it attaches to all existing NATM network interfaces in the system
and creates a HARP physical interface for each of them. This allows
us to use the same set of ATM drivers for all ATM stuff. It is
possible to use the same interface for HARP, NATM and netgraph at the
same time.
with a ProATM-155 and an IDT evaluation board and should also work
with a ProATM-25 (it seems to work at least, I cannot really measure
what the card emits). The driver has been tested on i386 and sparc64,
but should work an other archs also. It supports UBR, CBR, ABR and VBR;
AAL0, AAL5 and AALraw. As an additional feature VCI/VPI 0/0 can be
opened for receiving in AALraw mode and receives all cells not claimed
by other open VCs (even cells with invalid GFC, VPI and VCI fields and
OAM cells).
Thanks to Christian Bucari from ProSum for lending two cards and answering
my questions.
large to huge amounts of small or medium sized receive buffers. The problem
with these situations is that they eat up the available DMA address space
very quickly when using mbufs or even mbuf clusters. Additionally this
facility provides a direct mapping between 32-bit integers and these buffers.
This is needed for devices originally designed for 32-bit systems. Ususally
the virtual address of the buffer is used as a handle to find the buffer as
soon as it is returned by the card. This does not work for 64-bit machines
and hence this mapping is needed.
build it on the i386 and alpha architectures, where this has been
set up (there is also a sparc64-bitops.h in sys/gnu/ext2fs, but it
appears to be broken and it is not linked up).
This should unbreak the sparc64 LINT build.
built by LINT. Also override a number of knobs for enabling and
disabling various modules in the ALL_MODULES case to further increase
LINT's module coverage.
Submitted by: ru
on friday 13th and without making a universe). This adds struct and
constant definitions for ATM traffic parameters and re-enables the
build of the midway driver.
Tested by: make universe
from the tree until it is fixed. Since it is an atm driver, it isn't
commonly used so this will not negatively impact too many people.
harti can reconnect it when he resurfaces and corrects the en module
problems. This should allow snapshots to start succeeding again.
Reported by: lots of people
It currently supports the PMC Sierra Lite, Ultra and 622 chips and
the IDT 77105. The driver handles media options and state in a consistent
manner for ATM drivers. The next commit to the midway driver will make
it use utopia.
following changes have been done:
- stylify. The original code was too hard to read.
- get rid of a number of compilation options (Adaptec-only, Eni-only, no-DMA).
- more debugging features.
- locking. This is not correct yet in the absence of interface layer locking,
but is correct enough to not to cause lock order reversals.
- remove RAW mode. There are no users of this in the tree and I doubt that
there are any.
- remove NetBSD compatibility code. There was no way to keep NetBSD non-busdma
and FreeBSD busdma code together.
- if_en now buildable as a module.
This has been actively tested on sparc64 and i386 with ENI server and
client cards and an Adaptec card (thanks to kjc).
Reviewed by: mdodd, arr
ethernet controller. The driver has been tested with the LinkSys
USB200M adapter. I know for a fact that there are other devices out
there with this chip but don't have all the USB vendor/device IDs.
Note: I'm not sure if this will force the driver to end up in the
install kernel image or not. Special magic needs to be done to exclude
it to keep the boot floppies from bloating again, someone please
advise.
permit users and groups to bind ports for TCP or UDP, and is intended
to be combined with the recently committed support for
net.inet.ip.portrange.reservedhigh. The policy is twiddled using
sysctl(8). To use this module, you will need to compile in MAC
support, and probably set reservedhigh to 0, then twiddle
security.mac.portacl.rules to set things as desired. This policy
module only restricts ports explicitly bound using bind(), not
implicitly bound ports where the port number is selected by the
IP stack. It appears to work properly in my local configuration,
but needs more broad testing.
A sample policy might be:
# sysctl security.mac.portacl.rules="uid:425:tcp:80,uid:425:tcp:79"
This permits uid 425 to bind TCP sockets to ports 79 and 80. Currently
no distinction is made for incoming vs. outgoing ports with TCP,
although that would probably be easy to add.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
for the agp module, and add agp to the list of modules to compile for alpha.
Add an alpha_mb() to agp_flush_cache for alpha -- it's not correct but may
improve the situation, and it's what linux and NetBSD do.
Interface (SMAPI) BIOS, which is present on some IBM
Thinkpad models (560, 600, 770 to name a few.)
The SMAPI BIOS provides access to System Information,
System Configuration, and Power Management.