checking the BIOS video mode paramter table. Now syscons uses the
parameter table even if some bits in the table are different from the
current VGA register settings.
Even if comp_vgaregs() finds that the BIOS video parameter table looks
totally unfamiliar to it, syscons allows the user to change the
current video mode to some modes which are based on the VGA 80x25
mode. They are VGA 80x30, VGA 80x50, VGA 80x60. In this case the user
will be warned, during boot, that video mode switching is only
paritally supported on his machine.
PR: bin/4477
Fixed nonblocking mode. It was per-device instead of per-file.
Don't depend on gcc's misfeature of rewriting char args in old-style
function definitions to match wrong prototypes. Break K&R1 support
to fix this quickly.
actually offsets, they are offsets scaled by dividing by 2^cy_align.
I use different values for cy_align since the -current values are
unnaturally scaled, so I need different offsets, and the wrong
offsets got committed.
Reported by: nnd@itfs.nsk.su (N.Dudorov)
2) Fix temporal decimation, disable it when
doing CAP_SINGLEs, and in dual-field capture, don't
capture fields for different frames
Submitted by: Luigi Rizzo & Randall Hopper
changes:
o rip the old select from his distribution to prevent extra pollution
o the code now uses audio dma, helps reduce clicks
o improved card support, should work in full duplex on sb16 cards
o add better voxware ioctl support pointed out by Joao Carlos Mendes
Luis <jonny@coppe.ufrj.br>
o remove an unused file that I included for more complete history
o and MANY other changes
I have personally tested this code with a CS4237 based card and an AWE32
(non-PnP). Both cards worked fine in 8bit and 16bit mode.
This make the Miro PCTV work for me, including audio, and should
hopefully fix the other audio problems some people have been having.
Reviewed by: ahasty & Luigi Rizzo (freebsd-multimedia)
to define it by including <sys/kernel.h>. That broke PC-CARD
support for this driver, producing the dreaded "device allocation
failed" message. Surprisingly, the missing include caused only
two compiler warnings. The compilation still "succeeded" anyway.
usage at 0x100. Quoted Justin's quotation from the manual as well, to
explain the technical background.
PR: kern/4559
Submitted by: Stephen J. Roznowski <sjr@home.net>
use a Linker Set. Note, if a driver is loaded as an LKM if will have
to use the function call, but since none of the existing drivers
are loadable, this made things cleaner and boot messages nicer.
Obtained from: PAO-970616
flicker won't occur when set_border() is called.
- Properly restore the border color when switching virtual consoles.
Pointed out by: tony@dell.com
OKed by: sos
screen size was changed while the screen saver was inactive. Adjust
the positions of the daemon and the text and clip them accordingly
each time.
- Don't call set_border() too often. Some video chip may produce
flicker.
Pointed out by tony@dell.com
- Don't fill the entire screen with blank char every time the saver is
called. Blank only the part of the screen where the daemon and the
text was previously printed.
* Kill individual drivers 'suspend' routines, since there's no simple/safe
way to suspend/resume a card w/out going through the complete probe
at initialization time.
* Default to using the apm_pccard_resume sysctl code, which basically
pretends the card was removed, and then re-inserted. Suspend/resume
is now 'emulated' with a fake insert/removal. (Hence we no longer
need the driver-specific suspend routines.)
follow.
* Rename/reorder all of the pccard structures, change many of the member
names to be descriptive, and follow more closely other 'bus' drivers
naming schemes.
* Rename a bunch of parameter and local variable names to be more
consistant in the code.
* Renamed the PCCARD 'crd' device to be the 'card' device
* KNF and make the code consistant where it was obvious.
* ifdef'd out some unused code
check the value and caused kernel panic when a large value was given.
- Move the configuration option SC_HISTORY_SIZE from syscons.h to
syscons.c.
- Define the maximum total number of history lines of all consoles.
It is SC_HISTORY_SIZE*MAXCONS or 1000*MAXCONS; whichever is larger.
CONS_HISTORY will allow the user to set the history size up to
SC_HISTORY_SIZE unconditionally (or the current height of the console
if it is larger than SC_HISTORY_SIZE). If the user requests a larger
buffer, it will be granted only if the total number of all allocated
history lines and the requested number of lines won't exceed the maximum.
- Don't free the previous history buffer and leave the history buffer
pointer holding a invalid pointer. Set the pointer to NULL first, then
free the buffer.
