struct ifnet or the layer 2 common structure it was embedded in have
been replaced with a struct ifnet pointer to be filled by a call to the
new function, if_alloc(). The layer 2 common structure is also allocated
via if_alloc() based on the interface type. It is hung off the new
struct ifnet member, if_l2com.
This change removes the size of these structures from the kernel ABI and
will allow us to better manage them as interfaces come and go.
Other changes of note:
- Struct arpcom is no longer referenced in normal interface code.
Instead the Ethernet address is accessed via the IFP2ENADDR() macro.
To enforce this ac_enaddr has been renamed to _ac_enaddr.
- The second argument to ether_ifattach is now always the mac address
from driver private storage rather than sometimes being ac_enaddr.
Reviewed by: sobomax, sam
- Initialize val_ec with the content of the volume EC register
for ACPI_IBM_METHOD_VOLUME and ACPI_IBM_METHOD_MUTE in acpi_ibm_sysctl_set()
if there is no CMOS handle present. This fixes setting volume and mute on
such models.
Submitted by: ru
Approved by: philip
- Restructured for easier extensibility and maintainability
- To be more uniform with the other ACPI extras drivers and to better reflect
their actual meaning, some sysctls were moved:
o brightness -> lcd_brightness
o keylight -> thinklight
o enable -> events
o misckey -> hotkey
o avail_mask -> availmask
o key_mask -> eventmask
- New "initialmask" sysctl, which holds the initial eventmask
- The "wlan" sysctl is now read-only, since writing to it didn't have
any effect
- The "version" sysctl was removed, since it seems to be the same (0x100)
on all models I have seen
- Support for more hotkeys by the "hotkey" sysctl
- Improved support of ACPI events. Disabled by default, since it unexpectedly
changes the behaviour of some keys. (on my T41p there are now 24 different
keypress events that get reported)
- write support for: volume, mute, lcd_brightness and thinklight
- led(4) interface for the thinklight [1]
- New sysctls "fan" and "fan_speed" to support reading of fan status and speed
- New sysctl "thermal" to support reading of up to 8 thermal sensors
Reviewed by: philip
Approved by: philip
Submitted by: simon [1]
Inspired by: The Linux ibm_acpi driver by Borislav Deianov
http://ibm-acpi.sourceforge.net/
The ThinkPad Button program (tpb) by Markus Braun
http://www.nongnu.org/tpb/
Thanks to: brueffer, dvl, njl, philip, simon, takawata and the many
testers from freebsd-acpi@ and freebsd-mobile@
- Implement sampling modes and logging support in hwpmc(4).
- Separate MI and MD parts of hwpmc(4) and allow sharing of
PMC implementations across different architectures.
Add support for P4 (EMT64) style PMCs to the amd64 code.
- New pmcstat(8) options: -E (exit time counts) -W (counts
every context switch), -R (print log file).
- pmc(3) API changes, improve our ability to keep ABI compatibility
in the future. Add more 'alias' names for commonly used events.
- bug fixes & documentation.
o purge ath_initkeytable; it's not needed
o add multicast key search support for supporting multiple group keys
(disabled for now; requires updated hal)
o create keycache entry for stations using open auth so they get h/w
antenna management support
o add keycache -> node mapping table; eliminates mac-based lookup in
the net80211 layer
mutex instead of a MTX_DEF one in order to defer preemption while
reading the date and time registers. If we don't manage to read them
within the time slot where we are guaranteed that no updates occur we
might actually read them during an update in which case the output is
undefined.
times which was added in the last revision with what should be a proper
solution as long as keyboards that were pluggged in after the kernel
has fully booted aren't supported. I.e. when sunkbd_configure() is
called for the high-level console probe make sure that the keyboard is
both successfully configured (i.e. also probed) and attached. The band-
aid left the possibility to attach the keyboard device to the high-level
console without attaching the keyboard device itself when the keyboard
is plugged in after uart(4) attached but before syscons(4) does.
share their IRQ lines with the i8042. Any IRQ activity (typically during
attach) on the NS16550 used to connect the keyboard when actually the
PS/2 keyboard is selected in OFW causes interaction with the OBP i8042
driver resulting in a hang (and vice versa). As RS232 keyboards and mice
obviously aren't meant to be used in parallel with PS/2 ones on these
boards don't attach to these NS16550 in case the RS232 keyboard isn't
selected in order to prevent such hangs.
Ok'ed by: marcel
UARTs used to connect keyboards and not also PS/2 keyboards and only
return their package handle in case the keyboard is the preferred one
according to the OFW but otherwise still regardless of whether the
keyboard is used for stdin or not. This is simply achieved by looking
at the 'keyboard' alias and returning the corresponding package handle
in case it refers to a SCC/UART. This is change is done in order to
give the keyboard which the OFW or the user selected in OFW on boards
that support additional types of keyboards besides the RS232 ones also
preference in FreeBSD. It will be also used to determine on Sun AXi and
Sun AXmp boards whether a PS/2 or a RS232 is to be used as these are
sort of mutual exclusive there (see upcoming commit to uart_bus_ebus.c).
Note that Tatung AXi boards have the same issue but the former code
happened to already give the PS/2 keyboard preference by not identifying
the respective UART as keyboard system device there because the PS/2
keyboard node precedes the keyboard UART one in the OFW device tree of
these boards (which isn't the case for the Sun AXi).
Ok'ed by: marcel
the number of registered adapters instead of determining again whether
stdout is a supported card (and which might have failed to attach and
register).
- Fix a bug in the handling of the FBIOSCURSOR IOCTL; the code was meant
to return ENODEV for all invocations expect when used to disable the
cursor and not just when used for enabling the cursor.
- In case the adapter is the OFW stdout move its OFW cursor to the start
of the last line on halt so OFW output doesn't get intermixed with what
FreeBSD left on the screen.
- Drop variable names in the prototypes of some functions in order to
match the style of majority of the prototypes in this file.
the number of registered adapters instead of determining again whether
stdout is a supported card (and which might have failed to attach and
register).
- Drop creator_set_mode() and move the relevant parts to creator_fill_rect()
and creator_putc() respectively. This is a bit cleaner than having to
make sure that creator_set_mode() was called before creator_fill_rect()
or creator_putc() are used and matches better what Xorg does.
- Fix a bug in the handling of the FBIOSCURSOR IOCTL; the code was meant
to return ENODEV for all invocations expect when used to disable the
cursor and not just when used for enabling the cursor.
- In case the adapter is the OFW stdout move its OFW cursor to the start
of the last line on halt so OFW output doesn't get intermixed with what
FreeBSD left on the screen. With hindsight this is what the faking of a
hardware cursor which was removed in the last revision really was about,
i.e. to keep the OFW updated about the current cursor position. The new
approach however is simpler while producing the same result and doesn't
cause the first letter of the OFW output to be turned into a blank and
a newline.
