o better quality of the movement smoothing
o more features such as tap-hold and virtual scrolling
Support must still be enabled with this line in your /boot/loader.conf:
hw.psm.synaptics_support="1"
The following sysctls were removed:
hw.psm.synaptics.low_speed_threshold
hw.psm.synaptics.min_movement
hw.psm.synaptics.squelch_level
An overview of this new driver and a short documentation about the added
sysctls is available on the wiki:
http://wiki.freebsd.org/SynapticsTouchpad
simplifies certain device attachments (Kauai ATA, for instance), and makes
possible others on new hardware.
On G5 systems, there are several otherwise standard PCI devices
(Serverworks SATA) that will not allow their interrupt properties to be
written, so this information must be supplied directly from Open Firmware.
Obtained from: sparc64
This supports 1Gbps Ethernet engine found on ARM-based SOCs (Orion, Kirkwood,
Discovery), as well as on system controllers for PowerPC processors (MV64430,
MV6446x).
The following advanced features are supported:
- multicast
- VLAN tagging
- IP/TCP/UDP checksum calculation offloading
- polling
- interrupt coalescing
Obtained from: Marvell, Semihalf
the last byte of the ethernet address was not read which in turn
resulted in getting 5 out of the 6 bytes of ethernet address and
always returned ENOENT. I did not notice the bug on FPGA version
because of additional configuration data in EEPROM.
Pointed out by: bouyer at NetBSD
example the Huawei Mobile has an SD card slot on the second interface.
- Do not attach to Qualcomm and Novatel cards. If ignored these cards will
switch to modem mode automatically it seems.
- Reduce the priority on generic attachment to the appropriate level.
Note: A better solution is to send an eject command straightaway, but that can
be left till later.
* Orion
- 88F5181
- 88F5182
- 88F5281
* Kirkwood
- 88F6281
* Discovery
- MV78100
The above families of SOCs are built around CPU cores compliant with ARMv5TE
instruction set architecture definition. They share a number of integrated
peripherals. This commit brings support for the following basic elements:
* GPIO
* Interrupt controller
* L1, L2 cache
* Timers, watchdog, RTC
* TWSI (I2C)
* UART
Other peripherals drivers will be introduced separately.
Reviewed by: imp, marcel, stass (Thanks guys!)
Obtained from: Marvell, Semihalf
will ease the identification of memory leaks as the OS will be able to track
allocations for us by malloc type. vmstat -m will show all of the
allocations.
Convert the calls to drm_alloc() and friends, which are used in shared code
to static __inline__ while we are here.
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
from operating on a list with a single item. This code is used much more by
the i915 driver with xorg-7.4. Correct it to match the actual linux
implementation.
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
busmastering support. This also adds register definitions for MSI support,
which we will be using shortly.
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
Obtained from: drm git master
macio's enable-enet word, which apparently does nothing on some machines,
open an OF instance of the ethernet controller. This fixes cold booting
from disk on my Blue & White G3.
MFC after: 3 days
device id is JMC260 family. Previously it just verified the deivce
is JMC260 Rev A0. This will make it easy for newer JMC2xx support.
Pointed out by: bouyer at NetBSD
This was located in the ubsa driver, but should be moved into a separate
driver:
- 3G modems provide multiple serial ports to allow AT commands while the PPP
connection is up.
- 3G modems do not provide baud rate or other serial port settings.
- Huawei cards need specific initialisation.
- ubsa is for Belkin adapters, an Linuxy choice for another device like 3G.
Speeds achieved here with a weak signal at best is ~40kb/s (UMTS). No spooky
STALLED messages as well.
Next: Move over all entries for Sierra and Novatel cards once I have found
testers, and implemented serial port enumeration for Sierra (or rather have
Andrea Guzzo do it). They list all endpoints in 1 iface instead of 4 ifaces.
Submitted by: aguzzo@anywi.com
MFC after: 3 weeks
have in common right now is a memset. This saves a parameter to
these routines, as well as a level of indentation.
o Make mmc_get_bits a little clearer... It really only works on 128-bit
registers right now.
reduce ABI disruptions when new cpu types and new PMC events are added
in the future.
- Support alternate spellings for PMC events. Derive the canonical
spelling of an event name from its enumeration name in 'enum pmc_event'.
- Provide a way for users to disambiguate between identically named events
supported by multiple classes of PMCs in a CPU.
- Change libpmc's machine-dependent event specifier parsing code to
better support CPUs containing two or more classes of PMC resources.
If you just config KERNEL as usual there should be no apparent changes, you'll get all chipset support code compiled in.
However there is now a way to only compile in code for chipsets needed on a pr vendor basis. ATA now has the following "device" entries:
atacore: ATA core functionality, always needed for any ATA setup
atacard: CARDBUS support
atacbus: PC98 cbus support
ataisa: ISA bus support
atapci: PCI bus support only generic chipset support.
ataahci: AHCI support, also pulled in by some vendor modules.
ataacard, ataacerlabs, ataadaptec, ataamd, ataati, atacenatek, atacypress, atacyrix, atahighpoint, ataintel, ataite, atajmicron, atamarvell, atamicron, atanational, atanetcell, atanvidia, atapromise, ataserverworks, atasiliconimage, atasis, atavia; Vendor support, ie atavia for VIA chipsets
atadisk: ATA disk driver
ataraid: ATA softraid driver
atapicd: ATAPI cd/dvd driver
atapifd: ATAPI floppy/flashdisk driver
atapist: ATAPI tape driver
atausb: ATA<>USB bridge
atapicam: ATA<>CAM bridge
This makes it possible to config a kernel with just VIA chipset support by having the following ATA lines in the kernel config file:
device atacore
device atapci
device atavia
And then you need the atadisk, atapicd etc lines in there just as usual.
If you use ATA as modules loaded at boot there is few changes except the rename of the "ata" module to "atacore", things looks just as usual.
However under atapci you now have a whole bunch of vendor specific drivers, that you can kldload individually depending on you needs. Drivers have the same names as used in the kernel config explained above.
can reliably provoke data corruption on systems equipped with a
plenty of memory during high load.
Reported by: gnn via iXsystems
MFC candidate: RELENG_7_1, RELENG_7