PR: bin/4592
floppy drive #0, regardless of what the CMOS says. This is intended
as a bandaid for those plagued with Compaq's idea to not announce the
floppy drive on their `Aero' notebook.
Using the device flags is not very nice (in particular since they
aren't per-drive but per-controller), but still looks a lot better to
me than the disgusting guesswork hack that was recently posted to
-hackers.
Doc update will follow shortly.
a change that might have an effect on the problems some have seen
with older chips, it looks like the driver may have mistakenly thought
there was an SIA when there isn't.
Distribute all but the most fundamental malloc types. This time I also
remembered the trick to making things static: Put "static" in front of
them.
A couple of finer points by: bde
This driver includes the following patches submitted by:
1.0 Hideyuki Suzuki <hideyuki@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
Japanese Cable support
2.0 Keith Sklower <sklower@CS.Berkeley.EDU>
Minor update to the BSDI section so it compiles cleanly on BSDI
3.0 Joao Carlos Mendes Luis <jonny@coppe.ufrj.br>
ioctl interface to select video format , NTSC, PAL, etc...
savers are also modified so that they behave in the same way as the
blank saver on MDA and CGA, although it's not the way these screen
savers are supposed to work, but fading monitor and tickling green
monitor cannot be done on MDA and CGA, AFAIK. So, this is the second
best solution.
As of this change, the current state of support of screen savers is
summarized in the following table.
MDA CGA EGA VGA
blank OK OK NA OK
daemon OK OK OK OK
fade * * NA OK
green * * NA OK
snake OK OK OK OK
star OK OK OK OK
OK: works
NA: doesn't work, the module cannot be loaded for this adapter.
*: behave the same way as the blank saver.
As you can see, EGA is left out for now. But, we can do no better, as
EGA registers cannot be read...
Reviewed by: sos
shown to be harmful in that it results in the card not being detected
properly on warmboot due to the station address failing to be read
correctly from the NVRAM.
much like the scancode mode.
However the keys that (for no good reason) returns extension codes
etc, are translated into singlebyte codes.
Needed by libvgl. This makes life ALOT easier, also the XFree86
folks could use this.
overruns (not that it was a problem, but it could be):
1) Doubled the number of receive buffers in the DMA chain to 64.
2) Do packet receive processing before transmit in the interrupt routine.
if it is in 10Mbps mode and gets certain types of garbage prior to
the packet header. The work-around involves reprogramming the
multicast filter if nothing is received in some number of seconds
(currently set at 15). As a side effect, implemented complete support
for multicasting rather than the previous 'receive all multicasts'
hack, since we now have the ability to program the filter table.
Fixed a serious bug which crept in with the timeout() changes;
the cookie was only saved on the first timeout() call in fxp_init()
and wasn't updated in the most common place in fxp_stats_update()
when the timeout was rescheduled. This bug would have resulted in
an eventual panic if fxp_stop() was called (which happens when any
interface flags are changed, for example).
Fixed a bug in Alpha support that would have caused the TxCB
descriptor chain to span a page boundry, causing serious problems
if the pages didn't happen to be contiguous.
Removed some gratuitous bit masking that was left over from an
older implementation.
Fixed a bug where too much was copied from the configuration
template, spilling over into memory that followed it.
Fixed handling of if_timer...it was cleared too early in some cases.
operands that are set during seqeuncer program download instead of at
assembly time.
Convert the sequencer code to use" downloaded constants" for four run time
constants that vary depending on the board type. This frees up 4 bytes
of sequencer scratch ram space where these constants used to be stored and
also removes the additional instructions required to load their values
into the accumulator prior to using them.
Remove the REJBYTE sram variable. The host driver can just as easly
read the accumulator to get this value.
The scratch ram savings is important as the old code used to clober the
SCSICONF register on 274X cards which sits near the top of scratch ram
space. The SCSICONF register controls bus termination, and clobbering
it is not a good thing. Now we have 4 bytes to spare.
This should fix the reported problems with cards that don't have devices
attached to them failing with a stream of "Somone reset bus X" messages.
Doug Ledford determined the cause of the problem, fixes by me.
1. Clustered I/O is switched by the MNT_NOCLUSTERR and MNT_NOCLUSTERW
bits of the mnt_flag. The sysctl variables, vfs.foo.doclusterread
and vfs.foo.doclusterwrite are deleted. Only mount option can
control clustered I/O from userland.