- Add variable names to the prototypes of creator_cursor_*() which were
added in the last revision and list them alphabetically in order to match
the style of this file.
resources in ebus.c rev. 1.22 and collapse the resource allocation for
both the EBus and SBus variants into auxio_attach_common().
- For the EBus variant make sure that the resource for controlling the
LED is actually available; (in theory) we could have ended up using
the resource without allocating it.
the driver has unholy private knowledge of its great-*cgrandchildren.
The ACPI allocation routine lacked such knowledge when it tried to do
a default allocation for all descendants, rather than just its
immeidate children, so would access grandchild's ivar in an unsafe
way. This could lead to a panic when devices were present which had
no addresses setup by the BIOS, but which were later allocated in a
lazy manner via pci_alloc_map. As such, only do the default
allocation adjustments for immediate children. The manner that
acpi_sysres_find accesses the resource list, used later in
acpi_alloc_resource, is safe and proper so no additional test is
needed there.
This fixes a panic when probing an disabled ata controller on some
newer intel blades.
Reported by: dwhite
against 0 in pci_alloc_map, just like we do in pci_add_map. Also,
make sure that we restore the value to the BAR that was there before
if the bar is 0. Chances are that it was 0 before the write too and
that the restoration is a nop, but better safe than sorry.
Notice by: dwhite
we are processing has a base address of zero. Note that this will only
change behavior for devices where all the BARs of a given type have a base
address of 0 since we will enable the appropriate access when we encounter
the first BAR with a base that is not 0. Specifically, this allows certain
Toshiba laptops to no longer require 'hw.pci.enable_io_modes=0' to avoid
hangs during boot.
PR: kern/20040
PR: i386/63776 (possibly)
PR: i386/68900 (possibly)
PR: i386/74532 (possibly)
MFC after: 1 week
24, and 32 bit modes. To use that, syscons(4) must be built with
the compile time option 'options SC_PIXEL_MODE', and VESA support (a.k.a.
vesa.ko) must be either loaded, or be compiled into the kernel.
Do not return EINVAL when the mouse state is changed to what it already is,
which seems to cause problems when you have two mice attached, and
applications are not likely obtain useful information through the EINVAL
caused by showing the mouse pointer twice.
Teach vidcontrol(8) about mode names like MODE_<NUMBER>, where <NUMBER> is
the video mode number from the vidcontrol -i mode output. Also, revert the
video mode if something fails.
Obtained from: DragonFlyBSD
Discussed at: current@ with patch attached [1]
PR: kern/71142 [2]
Submitted by: Xuefeng DENG <dsnofe at msn com> [1],
Cyrille Lefevre <cyrille dot lefevre at laposte dot net> [2]
- Changed from using explicit devices id to using descriptive labels.
- Added support for 82573 and 82546 Quad adapters.
- Corrected support for 82547EI and 82541ER (mac_type was not assigned)
- Removed #ifdef DBG_STATS and extraneous code.
if_em_hw.c/if_em_hw.h
- Added support for 82573 and 82546 Quad adapters.
- Brought forward Intel's most current mac and phy changes.
program RXMAC to discard frames with SA field matching the stations's
MAC address. Experimentation shows that HME receives its own frames
when it operates at 10Mbps half-duplex. With this change HME runs at
10Mbps half-duplx should work with IPv6.
(No more "DAD detected duplicate IPv6 address".)
Reported by: jacques brierre <jbrierre AT bellsouth DOT net>
Reviewed by: marius
and on resume (reported to fix issues with ACPI)
o Add monitor mode support
o Add WPA (802.11i) support (not tested extensively though!)
o Add a device specific sysctl to control the tx antenna (default to
antenna diversity)
o Fix sensitivity setting
o Fix setting of the capinfo field when associating
o Temporarly disable 802.11a channels scanning that was causing firmware
panics with 2915ABG adapters until I find a better fix. This breaks
802.11a support.
o Temporarly switch back to software WEP until I implement hardware
encryption for AES and TKIP too.
Approved by: silby (mentor)
use with syscons(4) on sparc64. It's based on the respective NetBSD
driver with some additional info (initialisation/hardware cursor)
obtained from the Xorg 'ati' driver and some ideas taken from
creator(4). ATI Mach64 chips ("ATI Rage") are quite common as low-
end graphics chips in PCI-based sun4u machines and are used on-board
in e.g. Blade 100 and a couple of OEM products. Most if not all of
the Sun PGX add-on cards family (descriptions of the PGX32 are
conflicting but most say it's a Rage Pro) are also based on these
chips. Depending on the version of the OBP Mach64 cards destined for
use in i386 machines also work in sun4u machines.
The driver uses pixel mode with hardware acceleration as far as
syscons(4) currently permits on sparc64 so text mode is already
quite fast. The hardware cursor is used for the mouse pointer;
for one because this is a "restriction" induced in syscons(4) on
sparc64 by creator(4) and also because of issues with mapping
the aperture when used as a low-level early during boot. Due to
insufficiencies in the available documentation I didn't manage to
get mode switch work properly (sync problems), yet. So for now
this driver relies on the OBP having initialised a mode (as does
creator(4)). On all of the tested machines is even true when using
a serial console (and also not only when the OBP switched to a
serial console because no keyboard is present). In general however
the states the Mach64 chips are left in by the OBP vary a lot
depending on the version of the OBP. This e.g. includes the aperture
not being mapped in even when used as the console and the OBP just
barfing when asked to map it. The latter is also the reason for the
existence of this native driver in FreeBSD rather than taking an
OFW frambuffer approach.
Xorg is also happy to talk to these chips by mmap'ing them through
this driver. For some hardware configs like on the Blade 100 a fix
for the Xorg sparc64 MD bus code is however needed (added in version
6.8.2_2 of the xorg-server port).
The video driver font loading and saving methods are not implemented,
yet, as syscons(4) needs more work in that area to work viable on
sparc64.
With minor modifications machfb(4) would most likely also work on
powerpc, when #ifdef'ing the OFW and possibly implementing mode
setting probably also on the other archs. The latter is however
not very practible at the moment as it would conflict with vga(4).
Tested/developed with: Rage II+ add-on card on AX1105 and AXi board,
AXe board (on-board Rage Pro)
Additional testing by: marcel (Ultra 5 w/ on-board Rage Pro),
scottl (Naturetech GENIALstation 777S w/ on-board
Rage Mobility M1),
Michiel Boland and Ilmar S. Habibulin (Blade 100
w/ on-board Rage XL)
- Use register macros instead of magic values in the code. [1]
- Check the return values of OF_getprop() and other stuff that actually
can fail.
