M_WAITOK's.
FreeBSD/alpha. The most significant item is to change the command
argument to ioctl functions from int to u_long. This change brings us
inline with various other BSD versions. Driver writers may like to
use (__FreeBSD_version == 300003) to detect this change.
The prototype FreeBSD/alpha machdep will follow in a couple of days
time.
This will not make any of object files that LINT create change; there
might be differences with INET disabled, but hardly anything compiled
before without INET anyway. Now the 'obvious' things will give a
proper error if compiled without inet - ipx_ip, ipfw, tcp_debug. The
only thing that _should_ work (but can't be made to compile reasonably
easily) is sppp :-(
This commit move struct arpcom from <netinet/if_ether.h> to
<net/if_arp.h>.
now dead sys/pci/if_pdq.c which has been committed about by the same
time i made my tests with Matt's code.
LINT should compile now again.
Well, that's a clear case where ``CVS writer locks'' would certainly
(not) have helped. :-]
to -current.
Thanks goes to Ulrike Nitzsche <ulrike@ifw-dresden.de> for giving me
a chance to test this. Only the PCI driver is tested though.
One final patch will follow in a separate commit. This is so that
everything up to here can be dragged into 2.2, if we decide so.
Reviewed by: joerg
Submitted by: Matt Thomas <matt@3am-software.com>
importing it onto a vendor branch first, in the hope that this will
make future maintenance easier.
The conflicts are (hopefully) unimportant. More commits that actually
bring this into the source tree will follow.
Submitted by: Matt Thomas (thomas@lkg.dec.com)