PDRSHIFT.
The SYSTEM constant that was defined in this file has been replaced
with KERNBASE from param.h.
Changed almost all # style comments to /* */ C style comments. Several
comments cleaned up so that they make a little more since.
In the comments that describe C calling conventions to assembler routines
used a comma space sequence to seperate arguments and removed the space
between the function name and the argument list.
Removed useless comments like /* clr eax */.
Changed all comma space sequences on assemble instructions to just be comma.
Removed spaces after $ operators to make the file consistent, this may need
to change again (ie: $KERNBASE should probably be $(KERNBASE), but for now
it all seems to work just fine.) This may become a problem with the C
pre-processor.
Changed several double blank lines to single blank lines that where used
to seperate the I/O routines, these routines are blocked enough that we
don't need double blank lines between them.
Changed sequence of I/O routines to be all input functions, all output
functions instead of just the opposite.
Moved the SHOW_A_LOT debug stuff to near the end of the file.
Changed two occurances of the constant 0xfff to NBPG-1.
the proper I_X86CPU in the config file the following error will occur
while building the kernel: (had to line wrap the error for this message)
../../i386/i386/machdep.c:343: #error This kernel is not configured for one \
of the supported CPUs
Remove patch kit headers, and add $Id$
This is mostly to align some more code with NetBSD.
cpu.h:
Remove the old function vs. include configuration stuff that was
ifdefed out when we went to inline functions.
Remove the define of resettodr that made it a nop, there is
already a function that makes it a nop, no need to #define one.
Remove the #defines of processor types, they are now defined
in cputypes.h, #include that file.
Add struct cpu_nameclass for support of cpu types.
frame.h:
include sys/signal.h, it will be needed in the future.
put the sigframe structure here that was in machdep.c
pcb.h:
Add multiple inclusion protection.
Add pcb_ldt and pcb_ldt_len to pcb structure, this is for the
user mode ldt.
removed patch kit headers and sccsids, add $Id$. This is a general
clean up and reallignment with NetBSD-current where possible.
genassym.c:
removed extranious include of reg.h
removed old FP_* defines that have been ifdefed out since the patch kit
removed PCB_SIGC that is not referenced anywhere
add trapframe and sigframe defines
add KERNBASE define for use in locore.s
locore.s:
include npx.h and use NNPX for turning on and off FPU
include machine/cputypes.h for the types of cpu (used in cpu_identify)
change SYSPDREND to be one higher, this is really the base of the
next area, and will be changing again next time I revise the file
Reverse the NOP defines, you now get slow NOP's by default, this
may be what is casuing us trouble with some systems. If you want
the NOPS to be null you now need to have options DUMMY_NOPS.
Now get esym from the boot blocks which don't pass it yet, and
it is not used, but this will be changing.
Move the bit_colors stuff to be in with the rest of Bruces SHOW_A_LOT
things for debugging.
Added NetBSD's CPU type probe code, we now know what type of CPU
we are running on.
Adjust kernel pde calcuation to correct for change in SYSPDREND, no
longer need the +1.
machdep.c
include npx.h and use NNPX for turning on and off FPU
include isa.h, map.h(new file), exec.h in preperation for
changes that are still in process.
Add some of the code for MACHINE_NONCONTIG that will alow us
to better map around the BIOS memory area.
Now print the version, cpu id, real memory and availiable memory
during boot.
Correct the calculation of bufpages, the code was mixing pages
and bytes, it now does the right things. Removed Bill's hack
for limiting the erronous calculation.
add the identifycpu print out code from NetBSD.
remove the definition of the sigframe struct, it belongs in
frame.h
put in printf's about syncing disks on a halt/reboot.
Change the halted message to be a little easier reading.
Clean up of the dump messages, makes the source and the output
much more readable.
Change 0,0 in several places to have spaces after the commas.
is so often reported as an error condition when it is not. We print the
size of things so for those who want to know if this happened they can
figure it out from the size information that is printed.
Change the cpu "i386" line to 2 lines:
cpu "I386_CPU"
cpu "I486_CPU"
This is so we can do real CPU classification of code.
Fix missing depend for assym.s which does depend on genassym.c
lines to match NetBSD. Added $Id$.
Added MID_MACHINE from NetBSD.