- Let the unimplemented video driver methods return ENODEV rather
than 0 so other code isn't tricked into thinking a certain operation
was successfull. In case of e.g. the video driver creator_ioctl()
this caused vidcontrol(1) to return random garbage information.
Remove the TODO macros in the unimplemented video driver methods
which did a printf("%s: unimplemented\n", __func__). Under certain
circumstances these managed to invoke a printf() when a low-level
console device wasn't attached, yet, causing a Fast Data Access MMU
Miss. These macros were only really usefull for development anyway.
- Set the struct video_adapter and struct video_info va_flags and
vi_flags etc. as appropriate.
- In creator_configure() don't rely on hitting the node which is the
chosen console device first when searching the OFW tree for adapters
compatible with this driver. Instead just check whether the chosen
console device is a viable target for this driver. Targets that are
not the console (including additional cards in multi-head configs)
will be attached through creator_upa_attach(). I think this how the
code in creator_configure() was actually meant to work.
Honour the VIO_PROBE_ONLY flag and don't initialise and register the
console device twice when creator_configure() is called a second time
during sc_probe_unit().
Let creator_configure() return the number of the found adapters,
i.e. 1 in case probing succeeds, as it's expected. The return values
of video adapter configure functions however currently aren't checked
so this doesn't make a difference at the moment.
- In creator_upa_attach() don't rely on probing and attaching the
adapter which is the console first, in case there are multiple
adpaters and one of them is the console this could lead into using
the video adapter unit 0 twice.
- Make the check for DACs with inverted cursor control a bit more
precise and actually honour that information when turning the cursor
on or off. Add a helper function creator_cursor_enable() for this
in order to keep code duplication low. [1]
- Don't bother with faking a hardware cursor in case a device is the
console. Apparently this was meant to start kernel output right after
where the firmware left. In general this isn't worth the fuzz and
also had no real effect as creator_set_mode() did clear the screen
in any case, not just in case a device was not the console.
- Implement creator_fill_rect() and use it to actually blank the
display in creator_blank_display() when the mode is V_DISPLAY_BLANK,
moving blanking the display out of creator_set_mode(). Use it also
to implement creator_set_border() so the border can be re-drawn
when switching to a VTY from X, exiting X, etc. (which leaves us
with a black border most of the time).
- Implement the video driver creator_ioctl(), moving the implementation
of the IOCTL interface from the fbN CDEV version of creator_ioctl()
into the video driver version and use the latter to implement the
former. Use fb_commonioctl() to handle most of the FBIO IOCTLs.
This gives programs like vidcontrol(1) which use the video driver
creator_ioctl() a chance of working.
Implement turning off the cursor via the FBIOSCURSOR IOCTL, which
Xorg uses to in order to inform the OS that it's taking over the
cursor. In creator_putm() check whether the cursor is enabled and
(re-)install it if necessary, moving installing the cursor out of
creator_init() and into a helper function creator_cursor_install().
This fixes the missing mouse pointer when switching to a VTY from X,
exiting X, etc.
- Some clean-up (remove unused/useless code, etc.).
o sparc64/creator/creator_upa.c / sparc64/sparc64/sc_machdep.c:
- Attach syscons(4) as an own pseudo-device on the nexus rather than
directly in creator_upa_attach(), similiar to attaching syscons(4)
as a pseudo-device on isa(4) on other archs. This makes it a whole
lot easier to do the right thing in multi-head configs, especially
with different types of graphics adapters. [2]
- Set SC_AUTODETECT_KBD by default so USB keyboards work out of the
box. [2]
Based on/obtained from: Xorg 'ffb' driver [1]
Based on/obtained from: FreeBSD/powerpc [2]
uses white) so base the color of the border on SC_NORM_ATTR rather
than hardcoding BG_BLACK.
- Use SC_DRIVER_NAME rather than hardcoding 'sc' in message strings
(see also sys/dev/syscons/syscons.h rev. 1.82).
syscons(4) and its pseudo-devices don't get confused (including by
other device drivers) with the system controller devices which are
also termed 'sc' in the OFW tree (and which we probably want to
interface with hwpmc(4) one day).
VTB_FRAMEBUFFER specific code. On sparc64 we don't use a buffer of
type VTB_FRAMEBUFFER (see syscons.c) and excluding the respective
code here allows to compile syscons(4) without isa(4).
Requested by: joerg, marcel, yongari
a band-aid allowing to call this function savely multiple times, e.g.
during sckbdprobe() and sc_probe_unit(). Otherwise calling it a second
time results in a non-working keyboard. This needs a lot of more work
to actually do the right thing and work like expected.
- Let sunkbd_configure() return the number of the found keyboards, i.e.
1 in case probing succeeds, as it's expected. The return values of the
keyboard configure functions however currently aren't checked so this
doesn't make a difference at the moment.
- Use FBSDID.
which doesn't assume a hardware cursor on __sparc64__ rather than on
DEV_CREATOR. If we want to include more than one framebuffer driver in
e.g. the GENERIC kernel all drivers have to work the same way. Now that
DEV_CREATOR is no longer used remove it from options.sparc64.
controllers of Sun PCIO-2 chips which are used onboard in most of
the newer PCI-based sun4u machines (cosmetic change as they were also
already probed as generic FWOHCI without this). As with gem(4), hme(4)
and ohci(4) detect whether their intpin register is valid and correct
it if necessary, i.e. set the respective IVAR to the right value for
allocating the IRQ resource, as some of them come up having it set
to 0 (in fact in all machines I'm currently aware of the FireWire
part being enabled). This fixes attaching affected controllers.
Apporved by: simokawa
Tested by: Michiel Boland <michiel@boland.org>
MFC after: 1 month
pointer. If kernel malloc(0) returns a valid pointer, it needs to be
freed. If it returns NULL, it's ok to free this also.
Submitted by: pjd
Reviewed by: imp, dfr
Obtained from: Coverity Prevent
We can't call KeFlushQueuedDpcs() during bootstrap (cold == 1), since
the flush operation sleeps to wait for completion, and we can't sleep
here (clowns will eat us).
On an i386 SMP system, if we're loaded/probed/attached during bootstrap,
smp_rendezvous() won't run us anywhere except CPU 0 (since the other CPUs
aren't launched until later), which means we won't be able to set up
the GDTs anywhere except CPU 0. To deal with this case, ctxsw_utow()
now checks to see if the TID for the current processor has been properly
initialized and sets up the GTD for the current CPU if not.
Lastly, in if_ndis.c:ndis_shutdown(), do an ndis_stop() to insure we
really halt the NIC and stop interrupts from happening.
