register for the PLX id). Merge the vendor's modification of the 2.2.*
release version into -current for reference. Will be cleaned up in next
commit.
Obtained from: ftp://ftp.cyclades.com/pub/cyclades/cyclom-y/freebsd/3.0/cyy30.tar.gz
in cyopen() were done in a different order than in sioopen(), partly
to (ab)use a side effect of comparam() and partly because I didn't
understand what the reset was doing (it flushes the fifos). This
turned out to be more than a cosmetic problem. Flushing the fifos
quite late is good for discarding input that arrived while the line
state was being initialized, and in the cy driver it also seems to
reduce a problem with input that arrived long ago during the previous
close (the UART loses sync too easily and for too long).
The optimisation of only waiting before issuing new commands is
obviously invalid in general and it caused many errors in NIST-PCTS.
I think the errors were mostly for characters sent with the wrong
parity, etc., after a half complete tcsetattr().
Use microtime() instead of a magic loop count to limit the wait.
The wait is a busy-wait :-( and normally takes about 500 usec.
almost works properly. Unfortunately, there is no way to flush
the rx fifo without resetting the channel, which also flushes the
tx fifo. We avoid resetting even when both fifos need to be flushed,
since resetting seems to cause the rx to lose sync if it is done
while data is arriving.
Reminded by: NIST-PCTS
hardware is interrupt-driven to a fault and sending a BREAK requires
mode switching. Always running in the BREAK-capable mode as in PR 8318
would double the overhead for sending \0's.
Reminded by: PR 8318
is completely empty. There is an interrupt for output completion. It
is painful to use, but polling method used in the corresponding fix in
sio.c (rev.1.152) can't be used because there is no status bit for
transmitter-empty. Now ttywait() works right.
Reminded by: NIST-PCTS
Don't call timeout() for DTR wakeup if the relevant timeout is already
active. This fixes "timeout table full" panics when sufficiently many
cyopen()s are interrupted while they are sleeping waiting for the
timeout to expire.
were half of their physical offsets for ISA and 1/4 of their physical
offsets for PCI, while all other Cyclades offsets were physical/1 for
ISA and physical/2 for PCI. Logically wrong macros were used to scale
CY16_RESET and CY_CLEAR_INTR to the correct physical offsets.
Fixed some style bugs (mostly long lines).
interrupt handlers. Instead, load and use it atomically as necessary.
This reduces mode switching overhead for "polled" mode interrupt handling
from 5 i/o's to 3 (per service type, per port) so that polled mode is only
slightly more inefficient than "interrupt" mode.
for the Lite2 fix for always returning EIO in dead_read().
Cleaned up the cdevswitch initializers for all tty drivers.
Removed explicit calls to ttsetwater() from all (tty) drivers. ttsetwater()
is now called centrally for opens, not just for parameter changes.
for 1 second's worth of input) and larger tty output buffers. The
interrupt-level buffers are still too small for speeds above 115200
bps (only a little too small for 230400 bps if RTS flow control is
enabled).
Don't call ttsetwater() explicitly in open(). It is now called for
the TTYDISC l_open() and should be static.
Don't attempt to register the cdevsw more than once.
of invariants to cyattach().
Fixed minor bugs:
- cyparam() returned without restoring the ipl in the error cases. This
was harmless because cyparam() is always called at spltty().
- one check for "rev. J or higher" actually checked for precisely rev. J.
swapped RTS/DTR). Merge the vendor's modification of the 2.2.6-release
version into -current for reference. Will be cleaned up in next commit.
Obtained from: ftp://ftp.cyclades.com/pub/cyclades/cyclom-y/freebsd/2.2.6/cyy226.tar.gz
instead of at compile time using ifdefs.
Use _swi_null instead of dummycamisr. CAM and dpt should call
register_swi() instead of hacking on ihandlers[] directly.
FreeBSD/alpha. The most significant item is to change the command
argument to ioctl functions from int to u_long. This change brings us
inline with various other BSD versions. Driver writers may like to
use (__FreeBSD_version == 300003) to detect this change.
The prototype FreeBSD/alpha machdep will follow in a couple of days
time.
The differences Terrys patch and this patch are:
* Remove a lot of un-needed comments.
* Don't put l_hotchar at the front of stuct linesw, there is no need to.
* Use the #defines for the hotchar in the SLIP and PPP line disciplines
This introduce an xxxFS_BOOT for each of the rootable filesystems.
(Presently not required, but encouraged to allow a smooth move of option *FS
to opt_dontuse.h later.)
LFS is temporarily disabled, and will be re-enabled tomorrow.
actually offsets, they are offsets scaled by dividing by 2^cy_align.
I use different values for cy_align since the -current values are
unnaturally scaled, so I need different offsets, and the wrong
offsets got committed.
Reported by: nnd@itfs.nsk.su (N.Dudorov)
Add a simplelock to deal with disable_intr()/enable_intr() as used in UP kernel.
