Remove asm functions to call the openfirmware and kernel entry points;
we can just call them directly.
Don't use the stack pointer for an intermediate result in setx.
Put the stack in the bss.
- Give a guaranteed minimum cooling run time to avoid too frequent
cooling system On/Off switching. The minimum cooling run time can be
specified by hw.acpi.thermal.min_runtime in sec.
- Refine message printing (_AC-1 -> NONE).
- Add verbose mode enable/disable capability by hw.acpi.verbose in bool.
Reviewed by: acpi-jp@ folks
is npx.c's job and setting it here breaks the edit-time option of not
setting it in npx.c. (It is not set in the right places for the SMP
case, but always setting it here is harmless because there isn't even
an edit-time option to not set it.)
This is by the kind permission of Dave Safford, formerly of TAMU who wrote the
original code. Here is an excerpt of the e-mail exchange concerning this
issue:
Dave Safford wrote:
>Nick Sayer wrote:
>> Some time ago we spoke about SRA and importing it into FreeBSD. I forgot to
>> ask if you had a prefered license boilerplate for the top of the files. It
>> has come up recently, and the SRA code in FreeBSD doesn't have one.
>I really have no preference - use whatever is most convenient in the
>FreeBSD environment.
>dave safford
This is the standard BSD license with clause 3 removed and clause 4
suitably renumbered.
MFC after: 1 day
* Implement a fairly simplistic parser for unwinding stack frames.
* Use unwind records for DDB's 'trace' command. Also add support for
tracing past exceptions to the context which generated the exception.
The stack unwind code requires a toolchain based on binutils-2.11.2 or
later and gcc-3.0.1 or later.
DT_INIT and DT_FINI tags pointed to fptr records. In 2.11.2, it points
to the actuall address of the function. On IA64 you cannot just take
an address of a function, store it in a function pointer variable and
call it.. the function pointers point to a fptr data block that has the
target gp and address in it. This is absolutely necessary for using
the in-tree binutils toolchain, but (unfortunately) will not work with
old shared libraries. Save your old ld-elf.so.1 if you want to use
old ones still. Do not mix-and-match.
This is a no-op change for i386 and alpha.
Reviewed by: dfr
being usable at this point, so it's not even hooked up to the rest
of the RELNOTESng build; however it will be helpful for testing the content
as it approaches reality.
starts at offset 8; not 6. Hence the structure is 12 bytes and
not 10 bytes. Adjust the definition so that the ProcessorEnabled
flag is moved from bit 15 to bit 31 in the Flags field.
The definition now matches ACPI 2.0 Errata 1.5.
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.