a BIOS was not installed, this will still be true by the time we probe
the chip. We use this heuristic to determine if we should use the left
over scratch ram target settings for controllers that don't have an
SEEPROM. We also "snapshot" the host adapter SCSI id and whether ultra
is enabled or not and use these values if a BIOS was installed. The card
will act as if a BIOS was installed even if there wasn't one if you warm
reboot, but since the scratch ram area is still valid in this case, its
hardly worth the effort of writing a shutdown routing that clears out
the scratch ram. This should make users of motherboard controllers
happy.
channel B first as approriate.
Only reset the SCSI bus if the RESET_SCSI bit of SCSICONF is set. This
makes the aic7xxx driver honor all of the configuration settings availible
in SCSI-Select or the ECU.
Fix a benign bug in the reset code that caused us to always wait a full
second after the chip reset. This should shave some time off the probe.
Bug found by pedrosal@nce.ufrj.br (Pedro Salenbauch)
It seems that only the top three sync rates are doubled when in ultra mode,
so update the syncrates table as appropriate.
Found by "Dan Willis" <dan@plutotech.com> and his SCSI bus analyzer
channel B first as approriate.
Even if the BIOS is diabled, the ECU will still set the primary channel
bit, SCSI ID, RESET_SCSI bit, and BOFF_TIME, so use them.
Change #ifdef linux to #ifdef __linux__
aic7xxx_reg.h:
Remove unneeded BOFF_60BCLOCKS
define CHIPRSTACK to be the same as CHIPRST
define RESET_SCSI and CHANNEL_B_PRIMARY bits
All of these aer used during the setup of adapters.
we are consistent in how they are referenced in the handbook, and
so that they are now all clickable URLs. E.g. no more mis-matched
freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org and hackers@freebsd.org. They are used
just like the individual mail addresses defined in authors.sgml.
E.g. &a.doc will expand to:
FreeBSD documentation project mailing list <freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.ORG>
Be consistent in using the FreeBSD.ORG address. All references
to freebsd.org were changed to FreeBSD.ORG.
Use pre-defined addresses for some individuals where available.
The removed files are no longer needed, they are actually labelled as
``Use only if you are not 4.4BSD''. (Yeah, the ol' crufty printcap.c
is really gone!)
Properly declare all external objects in files ending in .h, as
opposed to embed them into files ending in .c.
(PR #1178).
Define a new SO_TIMESTAMP socket option for datagram sockets to return
packet-arrival timestamps as control information (PR #1179).
Submitted by: Louis Mamakos <loiue@TransSys.com>
Subject: Fix for annoying fsck bug
Date: Wed, 24 Jan 1996 13:33:29 -0700 (MST)
The following small diff fixes the annoying fsck bug that causes it to
need to be run twice to end up with correct reference counts for inodes
for directories that had subdirectories relocated into the lost+found
directory.
I found the need to rerun *extremely* annoying. This fix causes the
count to be correctly adjusted later in pass 4 by correctly stating
the parent reference count.
Note that the parent reference count is incremented when the directory
entry is made (for ".."), but is not really there in the case of a
directory that does not make an entry in its parent dir.
This can be tested by waiting for the inode sync after cd'ing from a
shell into a test fs. Then you "mkdir xxx yyy zzz", wait a second,
and hit the machine reset button.
Reviewed by: nate (Tested lots of crashes :)
Submitted by: Terry Lambert <terry@lambert.org>
Make "selection bar" inverse video white-on-blue on color screens to avoid
it getting muddled up with popup dialogs.
Do disk selection in a more friendly fashion (for one thing, allow a
drive to be de-selected again if you change your mind).
Add a few strategic screen-saves to prevent corruption of screen contents
(thanks, Michael Elbel!).
boundary, which means that it doesn't mark the start of the data
section (which is then inaccessible to the programmer ??).
Hopefully fixes recent locore reboot problems.
the patch submitted by Philippe Charnier since he wasn't actually freeing
the resources early enough (an earlier return could be invoked, leaving
the resources still allocated), but he definitely pointed it out. Merci,
Philippe!
Suggested-By: Philippe Charnier <charnier@lirmm.fr>
the past, since it returns to the old system of allocating mbufs out of
a private area rather than using the kernel malloc(). While this may seem
like a backwards step to some, the new allocator is some 20% faster than
the old one and has much better caching properties.
Written by: John Wroclawski <jtw@lcs.mit.edu>
really own (and which can end up being mangled later). The manifestation
of this bug is that the first attempt by a user to change their NIS password
succeeds, but all subsequent attempts fail. rpc.yppasswdd also logs
a message about not being able to find a file called
'/var/yp/<some garbage string>/master.passwd.' (Note that for some
bizarre reason, this doesn't happen with the malloc() from FreeBSD 2.1.0.
I suppose this means we can chalk up another victory for phkmalloc. :)
This bug only occurs if you use the -m flag with rpc.yppasswdd.
Fix this by copying the domain name to a static buffer and returning
a pointer to that instead.
Reported by: Jian-Da Li (jdli@csie.nctu.edu.tw)
second delay. My ps/2 mouse is now found reliably on my ThinkPad (it
didn't before) and still works on my NEC Versa.
Submitted by: Richard Wiwatowski <rjwiwat@adelaide.on.net>