Note that loading a driver during bootstrap is, unfortunately, kind of
a hit or miss sort of proposition. In Windows, the expectation is that
by the time a given driver's MiniportInitialize() method is called,
the system is already in 'multiuser' state, i.e. it's up and running
enough to support all the stuff specified in the NDIS API, which includes
the underlying OS-supplied facilities it implicitly depends on, such as
having all CPUs running, having the DPC queues initialized, WorkItem
threads running, etc. But in UNIX, a lot of that stuff won't work during
bootstrap. This causes a problem since we need to call MiniportInitialize()
at least once during ndis_attach() in order to find out what kind of NIC
we have and learn its station address.
What this means is that some cards just plain won't work right if
you try to pre-load the driver along with the kernel: they'll only be
probed/attach correctly if the driver is kldloaded _after_ the system
has reached multiuser. I can't really think of a way around this that
would still preserve the ability to use an NDIS device for diskless
booting.
prevent anything from making calls to the NIC while it's being shut down.
This is yet another attempt to stop things like mdnsd from trying to
poke at the card while it's not properly initialized and panicking
the system.
Also, remove unneeded debug message from if_ndis.c.
are used onboard in most of the newer PCI-based sun4u machines
(cosmetic change as they were also already probed as generic OHCI
without this). Detect whether their intpin register is valid and
correct it if necessary, i.e. set the respective IVAR to the right
value for allocating the IRQ resource, as some of them come up
having it set to 0 (mainly those used in Blade 100 and the first
one on AX1105 boards). This fixes attaching affected controllers.
Correcting the intpin value might be better off in the PCI code
via a quirk table but on the other hand gem(4) and hem(4) also
correct it themselves and at least for the USB controller part
the intpin register is truely hardwired to 0 and can't be changed.
This means that we would have to hook up the quirk information
in a lot of places in the PCI code (i.e. whenever the value of the
intpin register is read from or written to the pci_devinfo of the
respective device) in order to do it the right way.
MFC after: 1 month
- Add locking.
- Account for if the MC146818_NO_CENT_ADJUST flag is set we don't need
to check wheter year < POSIX_BASE_YEAR.
- Add some comments about mapping the day of week from the range the
generic clock code uses to the range the chip uses and which I meant
to add in the initial version.
- Minor clean-up, use __func__ instead of hardcoded function names in
error strings.
o in the rtc(4) front-end additionally:
- Don't leak resources in case mc146818_attach() fails.
- Account for ebus(4) defaulting to SYS_RES_MEMORY for the memory
resources since ebus.c rev. 1.22.
- Add support for storing the century in MK48TXX_WDAY_CB on MK48Txx with
extended registers when the MK48TXX_NO_CENT_ADJUST flag is set (and which
is termed somewhat confusing as it actually means don't manually adjust
the century in the driver).
- Add the MI part of interfacing the watchdog functionality of MK48Txx with
extended registers with watchdog(9). This is inspired by the SunOS/Solaris
drivers for the 'eeprom' devices also having watchdog support. I actually
expected this to work out of the box on Sun Exx00 machines with 'eeprom'
devices which have a 'watchdog-enable' property. On terminal count of the
the watchdog timer however only the MK48TXX_FLAGS_WDF bit rises but the
reset signal and the interrupt respectively (depending on whether the
MK48TXX_WDOG_WDS bit of the chip and the MK48TXX_WDOG_ENABLE_WDS flag
of the driver respectively is set) goes nowhere. Apparently passing the
reset signal on to the WDR line of the CPUs has to be enabled somewhere
else but we don't have documentation for the Exx00 specific controllers.
I decided to commit this nevertheless so it can be enabled in the eeprom(4)
front-end later in e.g. 6.0-STABLE without breaking the API. Besides the
Exx00 the watchdog part of the MK48Txx should also work on E250 and E450.
Possibly also without extra fiddling on these machines but I haven't
found someone willing to give it a try on such a machine so far.
- Use uintXX_t instead of u_intXX_t, use __func__ instead of hardcoded
function names in error strings.
front-end and the LSI64854 and NCR53C9x code in case one of these
functions fails. Add detach functions to these parts and make esp(4)
detachable.
- Revert rev. 1.7 of esp_sbus.c, since rev. 1.34 of sbus.c the clockfreq
IVAR defaults to the per-child values.
- Merge ncr53c9x.c rev. 1.111 from NetBSD (partial):
On reset, clear state flags and the msgout queue.
In NetBSD code to notify the upper layer (i.e. CAM in FreeBSD) on reset
was also added with this revision. This is believed to be not necessary
in FreeBSD and was not merged.
This makes ncr53c9x.c to be in sync with NetBSD up to rev. 1.114.
- Conditionalize the LSI64854 support on sbus(4) only instead of sbus(4)
and esp(4) as it's also required for the 'dma', 'espdma' and 'ledma'
busses/devices as well as the 'SUNW,bpp' device (printer port) which
all hang off of sbus(4).
- Add a driver for the 'dma', 'espdma' and 'ledma' (pseudo-)busses/
devices. These busses and devices actually represent the LSI64854 DMA
engines for the ESP SCSI and LANCE Ethernet controllers found on the
SBus of Ultra 1 and SBus add-on cards. With 'espdma' and 'ledma' the
'esp' and 'le' devices hang off of the respective DMA bus instead of
directly from the SBus. The 'dma' devices are either also used in this
manner or on some add-on cards also as a companion device to an 'esp'
device which also hangs off directly from the SBus. With the latter
variant it's a bit tricky to glue the DMA engine to the core logic of
the respective 'esp' device. With rev. 1.35 of sbus.c we are however
guaranteed that such a 'dma' device is probed before the respective
'esp' device which simplifies things a lot. [1]
- In the esp(4) SBus front-end read the part-unique ID code of Fast-SCSI
capable chips the right way. This fixes erroneously detecting some
chips as FAS366 when in fact they are not. Add explicit checks for the
FAS100A, FAS216 and FAS236 variants instead treating all of these as
ESP200. That way we can correctly set the respective Fast-SCSI config
bits instead of driving them out of specs. This includes adding the
FAS100A and FAS236 variants to the NCR53C9x core code. We probably
still subsume some chip variants as ESP200 while in fact they are
another variant which however shouldn't really matter as this will
only happen when these chips are driven at 25MHz or less which implies
not being able to run Fast-SCSI. [3]
- Add a workaround to the NCR53C9x interrupt handler which ignores the
stray interrupt generated by FAS100A when doing path inquiry during
boot and which otherwiese would trigger a panic.
- Add support for the 'esp' devices hanging off of a 'dma' or 'espdma'
busses or which are companions of 'dma' devices to esp(4). In case of
the variants that hang off of a DMA device this is a bit hackish as
esp(4) then directly uses the softc of the respective parent to talk
to the DMA engine. It might make sense to add an interface for this
in order to implement this in a cleaner way however it's not yet clear
how the requirements for the LANCE Ethernet controllers are and the
hack works for now. [2]
This effectively adds support for the onboard SCSI controller in
Ultra 1 as well as most of the ESP-based SBus add-on cards to esp(4).
