and all SCSI devices (except that it's not done quite the way I want). New
information added includes:
- A text description of the device
- A ``state''---unknown, unconfigured, idle, or busy
- A generic parent device (with support in the m.i. code)
- An interrupt mask type field (which will hopefully go away) so that
. ``doconfig'' can be written
This requires a new version of the `lsdev' program as well (next commit).
explanation. More doc needed, but not hard to do, if you want to.
A big hand to Martin Renters for the netboot program !
Anybody want to compete on who can "make world" in the shortest
amount of time ? I have 127 i486DX2/66 and 5 P60's I can use
now. And 3 times 66 Gb file servers to support it... :->
Anyway, NFS will be standard in the GENERIC kernel now, so that
people can use the bin-tarball to set up shop.
A word of wisdom, don't do this:
| cd /usr/bin
| for i in *
| do
| cp $i /tmp/a
| gzip -9 < /tmp/a > $i
| done
It will compress files with multiple links several times. do it this way:
| cd /usr/bin
| for i in *
| do
| gunzip -f < $i > /tmp/a
| gzip -9 < /tmp/a > $i
| done
This is part of a bug fix from Kirk McKusick to work around problems in FFS
related to the blkno of a 64bit offset not fitting into an int. Note the
proper solution would be to deal with 64bit block numbers, but doing this
would require sweeping changes; some other day perhaps.
Submitted by: Marshall Kirk McKusick
that this is intended for use only in floppy situations and is done at
the sacrifice of performance in that case (in ther words, this is not the
best solution, but works okay for this exceptional situation).
Submitted by: John Dyson
One of the alpha testers (ETO, Toshihisa <eto@osl.fujitsu.co.jp>)
of my APM driver sent me a very small patch to if_ze.c for using IBM
PCMCIA Ethernet card II. There are only a few difference between
Ethernet card I and II. So we can use them both with this patch. It
also includes a patch for PCIC of ThinkPad 230Cs (As long as I
remember, this model is available in Japan only. But it is very
popular subnote in Japan).
Submitted by: hosokawa
so i hope i've finally removed all the occasions where the driver
got stuck when there's no floppy in the drive.
Also attemmpting to omit the error mesage for ``recalib failed''
for the first time, since people tend to be confused about this.
From now on, >all< swapdevices must be activated with "swapon".
If you havn't got it, add this line to /etc/fstab:
/dev/wd0b none swap sw 0 0
ne sec
Reason:
We want our GENERIC* kernels to have a large selection of swap-devices, but
on the other hand, we don't want to use a wd0b as swap when we boot of a
floppy. This way, we will never use a unexpected swapdevice. Nothing else
has changed.
drivers have a chance to change their IRQ before it is checked.
This was implemented in revision 1.21 and broken in revision 1.26.
Drivers that can change their IRQ should probably be configured
with "irq ?".
else has been probed. This feature could go away again, if we can curb the
problem another way.
if_ed.c, syscons.c: Set the above flag. ed# because it needs it, syscons
because it looks stupid to "detect" the display you have already filled up
with text :-)
bt742a.c: Check bt_cmd() return-val during probe, thus failing on adaptec's.
Also silenced various printf's during the probe.
isa.c: Probe devices with the above flag set before the rest. Reduce the
number of "conflict" messages per device to one.
***
Please test the GENERIC-kernel now, if nobody can make it fail, GENERICAH
and GENERICBT has a finite and short life-expectancy...
***
I have put it here, because I belive we could share some code among the
various kinds of boot-code, whenever we get the time to look at it.
Submitted by: Martin Renters
For it to be useful, you must stick your disklabel on the partition which
starts where the MBR says FreeBSD lives. If you don't do that, you might
get a bad day.
Oh, that probably also means that putting swap there is a bad idea...
scheme of things, so I've changed them to be more appropriate. page in/ous
are now associated with the pager that did them. Nuked v_fault as the
only fault of interest that wouldn't be already counted in v_trap is a VM
fault, and this is counted seperately.
2) Implemented most of the remaining counters and corrected the counting of
some that were done wrong. They are all almost correct now...just a few
minor ones left to fix.
of mb_offset given the right sequence of 1 and 0 byte mbufs. This bug
was discovered by John Hood who also provided this fix - which is a
rewrite of the routine (and is easier to understand than the code I wrote).