2. When foofs_mount mounts block device, foofs_mount checks D_CLUSTERR
and D_CLUSTERW bits of the d_flags member in the block device switch
table. If D_NOCLUSTERR / D_NOCLUSTERW are set, MNT_NOCLUSTERR /
MNT_NOCLUSTERW bits will be set. In this case, MNT_NOCLUSTERR and
MNT_NOCLUSTERW cannot be cleared from userland.
3. Vnode driver disables both clustered read and write.
4. Union filesystem disables clutered write.
Reviewed by: bde
- some addition of comments (for readability)
- iso-2022 G0 designation support. This does almost nothing. Just for
avoiding garbled screen when got "ESC ( B".
(how about G1/2/3 designation? I'm not sure)
the normal CS4326 except that it's had it's ID's tweaked for some reason)
Also mark the device as alive in the attach routine so that the pnp system
doesn't think the attach failed.
of multiple PCI IDE controllers(Dyson), and some updates and cleanups from
John Hood, who originally made our IDE DMA stuff work :-).
I have run tests with 7 IDE drives connected to my system, all in DMA
mode, with no errors. Modulo any bugs, this stuff makes IDE look
really good (within it's limitations.)
Submitted by: John Hood <cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us>
rather than extracting the diff from Mark's patch, but it turns out that
I was freeing one allocation twice due to a previous cut/paste braino.
My botch, not Mark's.
Pointed out by: Mark Valentine <mv@pobox.com>
internal modems. Currently detects a USR modem, and a couple Supra
modems... vendor id's for sio capabile cards welcomed...
document new option EXTRA_SIO that will increase sio's internal data
structures to support X more serial ports... these are used by the
PnP part of sio for attaching... If you don't have it specified, it
will default to 2... This is defaulted to 0 if you don't have PnP
compiled into your kernel...
also document that if you set the PnP flags (pnp x flags y) to 0x1 that
the modem will be refused to be recognized by the sio driver... this
is for people that want the traditional isa driver to probe and attach
the modem... (for keeping legacy sio numbering)
number of dma overruns/underruns for systems under heavy dma load.
As a side effect, broken enhanced floppy controllers that sometimes
don't detect dma overruns/underruns will give less errors.
Reviewed by: j@uriah.heep.sax.de (J Wunsch)
Hide the bogus FDC ``chip type'' display behind a (mostly) undocumented
option, since people started to trust the bogus claim. Once we're going
to handle 2.88 MB controllers, we have to redo the chip detection, by
now just leave it hidden.
large (over 4KB) softc struct. The descriptor array is accessed by
busmaster dma and must be physically contiguous in memory. malloc() of
a block greater than a page is only virtually contiguous, and not
necessarily physically contigious.
contigmalloc() could do this, but that is a bit on the overkill side.
I'm not sure of the origins of the problem report and diagnosis, I learned
of the problem via mail forwarded from Jim Shankland <jas@flyingfox.com>.
Jim said that Matt Thomas's workaround was to reduce the number of
transmit descriptors from 128 to 32, but I was concerned that it might
cost performance. Anyway, this change is my fault, not Jim's. :-)
Reviewed by: davidg
delay that without this the performance is unacceptable. The 83C690,
83C790, and 83C795 chips which this affects are all designed to work
with 0 waitstates in 16bit mode.
Also cleaned up the toggling of 16bit access mode that occurs during
normal operation; the previous code may not have done the right thing
in all cases.
size in terms of lines (instead of bytes). When changing video mode
in ioctl SW_XXX commands, syscons checks scp->history_size and
allocate a history buffer at least as large as the new screen size.
(This was unnecessary before, because HISTORY_SIZE was as large as 100
lines and this is bigger than the maximum screen size: 60 lines).
Similar adjustment is done in ioctl CONS_HISTORY command too.
PR: kern/4169
Reviewed by: sos
Includers of this file apparently didn't know that <sys/queue.h>
was a prerequisite and include a semi-random collection headers
until one happened to include it.
and hardware.
There is now another simple_lock around clock data/hardware accesses in
clock.c and microtime.s. It is my belief that this is the only area
sio/cy might stumble into during an unblocked INTerrupt. Thus I separated
the sio/cy code from the generic disable_intr()/enable_intr() routines.
Controlled by smptests.h: USE_COMLOCK, ON by default.
Add a simplelock to deal with disable_intr()/enable_intr() as used in UP kernel.
UP kernel expects that this is enough to guarantee exclusive access to
regions of code bracketed by these 2 functions.
Add a simplelock to bracket clock accesses in clock.c: clock_lock.
