functions use the new sigset_t and sigaction_t which allows support for more
than 32 signals. Only the lower 32 signals are supported for now.
linux_rt_sigaction, linux_sigaction and linux_signal use linux_do_sigaction
to do the actual work. That way unnecessary redundancy is avoided. The same
has been done for linux_rt_sigprocmask and linux_sigprocmask. They call
linux_do_sigprocmask to do the actual work.
the SRM environment. This makes the traditional "boot [/kernel] -s"
and similar things work on the Alpha. Since the flags are appended,
they augment and/or override those from the SRM environment.
of kernel space. Remove the ioctl supporting functions, and move the actual
code to the switch-statement. Now everybody can clearly see that the
implementation is really poor.
Also fix a typo in LINUX_TIOCGETD. The underlying function was given command
TIOCSETD instead op TIOCGETD...
Introduce BUF_STRATEGY(struct buf *, int flag) macro, and use it throughout.
please see comment in sys/conf.h about the flag argument.
Remove strategy argument from all the diskslice/label/bad144
implementations, it should be found from the dev_t.
Remove bogus and unused strategy1 routines.
Remove open/close arguments from dssize(). Pick them up from dev_t.
Remove unused and unfinished setgeom support from diskslice/label/bad144 code.
changes. This is part 1 of the complete termios ioctl fixes.
o change type of c_{i|o|c|l}flag in struct termios from unsigned long to
unsigned int. The type now matches the Linux definitions.
o replaced constants by the corresponding defines in sptab[] for clarity.
Since there's no define for 135 baud, its mapping has been dropped.
function bsd_to_linux_termios:
o Fix typo IXON -> IXANY.
o Remove bogus assignment to c_cc[LINUX_VSWTC].
function linux_to_bsd_termios:
o Fix dupo LINUX_IXON -> LINUX_IXANY.
o Add LINUX_CREAD mapping.
o Fix typo IEXTEN -> LINUX_IEXTEN.
function linux_to_bsd_termio:
o Small optimization: Don't preset the complete c_cc array when we next
assign to the first LINUX_NCC entries.
Don't return "can't do it" when the user requests a state change to
the current state. This previously caused silly messages like "Can't
start <foo>: invalid argument", when in fact <foo> was already
started.
set_plex_state: don't set state for non-existent plexes.
update_plex_status: as long as we have initializing subdisks, we're
initializing.
Move the declaration of freerq() to request.h.
logrq: add support for lock events.
vinumstart: solve a problem where removing a plex from an active
volume could cause attempts to access non-existent plexes.
launch_requests: don't set a request group active until we're sure we
can launch it. This caused some hangs under unusual
circumstances.
bre: don't set XFR_BAD_SUBDISK if we're not going to use it.
build_read_request: correct recovery, which caused some hangs under
(other) unusual circumstances.
build_rq_buffer: don't set bp->b_dev if we don't have a dev.
sdio: clean up, remove obsolete code.
deallocrqg: unlock any locks the rqg may have.
bre5:
Shorten some lines.
Desired-by: bde
If we're reading from a short plex, return EOF indication.
Always lock the stripe before starting a transfer. Hopefully the
current version will solve some data integrity problems that have
been reported with degraded RAID-5 plexes.
Reported-by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
Remy Nonnenmacher <remy@synx.com>
solve some data integrity problems that have been reported with
degraded RAID-5 plexes.
Reported-by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely.de>
Remy Nonnenmacher <remy@synx.com>
Tidy other comments.
open_drive: don't call set_drive_state if we decide to take it down.
This could help avoid some race conditions with the daemon.
init_drive: don't set the drive down, we'll let close_locked_drive do
that.
close_locked_drive: set drive state to down without calling
set_drive_state. This could help avoid some race conditions with the
daemon.
driveio: remove the function, it wasn't being used.
get_volume_label: remove volume dependencies so that we can return a
label for plexes and subdisks as well. What a kludge.
Remove declarations for freerq and free_rqg.
Remove DEBUG_RESID code.
freerq: check whether the request is holding a lock, free if so.
free_rqg: remove. It wasn't being used any more.
