tsunami systems and the PCI bus-numbering system of FreeBSD. Eg, the former
allows for 2 PCI bus 2's (one each on hoses 0 and 1) while the latter
needs to give each PCI bus a unique monotonically increasing number.
It has been fairly well tested and correctly maps machines with a ppb on
hose 1 as well as machines with ppbs on both hoses.
DS10s remain untested, as I do not have a pci card with a ppb which will
pass POST in a tsunami.
This is a house of cards.
device_add_child_ordered(). 'ivars' may now be set using the
device_set_ivars() function.
This makes it easier for us to change how arbitrary data structures are
associated with a device_t. Eventually we won't be modifying device_t
to add additional pointers for ivars, softc data etc.
Despite my best efforts I've probably forgotten something so let me know
if this breaks anything. I've been running with this change for months
and its been quite involved actually isolating all the changes from
the rest of the local changes in my tree.
Reviewed by: peter, dfr
Rather than teaching pci_ioctl about hoses, we just pass down a magic number
& let the platform code figure out what the hose is based on what the bus
number is.
concept approved by dfr
Compaq XP1000, AlphaServer DS20, AlphaServer DS10, and DP264
This has been tested *only* on XP1000's. I'll be interested to hear from
owners of other types of DEC_ST6600 alphas.
I'd like to thank Don Rice of Compaq for providing the documentation required
to support this platform on FreeBSD. I'd also like to thank Doug Rabson for newbus,
and for helping me get a multiple hoses working with newbus.
Reviewed by: Doug Rabson <dfr@nlsystems.com>