case we should wait for the resetdone handler to be called before
returning.
- When providing resources via ndis_query_resources(), uses the
computed rsclen when using bcopy() to copy out the resource data
rather than the caller-supplied buffer length.
- Avoid using ndis_reset_nic() in if_ndis.c unless we really need
to reset the NIC because of a problem.
- Allow interrupts to be fielded during ndis_attach(), at least
as far as allowing ndis_isr() and ndis_intrhand() to run.
- Use ndis_80211_rates_ex when probing for supported rates. Technically,
this isn't supposed to work since, although Microsoft added the extended
rate structure with the NDIS 5.1 update, the spec still says that
the OID_802_11_SUPPORTED_RATES OID uses ndis_80211_rates. In spite of
this, it appears some drivers use it anyway.
- When adding in our guessed rates, check to see if they already exist
so that we avoid any duplicates.
- Add a printf() to ndis_open_file() that alerts the user when a
driver attempts to open a file under /compat/ndis.
With these changes, I can get the driver for the SMC 2802W 54g PCI
card to load and run. This board uses a Prism54G chip. Note that in
order for this driver to work, you must place the supplied smc2802w.arm
firmware image under /compat/ndis. (The firmware is not resident on
the device.)
Note that this should also allow the 3Com 3CRWE154G72 card to work
as well; as far as I can tell, these cards also use a Prism54G chip.
without the (defunct) isa compatibility shims. The new-bus-specific
parts are very similar to the ones for the pci probe and attach.
This was held up too long waiting for a repo copy to src/sys/dev/cy,
so I decided to fix the files in their old place. This gives easier
to read and merge diffs anyway.
The "count" line in src/sys/conf/files won't be changed until after
the repo copy, so old kernel configs that specify a count need not be
(and must not be) changed until then. The count is just ignored in
the driver. One unfinished detail is dynamic allocation of arrays
with <count> and (<count> * 32) entries, and iteration over the arrays.
This is now kludged with a fixed count of 10 (up to 10 cards with up
to 32 ports each).
Prodded by: imp
Submitted by: mostly by imp
Approved by: imp
common attach function so that the lock gets initialized in all cases.
This fixes breakage of the initialization of the lock in the pci case
in rev.1.135 (between the releases of 5.1 and 5.2). The lock is only
used in the SMP case, so this bug was not always fatal.
vm_mmap_vnode function, where we can safely check for a special /dev/zero
case. Rev. 1.180 has reordered checks and introduced a regression.
Submitted by: alc
Was broken by: kan
and used by uart(4) for the channel conflicted with the port offset for
the Z8530. The Z8530 has the channels reversed (i.e. channel B is at
offset 0 and channel A is at offset 4). Assign the port offsets in the
right order so that uart(4) will properly attach to the channels.
Submitted by: Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>
It was fixed by moving problemetic checks, as well as checks that
doesn't need locking before locks are acquired.
Submitted by: Ryan Sommers <ryans@gamersimpact.com>
In co-operation with: cperciva, maxim, mlaier, sam
Tested by: submitter (previous patch), me (current patch)
Reviewed by: cperciva, mlaier (previous patch), sam (current patch)
Approved by: sam
Dedicated to: enough!
SCHED_INTERACT_MAX was used where SCHED_SLP_RUN_MAX was needed. This was
causing the interactivity scaler to lose history at a more dramatic rate
than intended.
scenario into #ifdef DEBUG. This makes my cluster with Belkin
KVM switch completely usable, even if the KVM switch and mouse
get a bit confused sometimes.
Without this, when the mouse gets confused, all sorts of crud
gets spammed all over the screen. With this, the mouse may appear
dead for a second or three, but it recovers silently.
phandle_t. Since both are typedefed to unsigned int, this is more
or less cosmetic.
- Fix the code that determines whether a creator instance was used
for firmware output (and should not be blanked on initialization).
Since r1.2 of dev/fb/creator.c, this consisted comparing a handle of
an instance of a package with a handle of the package itself.
Use the test from r1.1, which utilizes OF_instance_to_package().
