same as the LINKSYS COMBO_ECARD (which also seems to be the same as
another linksys product that also has a modem, but I can't find that
one at the moment). Remove the PCM100, since it is now no longer
used.
CIS, weren't actually used anywhere (other than the generic PC Card
code when certain variables are defined). They aren't used in NetBSD
either. Make things simpler by removing them. Change PLANEX_2 to
PLANEX and tweak wi and owi to use that instead. The PLANEX id seems
to actually be pci ID assigned to planex, not its pcmcia id. Ooops.
I don't know if this is a reporting error from where this entry came
from, or if it is a mistake on PLANEX's part. I suspect the latter,
as ACTIONTEC and NEWMEDIA made the same mistake (although new media
may be because it uses an advansys chip inside). Make a note of this
in the file. The 0xc entires may be JEITA assigned, so note that as
well.
# This leaves just 3 entries that are totally unknown: airvast, archos
# and edimax although the arivast number is the same assigned to
# avertec in usb...
thought. I'm unsure why I thought this was the case, but it
definitely isn't for this card. If another card with the other ID
makes an appearance, then we'll add a second entry for it.
# With this change my Olicom OC2220 is now working again, since I make
# this commit with that device. :-)
versions of the Racore PC Card Ethernet card. Rearrange to reflect
this reality. This ejects IODATA from 0x1bf, which belongs to Racore.
Thanks to Wilko for providing me with a dumpcis for the DEPCM card.
Also, added Nextcom Nexthawk card from NetBSD
NetBSD went this route a while ago. FreeBSD originally tried this to
cope with multifunction cards. However, it turns out that we're
better off not worrying about the function number, and instead worry
about the function type for the function. This has worked well in
NetBSD, and all FreeBSD's relevant drivers have been converted.
# I'll rework the macros that specify them shortly, as soon as I can
# come up with a good, compatible way to deal...
as type 0, rather than the usualy type 4. Assume that this format is
from an old standard and go with it. The Fujitsu FMV-186A and Silicom
Ethernet cards I have both have tuples with this format, and they are
both pretty old cards.
# if somebody knows for sure, please let me know.
for the vast majority of our cards. However, they are critically
needed to distinguish different fe based PC Cards (the FMV-182 from
the 182A) which need to be treated differently (the ethernet address
is loaded not from the standard CIS-based ethernet tuples, but from
differing locations in attribute space based on the version string in
CIS3. This should have no impact for other users of this function.
card, and works with that driver. However, Eagle is using Fujitsu's
vendor number and a product code of 4, which seems a little odd.
Still, there's no conflicts...
prodstr may be NULL when fetched. For the default device description,
guard against this and return the numeric IDs instead when this
happens. For the matching routines, and consider NULL to not match
those entries that aren't NULL w/o calling strcmp.
Early patches by: Anders Hanssen
(1) Align to 64k for the CIS. Some cards don't like it when we aren't
aligned to a 64k boundary. I can't find anything in the standard
that requires this, but I have 1/2 dozen cards that won't work at
all unless I enable this.
(2) Sleep 1s before scanning the CIS. This may be a nop, but has little
harm.
(3) The CIS can be up to 4k in some weird, odd-ball edge cases. Since we
have limiters for when that's not the case, it does no harm to increase
it to 4k.
#1 was submitted, in a different form, by Carlos Velasco.
Xircom had an unfortunate habit of re-using PCMCIA IDs for quite different
cards - the xe driver knows about this and uses the first byte of 'extra'
PCMCIA ID info to identify cards with ambiguous IDs.
Reviewed by: imp (mentor)
is really EtherExpress or EEPro or what, but it does appear in a
couple of ethernet cards that have appeared recently on ebay. Silicom
appears to make these cards, and they have the 82595TX chipset in
them, and sometimes uarts. The ex driver needs some work to support
these cards, but I thought I'd get the device into pccarddevs.