Commit Graph

550 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jkim
99ef252d15 Add BPF Just-In-Time compiler support for ng_bpf(4).
The sysctl is changed from net.bpf.jitter.enable to net.bpf_jitter.enable
and this controls both bpf(4) and ng_bpf(4) now.
2005-12-07 21:30:47 +00:00
jkim
055dc8e121 Add experimental BPF Just-In-Time compiler for amd64 and i386.
Use the following kernel configuration option to enable:

	options BPF_JITTER

If you want to use bpf_filter() instead (e. g., debugging), do:

	sysctl net.bpf.jitter.enable=0

to turn it off.

Currently BIOCSETWF and bpf_mtap2() are unsupported, and bpf_mtap() is
partially supported because 1) no need, 2) avoid expensive m_copydata(9).

Obtained from:	WinPcap 3.1 (for i386)
2005-12-06 02:58:12 +00:00
ru
70cc5f871a Reduction. 2005-11-27 21:52:30 +00:00
ru
cbff67d85c Make config(8) understand ORed dependecies in "files*" and
improve tracking of known devices.  Bump config(8) version.
2005-11-27 21:41:58 +00:00
ru
2371e0885f Remove duplicates. 2005-11-26 08:50:20 +00:00
ru
bef2e3c846 Pull up sys/modules/acpi/acpi/Makefile,v 1.10 change by iedowse@.
This should fix another parallel make breakage, reported by pjd@.
2005-11-21 20:11:39 +00:00
ru
61c0ca0abb Add /dev/speaker support to amd64.
The following repo-copies were made (by Mark Murray):

sys/i386/isa/spkr.c -> sys/dev/speaker/spkr.c
sys/i386/include/speaker.h -> sys/dev/speaker/speaker.h
share/man/man4/man4.i386/spkr.4 -> share/man/man4/spkr.4
2005-11-11 09:57:32 +00:00
imp
c8edc59b40 Add support for XBOX to the FreeBSD port. The xbox architecture is
nearly identical to wintel/ia32, with a couple of tweaks.  Since it is
so similar to ia32, it is optionally added to a i386 kernel.  This
port is preliminary, but seems to work well.  Further improvements
will improve the interaction with syscons(4), port Linux nforce driver
and future versions of the xbox.

This supports the 64MB and 128MB boxes.  You'll need the most recent
CVS version of Cromwell (the Linux BIOS for the XBOX) to boot.

Rink will be maintaining this port, and is interested in feedback.
He's setup a website http://xbox-bsd.nl to report the latest
developments.

Any silly mistakes are my fault.

Submitted by: Rink P.W. Springer rink at stack dot nl and
	Ed Schouten ed at fxq dot nl
2005-11-09 03:55:40 +00:00
joerg
df94bb0494 Finally complete some work on generalizing the PCF8584-based I2C
drivers I started quite some time before.

Retire the old i386-only pcf driver, and activate the new general
driver that has been sitting in the tree already for quite some
time.

Build the i2c modules for sparc64 architectures as well (where I've
been developing all this on).
2005-10-28 15:58:19 +00:00
anholt
2bb9efbdc6 Add a new AGP driver for ATI IGP chipsets. The driver is based on reading of
the Linux driver, since specs are unavailable.  Many thanks to Adam Kirchhoff
for multiple useful testing cycles, and Ralf Wostrack for the final fix to get
it working.

PR:		i386/75251
Submitted by:	anholt
2005-09-17 03:36:47 +00:00
jhb
d2dbbf899f Remove the el(4) driver for 3Com 3c501 ISA NICs from HEAD as threatened
earlier as no one has stepped up to test recent changes to the driver.
Oddly, the module was actually turned on on ia64 though I'm fairly certain
that no ia64 machine has ever had or will ever have an ISA slot.