Change the Debugger calls to panics.
checkdiskconfig(): remove. It didn't make any sense to complain about
kernel keywords in user config files; it just made it more difficult
to convert. Now we ignore kernel keywords if we're not in kernel
mode.
get_empty_sd: initialize sectors.
free_drive: don't close if we don't have a vp. Maybe this will help
fix the problem that peter had, but I wouldn't count on it.
config_plex: If the plex is RAID-5, give it a rangelock structure.
start_config: Reset current drive, plex and volume so that a new
'create' command doesn't get long-dead defaults.
struct rqelement, enum rqinfo_type, struct rqinfo, union rqinfou: add
lock requests.
Add declarations for freerq and unlockrange. Since they include
request structures, they can't go in vinumext.h
stuff: unregister_methods() is horribly broken. The idea, if I'm not mistaken,
is that the refcount on a method is decremented, and only when it reaches
zero is the method freed. However desc->method is set to NULL unconditionally
regardless of the refcount, which means the method pointer is trashed the
first time the method is deallocated. The obvious detrimental effect is
that memory is leaked. The not so obvious effect is that when you call
unregister_method() the second time on the same method, you get a NULL
pointer dereference and a panic.
Now I can successfully unload network device drivers and the miibus module
without crashing the system.
*sigh*
A complete rewrite by dillon and myself to separate
the implementation of behaviors that effect the vm_map_entry
from those that effect the vm_object.
A result of this change is that madvise(..., MADV_FREE);
is much cheaper.
operations. This allows a device driver better insight into
what is going on that the current:
proc1: open /dev/foo R/O
devsw->open( R/O, proc1 )
proc2: open /dev/foo R/W
devsw->open( R/W, proc2 )
proc2: close
/* nothing, but device is
really only R/O open */
proc1: close
devsw->close( R/O, proc1 )
in deterministic behaviour. In this case known garbage out.
The fix is different than suggested in the PR.
PR: 12749
Originator: Boris Nikolaus <boris@cs.tu-berlin.de>
This setting is also acceptable for Celerons and Pentium Pros
with less than 1MB L2 caches.
Note: PQ_L2_SIZE is a misnomer. The correct number of colors is
a function of the cache's degree of associativity as well as its size.
Submitted by: bde and alc
with a match probability to achieve non-deterministic behaviour of
the firewall. This can be extremely useful for testing purposes
such as simulating random packet drop without having to use dummynet
(which already does the same thing), and simulating multipath effects
and the associated out-of-order delivery (this time in conjunction
with dummynet).
The overhead on normal rules is just one comparison with 0.
Since it would have been trivial to implement this by just adding
a field to the ip_fw structure, I decided to do it in a
backward-compatible way (i.e. struct ip_fw is unchanged, and as a
consequence you don't need to recompile ipfw if you don't want to
use this feature), since this was also useful for -STABLE.
When, at some point, someone decides to change struct ip_fw, please
add a length field and a version number at the beginning, so userland
apps can keep working even if they are out of sync with the kernel.
"the device doesn't support a dump routine"
Only print "dump succeeded" when 0 is returned, instead of when an unexpected
error number is returned, print that error number.
Reviewed by: Eivind
The linux syscalls translate the arguments first before invoking the
FreeBSD native syscalls.
PR: kern/9591
Originator: John Plevyak <jplevyak@inktomi.com>
a module. Also modified the code to work on FreeBSD/alpha and added
device vr0 to the alpha GENERIC config.
While I was in the neighborhood, I noticed that I was still using
#define NFPX 1 in all of the Makefiles that I'd copied from the fxp
module. I don't really use #define Nfoo X so it didn't matter, but
I decided to customize this correctly anyway.
respectively logging and dropping ICMP REDIRECT packets.
Note that there is no rate limiting on the log messages, so log_redirect
should be used with caution (preferrably only for debugging purposes).
as PCI->HOST bridges on my (440BX) box.
My change is to remove the test at the beginning entirely, letting the
switch on the device ID happen first. If the device ID is unknown, then
(in the default case) check for the generic PCIS_BRIDGE_HOST tag. This
should allow wierd cases (eg: wpaul's IMS VL bridge) to work by using the
id override. This strategy is more in line with the other PCI match
methods we use elsewhere,
I only have a limited testbed, but having my USB etc devices detected as
PCI->HOST bridges doesn't look good.
1) Safty change from casper dik was added to OpenBSD's sources since I
grabbed them. milltert@openbsd.org
2) Split up strlcpy to improve efficiency of the common case.
milltert@openbsd.org
3) Cleanup of cross references for man page. {alex,aaron}@openbsd.org
Pointed out by: deraadt@openbsd.org
Now that behaviors are stored in the vm_map_entry rather than
the vm_object, it's no longer necessary to instantiate a vm_object
just to hold the behavior.