With this the code for supporting the Performance Technologies SBS430
SBus SCSI add-on cards is also largely in place the remaining bits
were however omitted as it's unclear from the NetBSD how to couple
the DMA engine and the core logic together for these cards.
Obtained from: OpenBSD [1]
Obtained from: NetBSD [2]
Clue from: BSD/OS [3]
Reviewed by: scottl (earlier version)
Tested with: FSBE/S add-on card (FAS236), SSHA add-on card (ESP100A),
Ultra 1 (onboard FAS100A), Ultra 2 (onboard FAS366)
The Ralink RT2500 driver uses this API instead of NdisMIndicateReceivePacket().
Drivers use NdisMEthIndicateReceive() when they know they support
802.3 media and expect to hand their packets only protocols that want
to deal with that particular media type. With this API, the driver does
not manage its own NDIS_PACKET/NDIS_BUFFER structures. Instead, it
lets bound protocols have a peek at the data, and then they supply
an NDIS_PACKET/NDIS_BUFFER combo to the miniport driver, into which
it copies the packet data.
Drivers use NdisMIndicateReceivePacket() to allow their packets to
be read by any protocol, not just those bound to 802.3 media devices.
To make this work, we need an internal pool of NDIS_PACKETS for
receives. Currently, we check to see if the driver exports a
MiniportTransferData() method in its characteristics structure,
and only allocate the pool for drivers that have this method.
This should allow the RT2500 driver to work correctly, though I
still have to fix ndiscvt(8) to parse its .inf file properly.
Also, change kern_ndis.c:ndis_halt_nic() to reap timers before
acquiring NDIS_LOCK(), since the reaping process might entail sleeping
briefly (and we can't sleep with a lock held).
i8253reg.h, and add some defines to control a speaker.
- Move PPI related defines from i386/isa/spkr.c into ppireg.h and use them.
- Move IO_{PPI,TIMER} defines into ppireg.h and timerreg.h respectively.
- Use isa/isareg.h rather than <arch>/isa/isa.h.
Tested on: i386, pc98
- Move MD files into <arch>/<arch>.
- Move bus dependent files into <arch>/<bus>.
Rename some files to more suitable names.
Repo-copied by: peter
Discussed with: imp
of swi. This allows us to use the taskqueue_thread_* functions instead of
rolling our own. It also avoids a double trip through the queue.
Submitted by: njl
Reviewed by: sam
the same time.
Fix if_ndis_pccard.c so that it sets sc->ndis_dobj and sc->ndis_regvals.
Correct IMPORT_SFUNC() macros for the READ_PORT_BUFFER_xxx() routines,
which take 3 arguments, not 2.
This fixes it so that the Windows driver for my Cisco Aironet 340 PCMCIA
card works again. (Yes, I know the an(4) driver supports this card natively,
but it's the only PCMCIA device I have with a Windows XP driver.)
The core console code checks this field when a console is added and
emits a warning if it's empty. In practice the warning is harmless for
uart(4), because the cn_name is filled in as soon as the device name is
known; which is when the device is enumerated.
To avoid the warning, to avoid possible complications caused by emitting
the warning without there (possibly) being a console selected yet and to
avoid complications when the UART isn't found during bus enumeration, we
just preset the cn_name field here to the name of the driver.
Remove unused fields from ndis_miniport_block.
Fix a bug in KeFlushQueuedDpcs() (we weren't calculating the kq pointer
correctly).
In if_ndis.c, clear the IFF_RUNNING flag before calling ndis_halt_nic().
Add some guards in kern_ndis.c to avoid letting anyone invoke ndis_get_info()
or ndis_set_info() if the NIC isn't fully initialized. Apparently, mdnsd
will sometimes try to invoke the ndis_ioctl() routine at exactly the
wrong moment (to futz with its multicast filters) when the interface
comes up, and can trigger a crash unless we guard against it.
- Remove the old task threads from kern_ndis.c and reimplement them in
subr_ntoskrnl.c, in order to more properly emulate the Windows DPC
API. Each CPU gets its own DPC queue/thread, and each queue can
have low, medium and high importance DPCs. New APIs implemented:
KeSetTargetProcessorDpc(), KeSetImportanceDpc() and KeFlushQueuedDpcs().
(This is the biggest change.)
- Fix a bug in NdisMInitializeTimer(): the k_dpc pointer in the
nmt_timer embedded in the ndis_miniport_timer struct must be set
to point to the DPC, also embedded in the struct. Failing to do
this breaks dequeueing of DPCs submitted via timers, and in turn
breaks cancelling timers.
- Fix a bug in KeCancelTimer(): if the timer is interted in the timer
queue (i.e. the timeout callback is still pending), we have to both
untimeout() the timer _and_ call KeRemoveQueueDpc() to nuke the DPC
that might be pending. Failing to do this breaks cancellation of
periodic timers, which always appear to be inserted in the timer queue.
- Make use of the nmt_nexttimer field in ndis_miniport_timer: keep a
queue of pending timers and cancel them all in ndis_halt_nic(), prior
to calling MiniportHalt(). Also call KeFlushQueuedDpcs() to make sure
any DPCs queued by the timers have expired.
- Modify NdisMAllocateSharedMemory() and NdisMFreeSharedMemory() to keep
track of both the virtual and physical addresses of the shared memory
buffers that get handed out. The AirGo MIMO driver appears to have a bug
in it: for one of the segments is allocates, it returns the wrong
virtual address. This would confuse NdisMFreeSharedMemory() and cause
a crash. Why it doesn't crash Windows too I have no idea (from reading
the documentation for NdisMFreeSharedMemory(), it appears to be a violation
of the API).
- Implement strstr(), strchr() and MmIsAddressValid().
- Implement IoAllocateWorkItem(), IoFreeWorkItem(), IoQueueWorkItem() and
ExQueueWorkItem(). (This is the second biggest change.)
- Make NdisScheduleWorkItem() call ExQueueWorkItem(). (Note that the
ExQueueWorkItem() API is deprecated by Microsoft, but NDIS still uses
it, since NdisScheduleWorkItem() is incompatible with the IoXXXWorkItem()
API.)
- Change if_ndis.c to use the NdisScheduleWorkItem() interface for scheduling
tasks.
With all these changes and fixes, the AirGo MIMO driver for the Belkin
F5D8010 Pre-N card now works. Special thanks to Paul Robinson
(paul dawt robinson at pwermedia dawt net) for the loan of a card
for testing.
Have pmcstat(8) and pmccontrol(8) use these APIs.
