Commit Graph

126 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sam Leffler
3364462355 Switch to ath hal source code. Note this removes the ath_hal
module; the ath module now brings in the hal support.  Kernel
config files are almost backwards compatible; supplying

device ath_hal

gives you the same chip support that the binary hal did but you
must also include

options AH_SUPPORT_AR5416

to enable the extended format descriptors used by 11n parts.
It is now possible to control the chip support included in a
build by specifying exactly which chips are to be supported
in the config file; consult ath_hal(4) for information.
2008-12-01 16:53:01 +00:00
Joseph Koshy
0cfab8ddc1 - Add support for PMCs in Intel CPUs of Family 6, model 0xE (Core Solo
and Core Duo), models 0xF (Core2), model 0x17 (Core2Extreme) and
  model 0x1C (Atom).

  In these CPUs, the actual numbers, kinds and widths of PMCs present
  need to queried at run time.  Support for specific "architectural"
  events also needs to be queried at run time.

  Model 0xE CPUs support programmable PMCs, subsequent CPUs
  additionally support "fixed-function" counters.

- Use event names that are close to vendor documentation, taking in
  account that:
  - events with identical semantics on two or more CPUs in this family
    can have differing names in vendor documentation,
  - identical vendor event names may map to differing events across
    CPUs,
  - each type of CPU supports a different subset of measurable
    events.

  Fixed-function and programmable counters both use the same vendor
  names for events.  The use of a class name prefix ("iaf-" or
  "iap-" respectively) permits these to be distinguished.

- In libpmc, refactor pmc_name_of_event() into a public interface
  and an internal helper function, for use by log handling code.

- Minor code tweaks: staticize a global, freshen a few comments.

Tested by:	gnn
2008-11-27 09:00:47 +00:00
Joseph Koshy
e829eb6d61 - Separate PMC class dependent code from other kinds of machine
dependencies.  A 'struct pmc_classdep' structure describes operations
  on PMCs; 'struct pmc_mdep' contains one or more 'struct pmc_classdep'
  structures depending on the CPU in question.

  Inside PMC class dependent code, row indices are relative to the
  PMCs supported by the PMC class; MI code in "hwpmc_mod.c" translates
  global row indices before invoking class dependent operations.

- Augment the OP_GETCPUINFO request with the number of PMCs present
  in a PMC class.

- Move code common to Intel CPUs to file "hwpmc_intel.c".

- Move TSC handling to file "hwpmc_tsc.c".
2008-11-09 17:37:54 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
ae528485c4 Add freebsd32 compat shims for ioctl(2)
MDIOCATTACH, MDIOCDETACH, MDIOCQUERY, and MDIOCLIST requests.
2008-09-22 16:09:16 +00:00
Stanislav Sedov
e085f869d5 - Add cpuctl(4) pseudo-device driver to provide access to some low-level
features of CPUs like reading/writing machine-specific registers,
  retrieving cpuid data, and updating microcode.
- Add cpucontrol(8) utility, that provides userland access to
  the features of cpuctl(4).
- Add subsequent manpages.

The cpuctl(4) device operates as follows. The pseudo-device node cpuctlX
is created for each cpu present in the systems. The pseudo-device minor
number corresponds to the cpu number in the system. The cpuctl(4) pseudo-
device allows a number of ioctl to be preformed, namely RDMSR/WRMSR/CPUID
and UPDATE. The first pair alows the caller to read/write machine-specific
registers from the correspondent CPU. cpuid data could be retrieved using
the CPUID call, and microcode updates are applied via UPDATE.

The permissions are inforced based on the pseudo-device file permissions.
RDMSR/CPUID will be allowed when the caller has read access to the device
node, while WRMSR/UPDATE will be granted only when the node is opened
for writing. There're also a number of priv(9) checks.

The cpucontrol(8) utility is intened to provide userland access to
the cpuctl(4) device features. The utility also allows one to apply
cpu microcode updates.

Currently only Intel and AMD cpus are supported and were tested.