Reviewed by: dillon
correctly. It has the following code:
if (class != PCIC_BRIDGE || subclass != PCIS_BRIDGE_HOST)
return NULL;
My 486 has an Integrated Micro Solutions PCI bridge which identifies
itself as subclass PCIS_BRIDGE_OTHER, not PCIS_BRIDGE_HOST. Consequently,
it gets ignored. In my opinion, the correct test should be:
if ((class != PCIC_BRIDGE) && (subclass != PCIS_BRIDGE_HOST))
return NULL;
That way the test still succeeds because the chip's class is PCIC_BRIDGE.
Clearly it's not reasonable to expect all host to PCI bridges to always
have a subclass of PCIS_BRIDGE_HOST since I've got one that doesn't.
This way the sanity test should remain relatively sane while still allowing
some oddball yet correct hardware to work. If somebody has a better way
to do it, go ahead and tweak the test, but be aware that
class == PCIC_BRIDGE and subclass == PCIS_BRIDGE_OTHER is a valid case.
While I was here, I also added an explicit ID string for the IMS chipset.
I also dealt with a minor style nit: it's bad karma not to have a default
case for your switch statements, but the one in this routine doesn't have
one. The default string of "Host to PCI bridge" is now assigned in a
default case of the switch statement instead of initializing "s" with the
string before the switch and then not having any default case.
Isn't really that useful.
chip0: <PCI to Other bridge (vendor=10e0 device=8849)> at device 0.0 on pci0
is more in keeping with the spirit of the rest of the code.
Previous behavior with regard to truely unknown bridges unchanged.
"<Anti-Bill> Tell you what: you have commit privs now. You do it."
Config(8) contains no documentation about this.
Fix the help for the PnP irq and drq commands. This one caused
me a bit of head scratching the other night while trying to get
a problematic PnP device configured properly.
we create the pty on the fly when it is first opened.
If you run out of ptys now, just MAKEDEV some more.
This also demonstrate the use of dev_t->si_tty_tty and dev_t->si_drv1
in a device driver.
- %q -> %ll.
Fixed nearby errors not reported by gcc -Wformat on i386's:
- don't assume that the promotion of [u_]int64_t is [u_]quad_t.
- don't use signed formats for unsigned args.
- %q -> %ll; don't assume that the promotion of off_t is quad_t; only
assume that off_t's are representable as long longs.
- printing of dev_t's was completely broken.
Fixed nearby printf format errors not reported by gcc -Wformat on i386's:
- printing of ino_t's and pointers was sloppy.
kernels again, now that we're using EGCS/GCC 2.9+. This "here"
file is compatible with the Bourne shell and the Korn shell (incl. pdksh
and KSH93 from AT&T, which I do have), so it doesn't make newvers.sh
unportable, but makes it easier to modify in the future/read now.
Submitted by: green
warnings of the following nature on reloading a kld:
WARNING: "vinum" is usurping "console"'s bmaj
This only applies to cases where "console" is mentioned.
Broken-by: grog
Add Cybernet copyright.
OK'd-by: Chuck Jacobus <chuck@cybernet.com>
update_plex_state:
If any subdisk in the plex is initializing, set the plex to
initializing state. This gets rid of the ugly corrupt/degraded/up
transitions which previously occurred.
Desired-by: Steve Taylor <staylor@cybernet.com>
sddownstate:
Add new function, used by checksdstate.
checksdstate:
Let sddownstate decide what status to return.
Add Cybernet copyright.
OK'd-by: Chuck Jacobus <chuck@cybernet.com>
logrq: save device major and minor numbers to compensate for lost
dev_t.
launch_requests: Don't issue requests which are marked
XFR_BAD_SUBDISK. This may make things easier in bre().
bre:
Rearrange.
- Change some comments
- Recognize holes in plex structure. Formerly this could lead to
incorrect write to the plex. Return REQUEST_DEGRADED on a read
request, but carry on to the bitter end on a write request, and
mark the requests for the inaccessible subdisks with
XFR_BAD_SUBDISK.