Removed definition of DELAY() for non-kernel soures.
Fixed some small english errors that had been corrected in NetBSD.
File is now identical to NetBSD's, but will be changing soon for some
of my clean up work.
machdep.o is a defined to be a target in 2 places. This was caused by
the addition of the LOAD_ADDRESS stuff. Removed the extranious target
of machdep.o.
* patch from vak@zebub.msk.su (Serge V.Vakulenko) to work around
* a hardware bug in cheap WD clone boards where the PROM checksum
* byte is always zero
it relocates it to be after the BIOS memory hole instead of right below
the 640K limit.
THANK YOU CHRIS!!!
From: <cgd@postgres.Berkeley.EDU>
Date: Wed, 29 Sep 93 18:49:58 -0700
basically, reserve a new 32k space right after firstaddr,
and put the buffer space there...
the diffs are below, and are in ~cgd/sys/i386/i386 (in machdep.c)
on freefall. i obviously can't test them, so if some of you would
look the diffs over and try them out...
Date: Thu, 30 Sep 1993 15:13:17 +0300
Description:
Old wt driver is too incomplete and buggy.
It does not support Archive controllers, BSD-like
tape ioctls, multiple tape controllers, different
tape density etc.
Fix:
This driver is a replacement of the old one.
It was not tested on different controllers, though.
This is the streamer tape driver for 386bsd and FreeBSD,
which supports Wangtek and Archive controllers.
It was developed as a replacement of the old Wangtek
tape driver from CMU.
In comparison with the CMU driver, this version has the following enhancements:
1) Support for Archive SC402 and SC499 tape controllers added.
2) Support for up to three tape controllers on the same machine.
3) Support for BSD-style ioctls MTIOCGET, MTIOCTOP.
Mt command now works adequately with this driver.
4) Asynchronous REWIND and FSF operations, close() will not wait
until they finish. The next open() will wait for it instead.
5) Use of WTQICMD ioctl is limited to ERASE and RETENS operations.
This prevents the user from locking the tape driver by strange
tape operations.
6) Tape density switching added.
7) The status of the process, blocked on the tape operation,
is displayed at the WCHAN column of the `ps' command as:
wtread reading data from the tape
wtwrite writing data to the tape
wtrfm reading the tape marker
wtwfm writing the tape marker
wtrew rewinding the tape
wterase doing WTQICMD ERASE operation
wtretens doing WTQICMD RETENS operation
wtorew doing MTIOCTOP REW/OFFL operation
wtorfm doing MTIOCTOP FSF operation
wtowfm doing MTIOCTOP WEOF operation
Block interface (writing blocks less than 2048 bytes) is not functioning
pwoperly. Use raw interface instead.
* Added software NIC reset in NE probe to work around a problem
* with some NE boards where the 8390 doesn't reset properly on
* power-up. Remove initialization of IMR/ISR in the NE probe
* because this is inherent in the reset.
* added no multi-buffer override for 3c503
*
* Revision 2.1 93/09/29 12:32:12 davidg
* changed multi-buffer count for 16bit 3c503's from 5 to 2 after
* noticing that the transmitter becomes idle because of so many
* packets to load.
*
* Revision 2.0 93/09/29 00:00:19 davidg
* many changes, rewrites, additions, etc. Now supports the
* NE1000, NE2000, WD8003, WD8013, 3C503, 16bit 3C503, and
* a variety of similar clones. 16bit 3c503 now does multi
* transmit buffers. Nearly every part of the driver has
* changed in some way since rev 1.30.
Date: Wed, 29 Sep 1993 01:54:53 +0300
To bring this error try to make two swap partitons on one disk:
one of the partitions will be not recognized.
Fix is simple: set uninitialized val variable.
Date: Tue, 28 Sep 1993 09:03:13 +0100 (MET)
The only place I found with a printf("status %x") is in /sys/i386/isa/lpt.c,
and looks much like a left-over debugging printout...
And it was... I changed it to an lprintf (which is defined if debuggin is on)
Rod
Added STRIP=, DBSYM=, and LOAD_ADDRESS?=
Now use LOAD_ADDRESS for linking kernel and for dbsym, added strip -x to
cut kernel size.
Added machde.o: dependency, this will be needed in the future, and for
now it does not hurt anyone.