Submitted by: John Hood <cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us>
This is the main files for the iBCS2 emulator. It can be use
compiled into the kernel by using:
options IBCS2
options COMPAT_IBCS2
or as a lkm module using:
options COMPAT_IBCS2
and then loading it via the ibcs2 script in /usr/bin
REMEMBER: this code is still experimental ! NO WARRENTY !
Submitted by: sef@kithrup.com, mostyn@mrl.com, sos@kmd-ac.dk
Fix endless loop in siopoll() for an event on a tty with no tty struct.
Don't generate unwanted interrupts in the serial console driver. These
bugs probably don't matter unless the tty struct is dynamically allocated.
Support polled mode. To use it, leave out the irq and the vector in
the config file. It only causes extra overhead for open polled ports.
The maximum usable speed is approximately 1000 bps for a 16450 and
15000 bps for a 16550.
Other cosmetic changes.
Bug fixed, that caused system hang on first interrupt on some motherboards.
New version of PCI bus configuration code, now supports dynamic interrupt
configuration (using BIOS supplied values).
NCR SCSI and DEC Ethernet driver patched to use this feature.
*** Remove PCI IRQ specifications from your kernel config file ! ***
a route. (This still doesn't work, but it doesn't panic now.) It looks
like there may be a number of incipient bugs in this code.
Also, get ready for the time when all IP gateway routes are cloning, which
is necessary to keep proper TCP statistics.
- excise some unused code (#if 0'd out - don't want to nuke it yet)
- fix problems with "make depend" - some macros were screwing it up
- get rid of some static local variables
There still seems to be a small reentrancy problem somewhere.
systems with it on by default (or the equivalent flag) and terminal control
sequences confuse it greatly. (Try running `ls' under bash in an XTerm,
for instance.)
"APM" macro.
machdep.c: Made the APM-descriptors unconditional.
Bruce: if these still conflict with your debugger, please put in a reservation
for your debugger. These three desc. can be anywhere, as long as they are
contiguous, so just move them as needed.
pmap.c: tons of unused vars zapped, various other warnings silenced.
trap.c: unused vars zapped.
vm_machdep.c: A wrong argument, which by chance did the right thing, was
corrected.
the first place was so that BPF could grok trailer packets. I've since
decided that this is a job for tcpdump to decipher (if at all). Also
fixed up checks for received packet length to better cope with ancient
starlan boards.
1) cut this up into /sys/sys/inflate.h, sys/kern/inflate.c
sys/kern/ingact_gzip.c
2) make a lot more things static
3) make a lot of globals const
4) make some args const
5) first stage of making globals into a struct (not used yet)
The vm_allocate() call which was introduced between revisions 1.4 and
1.5 of imagact_gzip.c broke things. I have backed that out for the time
being. (Davidg: help please)
WARNING: if you have gzip enabled in your kernel, you must now run
config again, as another source file has been added. Otherwise your
kernel compile will fall over.
This is all still WIP. More commits to come.
Suggestions from: phk.
Submitted by: Thomas David Rivers <rivers%ponds@ncren.net>
WARNING: might hide some bug below! I commit this to improve the stability
of 2.0.
Thomas wrote:
-------------
I have been running a kernel with this change since October 4th; barring
unrelated network router troubles, the pitiful little machine has
completed several builds without any interaction from me, and continues
to chug along.
I re-read wd.c, and added appropriate printfs() to look for references
to dk_badsect[]. My changes should have printed something when dk_badsect[]
was referenced.
I got no output :-(
Thus, I'm forced to concluded that something else is examining some
spurious memory... which happened to be in dk_badsect[] of the disk structure
in wd.c. I can find no other explanation of why this unnecessary
initialization causes things to operate correctly.
On the premise that such an initialization isn't going to hurt anything,
I'm going to suggest it go into 2.0.
I'd like to thank everyone for there assistance, particularly David,
John and Bruce.
more weird kinds of a.out than anyone can argue for. This code failed to
load the first 28K of the text-segment, in the case where the first page
of the a.out contains only the a.out-header, and the text is still at 0x0.
Thanks Steven !
been relocated to run in the 64k segment at 0x10000 with the stack at
the top of this segment. This corrects the problems machines with 512K
base memory had booting.
2. startprog routing rewritten to convert the BOOTSEG ss to a KERNELSEG
ss, this eliminated the last of the >512K memory references. Additional
cleanup in here included a better way to copy the arguments to the
kernel stack.