- return REQUEST_EOF if the requested transfer goes beyond the end
of the plex. This is not an error, since other plexes may go
further into the volume address space.
build_read_request:
Handle REQUEST_DEGRADED returned from bre().
sdio:
Lock buffer before issuing the requests.
will only accept partitions of type 'vinum'.
format_config: Use the new %q format option in kvprintf, thus getting
rid of some of the filthiest code I've written in a long time. Also
remove the lltoa() function.
With-great-thanks-to: peter
format_config: Accept the fact that a subdisk might not be attached to
a plex, and save the config correctly.
vinum_scandisk: Scan all slices on a drive with a Microsoft partition
table. Only look at the compatibility slice if nothing was found in
the Microsoft slices.
This change removes a frequently employed method of shooting
yourself in the foot: people would decide that the Vinum drives
belonged on their own slice, and they wouldn't be able to start the
subsystem after a reboot. Documentation updates to follow.
initialize subdisks. Probably the plex-related subdisk type will die
a death.
vinumconfig.c:
Accept (and ignore) kernel state information in userland config
files. This saves a lot of error recovery and also makes it possible
to use the output of printconfig to create new configuration.
Remove checkdiskconfig(). It wasn't needed any more.
Start adding support for hot spare drives. You can't put anything on
them (yet).
Change message formats from %lld to %qd.
get_empty_sd: Initialize size to -1. Previously this was done in
config_subdisk, which is the wrong place.
start_config: set current drive, plex and volume to -1, thus stopping
update configurations from taking their defaults from old configs.
in the pathname translation procedure. This proves fatal, and can be
easily fixed. This or a similar change needs to be committed to svr4_util.h
and ibcs2_util.h. I will update ibcs2_util.h, if noone else thinks of a
better way to do this, in the same manner. I will leave svr4 to the
respective maintainer.
This closes the problem of the only crash I've been able to produce as
a user recently, except for (currently not-in-the-source tree) fd
table sharing fixes. Thanks goes to pho for his stress-testers.
of 2 weeks ago that this be done, and anyone who wishes to make bpf more
selective according to securelevel or compile-time options is more
than free to do so.
is, don't assume that SCSI ID corresponds to a unit number of da
device. Unit number of da device is provided by 2nd stage loader
and 3rd stage loader now use it.
- Fix drive letter to display.
Submitted by: IMAI Takeshi <take-i@ceres.dti.ne.jp>
bootable on 1 FDD PC98 machines. (When an external FDD unit is
installed, unit numbers become discontinuous.)
Submitted by: IMAI Takeshi <take-i@ceres.dti.ne.jp>
now used in f_ops in place of NULL, and modifications to the files
are more carefully ordered. f_ops should also be set to &badfileops
upon "close" of a file.
This does not fix other problems mentioned in this PR than the first
one.
PR: 11629
Reviewed by: peter
correct the pointers afterwards.
It's kinda bogus that we generate a 24 (?) byte filehandle (2 x int32
fsid and 16 byte VFS fhandle) and pad it out to 64 bytes for NFSv3 with
garbage. The whole point of NFSv3's variable filehandle length was
to allow for shorter handles, both in memory and over the wire. I plan
on taking a shot at fixing this shortly.
o use suser_xxx rather than suser to support JAIL code.
o KNF comment convention
o use vp->type rather than vaddr.type and eliminate call to
VOP_GETATTR. Bruce says that vp->type is valid at this
point.
Submitted by: bde.
Not fixed:
o return (value)
o Comment needs to be longer and more explicit. It will be after
the advisory.
reset command.
I observed some anomalous behavior while testing a 3c905C with a
Dell PowerEdge 4300/500 dual PIII 500Mhz system. The NIC would seem
to work correctly most of the time but would sometimes fail to receive
certain packets, in particular NFS create requests. I could mount
an NFS filesystem from the PowerEdge and do an ls on it, but trying
to do a "touch foo" would hang. Monitoring traffic from another host
revealed that the client was properly sending an NFS create request
but the server was not receiving it. It *did* receive it when I
ran the same test with an Intel fxp card.
I don't understand the exact mechanics of this strange behavior, but
resetting the receiver and transmitter seems to get rid of it. I used
to perform an RX and TX reset in xl_init(), but stopped doing it there
because on 3c905B and later cards this causes the autoneg session to
restart, which would lead to the NIC waiting a long time before exchanging
traffic after being brought up the first time. Apparently the receiver
and transmitter resets should be performed at least once when initializing
the card.