Approved by:	kib
Reviewed by:	rpaulo, cokane, Peter Jeremy
MFC after:	1 month
2008-08-08 16:26:53 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
0051271e12 Make genclock standard on all platforms.
Thanks to: grehan & marcel for platform support on ia64 and ppc.
2008-04-21 10:09:55 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
36bff1ebfb Convert amd64 and i386 to share the atrtc device driver. 2008-04-14 08:00:00 +00:00
Rui Paulo
6f15a9e57a Connect k8temp(4) to the build. 2008-04-12 14:20:22 +00:00
Scott Long
593c873471 Remove the rr232x driver. It has been superceded by the hptrr driver. 2008-02-03 07:07:30 +00:00
Scott Long
b063a42270 Add the 'hptrr' driver for supporting the following Highpoint RocketRAID
cards:

     o   RocketRAID 172x series
     o   RocketRAID 174x series
     o   RocketRAID 2210
     o   RocketRAID 222x series
     o   RocketRAID 2240
     o   RocketRAID 230x series
     o   RocketRAID 231x series
     o   RocketRAID 232x series
     o   RocketRAID 2340
     o   RocketRAID 2522

Many thanks to Highpoint for their continued support of FreeBSD.

Submitted by: Highpoint
2007-12-15 00:56:17 +00:00
Alan Cox
dbfb54ffea Eliminate compilation warnings due to the use of non-static inlines
through the introduction and use of the __gnu89_inline attribute.

Submitted by: bde (i386)
MFC after: 3 days
2007-12-09 21:00:36 +00:00
Robert Watson
3c90d1ea74 Break out stack(9) from ddb(4):
- Introduce per-architecture stack_machdep.c to hold stack_save(9).
- Introduce per-architecture machine/stack.h to capture any common
  definitions required between db_trace.c and stack_machdep.c.
- Add new kernel option "options STACK"; we will build in stack(9) if it is
  defined, or also if "options DDB" is defined to provide compatibility
  with existing users of stack(9).

Add new stack_save_td(9) function, which allows the capture of a stacktrace
of another thread rather than the current thread, which the existing
stack_save(9) was limited to.  It requires that the thread be neither
swapped out nor running, which is the responsibility of the consumer to
enforce.

Update stack(9) man page.

Build tested:	amd64, arm, i386, ia64, powerpc, sparc64, sun4v
Runtime tested:	amd64 (rwatson), arm (cognet), i386 (rwatson)
2007-12-02 20:40:35 +00:00
John Baldwin
dbac8ff400 Move the agp(4) driver from sys/pci to sys/dev/agp. __FreeBSD_version was
bumped to 800004 to note the change though userland apps should not be
affected since they use <sys/agpio.h> rather than the headers in
sys/dev/agp.

Discussed with:	anholt
Repocopy by:	simon
2007-11-12 21:51:38 +00:00
Benjamin Close
037347714a Link wpi(4) into the build.
This includes:
    o mtree (for legal/intel_wpi)
    o manpage for i386/amd64 archs
    o module for i386/amd64 archs
    o NOTES for i386/amd64 archs

Approved by: mlaier (comentor)
2007-11-08 22:09:37 +00:00
Rui Paulo
e702bc741c Connect asmc to the build infrastructure.
Approved by: 	njl (mentor)
Reviewed by:	njl (mentor)
2007-11-07 20:08:15 +00:00
Peter Wemm
d556638404 Split /dev/nvram driver out of isa/clock.c for i386 and amd64. I have not
refactored it to be a generic device.
Instead of being part of the standard kernel, there is now a 'nvram' device
for i386/amd64.  It is in DEFAULTS like io and mem, and can be turned off
with 'nodevice nvram'.  This matches the previous behavior when it was
first committed.
2007-10-26 03:23:54 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
a9d185b2c9 Align. 2007-10-25 14:16:07 +00:00
Alexander Leidinger
9f05d312b3 Backout sensors framework.
Requested by:	phk
Discussed on:	cvs-all
2007-10-15 20:00:24 +00:00
Alexander Leidinger
989500bf1a Import it(4) and lm(4), supporting most popular Super I/O Hardware Monitors.
Submitted by:	Constantine A. Murenin <cnst@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by:	Google Summer of Code 2007 (GSoC2007/cnst-sensors)
Mentored by:	syrinx
Tested by:	many
OKed by:	kensmith
Obtained from:	OpenBSD (parts)
2007-10-14 10:55:50 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
83d18f2283 Add a driver for the on-die digital thermal sensor found on Intel Core
and newer CPUs (including Core 2 and Core / Core 2 based Xeons).  The
driver attaches to each cpu device and creates a sysctl node in that
device's sysctl context (dev.cpu.N.temperature).  When invoked, the
handler binds to the appropriate CPU to ensure a correct reading.

