Module) and FBM (Fibre Buffer Modules). Also remember to clear the
semaphore registers. Tell the RISC processor to not halt on FPM
parity errors.
Throw out the ISP_CFG_NOINIT silliness and instead go to the use of
adapter 'roles' to see whether one completes initialization or not
(mostly for Fibre Channel). The ultimate intent, btw, of all of this
is to have a warm standby adapter for failover reasons. Because
we do roles now, setting of Target Capable Class 3 service parameters
in the ICB for the 2x00 cards reflects from role. Also, in isp_start,
if we're not supporting an initiator role, we bounce outgoing commands
with a Selection Timeout error. Also clean out the TOGGLE_TMODE
goop for FC- there is no toggling of target mode like there is
for parallel SCSI cards.
Do more cleanup with respect to using target ids 0..125 in F-port
topologies. Also keep track of things which *were* fabric devices
so that when you rescan the fabric you can notify the outer layers
when fabric devices go away.
Only force a LOGOUT for fabric devices if they're still logged in
(i.e., you cat their Port Database entry. Clean up the Get All Next
scanning.
Finally, use a new tag in the softc to store the opcode for the
last mailbox command used so we can report which opcode timed
out.
exactly the same functionality via a sysctl, making this feature
a run-time option.
The default is 1(ON), which means that /dev/random device will
NOT block at startup.
setting kern.random.sys.seeded to 0(OFF) will cause /dev/random
to block until the next reseed, at which stage the sysctl
will be changed back to 1(ON).
While I'm here, clean up the sysctls, and make them dynamic.
Reviewed by: des
Tested on Alpha by: obrien
not yet been caught), don't save the config with a null drive
name (which causes the drive to be renamed "plex" on the next
start), put in the text "*invalid*" instead.
This is damage control, not a fix.
Experienced by: peter
Break some long format strings so that they fit in style(9)-sized
lines.
Remove some "outdentation".
all of the hwvol members of struct snd_mixer live in a hwvol_* namespace.
- When changing the mixer device via the hwvol_mixer sysctl, reset the
muted state so that a mute operation on a new device won't try to
unmute the new device with the old device's saved volume.
- When the volume is muted, if a down or up volume request is received,
first restore the saved volume level and then adjust it.
Reviewed by: cg
cause the watchdog to (incorrectly) detect the interface state
going from down to up one second after lmc_ifup() was called,
causing lmc_ifup() to be called again, and resetting everything.
Fix by checking the interface state within lmc_ifup().
Submitted by: Darren Croke <djc@packetdesign.com>
Rewrite lockrange and unlockrange. The lock table is now a fixed
size, so there is no possibility for race conditions when expanding.
The current size (256 locked ranges) should be large enough that it
makes no sense to expand it. To do expansion right would require
quiescing the plex (requiring at least 256 I/O completions), and the
performance implications are horrendous.
Add a mutex per plex for accessing the lock table.
Based on analysis by: tegge
This should eliminate one case of foot shooting .
vinum_scandisk: If a drive in the partition table is downed, free it.
This duplicates code for the compatibility partition, which for some
reason was omitted here.
that require us to register our FC4 types of interest. Allow ourselves, in
F-port topologies, to start logging in fabric devices in the target 0..125
range. Change ISPASYNC_PDB_CHANGED (misnamed) to ISPASYNC_LOGGED_INOUT.
Fix (*SMACK*) again some default WWN stuff. This is *really* hard to get
right across all the range of platforms.
hscbs may be traded during error recovery due to the way
we manage the qinfifo. This has the effect of changing the
index to the sense buffer even though the request sense command
references the original buffer. SCBs don't play this swapping
game and so serve as a more consistent reference.
- add a dma hack similar to the NetBSD one
- change PDQ_OS_MEM{RD,WR} to use readl/writel rather than deref'ing
a 32 bit va.
Note that I did just enough to get this working on alpha. I probably
should have updated it to use busspace, but I was too lazy to navigate
the twisty minefield of ifdefs that make up this driver.