Hopefully this will cure problems that people have been having with the
3c905C -- this was the only strange behavior that I have observed with
the 3c905C so far which does not appear with the 3c905B or 3c905.
eisa_add_intr() which now takes an additional arguement (one of
EISA_TRIGGER_LEVEL or EISA_TRIGGER_EDGE).
The flag RR_SHAREABLE has no effect when passed to
bus_alloc_resource(dev, SYS_RES_IRQ, ...) in an EISA device context as
the eisa_alloc_resource() call (bus_alloc_resource method) now deals
with this flag directly, depending on the device ivars.
This change does nothing more than move all the 'shared = inb(foo + iobsse)'
nonesense to the device probe methods rather than the device attach.
Also, print out 'edge' or 'level' in the IRQ announcement message.
Reviewed by: dfr
o Add field to dev_desc for the size of the io port range. This isn't
used yet in the committed sources, but will make the transition easier
in the future.
If you build this into your kernel, you will need to rebuild pccardd.
_or_ you may specify "log logamount number" to set logging specifically
the rule.
In addition, "ipfw resetlog" has been added, which will reset the
logging counters on any/all rule(s). ipfw resetlog does not affect
the packet/byte counters (as ipfw reset does), and is the only "set"
command that can be run at securelevel >= 3.
This should address complaints about not being able to set logging
amounts, not being able to restart logging at a high securelevel,
and not being able to just reset logging without resetting all of the
counters in a rule.
Specifically intended for removing -fschg ("INSTALLFLAGS_EDIT=:S/schg/uchg/")
this makes the NOFSCHG flag redundant. NOFSCHG will still be honoured by
bsd.lib.mk but is valid for buildworld only. NOFSCHG is still implemented in
the old way (ie. _not_ ".if NOFSCHG then { INSTALLFLAGS_EDIT+=:S/schg/,/ }"
to emphasize the fact that NOFSCHG is only supported in a limited
fashion and for buildworld.
The interface and implementation are such that future use of flags such
as sappnd can also be easily removed or altered (perhaps to uappnd).
This commit brought to you by the letters B, D, and E, and the numbers six,
one, thirteen, and three.
Remove the initialization of PQ_NONE's cnt and lcnt. They aren't
used.
vm_page_insert:
Remove an unnecessary dereference.
vm_page_wire:
Remove the one and only (and thus pointless) reference
to PQ_NONE's lcnt.
I did some tcpdumping the other day and noticed that GETATTR calls
were frequently followed by an ACCESS call to the same file. The
attached patch changes nfs_getattr to fill the access cache as a side
effect. This is accomplished by calling ACCESS rather than
GETATTR. This implies a modest overhead of 4 bytes in the request and
8 bytes in the response compared to doing a vanilla GETATTR.
...
[The patch comprises two parts] The first
is the "real" patch, the second counts misses and hits rather than
fills and hits. The difference is subtle but important because both
nfs_getattr and nfs_access now fill the cache. It also changes the
default value of nfsaccess_cache_timeout to better match the attribute
cache. IMHO, file timestamps change much more frequently than
protection bits.
Submitted by: Bjoern Groenvall <bg@sics.se>
Reviewed by: dillon (partially)
their svr4_stat64 structures with old dev_t values instead of udev_t's.
Panic was caused when major() and minor() were called with args which
weren't pointers. The panic was probably introduced in rev 1.51 of
kern_conf.c
vnodes are locked and never unlocked, which leads to processes starting
to wedge up after doing a mount -o nfsv3,tcp,rdirplus foo:/fs /fs; ls /fs.
The second is that sometimes cnp is accessed without having been
properly initialized: cnp->cn_nameptr points to an earlier name while
"len" contains the length of a current name of different size. This
leads to an attempt to dereference *(cn->cn_nameptr + len) which will
sometimes cause a page fault and a panic.
With these two fixes, client side readdirplus works correctly with
FreeBSD, IRIX 6.5.4 and Solaris 2.5.1 and 2.6 servers.
Submitted by: Matthew Dillon <dillon@backplane.com>
being incremented by 4 bytes too few each time through the loop, which
allows more data into the mbuf chain that we really want. In the worst
case, when we're using 32K read/write sizes with a TCP client, this causes
readdirplus replies to sometimes exceed NFS_MAXPACKET which leads to a
panic. This problem cropped up for me using an IRIX 6.5.4 NFSv3 TCP client
with 32K read/write sizes, however supposedly it can be triggered by
WinNT NFS servers too. In theory, it can probably be triggered by any
NFS v3 implementation using TCP as long as it's using the maxiumum block
size.
