(accent_key + space does still print the accent letter too, as in
the previous commit.)
Requested by a couple of users.
- Clear the accent flag when the next_screen key is pressed.
- Added some comment lines regarding accent key processing.
This will not make any of object files that LINT create change; there
might be differences with INET disabled, but hardly anything compiled
before without INET anyway. Now the 'obvious' things will give a
proper error if compiled without inet - ipx_ip, ipfw, tcp_debug. The
only thing that _should_ work (but can't be made to compile reasonably
easily) is sppp :-(
This commit move struct arpcom from <netinet/if_ether.h> to
<net/if_arp.h>.
- IIR_TXRDY is never off even if reading a IIR register.
- Know as PIAFS "Palido 321S", "DC-*S" oemed by Sharp corp.
2. Omiting a restrict probing if it's already probed by pccardd.
Note: Define a new id_flags as follows
0x40000 - NO PROBE (Already probed as serial)
0x80000 - Has a bogus IIR_TXRDY register
Sato Junichi <junichi@astec.co.jp>
Nrihiro Kumagai <kuma@slab.tnr.sharp.co.jp>
Hirao Tetsuya <ai.cs.fujitsu.co.jp>
Toshiharu Asai <asai@mbc.infoshere.or.jp>
Shin'ya Kumabuchi <kumabu@t3.rim.or.jp>
Freebsd-users-jp@jp.freebsd.orgbsd-nomads@ai.cs.fujitsu.co.jp
With a keymap with accent key definitions loaded to syscons, you press
an accent key followed by a regular letter key to produce an accented
letter. Press an accent key followed by the space bar to get the
accent letter itself.
Code is based on the ideas and work by jmrueda@diatel.upm.es and
totii@est.is.
PR: i386/4016
console.h
- Defined structures and constants for accent (dead) keys.
syscons.c, kbdtables.h
- When an accent key is pressed, set the corresponding index to
`accents'. If the next key is the space key, produce the accent char
itself. Otherwise search the accent key map entry, indexed by
`accents', for a matching pair of a regular char and an accented char.
- Added ioctl functions to set and get the accent key map (PIO_DEADKEYMAP
and GIO_DEADKEYMAP).
necessary to call it when the tty layer's output state has not been
changed, but siostop() sometimes changes the TS_BUSY state and then
calls comstart() mainly for its side effect of calling ttwwakeup().
need to do it directly, since ttwwakeup() is always called just before
returning from rpstart(). The brokenness was waking up the wrong address
after clearing TS_SO_OLOWAT. It's not clear how processes waiting for
output to drain below low water ever got woken up.
Found by: when I fixed longstanding warts in output watermark
handling, this was the only driver that knew too much
(anything) about the watermarks
It failed to recognize the PCI bus in a system that had only an
old chip-set (class code 000000) and a Cyclom multiport serial
card on PCI bus 0, but no VGA card or disk or network controller.
PR: i386/5300
Submitted by: Nickolay N. Dudorov <nnd@itfs.nsk.su>
The #ifdef IPXIP in netipx/ipx_if.h is OK (used from ipx_usrreq.c and
ifconfig.c only).
I also fixed a typo IPXTUNNEL -> IPTUNNEL (and #ifdef'ed out the code
inside, as it never could have compiled - doh.)
- A nonprofiling version of s_lock (called s_lock_np) is used
by mcount.
- When profiling is active, more registers are clobbered in
seemingly simple assembly routines. This means that some
callers needed to save/restore extra registers.
- The stack pointer must have space for a 'fake' return address
in idle, to avoid stack underflow.
(mutant) Crystal CSS4236 chip on the Intel PR440FX SMP motherboard.
XXX this uses some rather ugly PnP bootstrap code that is *NOT* compatable
with 'controller pnp0' or *ANY* other PnP devices. If you use some other
PnP devices, enabling css0 will burn your house down. :-] The
"simplified" PnP init sequence directly blats your config(8) settings onto
the chip. I'm pretty sure 'css0' will conflict with 'mss0', this whole
area desperately needs a cleanup.