Axe borrowed from:	phk
2005-08-26 13:42:04 +00:00
pjd
352b6c307b Add VIA/ACE "PadLock" support as a crypto(9) driver.
HW donated by:			Mike Tancsa <mike@sentex.net>
Most of the code obtained from:	OpenBSD
MFC after:			3 days
2005-08-18 00:30:22 +00:00
dumbbell
8a2e09741f Connect reiserfs build to every platforms, not only i386 and pc98.
Reviewed by:	mux (mentor)
Approved by:	re (dougb)
2005-06-21 10:17:55 +00:00
dumbbell
21b06667dd Moving reiserfs from sys/gnu to sys/gnu/fs. This was discussed on arch@.
Reviewed by:	mux (mentor)
Approved by:	re (scottl)
2005-06-18 17:10:50 +00:00
marcel
70b9333cb4 Refactor the NETSMBCRYPTO option so that it does the same on all
platforms. ARM is excluded as it doesn't yet have any crypto
sources.

Approved by: re (dwhite)
MFC after: 1 day
2005-06-12 00:47:21 +00:00
marius
9afc57a1d6 - Hook up the new locations of the atkbdc(4), atkbd(4) and psm(4) source
files after they were repo-copied to sys/dev/atkbdc. The sources of
  atkbdc(4) and its children were moved to the new location in preparation
  for adding an EBus front-end to atkbdc(4) for use on sparc64; i.e. in
  order to not further scatter them over the whole tree which would have
  been the result of adding atkbdc_ebus.c in e.g. sys/sparc64/ebus. Another
  reason for the repo-copies was that some of the sources were misfiled,
  e.g. sys/isa/atkbd_isa.c wasn't ISA-specific at all but for hanging
  atkbd(4) off of atkbdc(4) and was renamed to atkbd_atkbdc.c accordingly.
  Most of sys/isa/psm.c, i.e. expect for its PSMC PNP part, also isn't
  ISA-specific.
- Separate the parts of atkbdc_isa.c which aren't actually ISA-specific
  but are shareable between different atkbdc(4) bus front-ends into
  atkbdc_subr.c (repo-copied from atkbdc_isa.c). While here use
  bus_generic_rl_alloc_resource() and bus_generic_rl_release_resource()
  respectively in atkbdc_isa.c instead of rolling own versions.
- Add sparc64 MD bits to atkbdc(4) and atkbd(4) and an EBus front-end for
  atkbdc(4). PS/2 controllers and input devices are used on a couple of
  Sun OEM boards and occur on either the EBus or the ISA bus. Depending on
  the board it's either the only on-board mean to connect a keyboard and
  mouse or an alternative to either RS232 or USB devices.
- Wrap the PSMC PNP part of psm.c in #ifdef DEV_ISA so it can be compiled
  without isa(4) (e.g. for EBus-only machines). This ISA-specific part
  isn't separated into its own source file, yet, as it requires more work
  than was feasible for 6.0 in order to do it in a clean way. Actually
  philip@ is working on a rewrite of psm(4) so a more comprehensive
  clean-up and separation of hardware dependent and independent parts is
  expected to happen after 6.0.

Tested on:	i386, sparc64 (AX1105, AXe and AXi boards)
Reviewed by:	philip
2005-06-10 20:56:38 +00:00
jkoshy
1d3209ab83 MFP4:
- 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.
2005-06-09 19:45:09 +00:00
dfr
874478d7fd Add support for XMM registers in GDB for x86 processors that support
SSE (or its successors).

Reviewed by: marcel, davidxu
MFC After: 2 weeks
2005-05-31 09:43:04 +00:00
dumbbell
804a10a990 Connect the ReiserFS filesystem to the build (i386 only).
Approved by:	mux (mentor)
2005-05-24 12:28:21 +00:00
scottl
b886087959 Update the file.* entries for the new home of hwpmc 2005-04-29 02:40:16 +00:00
wpaul
b493dd59e2 Throw the switch on the new driver generation/loading mechanism. From
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.
2005-04-24 20:21:22 +00:00
ru
7f4ce62259 Clean generated os+%DIKED-nve.h. 2005-04-22 19:55:52 +00:00
imp
9772dfc162 Need more files for i386, need all the files for pc98. 2005-04-19 21:40:07 +00:00
njl
0a1c7b06fb Hook smist up to the kernel build. 2005-04-19 16:39:23 +00:00
jkoshy
dc3444cd91 Bring a working snapshot of hwpmc(4), its associated libraries, userland utilities
and documentation into -CURRENT.

Bump FreeBSD_version.

