attach to the hostb driver instead. This means that agp can now be loaded
at runtime (in theory at least). Also, the drivers no longer have to
explicity call device_verbose() to cancel out any earlier calls to
device_quiet() by the hostb(4) driver (this shows a limitation in new-bus,
drivers really shouldn't be doing device_quiet() until they know they are
going to drive that device, i.e. in attach).
generic bridge support was biting us more than it helped, whenever a new chipset
came out from a vendor and misprogramming it caused strange hangs or corruption.
[2] Add a large number of PCI IDs based on what the linux drivers support.
Note that the new PCI IDs haven't been tested, they're just *likely* to work.
In particular the VIA AGP 8x chipsets are concerning, due to lack of testing,
possible issues (kern/69953), and not having a nice "does this bridge say it
would do 8x" function. However, this shouldn't make the situation worse, since
these chips would have probed in the past anyway.
network layer (ether).
- Don't abuse module names to facilitate ifconfig module loading;
such abuse isn't really needed. (And if we do need type information
associated with a module then we should make it explicit and not
use hacks.)
vm_mtx does not recurse and is required for most low level
vm operations.
faults can not be taken without holding Giant.
Memory subsystems can now call the base page allocators safely.
Almost all atomic ops were removed as they are covered under the
vm mutex.
Alpha and ia64 now need to catch up to i386's trap handlers.
FFS and NFS have been tested, other filesystems will need minor
changes (grabbing the vm lock when twiddling page properties).
Reviewed (partially) by: jake, jhb
tested on Intel BX chipsets only. The other agp minidrivers are totally
untested.
The programming api is a subset of the Linux api and is only intended to
be enough for the X server to use. There is also an in-kernel api for the
use of other kernel modules such as the 3D DRI.