Return PMC class-related constants (PMC widths and capabilities)
with the OP GETCPUINFO call leaving OP PMCINFO to return only the
dynamic information associated with a PMC (i.e., whether enabled,
owner pid, reload count etc.).
Allow pmc_read() (i.e., OPS PMCRW) on active self-attached PMCs to
get upto-date values from hardware since we can guarantee that the
hardware is running the correct PMC at the time of the call.
Bug fixes:
- (x86 class processors) Fix a bug that prevented an RDPMC
instruction from being recognized as permitted till after the
attached process had context switched out and back in again after
a pmc_start() call.
Tighten the rules for using RDPMC class instructions: a GETMSR
OP is now allowed only after an OP ATTACH has been done by the
PMC's owner to itself. OP GETMSR is not allowed for PMCs that
track descendants, for PMCs attached to processes other than
their owner processes.
- (P4/HTT processors only) Fix a bug that caused the MI and MD
layers to get out of sync. Add a new MD operation 'get_config()'
as part of this fix.
- Allow multiple system-mode PMCs at the same row-index but on
different CPUs to be allocated.
- Reject allocation of an administratively disabled PMC.
Misc. code cleanups and refactoring. Improve a few comments.
theoretically unload pci bridges or pci drivers. It will also allow
detach to work if one needed to detach a subtree.
This is inspired by looking at the p4 commits from bms to his 5.4
tree, but I didn't look at the final results.
for the VGA I/O or memory ranges, when it's not within the default
ranges decoded by the bridge. When allocation for VGA addresses is
attempted, check that the bridge has the VGA Enable bit set before
allowing it.
As such, newbusified VGA drivers can allocate their resources when
the VGA adapter is behind a PCI-to-PCI bridge.
Reviewed by: imp@, jhb@
Only allow a process to use the x86 RDPMC instruction if it has
allocated and attached a PMC to itself.
Inform the MD layer of the "pseudo context switch out" that needs
to be done when the last thread of a process is exiting.
fact that access to RR0 does not need a prior write to the register
index because the index always reverts to 0 after the indexed register
has been accessed.
Typically when a RR or WR is to accessed, one programs the index (which
is a write to the control register), followed by a read or write to the
actual indexed register (a read pr write to the same control register).
When this non-atomic sequence is interrupted after having written the
index and low-level console I/O is done in that situation, the write to
program the index will actually write to the indexed register and nuke
state. This almost always yields a wedge.
By not programming the index register and instead just reading from RR0,
the worst case scenario is non-fatal. For if we don't actually read from
RR0 but some other register we get an invalid status, which may lead us
to conclude that the transit data register is empty when it's not or that
the receive data register contains data when it doesn't. Hence, we may
lose an output character or get a sporadic input character, but given
the situation this is a non-issue.
Full serialization is not possible due to the fact that this code needs
to work from DDB and before mutex initialization has happened.
In collaboration with: kris@, marius@
Tested by: kris@
MFC after: 1 day
X-MFC: 5.4-RELEASE candidate
during a data phase. Before, we would try to recover the autosense, but
the DMA engine would still be active with interrupted transfer, and we'd
quickly spiral out of control and cause massive data corruption. For now,
just reset the chip and cancel everything. The better solution is to
cancel the DMA operation, but there is no clear way to do that right now.
The data corruption problem is severe enough to warrant this fix in the
interim. Thanks to Kris Kenneway to sacrificing countless filesystems to
this bug.
MFC After: 3 days
on boards with VIA gigE controllers that are embedded in VIA chipsets.
Presumably, they don't have an external EEPROM and store the MAC
address somewhere else. To get around this, force an autoload and
read the station address from the RX filter registers instead.
This has been tested to work on both embedded and standalone
controllers.
While there also check for failed device_add_child calls.
Found by: Coventry Analysis tool[1].
Submitted by: sam[1]
Approved by: pjd (mentor)
MFC after: 1 week
here on in, if_ndis.ko will be pre-built as a module, and can be built
into a static kernel (though it's not part of GENERIC). Drivers are
created using the new ndisgen(8) script, which uses ndiscvt(8) under
the covers, along with a few other tools. The result is a driver module
that can be kldloaded into the kernel.
A driver with foo.inf and foo.sys files will be converted into
foo_sys.ko (and foo_sys.o, for those who want/need to make static
kernels). This module contains all of the necessary info from the
.INF file and the driver binary image, converted into an ELF module.
You can kldload this module (or add it to /boot/loader.conf) to have
it loaded automatically. Any required firmware files can be bundled
into the module as well (or converted/loaded separately).
Also, add a workaround for a problem in NdisMSleep(). During system
bootstrap (cold == 1), msleep() always returns 0 without actually
sleeping. The Intel 2200BG driver uses NdisMSleep() to wait for
the NIC's firmware to come to life, and fails to load if NdisMSleep()
doesn't actually delay. As a workaround, if msleep() (and hence
ndis_thsuspend()) returns 0, use a hard DELAY() to sleep instead).
This is not really the right thing to do, but we can't really do much
else. At the very least, this makes the Intel driver happy.
There are probably other drivers that fail in this way during bootstrap.
Unfortunately, the only workaround for those is to avoid pre-loading
them and kldload them once the system is running instead.
16C950. Adding it here doesn't unlock any of the cool 16C950 features
(like the 128 byte fifo, the different prescalor, etc), but it does
seem to get it working for me in light testing.
Card Provided by: Ihsan Dogan
pumping data despite our scsi data counters being at 0, something has
gone massively wrong. The consequence of happily ignoring this is more
DMA phase errors and a disk full of spammed sectors. Instead, panic on
the first occurance to hopefully limit the damage.
MFC After: 3 days
latest 82550 and 82551 chipsets (revision IDs 0x0e, 0x0f and 0x10).
We were only enabling it for revisions 0x0c and 0x0d, now it's
enabled for any 8255x NIC with a revision ID bigger than 0x0c. It
should be safe, and this is what Intel does in their open source
driver.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Tested by: Pavel Lobach lobach_pavel at mail dot ru
This also removes the warning timeout on the taskqueues stalling as
I'm tired of getting ATA error reports for problems in other parts ;)
Misc cosmetic and comment cleanups now we are here.
number of task threads to start on boot. Go back to a default of 3
threads to work around lost battery state problems. Users that need
a setting of 1 can set this via the tunable. I am investigating the
underlying issues and this tunable can be removed once they are solved.
MFC after: 2 days
includes the MD header for us. Do not include <machine/specialreg.h>
as it is not a header file that can be included from MI files. It
is included from <machine/pmc_mdep.h> if so needed and possible.
Ok'd: jkoshy@
ioctls are now handled explicitly, but we can't really do anything
with them unless the NIC is up (trying to get/set a parameter when
the NDIS driver isn't running always yields an error). If something
invokes either of these ioctls and the NIC isn't initialized, punt
to the default ieee80211_ioctl() routine.