Submitted by:	Rui Paulo <rpaulo@fnop.net>
Sponsored by:	Google Summer of Code 2007
Tested by:	des, marcus, Constantine A. Murenin, Ian FREISLICH
Approved by:	re (kensmith)
MFC after:	3 weeks
2007-08-15 19:26:03 +00:00
Peter Wemm
a9431a52cf Temporarily turn nowerror on for i386 and amd64 pmap.c. I'd like to study
exactly what effect the options cause to the code with gcc these days.

Approved by:  re (rwatson)
2007-07-05 06:12:40 +00:00
George V. Neville-Neil
b2630c2934 Commit the change from FAST_IPSEC to IPSEC. The FAST_IPSEC
option is now deprecated, as well as the KAME IPsec code.
What was FAST_IPSEC is now IPSEC.

Approved by: re
Sponsored by: Secure Computing
2007-07-03 12:13:45 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
2b39bb4f4f Use default options for default partitioning schemes, rather than
making the relevant files standard. This avoids duplication and
makes it easier to override/disable unwanted schemes. Since ARM
doesn't have a DEFAULTS configuration file, leave the source
files for the BSD and MBR partitioning schemes in files.arm for
now.
2007-06-11 00:38:06 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
a96811b171 Fix the dependency for the linux_support.s, explicitely add linux_assym.h.
Reported by:	rwatson
In collaboration with:	rdivacky
Sponsored by:	Google SoC 2007
2007-05-23 15:45:52 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
1c182de9a9 Move futex support code from <arch>/support.s into linux compat directory.
Implement all futex atomic operations in assembler to not depend on the
fuword() that does not allow to distinguish between -1 and failure return.
Correctly return 0 from atomic operations on success.

In collaboration with:	rdivacky
Tested by:	Scot Hetzel <swhetzel gmail com>, Milos Vyletel <mvyletel mzm cz>
Sponsored by:	Google SoC 2007
2007-05-23 08:33:06 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
89c40e5fec Be more conservative and compile libkern/memset.c only on architectures
than need it. These are i386, amd64 and powerpc so far.
2007-04-06 04:51:50 +00:00
Matt Jacob
2c298b17e3 opt_ah.h ends up copied into a kernelcompile directory in some
aches as a read-only file. In a number of cases this has led to
compiles failing- usually due to some strange NFS drift which thinks
that the opt_ah.h in the compile directory is out of date wrt the
source it is copied from. When the copy is executed again, it fails
because the target is read-only. Oops. Modify the compile hooks
avoid this.

Discussed with a while back with:	Sam Leffler
2006-12-18 05:45:23 +00:00
John Baldwin
4184900911 MD support for PCI Message Signalled Interrupts on amd64 and i386:
- Add a new apic_alloc_vectors() method to the local APIC support code
  to allocate N contiguous IDT vectors (aligned on a M >= N boundary).
  This function is used to allocate IDT vectors for a group of MSI
  messages.
- Add MSI and MSI-X PICs.  The PIC code here provides methods to manage
  edge-triggered MSI messages as x86 interrupt sources.  In addition to
  the PIC methods, msi.c also includes methods to allocate and release
  MSI and MSI-X messages.  For x86, we allow for up to 128 different
  MSI IRQs starting at IRQ 256 (IRQs 0-15 are reserved for ISA IRQs,
  16-254 for APIC PCI IRQs, and IRQ 255 is reserved).
- Add pcib_(alloc|release)_msi[x]() methods to the MD x86 PCI bridge
  drivers to bubble the request up to the nexus driver.
- Add pcib_(alloc|release)_msi[x]() methods to the x86 nexus drivers that
  ask the MSI PIC code to allocate resources and IDT vectors.

MFC after:	2 months
2006-11-13 22:23:34 +00:00
Alexander Leidinger
3680a41902 Backout the linux aio stuff. Several problems where identified and the
dynamic nature (if no native aio code is available, the linux part
returns ENOSYS because of missing requisites) should be solved differently
than it is.

All this will be done in P4.

Not included in this commit is a backout of the changes to the native aio
code (removing static in some places). Those changes (and some more) will
also be needed when the reworked linux aio stuff will reenter the tree.