UP kernel expects that this is enough to guarantee exclusive access to
regions of code bracketed by these 2 functions.
Add a simplelock to bracket clock accesses in clock.c: clock_lock.
Help from: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
I have no way of testing this one, first SMP/cy user please let me know...
It is my belief that sio and cy are the only FAST_INTR() ISRs. If this
is a bad assumption please educate me.
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
almost complete control over RTS (control of its initial value is still
missing).
This fixes PR 1644 for sio.
The author of PR 1644 wants it in 2.1.6 and 2.2. This may be safe since
the complications are only in rarely used cases that I hope I've covered.
device must be configured. It's hard to tell whether a reset function
should be noreset or nullreset since reset functions are never called.
Most drivers use nullreset but noreset has the advantage of complaining
if somehow gets called).
Removed old aliases d_rdwr_t and d_ttycv_t for d_read_t/d_write_t and
d_devtotty_t.
Sorted declarations of switch functions into switch order.
Removed duplicated comments and declarations of nonexistent switch
functions.
most devsw referenced functions are now static, as they are
in the same file as their devsw structure. I've also added DEVFS
support for nearly every device in the system, however
many of the devices have 'incorrect' names under DEVFS
because I couldn't quickly work out the correct naming conventions.
(but devfs won't be coming on line for a month or so anyhow so that doesn't
matter)
If you "OWN" a device which would normally have an entry in /dev
then search for the devfs_add_devsw() entries and munge to make them right..
check out similar devices to see what I might have done in them in you
can't see what's going on..
for a laugh compare conf.c conf.h defore and after... :)
I have not doen DEVFS entries for any DISKSLICE devices yet as that will be
a much more complicated job.. (pass 5 :)
pass 4 will be to make the devsw tables of type (cdevsw * )
rather than (cdevsw)
seems to work here..
complaints to the usual places.. :)
to get the definitions of TRUE and FALSE which happen to be defined in
a deeply nested include.
Added nearby #includes of <sys/conf.h> where appropriate.
That's EVERY SINGLE driver that has an entry in conf.c..
my next trick will be to define cdevsw[] and bdevsw[]
as empty arrays and remove all those DAMNED defines as well..
Each of these drivers has a SYSINIT linker set entry
that comes in very early.. and asks teh driver to add it's own
entry to the two devsw[] tables.
some slight reworking of the commits from yesterday (added the SYSINIT
stuff and some usually wrong but token DEVFS entries to all these
devices.
BTW does anyone know where the 'ata' entries in conf.c actually reside?
seems we don't actually have a 'ataopen() etc...
If you want to add a new device in conf.c
please make sure I know
so I can keep it up to date too..
as before, this is all dependent on #if defined(JREMOD)
(and #ifdef DEVFS in parts)
totally dynamic.
this is only the devices in i386/isa
I'll do more tomorrow.
they're completely masked by #ifdef JREMOD at this stage...
the eventual aim is that every driver will do a SYSINIT
at startup BEFORE the probes, which will effectively
link it into the devsw tables etc.
If I'd thought about it more I'd have put that in in this set (damn)
The ioconf lines generated by config will also end up in the
device's own scope as well, so ioconf.c will eventually be gutted
the SYSINIT call to the driver will include a phase where the
driver links it's ioconf line into a chain of such. when this phase is done
then the user can modify them with the boot: -c
config menu if he wants, just like now..
config will put the config lines out in the .h file
(e.g. in aha.h will be the addresses for the aha driver to look.)
as I said this is a very small first step..
the aim of THIS set of edits is to not have to edit conf.c at all when
adding a new device.. the tabe will be a simple skeleton..
when this is done, it will allow other changes to be made,
all teh time still having a fully working kernel tree,
but the logical outcome is the complete REMOVAL of the devsw tables.
By the end of this, linked in drivers will be exactly the same as
run-time loaded drivers, except they JUST HAPPEN to already be linked
and present at startup..
the SYSINIT calls will be the equivalent of the "init" call
made to a newly loaded driver in every respect.
For this edit,
each of the files has the following code inserted into it:
obviously, tailored to suit..
----------------------somewhere at the top:
#ifdef JREMOD
#include <sys/conf.h>
#define CDEV_MAJOR 13
#define BDEV_MAJOR 4
static void sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD */
---------------------somewhere that's run during bootup: EVENTUALLY a SYSINIT
#ifdef JREMOD
sd_devsw_install();
#endif /*JREMOD*/
-----------------------at the bottom:
#ifdef JREMOD
struct bdevsw sd_bdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, sdstrategy, sdioctl, /*4*/
sddump, sdsize, 0 };
struct cdevsw sd_cdevsw =
{ sdopen, sdclose, rawread, rawwrite, /*13*/
sdioctl, nostop, nullreset, nodevtotty,/* sd */
seltrue, nommap, sdstrategy };
static sd_devsw_installed = 0;
static void sd_devsw_install()
{
dev_t descript;
if( ! sd_devsw_installed ) {
descript = makedev(CDEV_MAJOR,0);
cdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_cdevsw,NULL);
#if defined(BDEV_MAJOR)
descript = makedev(BDEV_MAJOR,0);
bdevsw_add(&descript,&sd_bdevsw,NULL);
#endif /*BDEV_MAJOR*/
sd_devsw_installed = 1;
}
}
#endif /* JREMOD */
misplaced extern declarations (mostly prototypes of interrupt handlers)
that this exposed. The prototypes should be moved back to the driver
sources when the functions are staticalized.