Submitted by: Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>
+ struct ifnet: remove unused fields, move ipv6-related field close
to each other, add a pointer to l3<->l2 translation tables (arp,nd6,
etc.) for future use.
+ struct route: remove an unused field, move close to each
other some fields that might likely go away in the future
"...If "keyboard" is the selected input-device and "screen" the
output-device (both via /options) but the keyboard is unplugged,
OF automatically switches to ttya for the console, it even prints
a line telling so on "screen". Solaris respects this behaviour and
uses ttya as the console in this case and people probably expect
FreeBSD to do the same (it's also very handy to temporarily switch
consoles)..."
"...I changed the comparison of the console device with "ttya" ||
"ttyb" to "tty" because on AXe boards all 4 onboard UARTs end in
SUB-D connectors (ttya and ttyb being 16550 and ttyc and ttyd a
SAB82532) and there's no Sun keyboard connector (but PS/2). If one
plugs a serial card in a box there also can be more than just ttya
and ttyb available for a console..."
Submitted by: Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>
Has no doubt that the change is correct: marcel
"... uart_cpu_sparc64.c currently only looks at /options if ttyX is
the selected console. However, there's one case where it should
additionally look at /chosen. If "keyboard" is the selected input-
device and "screen" the output-device (both via /options) but the
keyboard is unplugged, OF automatically switches to ttya for the
console. It even prints a line telling so on "screen". Solaris
respects this behaviour and uses ttya as the console in this case
and people probably expect FreeBSD to do the same (it's also very
handy to temporarily switch consoles)..."
Submitted by: Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>
Has no doubt the change is correct: marcel
WARNS=6. I don't change the WARNS level in the Makefile because I
didn't tested this on other archs.
The fs.h fix was suggested by: marcel
Reviewed by: md5(1)
of UARTs. We already did this in uart_cpu_getdev().
While here, also check the compat name for "su" or "su16550".
Both changes submitted by: Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>
Does not doubt the correctness of the second change: marcel
it belongs. Change the implementation to match those of rfs() and
rgs() for consistency and irrespective of whether the original was
more correct or not (technically speaking).
in the process. This is required for proper debugging of corefiles
created by 1:1 or M:N threaded processes. Add an XXX comment where
we should actually call a function that dumps MD specific notes.
An example of a MD specific note is the NT_PRXFPREG note for SSE
registers.
Since BFD creates non-annotated pseudo-sections for the first PRSTATUS
and FPREGSET notes (non-annotated in the sense that the name of the
section does not contain the pid/tid), make sure those sections describe
the initial thread of the process (i.e. the thread which tid equals the
pid). This is not strictly necessary, but makes sure that tools that use
the non-annotated section names will not change behaviour due to this
change.
The practical upshot of this all is that one can see the threads in
the debugger when looking at a corefile. For 1:1 threading this means
that *all* threads are visible.
NFSv3. It's likely that modifying the attributes will affect the
file's accessibility. This version of the patch is one suggested
by Ian Dowse after reviewing my original attempt in the PR
Reviewed By: iedowse
PR: kern/44336
MFC after: 3 days
is twofold:
1. When a 1:1 or M:N threaded process dumps core, we need to put the
register state of each of its kernel threads in the core file.
This can only be done by differentiating the pid field in the
respective note. For this we need the tid.
2. When thread support is present for remote debugging the kernel
with gdb(1), threads need to be identified by an integer due to
limitations in the remote protocol. This requires having a tid.
To minimize the impact of having thread IDs, threads that are created
as part of a fork (i.e. the initial thread in a process) will inherit
the process ID (i.e. tid=pid). Subsequent threads will have IDs larger
than PID_MAX to avoid interference with the pid allocation algorithm.
The assignment of tids is handled by thread_new_tid().
The thread ID allocation algorithm has been written with 3 assumptions
in mind:
1. IDs need to be created as fast a possible,
2. Reuse of IDs may happen instantaneously,
3. Someone else will write a better algorithm.
Add in missing case for i845G in the attach routine. I'll MFC this
with the rest of the change after the 4.10 codefreeze lifts.
Reviewed By: Doug Rabson