Requested by:	rwatson
Discussed with:	rwatson
2006-10-29 14:02:39 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
837f167eb2 Move "device splash" back to MI NOTES and "files", it's MI. 2006-10-23 13:23:14 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
663cf7fed2 Move MI parts of syscons into MI "files". 2006-10-23 13:05:01 +00:00
Alexander Leidinger
6a1162d4cd MFP4 (with some minor changes):
Implement the linux_io_* syscalls (AIO). They are only enabled if the native
AIO code is available (either compiled in to the kernel or as a module) at
the time the functions are used. If the AIO stuff is not available there
will be a ENOSYS.

From the submitter:
---snip---
DESIGN NOTES:

1. Linux permits a process to own multiple AIO queues (distinguished by
   "context"), but FreeBSD creates only one single AIO queue per process.
   My code maintains a request queue (STAILQ of queue(3)) per "context",
   and throws all AIO requests of all contexts owned by a process into
   the single FreeBSD per-process AIO queue.

   When the process calls io_destroy(2), io_getevents(2), io_submit(2) and
   io_cancel(2), my code can pick out requests owned by the specified context
   from the single FreeBSD per-process AIO queue according to the per-context
   request queues maintained by my code.

2. The request queue maintained by my code stores contrast information between
   Linux IO control blocks (struct linux_iocb) and FreeBSD IO control blocks
   (struct aiocb). FreeBSD IO control block actually exists in userland memory
   space, required by FreeBSD native aio_XXXXXX(2).

3. It is quite troubling that the function io_getevents() of libaio-0.3.105
   needs to use Linux-specific "struct aio_ring", which is a partial mirror
   of context in user space. I would rather take the address of context in
   kernel as the context ID, but the io_getevents() of libaio forces me to
   take the address of the "ring" in user space as the context ID.

   To my surprise, one comment line in the file "io_getevents.c" of
   libaio-0.3.105 reads:

             Ben will hate me for this

REFERENCE:

1. Linux kernel source code:   http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/
   (include/linux/aio_abi.h, fs/aio.c)

2. Linux manual pages:         http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/docs/manpages/
   (io_setup(2), io_destroy(2), io_getevents(2), io_submit(2), io_cancel(2))

3. Linux Scalability Effort:   http://lse.sourceforge.net/io/aio.html
   The design notes:           http://lse.sourceforge.net/io/aionotes.txt

4. The package libaio, both source and binary:
       http://rpmfind.net/linux/rpm2html/search.php?query=libaio
   Simple transparent interface to Linux AIO system calls.

5. Libaio-oracle:              http://oss.oracle.com/projects/libaio-oracle/
   POSIX AIO implementation based on Linux AIO system calls (depending on
   libaio).
---snip---

Submitted by:	Li, Xiao <intron@intron.ac>
2006-10-15 14:22:14 +00:00
John Baldwin
d72a078647 Update the ipmi(4) driver:
- Split out the communication protocols into their own files and use
  a couple of function pointers in the softc that the commuication
  protocols setup in their own attach routine.
- Add support for the SSIF interface (talking to IPMI over SMBus).
- Add an ACPI attachment.
- Add a PCI attachment that attaches to devices with the IPMI interface
  subclass.
- Split the ISA attachment out into its own file: ipmi_isa.c.
- Change the code to probe the SMBIOS table for an IPMI entry to just use
  pmap_mapbios() to map the table in rather than trying to setup a fake
  resource on an isa device and then activating the resource to map in the
  table.
- Make bus attachments leaner by adding attach functions for each
  communication interface (ipmi_kcs_attach(), ipmi_smic_attach(), etc.)
  that setup per-interface data.
- Formalize the model used by the driver to handle requests by adding an
  explicit struct ipmi_request object that holds the state of a given
  request and reply for the entire lifetime of the request.  By bundling
  the request into an object, it is easier to add retry logic to the various
  communication backends (as well as eventually support BT mode which uses
  a slightly different message format than KCS, SMIC, and SSIF).
- Add a per-softc lock and remove D_NEEDGIANT as the driver is now MPSAFE.
- Add 32-bit compatibility ioctl shims so you can use a 32-bit ipmitool
  on FreeBSD/amd64.
- Add ipmi(4) to i386 and amd64 NOTES.

Submitted by:	ambrisko (large portions of 2 and 3)
Sponsored by:	IronPort Systems, Yahoo!
MFC after:	6 days
2006-09-22 22:11:29 +00:00
Eric Anholt
f031f0c03d Include agp_i810.c in amd64 AGP builds to get support for the Intel 915 Express
chipsets.