I have been using the following with some success on the PR440FX:
controller snd0
device css0 at isa? port 0x534 irq 5 drq 1 flags 0x08 vector adintr
device opl0 at isa? port 0x388
device mpu0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 10 vector mpuintr
Wrappered and enabled by the define BETTER_CLOCK (on by default in smpyests.h)
apic_vector.s also contains a small change I (smp) made to eliminate
the double level INT problem. It seems stable, but I haven't the tools
in place to prove it fixes the problem.
Reviewed by: smp@csn.net
Submitted by: Tor Egge <Tor.Egge@idi.ntnu.no>
MS IntelliMouse, Kensington Thinking Mouse, Genius NetScroll,
Genius NetMouse, Genius NetMouse Pro, ALPS GlidePoint, ASCII
MieMouse, Logitech MouseMan+, FirstMouse+
- The `psm' driver is made to recognize various models of PS/2 mice
and enable their extra features so that their additional buttons and
wheel/roller are recognized. The name of the detected model will be
printed at boot time.
- A set of new ioctl functions are added to the `psm', `mse' and
`sysmouse' drivers so that the userland program (such as the X server)
can query device information and change driver settings.
- The wheel/roller movement is handled as the `Z' axis movement by the
mouse drivers and the moused daemon. The Z axis movement may be mapped
to another axis movement or buttons.
- The mouse drivers support a new, standard mouse data format,
MOUSE_PROTO_SYSMOUSE format which can encode x, y, and x axis movement
and up to 10 buttons.
/sys/i386/include/mouse.h
- Added some fields to `mousestatus_t' to store Z axis movement
and flag bits.
- Added the field `model' to `mousehw_t' to store mouse model code.
Defined model codes.
- Extended `mousemode_t'.
- Added new protocols and some constants for them.
- Added new ioctl functions and structures.
- Removed obsolete ioctl definitions.
/sys/i386/include/console.h
- Added `dz' field to the structure `mouse_data' to pass Z axis movement
to `syscons/sysmouse'.
- Removed LEFT_BUTTON, MIDDLE_BUTTON and RIGHT_BUTTON. Use button bits
defined in `mouse.h' instead.
/sys/i386/isa/psm.c
- Added a set of functions to detect various mice which have additional
features (wheel and buttons) unavailable in the standard PS/2 mouse.
- Refined existing ioctl functions and added new ones. Most important
of all is MOUSE_SETLEVEL which manipulates the output level of the driver.
While the output level remains zero, the output from the `psm' driver is
in the standard PS/2 mouse format (three bytes long). When the level
is set to one, the `psm' driver will send data in the extended format.
At the level two the driver uses the format which is native to the
connected mouse is used. (Meaning that the output from the device is
passed to the caller as is, unmodified.) The `psm' driver will pass
such extended data format as is to the caller if the output level is
two, but emulates the standard format if the output level is zero.
- Added kernel configuration flags to set initial resolution
(PSM_CONFIG_RESOLUTION) and acceleration (PSM_CONFIG_ACCEL).
- Removed the compile options PSM_ACCEL, PSM_CHECKSYNC and PSM_EMULATION.
Acceleration ratio is now specified by the kernel configuration flags
stated above. Sync check logic is refined and now standard.
The sync check can be turned off by the new kernel configuration flags
PSM_CONFIG_NOCHECKSYNC (0x100). PSM_EMULATION has been of little use.
- Summer clean up :-) Removed unused code and obsolete comments.
/sys/i386/isa/mse.c
- Created mseioctl() to deal with ioctl functions MOUSE_XXXX.
Most importantly, the MOUSE_SETLEVEL ioctl will change the
output format from the 5 byte format to the new, extended format
so that the caller can take advantage of Z axis movement and additional
buttons.
- Use constants defined in `mouse.h' rather than magic numbers.