Tested by: wilko (on both x86 and alpha)
Add the entry for the Yano U640MO-03 MO drive. (ifdef-0-ed out for now)
Fix a hack were an original buffer was modified instead of copied
(cmd[] -> (*rcmd)[])
Submitted by: Iwasa Kazmi <kzmi@ca2.so-net.ne.jp>
instead of the requested length. Otherwise all transfers look like 0 byte
transfers to CAM.
Submitted by: Iwasa Kazmi <kzmi@ca2.so-net.ne.jp>
2) Finalise the command in the case of CBI transfers with CCI (command
completion interrupt).
3) Remove a redundant bzero of a buffer.
The pccard_function_init() call creates a bunch of inactive resources
that are persistant and configured on demand. When the child driver
"allocates" a resource it is connected up to one of these. When the
child releases the resource, we should not delete our copy, just
deactivate it again. Otherwise there is nothing to recreate it again
after several probe functions have run and done an alloc/release cycle.
INVARIANTS shows 0xdeadc0de without this.
More work is needed to do a sweep though the pccard_function_disable()
call to actually delete the resources for real. Right now, we leak
memory on eject (at best), so Dont Do That(TM) yet. This affects
16 bit pccards on a cardbus bridge only. This will be fixed soon, but
for now it gets the cards working.
Reviewed by: imp
to match the pccard.conf file. There are more ID's that need adding, but
these seem to be the common ones.
This was committed on an ep0 interface under NEWCARD:
ep0: <3Com 3c589 10Mbps Ethernet> at port 0x300-0x30f irq 9 function 0 config 1 on pccard1
ep0: Ethernet address 00:10:4b:df:48:57
Reviewed by: imp
to conform to style(9), plus one other convention that I use:
o Declare variables at the start of the function, rather than in blocks
when it doesn't help understanding (mine).
o 80 column limit.
o BSD style statement continuation, rather than "gnu" style.
bus to use. We need to set it here.
This fixes the problem where a probe routine establishes and
disestablishes the interrupt and then we get a panic in the probe
routine.
However, we pass the pointer to the interrupt hanlder count to the
parent bus, which writes its own cookie there, so there may be some
problems with that which isn't apparent at the moment.
Commit made from: laptop running NEWCARD with sn driver (which works,
but gets the wrong ethernet address).
o Fix OLDCARD to use the new interface.
o Rename the offsetp argument to deltap to more closely reflect what it
is returning (it returns the delta from the requested value to the actual
value).
o Remove duplicate $FreeBSD$ in pccbb.c
o Allow deltap to be NULL.
o Convert new isa pcic driver and add XXX comments that this function isn't
actually implemented there (which means that NEWCARD pccard stuff won't
work there until it is).
o Revert attempts to make old inferface work in NEWCARD.
Subitted by: peter (Parts of the new version code)
by even a compile of the OLDCARD code, was unapproved by me the keeper
of OLDCARD and broke OLDCARD and the ray driver.
Adjust new code to cope with the older interface.
If the interface changes in the future, it ***MUST*** be cleared by me
so that the OLDCARD impacts taken into account. It code in card_if.m
is used jointly by both OLDCARD and NEWCARD.
gets the cardbus code to compile, and I was successfully able to map
the CIS into high memory and probe/attach a 16 bit pccard.
Jonathan: feel free to replace this with your version if you want -
this is an expedient hack to get things to build and appear to work.
allocation not succeeding.
In this case, make sure the driver doesn't leak any memory by freeing all
necessary buffers; make sure to loop and free all the previously allocated
mbufs in this routine.
Reviewed by: alfred
- pccbb no longer needs to remember whether a card is inserted.
- pccbb reissues insertion on load of cardbus/pccard modules.
- got rid of unnecessary delays in power functions.
- Cardbus children are no longer deleted if probe/attach fails.
- non-attached child devices are reprobed at driver_added.
* CARD interface to read CIS
- added card_cis_read/card_cis_free interface to read arbitrary CIS
data. This currently is only implemented in cardbus.