Help from: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
Remove unused headers.
Remove all but one instance of the device base name.
Prototype some local static functions.
Consistently reference the softc structure as "sc" rather than "lpt".
Prompted-by: bde
arg of type u_short (just write the function in ANSI C like most
other functions in this file instead of fixing the interface or
depending on a gcc feature).
I have no way of testing this one, first SMP/cy user please let me know...
It is my belief that sio and cy are the only FAST_INTR() ISRs. If this
is a bad assumption please educate me.
Several new fine-grained locks.
New FAST_INTR() methods:
- separate simplelock for FAST_INTR, no more giant lock.
- FAST_INTR()s no longer checks ipending on way out of ISR.
sio made MP-safe (I hope).
- interrupt-driven printing now works (nlpt)
- Rearrangement of bus-related functions into ppb_base/ppbconf
- Addition of ieee1284 interface functions, preliminary parallel-port
PnP support
Submitted by: Nicolas Souchu <Nicolas.Souchu@prism.uvsq.fr>
entry to the QOUTFIFO when it is full. This should eliminate the
"Timed out while idle" problems that many have reported.
In truth, this is somewhat of a hack. Although are interrupt latency is
low enough that we should be able to always service the queue in time,
since each entry must be passed up to the higher SCSI layer for what can
be a large amount of processing (perhaps even resulting in a new command
being queued) with interrupts disabled, we need this mechanism to avoid
overflow. In the future, these additional tasks will be offloaded to a
software interrupt handler which should make this hack unnecessary.
Add support for MODEX 320x240x256color with "unchained" adressing, giving
access to all 256K on all VGA's, those with that much memory that is :)
Also make sysmouse use the right resolution in graphics modes.
facilitate the new saver loading/unloading notification interface
in syscons.
daemon_saver:
- M_NOWAIT was wrong, since NULL returns are not handled. Just use
M_WAITOK.
- use `ostype' instead of hard-coded "FreeBSD". Now there is no more
hard-coded string! (But, who will run this screen saver on other
OS?!)
- put macros and data declarations in a consistent order.
- -DDEAMON_ONLY and -DSHOW_HOSTNAME options added in the previous commit
are removed. Options of this kind can go stale and no one notices
because no one uses them. DEAMON_ONLY is just removed. SHOW_HOSTNAME
is made default.
snake_saver:
- use `ostype' and `osrelease' as in the daemon saver. The string changes
slightly - there was a hyphen after "FreeBSD"; now there is a space.
(It is consistent with uname -a, like the daemon server already is.)
all screen savers:
- Use the new add_scrn_saver()/remove_scrn_saver() in syscons.c
to declare loading/unloading of a screen saver. Removed reference
to `current_saver' and the variable `old_saver' as they are not
necessary anymore.
- The blank, fade and green screen savers manipulate VGA registers.
Module loading should fail for non-VGA cards.
- `scrn_blanked' is consistently treated as a number/counter rather
than boolean.
- Some savers touch `scp->start' and `scp->end' to force entire screen
update when stopping themselves. This is unnecessary now because
syscons.c takes care of that.
- cleared up many unused or unnecessary #include statements.
- Removed -DLKM from Makefiles.
YOU NEED TO RECOMPILE BOTH SCREEN SAVERS AND KERNEL AS OF THIS CHANGE.
1. Add new interface, add_scrn_saver()/remove_scrn_saver(), to declare
loading/unloading of a screen saver. The screen saver calls these
functions to notify syscons of loading/unloading events.
It was possible to load multiple savers each of which will try to
remember the previous saver in a local variable (`old_saver'). The
scheme breaks easily if the user load two savers and unload them in a
wrong order; if the first saver is unloaded first, `old_saver' in the
second saver points to nowhere.
Now only one screen saver is allowed in memory at a time.
Soeren will be looking into this issue again later. syscons is
becoming too heavy. It's time to cut things down, rather than adding
more...
2. Make scrn_timer() to be the primary caller of the screen saver
(*current_saver)(). scintr(), scioctl() and ansi_put() update
`scrn_time_stamp' to indicate that they want to stop the screen saver.
There are three exceptions, however.
One is remove_scrn_saver() which need to stop the current screen saver
if it is running. To guard against scrn_timer() calling the saver during
this operation, `current_saver' is set to `none_saver' early.
The others are sccngetc() and sccncheckc(); they will unblank the
screen too. When the kernel enters DDB (via the hot key or a
break point), the screen saver will be stopped by sccngetc().