/sys/i386/isa/syscons.c
- Changed scioctl() to reflect the new `console.h' and some of the new
ioctls defined in `mouse.h'. Most importantly, the MOUSE_SETLEVEL
ioctl will change the `sysmouse' output format from the MouseSystems
5 byte format to the new, extended format so that the caller can
take advantage of Z axis movement and additional buttons.
- Added support for double/triple click actions of the left button and
single click action of the right button in the virtual console. The
left button double click will select a word under the mouse pointer.
The triple click will select a line and the single click of the right
button will extend the selected region to the current position of
the mouse pointer. This will make the cut/paste support more compatible
with xterm.
/sys/i386/isa/kbdio.h
- Added PSM_INTELLI_ID.
make isa_dmacascade, isa_dmastart, isa_dmadone, and find_isadev MUCH
easier to be found by starting them at the beginging of the line...
remove braces inside of ifdef RESOURCE_CHECK... found by % in vi...
Here are the remanding changes required to support the Ensoniq
Soundscape using FreeBSD 3.0-current.
Notes:
1) ad1848_init already has code to detect if DMA_DUPLEX should
be set so it is not necessary (and is in fact a mistake) to
hard code setting it. Not all soundcards (i.e. the current
sscape driver) are capable of using DMA_DUPLEX.
2) The other changes are hopefully self explanatory. Feel free
to let me know if you need additional information.
Submitted by: john@feith.com (John Wehle)
"high resolution" profiling. The available clocks are:
- the i8254 clock
- on non-SMP i586's and i686's: the TSC
- on systems with I586_PMC_GUPROF configured, and PERFMON configured
and available: all the performance counters.
This is unfinshed (there are problems with locking out the PERFMON
device driver, and with losing calibration after switching the clock),
but better than static configuration or writing to kmem.
Changed ifdefs to avoid generating code for non-working option
combinations.
there is a natural place to initialize `safepri' in a future commit.
Spinoffs:
- spl0() gets called in the unlikely event that isa is not configured.
- configure() has better control over enabling interrupts.
- it is now less unclear that interrupts aren't actually enabled early.
Rev.1.48 of autoconf.c seems to have done the opposite of what was
intended - moving the isa_configure() call delayed the spl0() side
effect.
Added some comments about the bogons. Removed the splhigh() call since
it is a no-op.
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
this mouse can correctly operate only in the high resolution mode.
If the mouse pointer jumps to the top or left edge or the top-left
corner of the screen, try defining PSM_MSCKLUDGE in the kernel
configuration file. This option will put the mouse in the high
resolution mode during device initialization.
and don't include <sys/fcntl.h>. (The select -> poll changes replaced
fcntl macros by poll macros.)
Use <machine/*.h> instead of <i386/include/*.h>.
Fail the probe instead of crashing in the unlikely event that malloc()
fails.
Fixed #include order. <i386/isa/isa_device.h> will soon be a prerequisite
for <i386/isa/pnp.h>. Including both in alphebetical order gets this
right naturally.
years and gives a "laugh"able number of compile-time errors (see the
comment). main() just printed the struct sizes. This can be done
better by compiling with -g and reading off the sizes from the stabs.
Sorted #includes.
Fixed an unsigned vs signed comparison.
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)
This corresponds to Voxware 3.5-alpha-<something> and Amancio's guspnp21.
There was a bit of a FUBAR during the commmit, so not all files are
mentioned in this commit's mail.
X-rant: I have just started to _*HATE*_ CVS...
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.
Very rudimentary, lots of error checks missing, but it works.
Dont do an ls on two different CD's though, it will eat your
changer mechanism for lunch :), this clearly needs some more
thought. Until then this will enable those with changers to
mount their multible CD's and doing "sensible" work....
Thanks to Andrew Gordon <arg@arg1.demon.co.uk> for donating a drive
(a NEC CDR-C251 4x4) that makes this possible to develop.
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.
in <machine/cpu.h>. Moved the declarations to <machine/cputypes.h>.