Reviewed by:	alc, jhb (kernel changes)
2005-04-19 04:01:25 +00:00
wpaul
9b4df77d35 Add winx32_wrap.S to files.i386 for the NDISulator. 2005-04-11 16:23:13 +00:00
jhb
41cadaa11e Divorce critical sections from spinlocks. Critical sections as denoted by
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
2005-04-04 21:53:56 +00:00
scottl
deb672e8b2 Glue the arcmsr driver into the tree. 2005-03-31 20:21:43 +00:00
njl
08fabe830f Add powernow to kernel build target. 2005-03-27 21:50:30 +00:00
obrien
04ecb96d39 FreeBSD consumer bits of the nForce MCP NIC binary blob.
Demanded by:	DES
Encouraged by:	scottl
Obtained from:	q@onthenet.com.au (partially)
KNF'ed by:	obrien
2005-03-12 00:29:30 +00:00
scottl
234c4487a0 Move all of the hptmv files to /sys/dev/hptmv so that they won't be mistaken
for being on a CVS vendor branch.  The files were moved via a repo-copy.
2005-03-02 05:14:28 +00:00
wpaul
efb3e8caac - Correct one aspect of the driver_object/device_object/IRP framework:
when we create a PDO, the driver_object associated with it is that
  of the parent driver, not the driver we're trying to attach. For
  example, if we attach a PCI device, the PDO we pass to the NdisAddDevice()
  function should contain a pointer to fake_pci_driver, not to the NDIS
  driver itself. For PCI or PCMCIA devices this doesn't matter because
  the child never needs to talk to the parent bus driver, but for USB,
  the child needs to be able to send IRPs to the parent USB bus driver, and
  for that to work the parent USB bus driver has to be hung off the PDO.

  This involves modifying windrv_lookup() so that we can search for
  bus drivers by name, if necessary. Our fake bus drivers attach themselves
  as "PCI Bus," "PCCARD Bus" and "USB Bus," so we can search for them
  using those names.

  The individual attachment stubs now create and attach PDOs to the
  parent bus drivers instead of hanging them off the NDIS driver's
  object, and in if_ndis.c, we now search for the correct driver
  object depending on the bus type, and use that to find the correct PDO.

  With this fix, I can get my sample USB ethernet driver to deliver
  an IRP to my fake parent USB bus driver's dispatch routines.

- Add stub modules for USB support: subr_usbd.c, usbd_var.h and
  if_ndis_usb.c. The subr_usbd.c module is hooked up the build
  but currently doesn't do very much. It provides the stub USB
  parent driver object and a dispatch routine for
  IRM_MJ_INTERNAL_DEVICE_CONTROL. The only exported function at
  the moment is USBD_GetUSBDIVersion(). The if_ndis_usb.c stub
  compiles, but is not hooked up to the build yet. I'm putting
  these here so I can keep them under source code control as I
  flesh them out.
2005-02-24 21:49:14 +00:00
njl
424be44ec2 Remove CPU_ENABLE_TCC and hook the cpufreq p4tcc up to the build. 2005-02-23 16:43:44 +00:00
njl
b6857b260a Hook EST up to the build. 2005-02-20 20:29:04 +00:00
imp
8ea73f2d54 Break out obscure ISA cards into their own files, as well as ne2000
and wd80x3 support.  Make the obscure ISA cards optional, and add
those options to NOTES on i386 (note: the ifdef around the whole code
is for module building).  Tweak pc98 ed support to include wd80x3 too.
Add goo for alpha too.

The affected cards are the 3Com 3C503, HP LAN+ and SIC (whatever that
is).  I couldn't find any of these for sale on ebay, so they are
untested.  If you have one of these cards, and send it to me, I'll
ensure that you have no future problems with it...

Minor cleanups as well by using functions rather than cut and paste
code for some probing operations (where the function call overhead is
lost in the noise).

Remove use of kvtop, since they aren't required anymore.  This driver
needs to get its memory mapped act together, however, and use bus
space.  It doesn't right now.

This reduces the size of if_ed.ko from about 51k to 33k on my laptop.
2005-02-09 20:03:40 +00:00
wpaul
df89b62698 Next step on the road to IRPs: create and use an imitation of the
Windows DRIVER_OBJECT and DEVICE_OBJECT mechanism so that we can
simulate driver stacking.

