to deal with the fact that we relied on devconf to do the shutdown
callouts in various drivers. The changes in this commit are to add support
for device shutdown in this driver via the new at_shutdown() mechanism.
Similar changes need to be made to all of the other drivers that need
a shutdown routine called (if_de.c comes to mind immediately).
changes. This version should fix a number of bugs such as with auto-
speed sensing and at least one known panic.
Submitted by: Matt Thomas (matt@3am-software.com)
not depend on bootverbose being true.
Include only register specifications for those chip sets that apply to
a cpu that might boot this a particular kernel (ie. make the Saturn code
depend on I486_CPU being defined, the Pentium chip sets on I586_CPU ...)
way it attaches multiple PCI buses directly to the CPU, instead of having
them hanging off from PCI to PCI bridges. This code is a hack, and will
be obsoleted by the planned rework of the PCI code, which will change the
dealing with PCI to PCI bridges and other special devices significantly.
The patch also adds a kern_devconf entry for PCI bus 0 which is assumed
to be a child of cpu0. The new PCI code will make it possible to hand out
the kern_devconf structure to a pci device being attached, since this is
(regretably, IMHO) required by a few ISA devices.
Finally there are new PCI ids for some Intel chip set devices, which had
already been known to 2.1.5R, but did not make it into -current. This closes
"kern/1558: PCI probe seems to have lost a device in -current".
logic clock signal, which had been erroneously commented out by the
previous commit. This will re-enable support for sync. transfer negotiation,
which depends on one of those values.
calculate an optimum value from (constant) parameters.
This should set the SCNTL3 register of the 53c860 and 53c875 to twice
the divider it used to be, since cards based on those chips seem to use
an 80MHz clock instead of the Clock Doubler feature and a 40MHz clock.
This code applies to several systems with integrated Ethernet
chip, for example from HP or Compaq. It should also support
PCI Ethernet cards based on the AMD PCI Lance chip.
This code has been reviewed (visually) by Paul Richards and
tested (using an ISA Lance board) by Joerg Wunsch.
Since the parameters to nearly each and every single function
had to be changed (generally from unit number to lnc_soft*),
there is some potential for buglets having crept in ...
BEWARE: If you had lnc0 configured to have the ISA probe find
your PCI Lance, then it should now be found by the PCI probe,
and should be automatically configured as pci1 (!!! note the "1").
Reviewed by: paul, joerg
is only used by the icu support modules and by a few drivers that know
too much about the icu (most only use it to convert `n' to `IRQn'). isa.h
is only used by ioconf.c and by a few drivers that know too much about
isa addresses (a few have to, because config is deficient).
All new code is "#ifdef PC98"ed so this should make no difference to
PC/AT (and its clones) users.
Ok'd by: core
Submitted by: FreeBSD(98) development team
NetBSD/OpenBSD support Submitted by:Noriyuki Soda <soda@sra.co.jp>,
Pete Bentley <pete@demon.net>,
Charles M. Hannum <mycroft@mit.edu>,
Theo de Raadt <deraadt@theos.com>
I spent the better part of a day trying to figure out why my
experiment didn't work the way I expected, only to find out that
the router was dropping huge numbers of packets because of PCI bus
priblems. This does not fix the bug that errors are counted as
input packets because my patch doesn't apply cleanly.
is enabled by having an "device ed0 at isa? [...]" config line.
The first PCI card will get a unit number one higher than the highest
defined for any ISA card of the ED type, e.g. if ed0 and ed1 are
configured, then the PCI cards will be ed2, ed3, ...
BEWARE: If you have configured your kernel as ed0 with the port address
as assigned by the PCI BIOS, then your card will be found by both the
PCI and ISA probes, and bad things may happen. Make sure to restore
the original port address form the GENERIC kernel for the ed0 device!
Reviewed by: davidg
1) A spelling error pointed out by Paco Hope.
2) A bug in the range checking routing pointed out by Jim Bray.