While we wait for holds to be released, print a list of who holds us
back once per second.
Use the new KPI from GEOM instead of vfs_mount.c calling g_waitidle().
Use the new KPI also from ata.
With ATAmkIII's newbusification, ata could narrowly miss the window
and ad0 would not exist when we tried to mount root.
dc0: MII without any PHY!
We have to enable the connection to the MII first. Doing so fixes the
problem cards without breaking the older, working cards.
Bad card provided by: deischen
- ncr53c9x.c:
1.108: Remove unreachable break after return and goto statements.
1.109: avoid strong words; use 'screw' instead
1.110: Fix some typos. From Tom Cosgrove via jmc@openbsd.
1.114: nuke trailing whitespace
1.107 was already merged, 1.112 and 1.113 are not relevant for FreeBSD.
1.111 is a functional change and will be merged later.
- ncr53c9xreg.h:
1.12: DMA, not dma nor Dma.
1.13: Fix some typos. From Tom Cosgrove via jmc@openbsd.
1.14: nuke trailing whitespace
- ncr53c9xvar.h:
1.43: Fix some typos. From Tom Cosgrove via jmc@openbsd.
1.44: Constify.
1.42 and 1.46 were already merged, 1.45 is not relevant for FreeBSD.
- Merge esp_sbus.c rev. 1.31 from NetBSD: nuke trailing whitespace.
Rev. 1.28 and 1.30 were already merged, 1.29 is not relevant for FreeBSD.
- Remove unused headers.
- Use BUS_PROBE_DEFAULT.
- Use __func__ instead of hardcoded function names in error messages.
- Correct some comments.
- Correct some function declarations to match their prototypes.
- Some style(9) fixes (don't use function calls in initializers; indentation).
- Zero the allocated structs to avoid problems with uninitialized members.
- Remove the ifdef'ed out SBus interrupt priority code and the hook for
ncr53c9x_reset(), remove the unused SBus interrupt priority member from
esp_softc. On FreeBSD setting the SBus interrupt priority is entirely done
in sbus(4) and the reset function isn't even really used in NetBSD.
- s,dma,DMA, in comments.
- Make the code fit in 80 columns.
this buffer anyway so the constraint that it had to be DMA capable only
caused pain when devices failed to aquire the memory. Use a regular
malloc instead with sndbuf_setup.
Approved by: tanimura (mentor)
- Split core DRM routines back into their own module, rather than using the
nasty templated system like before.
- Development-class R300 support in radeon driver (requires userland pieces, of
course).
- Mach64 driver (haven't tested in a while -- my mach64s no longer fit in the
testbox). Covers Rage Pros, Rage Mobility P/M, Rage XL, and some others.
- i915 driver files, which just need to get drm_drv.c fixed to allow attachment
to the drmsub device. Covers i830 through i915 integrated graphics.
- savage driver files, which should require minimal changes to work. Covers the
Savage3D, Savage IX/MX, Savage 4, ProSavage.
- Support for color and texture tiling and HyperZ features of Radeon.
Thanks to: scottl (much p4 handholding)
Jung-uk Kim (helpful prodding)
PR: [1] kern/76879, [2] kern/72548
Submitted by: [1] Alex, lesha at intercaf dot ru
[2] Shaun Jurrens, shaun at shamz dot net
This allows to attach to the children (ATA devices) even without a
driver being attached. This allows atapi-cam to do its work both
with and without the pure ATAPI driver being present.
ATA patches by /me
ATAPI-cam pathes by Thomas
printf's during a verbose boot is more intuitive (the BAR listings and
interrupt routing info now comes after the config header dump rather than
just before it).
Save a memory dereference in the ISR by passing this in directly.
Calling pps_capture is MP safe for all other operations on struct
pps_state, so there's no need to aquire the lock before we do this,
even from a fast ISR. Avoid dereferencing sc->ppbus until after
pps_capture is called as well. These actions reduce somewhat the
cache effects that cause variance in interrupt times. On an
especially slow test machine (300MHz Cyrix GXm), this reduces the
interrupt latency about about 10% (from 21us to 19us) and helps a
little with the variance (although most of the variance seems to be
caused by lots of interrupt masking).
This also happens fixes one or two of bde's style issues.
we start turning any of them back on again. This works around a bug in
some BIOSen that alias two different link devices for APIC vs ATPIC modes
onto the same physical hardware link.
Submitted by: njl
Tested by: Antoine Brodin antoine dot brodin at laposte dot net
pcib_route_interrupt interface. Since there's only one interrupt pin
in the CardBus form factor, everybody gets to share it. Implement
cbb_route_interrupt to return the interrupt we have.
Suggested by: bms
Otherwise, busses that implement the pcib interface that forget to
implement pcib_route_interrupt would return EIO, which the caller
interprets as 'use interrupt 6'. This is likely the cause of much of
the grief that we had when I enabled power modes for the cardbus
bridge, since the card needed to reroute the interrupt to it and it
was getting 6 which was d by the pccbb sanity checks.
3ware's 9xxx series controllers. This corresponds to
the 9.2 release (for FreeBSD 5.2.1) on the 3ware website.
Highlights of this release are:
1. The driver has been re-architected to use a "Common Layer"
(all tw_cl* files), which is a consolidation of all OS-independent
parts of the driver. The FreeBSD OS specific portions of the
driver go into an "OS Layer" (all tw_osl* files).
This re-architecture is to achieve better maintainability, consistency
of behavior across OS's, and better portability to new OS's (drivers
for new OS's can be written by just adding an OS Layer that's specific
to the OS, by complying to a "Common Layer Programming Interface" API.
2. The driver takes advantage of multiple processors.
3. The driver has a new firmware image bundled, the new features of which
include Online Capacity Expansion and multi-lun support, among others.
More details about 3ware's 9.2 release can be found here:
http://www.3ware.com/download/Escalade9000Series/9.2/9.2_Release_Notes_Web.pdf
Since the Common Layer is used across OS's, the FreeBSD specific include
path for header files (/sys/dev/twa) is not part of the #include pre-processor
directive in any of the source files. For being able to integrate twa into
the kernel despite this, Makefile.<arch> has been changed to add the include
path to CFLAGS.
Reviewed by: scottl
problems here, it became clear we were being too complex.
o Don't keep track of resources in two places
o Use resource_list_purge instead of rolling our own
o Just reassign the ownership of the resource, rather than freeing it
and reallocating it.
o Fix compile problems when sizeof(u_long) != sizeof(int)
this code:
o rid is stored in the resource, so don't bother keeping track of it here.
o Implement memory space
o Don't try to activate 'memory card' CFEs. This is type memory, as opposed
to the memory resource.
resource_list_find. Check to make sure that rle is not NULL and panic
if it is (but it appears that resource_list_add already panics, so I'm
not entirely sure it is necessary now).