However, we have a reentrancy problem here. If the system has been in
the middle of the screen saver...
(The screen saver reentrancy problem has always been with sccnputc()
and sccngetc() in the -current source. So, the new code is doing no
worse, I reckon.)
3. Use `mono_time' rather than `time'.
4. Make set_border() work for EGA and CGA in addition to VGA. Do
nothing for MDA.
Changes to the LKM screen saver modules will follow shortly. YOU NEED
TO RECOMPILE BOTH SCREEN SAVERS AND KERNEL AS OF THESE CHANGES.
Reviewed by: sos and bde
and released. It should use `spcl' consistently in both cases,
otherwise shift/control/alt state may not be correctly set/reset.
(Even with this fix, you can still make syscons confused and fail to
change internal state if you really want to, by installing a really
arcane and artificial keymap.)
PR: i386/4030
Reviewed by: sos
cursor (CHAR_CURSOR)
1. Reduced the number of calls to set_destructive_cursor(). The
destructive cursor produced noticeable overhead on the system. It was
caused by draw_cursor_image() calling set_destructive_cursor() every
so often.
set_destructive_cursor() absolutely needs to be called when
a) the character code under the cursor has changed either because
the cursor moved or because the screen was updated or the mouse
pointer overlapped the cursor.
b) Or a new font has been loaded,
c) or the video mode has been changed,
d) or the cursor shape has been changed,
e) or the user switched virtual consoles.
2. Turn off the configuration flag CHAR_CURSOR (destructive cursor) in
scattach() if we have a non-VGA card. The destructive cursor works
only for VGA.
3. Removed redundant calls to set_destructive_cursor() in some places.
4. Fixed the "disappearing mouse pointer" problem. The mouse pointer
looked hidden under the destructive cursor when it overlaped the cursor.
A slightly different version of the patch was reviewd and OKed by
sos and ache.
Add a new configuration flag, KBD_NORESET (0x20) to tell scprobe() not
to reset the keyboard.
IBM ThinkPad 535 has the `Fn' key with which the user can perform
certain functions in conjunction with other keys. For example, `Fn' +
PageUP/PageDOWN adjust speaker volume, `Fn' + Home/End change
brightness of LCD screen. It can also be used to suspend the system.
It appears that these functions are implemented at the keyboard level
or the keyboard controller level and totally independent from BIOS or
OS. But, if the keyboard is reset (as is done in scprobe()), they
become unavailable. (There are other laptops which have similar
functions associated with the `Fn' key. But, they aren't affected by
keyboard reset.)
ThinkPad 535 doesn't have switches or buttons to adjust brightness and
volume, or to put the system into the suspend mode. Therefore, it is
essential to preserve these `Fn' key functions in FreeBSD. The new
flag make scprobe() skip keyboard reset.
If this flag is not set, scprobe() behaves in the same say as before.
(If we only knew a way to detect ThinkPad 535, we could skip keyboard
reset automatically, but...)
rather than hard-code it in the message text. Optinally include
the host name in the message if SHOW_HOSTNAME is defined.
The origianl idea and sample code submitted by Angelo Turetta
<ATuretta@stylo.it>.
adapter during the system boot. It always assumes there is at least a
monochrome adapter.
This is rather strange assumption. If there is no dispaly adapter, the
console driver cannot be any good...
In this patch, scinit() is split into two parts; the first part is
now called scvidprobe() which will detect the presence of video card
at the CGA or MONO buffer address and returns TRUE if found. It is
called during sccnprobe() and scprobe(). Both will fail if no video
card is found.
The second part, whose name stays the same as before, scinit(), is
called from sccninit() and scattach() to complete initialization of
the found video card.
The keyboard probe code is moved from scprobe() to sckbdprobe();
scprobe() now calls scvidprobe() and sckbdprobe() to carry out device
probe. (This is rather a cosmetic change, but it sure makes the code
look better organized.)
The problem pointed out by Joerg.
changes relative to the 2.2 compatable version are include file
related, the new multicast interface (!) and the new PCI interface.
This should work "as-is" but has not been tested (I have not been able
to get a dc21x4x based card for testing).
- OVERRIDE_TUNER: allows you to manually choose the tuner type for those
cards that fail to probe properly. See source for legal
values.
- OVERRIDE_DBX: allows you to manually choose DBX or NO DBX for those
cards that fail to probe properly.
