for entire SYS5 SHM segments. This is totally unnecessary, and so the
correct allocation of VM objects has been substituted. (The vm_mmap
was misused -- vm_object_allocate is more appropriate.)
If you define this, it means your keyboard is actually probable using the
brain-dammaged probe routine in syscons, and if the keyboard is NOT found,
then you don't want syscons to activate itself further.
This makes life sane for those of us who use serial consoles most of the
time and want "the right thing" to happen when we plug a keyboard in.
Bowrite guarantees that buffers queued after a call to bowrite will
be written after the specified buffer (on a particular device).
Bowrite does this either by taking advantage of hardware ordering support
(e.g. tagged queueing on SCSI devices) or resorting to a synchronous write.
Bowrite guarantees that buffers queued after a call to bowrite will
be written after the specified buffer (to a particular device).
Bowrite does this either by taking advantage of hardware ordering support
(e.g. tagged queueing on SCSI devices) or by resorting to a synchronous write.
not depend on bootverbose being true.
Include only register specifications for those chip sets that apply to
a cpu that might boot this a particular kernel (ie. make the Saturn code
depend on I486_CPU being defined, the Pentium chip sets on I586_CPU ...)
I just couldn't get the code to be as small as it should have gotten..
atill a LITTLE bigger than before as I need to allow the
default string to have options as well
1/ Makefile: the maximum size for boot2 is 7.5K not 7K,
so don't complain until it reaches THAT size..
newfs leaves 8K and boot 1 is 512k. leaving 7.5K becasue the disklabel
is considered to part of the boot2 file.
[512 boot1][512 disklabel][ 7K boot2 code ]
[boot1 file][ boot2 file ]
2/ Boot2.S: move the soring of the default name read from block 2 to AFTER
clearing the BSS.
3/ boot.c:
Move the parsing of the command line into the
place it's called for clarity.. alsoi comment it a bit and clean it
up a bit.. for some reason this seems ot have made it a little
larger, but I can't work out why.. maybe bruce might have ideas?
compensated for by shrinkage elsewhere..
the practical result of this is htat the default string can now contain args
e.g. if you change the default string to have -gd
then the machine will boot to the dgb debugger stub by default..
this is mostly useful with the nextboot utility..
as it now allows you to remotely force a machine to reboot into
the debugger.
(1) Remove mk30line (moved to /usr/sbin, but not in our source tree yet)
(2) Delete unneeded (well, harmful now :) code to prohibit #including
of isa_device.h from PC98 sources.
(3) Remove files now equal to their ISA/PC-AT counterparts.
Submitted by: The FreeBSD(98) Development Team
so that the compiler can see that it is OK to use const strings in
NDINIT(). Some emulators want to use paths of the form "/compat/foo".
Removed the casts that hid the non-problem. Didn't fix the missing
consts in syscalls.master that hid the non-problem.
were declared as non-const. This is backwards (_lkm_exec() changes the
pointers but all the target `struct execsw's are const). Fixed this
and poisoned related declarations to match and removed the bogus casts
that hid the bug.
the file access time update on reads and can be useful in reducing
filesystem overhead in cases where the access time is not important (like
Usenet news spools).
way it attaches multiple PCI buses directly to the CPU, instead of having
them hanging off from PCI to PCI bridges. This code is a hack, and will
be obsoleted by the planned rework of the PCI code, which will change the
dealing with PCI to PCI bridges and other special devices significantly.
The patch also adds a kern_devconf entry for PCI bus 0 which is assumed
to be a child of cpu0. The new PCI code will make it possible to hand out
the kern_devconf structure to a pci device being attached, since this is
(regretably, IMHO) required by a few ISA devices.
Finally there are new PCI ids for some Intel chip set devices, which had
already been known to 2.1.5R, but did not make it into -current. This closes
"kern/1558: PCI probe seems to have lost a device in -current".
is non-null before trying to delete it in rt_setgate(), which then
allows removal of the special-case code from the RTM_ADD case.
This should fix the panics that joerg and Phil Karn have been seeing.
returned by the RTC, use the bootblock supplied value. Also, map the
'stolen by BIOS' memory in the same manner as the ISA-hole memory, since
it is really an extenstion of the BIOS. This is necessary for 32-bit
BIOS functions such as APM support on laptops, and the loss of memory
for non-necessary functions seems to be at most 4k.
Reviewed by: phk
Obtained from: email conversation with jtk@atria.com