Fixed style bugs in the moved code. Fixed everything that depended on
the nested include. Don't include <machine/cpu.h> (in the changed files)
unless something in it is used directly.
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
* 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
for a couple of external CD's (notably the Sony PRD-650).
Note: In order to get my CD recognized, I had to configure the CD under
Win95, but it seems to work now even if I turn it off.
Submitted by: PAO [minor mods by me]
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.
i was at it, do no longer insist on `PCVT_FREEBSD' being declared in
the config file, but default it to a reasonable value.
More cleanup to follow, but this part is safe for RELENG_2_2, too.
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
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.
It seems I didn't count my 0's properly when adding the new masks into
icu_vector.s pushing SWI_AST_MASK off the end of the array and screwing
up the indexing for SWI_CLOCK_MASK.
Fix the bug icu_vector.s and also reformat the code in both icu_vector.s and
apic_vector.s so that it will be much harder to make the same mistake in
the future.
Submitted by: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
machine generates an NMI for each floating point error, just like an old XT.
Since it is ISA only, reading the EISA status port yields 0xff, which would
give a spurious EISA panic. The simplest thing to do is to ignore the 0xff.
- 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)
buffer queue so I missed this when I changed buf_queue_head.
This probably fixes Soren's problem too, but he never mentioned
which CD driver he was using. 8-)
Submitted by: dave adkins <adkin003@tc.umn.edu>
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>
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)
these structs for conflics...
it still exist that two PnP cards can colide, but this is up to the user
to make sure it doesn't happen...
other modifications to pnp.c to format output properly, and hide more
output behind bootverbose flag...
fix some bugons in pnp.h that would of made it difficult for inclusion
in external programs (for import of pnpinfo)
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.
was 0.
PR: 4164
Submitted by: Joe Traister <traister@mojozone.org>
While i was at it, also fixed a broken return value for the VT_RELDISP
ioctl, iff the third arg was legally VT_TRUE, but the destination
screen was in process mode so the actual switch had to be deferred.
This was breaking the ability to directly toggle between two X servers
running on two VTs, since the server getting the bogus error return
was running wild, and competing with the other one for the hardware.
(Sigh, this was a very long-standing bug.)
PR: 4486
Submitted by: tegge@idi.ntnu.no (Tor Egge)
Implement a function is_adapter_memory() in order to determine what
should nto be dumped at all. Currently, only populated with the ``ISA
memory hole''. Adapter regions of other busses should be added.
This code has been submitted by Luigi Rizzo <luigi@labinfo.iet.unipi.it>,
based on work done by Sujal Patel.
This currnetly doesn't provide the ability to register the port address
of PnP cards assigned a PnP driver. As there aren't any PnP capible
drivers yet, this isn't much of a problem.
The code allows you, through USERCONFIG, configure what the cards port
bases, irqs, and dma's are like. Currently there isn't support to view
what cards are in the sytem.
It successfully configures my PnP Internal Modem and sio then sees the
card as a normal isa device.
man page will be committed shortly.
Approved-by: jkh
Submitted-by: Luigi Rizzo
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.
mode, the slash is a comment leader, while under non-elf it is a divide
symbol (what a concept! :-). Theoretically, #APP/#NO_APP can change this
but that doesn't seem to mesh too well with macros and line continuation.
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
* lots of fixes to error handling-- mostly works now
* improve DMA timing config for Triton chipsets-- PIIX4 and UDMA drive
still untested
* generally improve DMA config in many ways-- mostly cleanup
* clean up boot-time messages
* rewrite PRD generation algorithm
* first wd timeout is now longer, to handle drive spinup
Submitted by: John Hood <cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us>
2) Added a non_blocking flag to the write routine.
3) Added a 3rd buffer (actually a ring buffer would be better)
Submitted by: Jim Lowe <james@miller.cs.uwm.edu>
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>
and the sound driver which uses auto dma.
