Also, fix a couple whitespace formatting errors and typos.
Note that the Klingon joke has a 12-point version in the
-chat list, mesg-id: <19990717120618.C269@marder-1> (thanks to
DES and to submitter doug@gorean). Also, note that the following
people need to learn to double-space after a period: <DougB@gorean.org>,
<des@flood.ping.uio.no>, <mellon@pobox.com>, <jeroen@vangelderen.org>,
and <rsidd@physics.iisc.ernet.in>.
Only PCI and on-board ISA peripherials are supported at this time.
This support has been only lightly tested due to a lack of response to my
call for testers on the freebsd-alpha mailing list. It works quite well
on the one AS2100 on which it has been tested, but it may not work on
an AS2100A and should therefore be regarded as experimental.
- Go ahead and use 'lgdt' again instead of hand-assembling the instruction.
During testing this code worked fine. If for some reason a 32-bit offset
is needed, 'lgdtl' should be used instead of reverting to manual machine
code.
Tested by: peter
Fix D-Link 660 entry (PR 1340, Annelise Anderson)
Add more comments to very generic pcmcia ethernet card
entry (PR 17006, Georg Graf)
Add Linksys EtherFast 10/100 Intergrated PC Card (PCM100) (private mail
from Sean O'Connell)
PRs: 17006, 13402, 17992
buzy, only search upwards for a free slot to use..
This broke unit numbering on ATA systems where PCI attached controllers
come before the mainboard ones...
Reviewed by: dfr
m_adj() and then check the resulting mbuf for misalignment, copying
backwards to align the mbuf if required.
This fixes a longstanding problem where an mbuf which would have been
properly aligned after an m_adj() was being misaligned and causing an
unaligned access trap in ip_input(). This bug only triggered when booting
diskless.
Reviewed by: dfr
more frequently than the core part of the sio driver, it might
be good to move the PnP IDs to sio_isapnp.h or something like
that.
PR: i386/18828
Submitted by: J.P. King <jpk28@cam.ac.uk>
DATALINK_CARRIER and turn off scripting.
This should fix instances where ``term'' is used followed by ~.
and then ``dial''/``open'' (it currently just sits there looking
at you).
Reported by: Tim Vanderhoek <vanderh@ecf.utoronto.ca>