Added idempotency guards to <machine/conf.h>. "ioconf.h" can't be
included when building LKMs so define a wart in bsd.kmod.mk to help
guard against including it.
to <machine/conf.h>. conf.h was mechanically generated by
`grep ^d_ conf.c >conf.h'. This accounts for part of its ugliness. The
prototypes should be moved back to the driver sources when the functions
are staticalized.
Fix the tests for being a console by reverting to the ones that
were used before the the RB_SERIAL changes. RB_SERIAL only needs
to be tested in one place. The initialization of comconsole was
wrong before the RB_SERIAL changes for the COMCONSOLE case. This
may have been the cause of the unnecessary changes.
Start eliminating #includes of <i386/i386/cons.h>. This header is
supposed to be included from <machine> although it should be
completely machine-independent and included from <sys>.
Remove a wrong XXX comment. `comconsole' is used to test for being
a console and even the tests for deciding the default termios state
are necessary (the semi-reentrant i/o routines don't handle ordinary
device i/o).
cy.c:
Sync with sio.c. The console tests are present but always fail.
Use input buffer watermarks of TTYHOG-512 (high) and (high)*7/8
(low) instead of TTYHOG/2 (high) and TTYHOG/5 (low) to agree with
some drivers. 512 is magic and some things depended on TTYHOG/2
>= TTYHOG-512 to work; now they depend on the 512 magic not changing
and TTYHOG-512 being significantly larger than 0. This should be
handled in ttsetwater().
Separate the decision about whether to do input flow control from
doing it. ttyblock() now just starts input flow control (hardware
and/or software) and there is a new function ttyunblock() to stop
it. The decisions are the same except for the watermark changes
and allowing for input expansion for PARMRK.
When flushing input, try harder at first to send a start character
if required, but give up if the first attempt fails.
cy.c, rc.c, sio.c:
Simplify: let ttyinput() handle input flow control if it is not
being bypassed. Use ttyblock() to start flow control otherwise.
rc.c:
Use same input flow control test as elsewhere: test in a more
efficient order and start flow control at >= highwater instead of
at > highwater.
essential when I fix excessive wakeups for output-below-low-water.
In cy.c and sio.c, wake up via the driver start routine to also
eliminate duplicated code involving the clearing of TS_TTSTOP.
Always (except in code to be replaced soon) call driver start
routine directly instead of going through ttstart().
ttwwakeup(). The conditions for doing the wakeup will soon become
more complicated and I don't want them duplicated in all drivers.
It's probably not worth making ttwwakeup() a macro or an inline
function. The cost of the function call is relatively small when
there is a process to wake up. There is usually a process to wake
up for large writes and the system call overhead dwarfs the function
call overhead for small writes.
- use pseudo-dma
- provide the same features and interface as sio
- support multiple boards
- fix bugs.
Some compile-time configuration constants are set to support higher
speeds and Cyclom-16Y's at a 30% relative cost in efficiency.
Cyclom-16Y support is untested.
(a) bring back ttselect, now that we have xxxdevtotty() it isn't dangerous.
(b) remove all of the wrappers that have been replaced by ttselect
(c) fix formatting in syscons.c and definition in syscons.h
(d) add cxdevtotty
NOT DONE:
(e) make pcvt work... it was already broken...when someone fixes pcvt to
link properly, just rename get_pccons to xxxdevtotty and we're done
(b) add a function callback vector to tty drivers that will return a pointer
to a valid tty structure based upon a dev_t
(c) make syscons structures the same size whether or not APM is enabled so
utilities don't crash if NAPM changes (and make the damn kernel compile!)
(d) rewrite /dev/snp ioctl interface so that it is device driver and i386
independant
when ttselect() is improved. This requires using an array of tty structs
and not using ttymalloc().
Fix an off by 1 error. Some caclulations seem to be off by a factor
of NCY. NCY defaults to 16, which gives 256 tty structs occupying
0xd000 bytes. The minor number encoding only allows 16 ttys.
Update the types of timeout functions to 2.0.
adapted to FreeBSD by Heikki Suonsivu <hsu@cs.hut.fi>.
Submitted by: Andrew Werple <andrew@werple.apana.org.au> and
Heikki Suonsivu <hsu@cs.hut.fi>
Obtained from: NetBSD