3. Elimination of argv and esym cruft saved a few bytes.
4. Only need to truncate the head.a_entry to a meg boundary once intead
of every time we used it! [Saving more bytes].
5. Addition of version 1 bootinfo structure support. These boot blocks
pass the kernel name in to the kernel now.
6. Removed historical comments about MACH argv stuff, as it is useless now.
that and when it does it will be done differently.
2. The kernel now does a frame setup on entry so it ``looks'' like a
real function call. This will be needed by future boot code and
debuggers.
3. Clean up stack offsets to all be in decimal and use %ebp when copying
parameters in from the boot code.
4. Implement version 1 of the uniform boot code passing mechanism with
support for kernelname passing and nfs_diskless structure passing.
5. Document the 3 different ways the kernel is called depending on what code
is calling it.
- Allow PPP to run multicasts natively.
- Deal properly with lots of similarly-named interfaces.
- Don't sign-extend if_flags.
NB: the last fix (to rtsock.c) must be reversed when we expand if_flags to a
reasonable size.
Submitted by: Mark Treacy
the uncompression buffer. Now malloc(M_GZIP) is used for all the Huffman-
tree stuff only. Numbers so far indicate < 15Kb Malloc use + 32 Kb for
the abovementioned buffer while uncompressing.
drives that return sector counts of 0 and cause division by 0 traps during
the probe).
Reviewed by: Dave <root@hclb.demon.co.uk>
Obtained from: FreeBSD 1.1.5.1
cleaned up much of the cruft in this thing.
No printf's in the case where things go well.
Gzip-headers can contain filenames and comments (as long as they're
shorter than the page-size.)
I don't think we leak memory, in the "exec/aout" code. I'm not quite sure
about the inflate code yet, but I don't think memory is lost.
Q: Can I add a class M_GZIP to <sys/malloc.h> and bump M_LAST one up
without any thing else needing tweaking ?
Poul-Henning
inadvertantly introduced in pre-1.1.5. This could cause page modifications
to go unnoticed during certain extreme low memory/high paging rate conditions.
Submitted by: John Dyson and David Greenman
WARNING: THIS MATERIAL MIGHT GO AWAY!
This material needs the core-groups approval to stay here for the 2.0 release.
If the core-group does not concent to this commit, it will be backed out.
***
It is a non-gpl'ed "unzip" which will allow execution of a.out files which
have been sent through "gzip -9". The idea being saved disk-space.
Just now this code has quality rating: "working prototype".
To compress a file to be used with this, do it exactly this way:
gzip -9 -v < /bin/FOO > /tmp/FOO
remember to chmod /tmp/FOO as needed.
DON'T compress all of you binaries right away ! There are several things
which you should consider first:
1. Using compressed binaries, you use >MUCH< more VM, and thus swap-space.
2. It is slow.
3. It might crash your machine.
Apart from that, I welcome comments...
NB: There is also a change to sys/conf/files, but cvs core-dumped on me,
so it didn't get into the logs or emailed, but the commit seems to have
happended OK.
WARNING: THIS MATERIAL MIGHT GO AWAY!
This material needs the core-groups approval to stay here for the 2.0 release.
If the core-group does not concent to this commit, it will be backed out.
***
It is a non-gpl'ed "unzip" which will allow execution of a.out files which
have been sent through "gzip -9". The idea being saved disk-space.
Just now this code has quality rating: "working prototype".
To compress a file to be used with this, do it exactly this way:
gzip -9 -v < /bin/FOO > /tmp/FOO
remember to chmod /tmp/FOO as needed.
DON'T compress all of you binaries right away ! There are several things
which you should consider first:
1. Using compressed binaries, you use >MUCH< more VM, and thus swap-space.
2. It is slow.
3. It might crash your machine.
Apart from that, I welcome comments...
be merged at some point)
New AMD family ethernet driver. Should support BICC,NE2100, TNIC,
AT1500 and anything else that uses a Lance/PCnet type chip. Only been
tested with the BICC so far though.
Still work to do on performance and MULTICAST support needs to be added
but it's basically working and I want the revision history from this
point on
AT1500 and anything else that uses a Lance/PCnet type chip. Only been
tested with the BICC so far though.
Still work to do on performance and MULTICAST support needs to be added
but it's basically working and I want the revision history from this
point on