In Windows, each loaded driver image is attached to a DRIVER_OBJECT
structure. Windows uses the registry to match up a given vendor/device
ID combination with a corresponding DRIVER_OBJECT. When a driver image
is first loaded, its DriverEntry() routine is invoked, which sets up
the AddDevice() function pointer in the DRIVER_OBJECT and creates
a dispatch table (based on IRP major codes). When a Windows bus driver
detects a new device, it creates a Physical Device Object (PDO) for
it. This is a DEVICE_OBJECT structure, with semantics analagous to
that of a device_t in FreeBSD. The Windows PNP manager will invoke
the driver's AddDevice() function and pass it pointers to the DRIVER_OBJECT
and the PDO.

The AddDevice() function then creates a new DRIVER_OBJECT structure of
its own. This is known as the Functional Device Object (FDO) and
corresponds roughly to a private softc instance. The driver uses
IoAttachDeviceToDeviceStack() to add this device object to the
driver stack for this PDO. Subsequent drivers (called filter drivers
in Windows-speak) can be loaded which add themselves to the stack.
When someone issues an IRP to a device, it travel along the stack
passing through several possible filter drivers until it reaches
the functional driver (which actually knows how to talk to the hardware)
at which point it will be completed. This is how Windows achieves
driver layering.

Project Evil now simulates most of this. if_ndis now has a modevent
handler which will use MOD_LOAD and MOD_UNLOAD events to drive the
creation and destruction of DRIVER_OBJECTs. (The load event also
does the relocation/dynalinking of the image.) We don't have a registry,
so the DRIVER_OBJECTS are stored in a linked list for now. Eventually,
the list entry will contain the vendor/device ID list extracted from
the .INF file. When ndis_probe() is called and detectes a supported
device, it will create a PDO for the device instance and attach it
to the DRIVER_OBJECT just as in Windows. ndis_attach() will then call
our NdisAddDevice() handler to create the FDO. The NDIS miniport block
is now a device extension hung off the FDO, just as it is in Windows.
The miniport characteristics table is now an extension hung off the
DRIVER_OBJECT as well (the characteristics are the same for all devices
handled by a given driver, so they don't need to be per-instance.)
We also do an IoAttachDeviceToDeviceStack() to put the FDO on the
stack for the PDO. There are a couple of fake bus drivers created
for the PCI and pccard buses. Eventually, there will be one for USB,
which will actually accept USB IRP.s

Things should still work just as before, only now we do things in
the proper order and maintain the correct framework to support passing
IRPs between drivers.

Various changes:

- corrected the comments about IRQL handling in subr_hal.c to more
  accurately reflect reality
- update ndiscvt to make the drv_data symbol in ndis_driver_data.h a
  global so that if_ndis_pci.o and/or if_ndis_pccard.o can see it.
- Obtain the softc pointer from the miniport block by referencing
  the PDO rather than a private pointer of our own (nmb_ifp is no
  longer used)
- implement IoAttachDeviceToDeviceStack(), IoDetachDevice(),
  IoGetAttachedDevice(), IoAllocateDriverObjectExtension(),
  IoGetDriverObjectExtension(), IoCreateDevice(), IoDeleteDevice(),
  IoAllocateIrp(), IoReuseIrp(), IoMakeAssociatedIrp(), IoFreeIrp(),
  IoInitializeIrp()
- fix a few mistakes in the driver_object and device_object definitions
- add a new module, kern_windrv.c, to handle the driver registration
  and relocation/dynalinkign duties (which don't really belong in
  kern_ndis.c).
- made ndis_block and ndis_chars in the ndis_softc stucture pointers
  and modified all references to it
- fixed NdisMRegisterMiniport() and NdisInitializeWrapper() so they
  work correctly with the new driver_object mechanism
- changed ndis_attach() to call NdisAddDevice() instead of ndis_load_driver()
  (which is now deprecated)
- used ExAllocatePoolWithTag()/ExFreePool() in lookaside list routines
  instead of kludged up alloc/free routines
- added kern_windrv.c to sys/modules/ndis/Makefile and files.i386.
2005-02-08 17:23:25 +00:00
mdodd
f1d4551d87 - Split out PCI support.
- Add previously removed ISA support.

