the input speed, so that it can work at speeds larger than 115200
bps without being flow controlled. The buffer is twice as large
as before at 115200 bps and half as large as before at low speeds
Use a single interrupt-level buffer instead of ping-pong buffers
because the simplifications provided by ping-pong buffers became
complications.
This change is over-engineered. Statically configured buffering
was simpler and faster, and increasing the buffer size to support
1.5Mbps would cost about 1 US cent's worth of RAM per port, but I
was interested in the buffer switching mechanism.
Increase the overall length of the delay by 10.
Without this a 3C509 card on my MediaGX crash box can't be reliably
read. With this it is solid.
I've left a delay multiplier in instead of just changing the base
delay because I'm surprised I had to increase it so much and expect
there may be another problem.
Change microseq offsets. Previously, offsets of the program counter where
added to the index of the current microinstruction. Make them rely on the
index of the next executed microinstruction.
Suggested by: Luigi Rizzo <luigi@labinfo.iet.unipi.it>
also a bit of a BDE patch in there I beleive. Backs out a fix I needed for Cyrix support
early on but it turns out that a later fix in the cyrix support made it un-needed.
pnp system in freebsd, I'm not sure how useful this will be, but my
1542CP seems to work well in plug and play mode and does seem to
probe correctly at all the oddball addresses/irq/drqs that I tried.
[[
I was unable to get /kernel.conf or /kernel.config to read in, so
I wasn't able to verify that this method of userconfig works. that's
one thing that makes pnp so hard to use in the current scheme.
Pointers to the right new way of doing this accepted.
]]
o Add some kludges to maybe bring support for 1540A/1542A into the
driver. Since I have no 154xA cards, and the only person I know
that has them hasn't given me feedback, I'm making this commit
blind.
o Honor unit numbers that are in the config file now. This allows one
to hard wire the unit numbers (and have high unit numbers for plug
and pray devices, which can't seem to be hardwired) and have the
cards not migrate from aha1 -> aha0 should aha0 go on the fritz. I
didn't verify that hard wired scsi busses would work, but did verify
that hard wired aha addresses did work to a limited extent. Both
aha0 and aha1 must be hardwired, or when the card that was in aha0
goes away, the probe for aha0 might pick up the card that otherwise
would have been aha1.
- Bring down the splash screen when a vty is opened for the first
time.
- Make sure the splash screen/screen saver is stopped before
switching vtys.
- Read and save initial values in the BIOS data area early.
VESA BIOS may change BIOS data values when switching modes.
- Fix missing '&' operator.
- Move ISA specific part of driver initialization to syscons_isa.c.
atkbd
- kbdtables.h is now in /sys/dev/kbd.
all
- Adjust for forthcoming alpha port. Submitted by: dfr
to look up cookies properly, at least for standard controllers.
Cookies are used so that we don't have to pass around lots of args.
All of the dmainit functions use the unit number so it is essential
that we pass them a cookie with the correct unit number.
This may break working configurations if there are bugs in the
dmainit functions like the ones I just fixed for VIA chipsets.
Broken in: rev 1.4 of ide_pci.c and rev.1.139 of wd.c.
IDE hardare. The attempted fix in rev.1.182 was a no-op except for
adding dozens of style bugs. The undocumented options ALI_V and
DISABLE_PCI_IDE go away as a side effect. ALI_V was a no-op because
rev.1.182 was a no-op. DISABLE_PCI_IDE didn't actually disable
PCI IDE. It disabled the buggy code in wdprobe() at a cost of
completely breaking support for Promise controllers.
Broken in: rev.1.139
buffer had to be left on the head of the queue for [bufq]disksort()
to sort against. This isn't right for devices that can support multiple
active i/o's, and only the fd driver did it. "Fixing" this in rev.1.36
of ufs_disksubr.c broke the fd driver in much the same way as rev.1.52
of <sys/buf.h> broke it (see rev.1.119).
Bug reported and fix tested by: dt
- Don't try to set typematic rate if there is not a keyboard.
- Fix wrong test on error code.
- Don't try to claim the keyboard twice. The second call will fail.
keyboard and video card drivers.
Because of the changes, you are required to update your kernel
configuration file now!
The files in sys/dev/syscons are still i386-specific (but less so than
before), and won't compile for alpha and PC98 yet.
syscons still directly accesses the video card registers here and
there; this will be rectified in the later stages.
+ ECP parallel port chipset FIFO detection
+ DMA+FIFO parallel I/O handled as chipset specific
+ nlpt updated in order to use the above enhanced parallel I/O.
Use 'lptcontrol -e' to use enhanced I/O
+ Various options documented in LINT
+ Full IEEE1284 NIBBLE and BYTE modes support. See ppbus(4) for
an overview of the IEEE1284 standard
+ Detection of PnP parallel devices at boot
+ Read capability added to nlpt driver to get IEEE1284 compliant
printer status with a simple 'cat /dev/lpt0'
+ IEEE1284 peripheral emulation added to BYTE mode. Two computers
may dialog according to IEEE1284 signaling method.
See PERIPH_1284 option and /sys/dev/ppbus/ppi.c
All this code is supposed to provide basic functions for IEEE1284 programming.
ppi.c and nlpt.c may act as examples.
version and the asm version are inlined, and everything is cached,
the asm version is 1.75 times slower than the C version on P5's.
On K6's, it is only 1.25 times slower.
fixing it. See rev.1.22 of ../sound/audio.c for fixes. When both
the C version and the asm version are inlined, and everything is cached,
the asm version is 1.75 times slower than the C version on P5's. On
K6's, it is only 1.25 times slower.
versions of gcc and broken for current versions of egcs. The asm
here (for translate_bytes()) is now an interesting example of one
that needs to be volatile to work.
Fixed missing "memory" in the clobber list for translate_bytes().
Submitted by: "John S. Dyson" <dyson@iquest.net> but rewritten by me