PR:		kern/93676
Submitted by:	Jan Blaha <Jan.Blaha@unet.cz>
MFC after:	1 week
2006-09-05 16:55:13 +00:00
Alexander Leidinger
9b44bfc556 Add the linux 2.6.x stuff (not used by default!):
- TLS - complete
 - pid/tid mangling - complete
 - thread area - complete
 - futexes - complete with issues
 - clone() extension - complete with some possible minor issues
 - mq*/timer*/clock* stuff - complete but untested and the mq* stuff is
   disabled when not build as part of the kernel with native FreeBSD mq*
   support (module support for this will come later)

Tested with:
 - linux-firefox - works, tested
 - linux-opera - works, tested
 - linux-realplay - doesnt work, issue with futexes
 - linux-skype - doesnt work, issue with futexes
 - linux-rt2-demo - works, tested
 - linux-acroread - doesnt work, unknown reason (coredump) and sometimes
   issue with futexes
 - various unix utilities in linux-base-gentoo3 and linux-base-fc4:
   everything tried worked

On amd64 not everything is supported like on i386, the catchup is planned for
later when the remaining bugs in the new functions are fixed.

To test this new stuff, you have to run
	sysctl compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.16
to switch back use
	sysctl compat.linux.osrelease=2.4.2

Don't switch while running a linux program, strange things may or may not
happen.

Sponsored by:			Google SoC 2006
Submitted by:			rdivacky
Some suggestions/help by:	jhb, kib, manu@NetBSD.org, netchild
2006-08-15 12:54:30 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
302981e72a Remove sio(4) and related options from MI files to amd64, i386
and pc98 MD files. Remove nodevice and nooption lines specific
to sio(4) from ia64, powerpc and sparc64 NOTES. There were no
such lines for arm yet.
sio(4) is usable on less than half the platforms, not counting
a future mips platform. Its presence in MI files is therefore
increasingly becoming a burden.
2006-07-29 18:38:54 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
bfc788c283 Add a pure open source nForce Ethernet driver, under BSDL.
This driver was ported from OpenBSD by Shigeaki Tagashira
<shigeaki@se.hiroshima-u.ac.jp> and posted at
http://www.se.hiroshima-u.ac.jp/~shigeaki/software/freebsd-nfe.html
It was additionally cleaned up by me.
It is still a work-in-progress and thus is purposefully not in GENERIC.
And it conflicts with nve(4), so only one should be loaded.
2006-06-26 23:41:07 +00:00
Doug Ambrisko
741367d5a5 Add in a bunch of things to the mfi driver:
- Linux ioctl support, with the other Linux changes MegaCli
	will run if you mount linprocfs & linsysfs then set
	sysctl compat.linux.osrelease=2.6.12 or similar.  This works
	on i386.  It should work on amd64 but not well tested yet.
	StoreLib may or may not work.  Remember to kldload mfi_linux.
      - Add in AEN (Async Event Notification) support so we can
	get messages from the firmware when something happens.
	Not all messages are in defined in event detail.  Use
	event_log to try to figure out what happened.
      - Try to implement something like SIGIO for StoreLib.  Since
	mrmonitor doesn't work right I can't fully test it.  StoreLib
	works best with the rh9 base.  In theory mrmonitor isn't
	needed due to native driver support of AEN :-)
Now we can configure and monitor the RAID better.

Submitted by:	IronPort Systems.
2006-05-18 23:30:48 +00:00
Doug Ambrisko
32397ce071 Add in linsysfs. A linux 2.6 like sys filesystem to pacify the Linux
LSI MegaRAID SAS utility.

Sponsored by:		IronPort Systems
Man page help from:	brueffer
2006-05-09 22:27:01 +00:00
Alexander Leidinger
f4eb471709 - change the example of compiling only specific modules to not contain
the linux module, since it is not cross-platform
- move linprocfs from "files" and "options" to architecture specific files,
  since it only makes sense to build this for those architectures, where we
  also have a linuxolator
- disable the build of the linuxolator on our tier-2 architecture "Alpha":
  * we don't have a linux_base port which supports Alpha and at the
    same time is not outdated/obsoleted upstream/in a good condition/
    currently working
  * the upcomming new default linux base port is based upon Fedora
    Core 3 (security support via http://www.fedoralegacy.org), which
    isn't available for Alpha (like the current default linux base
    port which is based upon Red Hat 8)
  * nobody answered my request for testing it ~1 month ago on
    current@ and alpha@ (it doesn't surprises me, see above)
  * a SoC student wouldn't have to waste time on something which
    nobody is willing to test

This does not remove the alpha specific MD files of the linuxolator yet.