3) Enables the setting of frames per second.
Submitted-By: Jim Lowe <james@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
a BIOS was not installed, this will still be true by the time we probe
the chip. We use this heuristic to determine if we should use the left
over scratch ram target settings for controllers that don't have an
SEEPROM. We also "snapshot" the host adapter SCSI id and whether ultra
is enabled or not and use these values if a BIOS was installed. The card
will act as if a BIOS was installed even if there wasn't one if you warm
reboot, but since the scratch ram area is still valid in this case, its
hardly worth the effort of writing a shutdown routing that clears out
the scratch ram. This should make users of motherboard controllers
happy.
should be <= than subordinate, not the other way around.
They are both true if the bridge is not cascaded (i.e., twin-channel
scsi/e-net adapters won't be affected by this bug), which is probably why
it was unnoticed until today.
- always use pci_conf_read() and pci_conf_write(). (This is required to
simulate non-existant devices in my system for PCI bridge code tests.)
- reorder some functions (put the main functions at the end).
- correct off by one bug in the code dealing with unitialized PCI to PCI
bridge chips. (Bug found by ASAMI Satoshi.)
- print function number for multi-function devices.
Use new XS_SELTIMEOUT error code for selection timeouts.
aic7870.c:
Move SCB walking code to aic7xxx.c and make it work for all card types.
The flag AHC_EXTSCB is no longer needed since the SCBs are walked in
all cases now.
vm_offset_t is currently unsigned long but should probably be plain
unsigned for i386's to match the choice of minimal types to represent
for fixed-width types in Lite2. Anyway, it shouldn't be assumed
to be unsigned long.
I only fixed the type mismatches that were detected when I changed
vm_offset_t to unsigned. Only pointer type mismatches were detected.
- Do not enable tagged commands by default
- Probe only 1 LUN
- Do not negotiate sync. transfer with CDROM drives
Defining FAILSAFE will result in a driver that will tolerate
marginal hardware for the price of a slight loss of performance
It is intended for use in install kernels.
Cleanse the SCSI subsystem of its internally defined types
u_int32, u_int16, u_int8, int32, int16, int8.
Use the system defined *_t types instead.
aic7870.c:
Handle Seeprom data a little better.
the S-Video input. It also has code in the driver for the meteor RGB support
and some other bug fixes. I don't have a meteor RGB but I have been told
that it works.
Submitted by: Jim Lowe <james@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
port addresses (even though the PC architecture doesn't support them).
Add code to limit the I/O map size based on the lowest set bit of the
address. This cures the problem with the BT946C only having a 16 bit
map register, in voiolation of the PCI specs, without giving up the
general support of >65K port regions.
- fill in and use ifp->if_softc
- use if_bpf rather than private cookie variables
- change bpf interface to take advantage of this
- call ether_ifattach() directly from Ethernet drivers
- delete kludge in if_attach() that did this indirectly
that don't announce support for command queues.
SCSI_NCR_DFLT_TAGS can be specified in the kernel config file
and sets the default number of tags per disk drive.
A value of 0 means "no tags".
Minor correction in debug messages: Values from the msg_in
buffer were being printed in the msg_out trace message ...
feature in the header type register, though it is required by the PCI spec.
This should correctly probe both functions of the Intel 82371FB chip,
without the need for a special case based on the device ID.
chipset. This does not attempt to do anything special with the timing
on the hope that the BIOS will have done the right thing already. The
actual interface from the wd driver to the new facility is not
implemented yet (this commit being an attempt at prodding someone else
to do it because looking at the wd driver always confuses the h*** out of me).
includes a hack in the probe code: the 82371FB is a multifuction
device, but doesn't properly set the configuration bit which
indicates this. So, we just hard-wire all 82371FBs as multifunction
devices.
This does not actually make the bus-master IDE stuff work, although
if anyone wants to work on that, I have the databooks that tell
how to use it.