original hardware list was mostly organized by driver except for the
case of NICs by Intel, DEC, and 3Com, whose NICs tended to be
organized by manufacturer. Most of these entries are now organized by
driver, except for a few 3Com NICs; also the multitude of ed(4)
drivers needs to be coalesced.
While I'm here, fix a markup glitch in the ISDN section that caused
any non-i386 hardware list to be incorrectly numbered.
do it as a side-effect of probing for MP hardware. This allows
us to scan for local SAPICs early (especially before MBUF
initialization).
o Fix the Local SAPIC structure so that matches the Local SAPIC
table entry. Now that the Local SAPIC info is the same as the
Local APIC info, stop dumping the Local APIC entries.
o For every Local SAPIC entry in the MADT that's not disabled,
let the SMP code know about it. They represent actual CPUs.
o Register the OS_BOOT_RENDEZ entry point and provide a (bogus)
implementation for the entry point.
o Provide a mapping for internal IPI numbers to ExtINT vectors.
o In a MP system, announce the CPUs and start them by sending
IPI_AP_WAKEUP to each of them. Not that it makes a difference
at this time :-)
o Miscellaneous style fixes and other adjustments.
number) instead of allocating next free unit for them. If someone needs
fixed place, he must specify it correctly. "Allocating next" is especially bad
because leads to double device detection and to "repeat make_dev panic" as
result. This can happens if the same devices present somewhere on PCI bus,
hints and ACPI. Making them present in one place only not always
possible, "sc" f.e. can't be removed from hints, it results to no console at
all.
2) In make_device(), detect when devclass_add_device() fails, free dev and
return. I.e. add missing error checking. This part needed to finish fix in 1),
but must be done this way in anycase, with old variant too.
header for the case where sizeof(time_t) != sizeof(int). dumprestore.h
was embedding time_t when it should have been embedding int32_t.
Use time_to_time32() and time32_to_time() to convert between the
protocoll/file-format time and time_t.
serve two purposes: (1) so we can maintain backwards compatibility with
protocols (rwhod, dump, etc...) that either assume time_t is 32 bits or
assume sizeof(time_t) == sizeof(int), or make other similar assumptions.
(2) To tag such routines (by the presence of these calls) for future
cleanup/extension work.
The 32->64 routine, time32_to_time() (when time_t is 64 bits, that is),
is defined specifically to implement temporal locality to properly set the
msb bits of a 64 bit time_t quantity, using the 50 year rule. The locality
code has not been implemented yet (and doesn't need to be for a while),
but that is the intent. This will allow us to maintain backwards protocol
compatibility past 2038.
These routines are intended to be platform and time_t agnostic.
MFC after: 1 week
- ANSIfy function declarations
- braces around initializers structs within structs
- add parens in complicated expressions
- disambiguate dangling elses
- no more implicit int
- make functions static where possible
- use prototypes
- don't use varargs hack for diag()
Requested by: joerg
MFC after: 2 weeks
non-existent disk in a legacy /dev on a DEVFS system would panic the system
if stat(2)'ed.
Do not whine about anonymous device nodes not having a si_devsw, they're
not supposed to.
characters. Use quad conversion functions rather then long conversion
where appropriate to handle the available range. Mainly fixes time_t
but there was also a st_size ulong conversion in there that has to be
quad or cpio cannot be used to copy files > 2G.
MFC after: 1 day