Add a test to make sure we have a interrupt resource when we're
disabling it. This is also a cannot happen, but the extra care
shoudln't hurt.
Found by: Coventry tool via sam@
whether or not the receive pipe is stopped. This ensures that we
do not attempt to start the same transfer twice, and it allows
ucomstop() to skip the restarting of the read pipe if it was not
originally running, such as when called indirectly from ucomreadcb().
PR: kern/79420
MFC after: 1 day
layer, but with a twist.
The twist has to do with the fact that Microsoft supports structured
exception handling in kernel mode. On the i386 arch, exception handling
is implemented by hanging an exception registration list off the
Thread Environment Block (TEB), and the TEB is accessed via the %fs
register. The problem is, we use %fs as a pointer to the pcpu stucture,
which means any driver that tries to write through %fs:0 will overwrite
the curthread pointer and make a serious mess of things.
To get around this, Project Evil now creates a special entry in
the GDT on each processor. When we call into Windows code, a context
switch routine will fix up %fs so it points to our new descriptor,
which in turn points to a fake TEB. When the Windows code returns,
or calls out to an external routine, we swap %fs back again. Currently,
Project Evil makes use of GDT slot 7, which is all 0s by default.
I fully expect someone to jump up and say I can't do that, but I
couldn't find any code that makes use of this entry anywhere. Sadly,
this was the only method I could come up with that worked on both
UP and SMP. (Modifying the LDT works on UP, but becomes incredibly
complicated on SMP.) If necessary, the context switching stuff can
be yanked out while preserving the convention calling wrappers.
(Fortunately, it looks like Microsoft uses some special epilog/prolog
code on amd64 to implement exception handling, so the same nastiness
won't be necessary on that arch.)
The advantages are:
- Any driver that uses %fs as though it were a TEB pointer won't
clobber pcpu.
- All the __stdcall/__fastcall/__regparm stuff that's specific to
gcc goes away.
Also, while I'm here, switch NdisGetSystemUpTime() back to using
nanouptime() again. It turns out nanouptime() is way more accurate
than just using ticks(). On slower machines, the Atheros drivers
I tested seem to take a long time to associate due to the loss
in accuracy.
systems that boot with this value at the lowest setting. Change the
default boot config back to "leave frequency as BIOS set it". Also, fix
buglet where acpi_throttle wouldn't be used if p4tcc was present but
disabled by the user.
MFC after: 1 week
Affects to people WITH an AD1888 codec, the system will output to the port
labeled "speaker" instead of microphone. System will work the same in
multiple operating systems.
If people are currently using their systems with this codec they will need
to swap their output ports.
I have _not_ checked audio input or line input (basically, I have checked
nothing other than line-out).
I believe this is an appropriate change, it makes us consistent with
documentation, and other operating systems. Furthermore, this feature
(playing) is the vast majority of sound activities, so if this makes is
right for playback and wrong for recording... playback is more important,
and we can fix recoding in the future without worries of screwing people
again in the future (since we'll be "right" on the playback).
Submitted by: David Cross
instructs the driver to avoid using Keyboard Interface Test command.
This command causes problems with some non-compliant hardware, resulting
in machine being abruptly powered down early in the boot process.
Particularly it's known that HP ZV5000 and Compaq R3000Z notebooks
are affected by this problem.
Due to popularity of those models this patch is good MFC5.4 candidate.
PR: 67745
Submitted by: Jung-uk Kim jkim at niksun.com
MFC after: 1 days
- newbus plumbing. Each atapicam bus is a child off of a parent ata channel
bus. This is somewhat of a hack, but allows the ata core to be completely
free of atapicam knowledge.
- No more global lists of softc's and no more groping around in internal ata
structures on each command.
- Giant-free operation of the completion handler.
- Per-bus mutex for protecting the busy list and synchronizing detach.
- Lots of streamlining and dead code elimination, better adherence to the
CAM locking protocol.
This feature still requires that the appropriate atapi-* driver be present
for each atapi device that you want to talk to (i.e. atapi-cd for cdroms).
It does work both compiled into the kernel and as a loadable module.
Reviewed by: thomas, sos
critical_enter() and critical_exit() are now solely a mechanism for
deferring kernel preemptions. They no longer have any affect on
interrupts. This means that standalone critical sections are now very
cheap as they are simply unlocked integer increments and decrements for the
common case.
Spin mutexes now use a separate KPI implemented in MD code: spinlock_enter()
and spinlock_exit(). This KPI is responsible for providing whatever MD
guarantees are needed to ensure that a thread holding a spin lock won't
be preempted by any other code that will try to lock the same lock. For
now all archs continue to block interrupts in a "spinlock section" as they
did formerly in all critical sections. Note that I've also taken this
opportunity to push a few things into MD code rather than MI. For example,
critical_fork_exit() no longer exists. Instead, MD code ensures that new
threads have the correct state when they are created. Also, we no longer
try to fixup the idlethreads for APs in MI code. Instead, each arch sets
the initial curthread and adjusts the state of the idle thread it borrows
in order to perform the initial context switch.
This change is largely a big NOP, but the cleaner separation it provides
will allow for more efficient alternative locking schemes in other parts
of the kernel (bare critical sections rather than per-CPU spin mutexes
for per-CPU data for example).
Reviewed by: grehan, cognet, arch@, others
Tested on: i386, alpha, sparc64, powerpc, arm, possibly more
to see what features they may support before calling identify/probe/attach.
This is necessary because the ACPI 3.0 spec requires driver support be
advertised before running any methods. For now, the flags are as specified
in for the _PDC and _OSC methods but we can support private flags as needed.
Add an implementation of this for acpi_cpu. It checks all its children
(notably cpufreq drivers) and calls the _PDC method to report the results.
creating the /dev/dpti%d entry that the software expects. This is just
a band-aid until either someone (hopefully) rewrites the utilities, or all
asr/dpt cards in existance get blasted into the sun.
the type of object represented by the handle argument.
- Allow vm_mmap() to map device memory via cdev objects in addition to
vnodes and anonymous memory. Note that mmaping a cdev directly does not
currently perform any MAC checks like mapping a vnode does.
- Unbreak the DRM getbufs ioctl by having it call vm_mmap() directly on the
cdev the ioctl is acting on rather than trying to find a suitable vnode
to map from.
Reviewed by: alc, arch@
series of controllers. Areca provides a CLI and HTTP management tool for
FreeBSD/i386 and FreeBSD/amd64 on their website. Many thanks to Areca for
their support of FreeBSD. Thanks also to Mike Tansca and Sentex Communications
for donating hardware.
Obtained from: Erich Chen <erich at areca com tw>