Submitted by:	David S. Madole <david AT madole.net>
2005-02-03 23:01:01 +00:00
imp
c277942994 Sort entries.
Remove a couple of 'card' lines that were somehow missed when OLDCARD was
desupported.
2005-01-10 04:40:23 +00:00
imp
79c363eb00 move all the card entries to files.pc98
style change: regularize tabbing
2005-01-04 06:07:25 +00:00
imp
a9476981be Separate mse driver into a core driver and a bus attachments. Separate out
the ISA and CBUS (called isa on pc98) attachments.  Eliminate all PC98
ifdefs in the process (the driver in pc98/pc98/mse.c was a copy of the one
in i386/isa/mse.c with PC98 ifdefs).  Create a module for this driver.

I've tested this my PC-9821RaS40 with moused.  I've not tested this on i386
because I have no InPort cards, or similar such things.  NEC standardized
on bus mice very early, long before ps/2 mice ports apeared, so all PC-98
machines supported by FreeBSD/pc98 have bus mice, I believe.

Reviewed by: nyan-san
2004-12-12 20:05:50 +00:00
sam
45e73044fe update for new ath hal 2004-12-08 18:20:53 +00:00
imp
10cc2ac30b It appears that 'kbd' device has never been used and isn't needed.
Build tests show that this isn't used for GENERIC or LINT, and nobody
seemed to know why they existed.
2004-11-23 00:00:43 +00:00
imp
8dabebd604 After discussions with Nate, repo copy the acpi assist drivers from
i386 to dev/acpi_support.  In theory, these devices could be found
other than in i386 machines only as amd64 becomes more popular.  These
drivers don't appear to do anything i386 specific, so move them to
dev/acpi_support.  Move config lines to files so that those
architectures that don't support kernel modules can build them into
the kernel.  At the same time, rename acpi_snc to acpi_sony to follow
the lead of all the other specialty devices.
2004-11-15 05:54:15 +00:00
imp
08094f6af8 pbio has moved to dev/pbio
Prodded by: peter
2004-11-11 04:53:46 +00:00
scottl
ae662d81f3 Hook the hptmv driver up to the build. 2004-10-24 08:53:40 +00:00
imp
03e8fdc421 Port pbio to HEAD.
OK'd by: dds
2004-10-07 16:21:03 +00:00
obrien
963044797e AMD64 on-CPU GART support.
This also applies to AMD64 HW running 'i386' OS.

Submitted by:	Jung-uk Kim <jkim@niksun.com>
Integration by:	obrien
2004-08-16 12:25:48 +00:00
rwatson
abf6ea2973 Add an "options MP_WATCHDOG" to i386. This option allows one of the
logical CPUs on a system to be used as a dedicated watchdog to cause a
drop to the debugger and/or generate an NMI to the boot processor if
the kernel ceases to respond.  A sysctl enables the watchdog running
out of the processor's idle thread; a callout is launched to reset a
timer in the watchdog.  If the callout fails to reset the timer for ten
seconds, the watchdog will fire.  The sysctl allows you to select which
CPU will run the watchdog.

A sample "debug.leak_schedlock" is included, which causes a sysctl to
spin holding sched_lock in order to trigger the watchdog.  On my Xeons,
the watchdog is able to detect this failure mode and break into the
debugger, which cannot otherwise be done without an NMI button.

This option does not currently work with sched_ule due to ule's push
notion of scheduling, similar to machdep.hlt_logical_cpus failing to
work with that scheduler.

On face value, this might seem somewhat inefficient, but there are a
lot of dual-processor Xeons with HTT around, so using one as a watchdog
for testing is not as inefficient as one might fear.
2004-08-15 18:02:09 +00:00
markm
e67812831a Oops. Didn't commit this as part of the mem module fix. 2004-08-04 20:49:43 +00:00
markm
a6c822020d Break out the MI part of the /dev/[k]mem and /dev/io drivers into
their own directory and module, leaving the MD parts in the MD
area (the MD parts _are_ part of the modules). /dev/mem and /dev/io
are now loadable modules, thus taking us one step further towards
a kernel created entirely out of modules. Of course, there is nothing
preventing the kernel from having these statically compiled.
2004-08-01 11:40:54 +00:00