* pccard begins to work
- pccard can now use higher memory space (and uses it by default).
- set_memory_offset interface changed.
- fixed ccr access, which was broken at multiple locations.
- implement an interrupt handler - pccard can now share interrupts.
- resource alloc/release/activate/deactivate functions gutted: some
resources are allocated by the bridge before the child device is
probed or attached. Thus the resource "belongs" to the bridge, and
the pccard_*_resource functions need to fudge the owner/rid.
- changed some error conditions to panics to speed debugging.
* Mutex fix - Giant is entered at the beginning of thread
This version is functional and is aproaching solid..
notice I said APROACHING. There are many node types I cannot test
I have tested: echo hole ppp socket vjc iface tee bpf async tty
The rest compile and "Look" right. More changes to follow.
DEBUGGING is enabled in this code to help if people have problems.
aic7xxx.h:
First pass at big-endian support in the Core.
Capture state for second channel on TWIN channel adapters
for suspend and resume.
aic7xxx_freebsd.h:
Stubs for endian conversion functions. These will get filled
out once we get an official kernel api for this kind of thing
that is something more elegant and efficient than a bunch of
manual swaps #ifdefed by platform.
aic7xxx_pci.c
Allow the second channel of motherboard aic7896 chips to be attached.
It turns out that the encoding of the subdevice id differs between
PCI cards and MB based controllers and our check to see, via
the subvendor id, if the second channel was "stuffed" always
turned out negative.
the video switch by another. Exactly as VESA does on top of VGA.
It adds linear framebuffer to S3 VESA 1.2 cards.
Obtained from: The original S3 ISA code comes from
Peter Horton <pdh@colonel-panic.com>
specific snd_mixer device rather than global across all mixers.
- Add per-mixer mute status and saved mute_level so that the mixer_hwmute()
function can now toggle the mute state when the mute button is pressed.
- Create a dynamic sysctl tree hw.snd.pcmX when a pcm device is registered.
- Move the hw.snd.hwvol_* sysctl's to hw.snd.pcmX.hwvol_* so that they
are now properly device-specific. Eventually when the mixers become
their own devices these sysctl's will move to live under a mixerX tree.
- Change the interface of the hwvol_mixer sysctl so that it reports the
name of the current mixer device instead of the number and is settable
with the name instead of the number.
- Add a new function mixer_hwinit() used to setup the dynamic sysctl's
needed for the hwvol support that can be called by drivers that support
hwvol.
Reviewed by: cg
'chancount' never got up to equaling 'maxchans'. As a result,
pcm_makelinks() was never called, and one always had to set the sysctl to
get the /dev/mixer and other symlinks generated in the DEVFS case. Instead,
change the test in pcm_addchan() to call pcm_makelinks() after the first
channel is initialized, since the aliases are linked to channel 0.
Reviewed by: cg
status register rather than 0. Without this, a single hardware volume
event triggers an interrupt storm.
- Implement hardware volume control for the Maestro chips. This version
only handles the case where both channels are adjusted at the same time.
Reviewed by: cg
- The mixer_hwmute() function can be called when a soundcard receives a
mute request.
- The mixer_hwstep() function can be used to adjust the volume of one or
both channels.
- The 'hw.snd.hwvol_step' sysctl determines the amount that mixer_hwstep()
adjusts the volume by on each call.
- The 'hw.snd.hwvol_mixer' sysctl specifies the mixer device to adjust the
volume on for both functions. The values used correspond to the
SOUNDCARD_MIXER_* constants.
want according to the modes set with the ppc(4) flags. Especially, it
should fix some problems with mode detection of parallel chipsets
configured to EPP but which have timing troubles with the drives. In such
a case, the driver should now fall back to slower modes (PS2, NIBBLE).
WWNs correctly (Again!) - this time for the case that we're not going
to fully init the adapter if isp_init is called (with ISP_CFG_NOINIT
set in options). The pupose for this is to bring the adapter up to
almost ready to go, get info out of NVRAM, but to not start it up- leaving
it until later to actually start things up if wanted (and possibly with
different roles selected).