Reviewed by: Matthew Dillon <dillon@backplane.com>
space of PCI devices that don't exist cause PCI master & target aborts
rather than returning ~0 or giving a machine check. Bring in some code
from NetBSD to handle this properly.
obtained from: NetBSD
reviewed by: dfr
- Add support for calling 32-bit code in other segments
- Add support for calling 16-bit protected mode code
Update APM to use this facility.
Submitted by: jlemon
- device_print_child() either lets the BUS_PRINT_CHILD
method produce the entire device announcement message or
it prints "foo0: not found\n"
Alter sys/kern/subr_bus.c:bus_generic_print_child() to take on
the previous behavior of device_print_child() (printing the
"foo0: <FooDevice 1.1>" bit of the announce message.)
Provide bus_print_child_header() and bus_print_child_footer()
to actually print the output for bus_generic_print_child().
These functions should be used whenever possible (unless you can
just use bus_generic_print_child())
The BUS_PRINT_CHILD method now returns int instead of void.
Modify everything else that defines or uses a BUS_PRINT_CHILD
method to comply with the above changes.
- Devices are 'on' a bus, not 'at' it.
- If a custom BUS_PRINT_CHILD method does the same thing
as bus_generic_print_child(), use bus_generic_print_child()
- Use device_get_nameunit() instead of both
device_get_name() and device_get_unit()
- All BUS_PRINT_CHILD methods return the number of
characters output.
Reviewed by: dfr, peter
result of a joined effort with parts contributed by Doug Rabson, Warner
Losh and Stefan Esser (hope I did not forget anybody). Part of the sources
is obtained from NetBSD with modifications.
This code is work in progress:
As of the time of the initial import, a loader.exe executable is built,
which can be loaded on an Alpha with NT only firmware, but no attempt is
made to switch to OSF PAL code as required to start an actual kernel.
active or not. The only sane thing we can do here is assume that if
APM is supported it might be active at some point, and bail.
In reality, even this isn't good enough; regardless of whether we support
APM or not, the system may well futz with the CPU's clock speed and throw
the TSC off. We need to stop using it for timekeeping except under
controlled circumstances. Curse the lack of a dependable high-resolution
timer.
equivalent to SYS_RES_MEMORY for x86 but for alpha, the rman_get_virtual()
address of the resource is initialised to point into either dense-mapped
or bwx-mapped space respectively, allowing direct memory pointers to be
used to device memory.
Reviewed by: Andrew Gallatin <gallatin@cs.duke.edu>
This function is called for each device for which no driver
was found.
Output is similar to the eisa_probe_nomatch() function but with the
added benefit of displaying the assigned IRQ (since PCI gives us
this information up front.)
Output is like so:
pci0: unknown card CPQ0508 (vendor=0x0e11, dev=0x0508) at 11.0 irq 9
pci0: unknown card DFZ0508 (vendor=0x10da, dev=0x0508) at 11.0 irq 9
pci0: unknown card DBL0508 (vendor=0x104c, dev=0x0508) at 11.0 irq 9
pci0: unknown card DDM0011 (vendor=0x108d, dev=0x0011) at 11.0 irq 9
I'm not happy with the 3 lines of macro cruft that got added but
I consider it a temporary annoyance as those bits will be moved to
some place where PCI, EISA and ISAPNP code will be able to use them.
(Not surprisingly, this message is longer than the code in question.)
Reviewed by: peter, dfr
a PCI memory mapped region, rman_get_bushandle() returns what happens
to be a kernel virtual address pointing to the base of the PCI shared
memory window. However this is not the behavior on all platforms:
the only thing you should do with the bushandle is pass it to the
bus_spare_read()/bus_space_write() routines. If you actually do want
the kernel virtual address of the base of the PCI memory window, you
need to use rman_get_virtual().
The problem is that at the moment, rman_get_virtual() returns a physical
address, which is bad. In order to get the kernel virtual address we
need, we have to play with it a little.
Presumeably this behavior will be changed, but in the meantime the
Tigon driver won't work. So for the moment, I'm adding a kludge to
make things happy on the alpha: the correct kernel virtual address
is calculated from the value returned by rman_get_virtual(). This
should be removed once rman_get_virtual() starts doing the right
thing.
This should make the Tigon actuall work on the alpha now.