0 == no DBX circuit present, 1 == DBX circuit present.
speed using the boot blocks, instead of a hardcoded value stuck in the
kernel. This way, you can have systems using the same kernel but different
console speeds.
Add a sysctl entry for changing the system console speed.
Lock the user tty speed to match the system console speed.
Nuke CONSPEED.
Reviewed by: bde
device probe of a host to PCI bridge may modify that value, based on
its knowledge of device specific registers. This makes the Intel XXpress
work, as verified by: Terje Marthinussen <terjem@cc.uit.no>.
1) Stop at the first map register that contains a zero value.
2) When testing for the map size work up from low values, since
this works around a bug in some BusLogic SCSI card, which has
the 16 upper port base address bits hardwired to zero.
The config register dump printed in the bootverbose case has
been slightly rearranged.
reality. There will be a new call interface, but for now the file
pci_compat.c (which is to be deleted, after all drivers are converted)
provides an emulation of the old PCI bus driver functions. The only
change that might be visible to drivers is, that the type pcici_t
(which had been meant to be just a handle, whose exact definition
should not be relied on), has been converted into a pcicfgregs* .
The Tekram AMD SCSI driver bogusly relied on the definition of pcici_t
and has been converted to just call the PCI drivers functions to access
configuration space register, instead of inventing its own ...
This code is by no means complete, but assumed to be fully operational,
and brings the official code base more in line with my development code.
A new generic device descriptor data type has to be agreed on. The PCI
code will then use that data type to provide new functionality:
1) userconfig support
2) "wired" PCI devices
3) conflicts checking against ISA/EISA
4) maps will depend on the command register enable bits
5) PCI to Anything bridges can be defined as devices,
and are probed like any "standard" PCI device.
The following features are currently missing, but will be added back,
soon:
1) unknown device probe message
2) suppression of "mirrored" devices caused by ancient, broken chip-sets
This code relies on generic shared interrupt support just commited to
kern_intr.c (plus the modifications of isa.c and isa_device.h).
1) Adjust NFRAMES from 16 to 8 per 16k of memory.
2) Acknowledge interrupts to the card early in the interrupt
handler before processing the event that caused the interrupt.
This frees the card to process addtional events instead of
waiting for the driver to finish handling events.
3) Changed the initialization of the transmit buffers to be a
loop so that the number of buffers can be more easily changed.
4) Moved the code to take the adapter out of loop back mode to just
before we enable the receiver.
I also made the driver dynamically size its resource arrays at attach
time so that we can take full advantage of adapters with more than 16k
of memory.
Richard has some other changes he's working on to improve performance,
but this should get ee16 support working reliably again.
Thanks to Wes Santee <wes@bogon.net> for testing these patches.
Submitted by: Richard Straka <straka@user1.inficad.com>
full implementation of the sate machine as described in RFC1661, and
provides support for plugging in various control protocols. I needed
this to provide PPP support for the BISDN project (right now).
Unfortunatley, while the existing API was almost up to the point, i
needed one minor API change in order to decouple the this-layer-
started and this-layer-finished actions from the respective Up and
Down events of the lower layer. This requires two additional lines in
the attach routines of all existing lower layer interface drivers that
are using syncPPP (shortcutting these actions and events). Apart from
this, i believe i didn't change the API of all this, so everything
should plug in without too many hassles. Please report if i broke
something in the existing drivers.
For a list of features (including new ones like dial-on-demand), and
things still to be done, please refer to the man page i'll commit asap.
Encouraged by: Serge Vakulenko <vak@cronyx.ru>
When an ioctl command SW_XXXX is issued, scioctl() checks if the font
appropriate for the specified mode is already loaded. The check was
correctly done for 8 line and 16 line fonts, but not for 14 line font.
The symbols FONT_8, FONT_14 and FONT_16 were defined as numbers but
were sometimes treated as bit flags. They are now defined as bit
flags.
2) screen blinking (two fixes)
Removed a redundant call to timeout() in do_bell().
Don't let blink_screen() write to the video buffer if the screen is in
the graphics (UNKNOWN) mode.
3) screen saver timeout
The ioctl command CONS_BLANKTIME sets the screen saver's timeout. The
value of zero will disable the screen saver. If the screen saver is
currently running it should be stopped.
4) border color and destructive cursor (two fixes)
The border color and the cursor type can be changed via escape
sequences. But only VGA can change the border color and set the
cursor type to destructive (CHAR_CURSOR) in the current syscons.
scan_esc() failed to check this.
Reviewed by: sos