Discussed on:		arch (mostly silence)
Spiritual support by:	scottl
2006-05-07 18:12:18 +00:00
Scott Long
27aafcda76 Enable the rr232x driver for amd64. 2006-04-28 05:23:10 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
cea4d8752f o Move ISA specific code from ppc.c to ppc_isa.c -- a bus front-
end for isa(4).
o  Add a seperate bus frontend for acpi(4) and allow ISA DMA for
   it when ISA is configured in the kernel. This allows acpi(4)
   attachments in non-ISA configurations, as is possible for ia64.
o  Add a seperate bus frontend for pci(4) and detect known single
   port parallel cards.
o  Merge PC98 specific changes under pc98/cbus into the MI driver.
   The changes are minor enough for conditional compilation and
   in this form invites better abstraction.
o  Have ppc(4) usabled on all platforms, now that ISA specifics
   are untangled enough.
2006-04-24 23:31:51 +00:00
Peter Wemm
c0345a84aa Introduce minidumps. Full physical memory crash dumps are still available
via the debug.minidump sysctl and tunable.

Traditional dumps store all physical memory.  This was once a good thing
when machines had a maximum of 64M of ram and 1GB of kvm.  These days,
machines often have many gigabytes of ram and a smaller amount of kvm.
libkvm+kgdb don't have a way to access physical ram that is not mapped
into kvm at the time of the crash dump, so the extra ram being dumped
is mostly wasted.

Minidumps invert the process.  Instead of dumping physical memory in
in order to guarantee that all of kvm's backing is dumped, minidumps
instead dump only memory that is actively mapped into kvm.

amd64 has a direct map region that things like UMA use.  Obviously we
cannot dump all of the direct map region because that is effectively
an old style all-physical-memory dump.  Instead, introduce a bitmap
and two helper routines (dump_add_page(pa) and dump_drop_page(pa)) that
allow certain critical direct map pages to be included in the dump.
uma_machdep.c's allocator is the intended consumer.

Dumps are a custom format.  At the very beginning of the file is a header,
then a copy of the message buffer, then the bitmap of pages present in
the dump, then the final level of the kvm page table trees (2MB mappings
are expanded into a 4K page mappings), then the sparse physical pages
according to the bitmap.  libkvm can now conveniently access the kvm
page table entries.

Booting my test 8GB machine, forcing it into ddb and forcing a dump
leads to a 48MB minidump.  While this is a best case, I expect minidumps
to be in the 100MB-500MB range.  Obviously, never larger than physical
memory of course.

minidumps are on by default.  It would want be necessary to turn them off
if it was necessary to debug corrupt kernel page table management as that
would mess up minidumps as well.

Both minidumps and regular dumps are supported on the same machine.
2006-04-21 04:24:50 +00:00
Yaroslav Tykhiy
8d96e45531 Retire NETSMBCRYPTO as a kernel option and make its functionality
enabled by default in NETSMB and smbfs.ko.

With the most of modern SMB providers requiring encryption by
default, there is little sense left in keeping the crypto part
of NETSMB optional at the build time.

This will also return smbfs.ko to its former properties users
are rather accustomed to.

Discussed with:		freebsd-stable, re (scottl)
Not objected by:	bp, tjr (silence)
MFC after:		5 days
2006-03-05 22:52:17 +00:00
Doug Ambrisko
1c204a5731 Tie the ipmi driver into the i386/amd64 builds. 2006-02-13 17:56:24 +00:00
Doug Ambrisko
084500bc13 Add in the Linux IOCTL shim and create the megadev0 device so
Linux LSI MegaRaid tools can run on FreeBSD until Linux emulation.

Add in the Linux IOCTL shim and create the megadev0 device so
Linux LSI MegaRaid tools can run on FreeBSD until Linux emulation.

Add glue to build the modules but don't tie it into the build
yet until I test it from the CVS repo. via the mirror on an
amd64 machine.

Tie this into the Linux32 emulation on amd64 so the tools can
run on amd64 kernel.

Cleaned up by:	ps (amr_linux.c)
2006-01-24 21:13:50 +00:00
Jung-uk Kim
848c454cc1 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
Jung-uk Kim
ae275efcae 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
Ruslan Ermilov
a8e06f2a52 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
Ruslan Ermilov
6d8200ff0c 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