Cleaned out conf.o: dependency, mkdep does the right things. Same for
param.c:
This is really a Merge in of NetBSD's Makefile.i386, here is the relevant
rlog info:
----------------------------
revision 1.27
date: 1993/08/27 23:58:20; author: brezak; state: Exp; lines: +2 -2
Need LOAD_ADDRESS for depend pass.
----------------------------
revision 1.25
date: 1993/07/19 16:52:16; author: mycroft; state: Exp; lines: +3 -3
Add ${DEBUG} to CFLAGS and -f to dbsym.
----------------------------
revision 1.22
date: 1993/07/18 10:08:22; author: mycroft; state: Exp; lines: +5 -6
Change to work with new config stuff for specifying load address.
----------------------------
revision 1.20
date: 1993/07/18 09:47:40; author: mycroft; state: Exp; lines: +6 -5
Use new -T option to dbsym.
----------------------------
revision 1.17
date: 1993/07/11 08:42:22; author: cgd; state: Exp; lines: +2 -2
don't ignore errors from dbsym... it might say that, e.g. there's
not enough symbol space!
----------------------------
revision 1.14
date: 1993/06/06 23:29:03; author: cgd; state: Exp; lines: +2 -2
make conf.o actually depend on conf.c...
----------------------------
revision 1.8
date: 1993/04/29 03:27:39; author: cgd; state: Exp; lines: +5 -10
use ed instead of ex. the script to use is identical, and we might
want to switch back to using ex when our ex supports -.
----------------------------
revision 1.5
date: 1993/03/24 18:48:57; author: cgd; state: Exp; lines: +1 -1
now use absolute path for dbsym
----------------------------
Date: Sun, 12 Sep 1993 18:19:05 -0500
This will allow you to compile and run a freebsd kernel with shared
memory support. I haven't tested the shm*() calls yet.
You run out of page table descriptors if you specify 4Mb of sharable
memory (SHMMAXPGS=1024). I don't know what the limit is, but
SHMMAXPGS=64 works. Rich
Date: Thu, 16 Sep 93 01:35:10 +1000
Julian writes:
>In fact DEVIDLE and FINDWORK ended up being basically equivalent.
>the bit I wonder about, is the returning of 0.. What (other than
>another request from somewhere else in the kernel) is going to start
>work on the next item on the queue?
I think removing FINDWORK would make things clearer.
Nothing much is going to start work on the next item. However, it is
pointless to continue processing the queue for the same unready drive.
Aborting all reads and trying harder to perform all writes would be
better.
Julian writes.
> no, actually it should be:
> fdt = fd_data[FDUNIT(minor(dev))].ft;
Fixed.
From: bde@kralizec.zeta.org.au (Bruce Evans)
Date: Thu, 16 Sep 93 22:56:01 +1000
The fd driver reported the wrong cylinder/head/sector numbers after an
error (ST3 is only valid after a sense-drive command), and didn't report
fs block numbers (diskerr was not used).
There was an old problem with writes to block fd devices. Try this:
1. write protect floppy in fd0.
2. tar cf /dev/fd0a /dev/null. Repeat a few times. Later writes tend to
terminate earlier.
3. un-write protect floppy.
4. repeat step 2. The writes tend to return 0, 2048, 4096, ... and then
succeed.
This was caused by a bug in vfs__bios.c. (The bug is fixed in NetBSD's
vfs_bio.c.) fd.c sets bp->b_resid to nonzero after an error. vfs__bios.c
was not initializing bp->b_resid. This causes some writes to terminate
early (e.g., writes to block devices; see spec_write()).
Related funnies:
1. Nothing tries to write the residual bytes.
2. The wd driver sets bp->b_resid to 0 after an error, so there's no
way anything else could write the residual bytes.
3. I use the block fd device for tar because the raw device seemed to
have more bugs long ago, and because it ought to be able to handle
buffering more transparently (I don't want to have to know the
device size). But spec_write() always uses the size BLKDEV_IOSIZE
== 2048 which is too small. For disks it should use the size of
one track (rounded down to meet the next track boundary or the i/o
size). Here it would help if the DIOCGPART ioctl worked. But
DIOCGPART is not implemented for floppies, and the disk size is
ignored except for partitions of type FS_BSDFFS.
Bruce