The dma interface functionality remains however it now checks
to see if a dma is operating in auto dma mode and if so it bypasses
the busy flag check . I have modified the sound driver 3.5 to
adjust for this new behavior and tested it under FreeBSD 3.0 -current
This patch also includes the new function isa_dmastop.
Submitted by: Amancio Hasty <hasty@rah.star-gate.com>
irqs can't work (at best, the first one attached wins). It used to
be necessary to skip this check because of bogus irqs in the sound
drivers, but the sound drivers have been fixed, except possibly the
OSS ones.
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).
Added a new variable, 'bsp_apic_ready', which is set as soon as the bootstrap
CPU has initialized its local APIC. Conditionalize the GENSPLR functions
to call ss_lock ONLY after bsp_apic_ready is TRUE; This should prevent
any problems with races between the time the 1st AP becomes ready and the
time smp_active is set.
region protected by the simplelock 'cpl_lock'.
Notes:
- this code is currently controlled on a section by section basis with
defines in machine/param.h. All sections are currently enabled.
- this code is not as clean as I would like, but that can wait till later.
- the "giant lock" still surrounds most instances of this "cpl region".
I still have to do the code that arbitrates setting cpl between the
top and bottom halves of the kernel.
- the possibility of deadlock exists, I am committing the code at this
point so as to exercise it and detect any such cases B4 the "giant lock"
is removed.
Made NEW_STRATEGY default.
Removed misc. old cruft.
Centralized simple locks into mp_machdep.c
Centralized simple lock macros into param.h
More cleanup in the direction of making splxx()/cpl MP-safe.
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).
Work done by BSDI, Jonathan Lemon <jlemon@americantv.com>,
Mike Smith <msmith@gsoft.com.au>, Sean Eric Fagan <sef@kithrup.com>,
and probably alot of others.
Submitted by: Jnathan Lemon <jlemon@americantv.com>
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.
I changed a few bits here and there, mainly renaming wd82371.c
to ide_pci.c now that it's supposed to handle different chipsets.
It runs on my P6 natoma board with two Maxtor drives, and also
on a Fujitsu machine I have at work with an Opti chipset and
a Quantum drive.
Submitted by:cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us <John Hood>
Original readme:
*** WARNING ***
This code has so far been tested on exactly one motherboard with two
identical drives known for their good DMA support.
This code, in the right circumstances, could corrupt data subtly,
silently, and invisibly, in much the same way that older PCI IDE
controllers do. It's ALPHA-quality code; there's one or two major
gaps in my understanding of PCI IDE still. Don't use this code on any
system with data that you care about; it's only good for hack boxes.
Expect that any data may be silently and randomly corrupted at any
moment. It's a disk driver. It has bugs. Disk drivers with bugs
munch data. It's a fact of life.
I also *STRONGLY* recommend getting a copy of your chipset's manual
and the ATA-2 or ATA-3 spec and making sure that timing modes on your
disk drives and IDE controller are being setup correctly by the BIOS--
because the driver makes only the lamest of attempts to do this just
now.
*** END WARNING ***
that said, i happen to think the code is working pretty well...
WHAT IT DOES:
this code adds support to the wd driver for bus mastering PCI IDE
controllers that follow the SFF-8038 standard. (all the bus mastering
PCI IDE controllers i've seen so far do follow this standard.) it
should provide busmastering on nearly any current P5 or P6 chipset,
specifically including any Intel chipset using one of the PIIX south
bridges-- this includes the '430FX, '430VX, '430HX, '430TX, '440LX,
and (i think) the Orion '450GX chipsets. specific support is also
included for the VIA Apollo VP-1 chipset, as it appears in the
relabeled "HXPro" incarnation seen on cheap US$70 taiwanese
motherboards (that's what's in my development machine). it works out
of the box on controllers that do DMA mode2; if my understanding is
correct, it'll probably work on Ultra-DMA33 controllers as well.
it'll probably work on busmastering IDE controllers in PCI slots, too,
but this is an area i am less sure about.
it cuts CPU usage considerably and improves drive performance
slightly. usable numbers are difficult to come by with existing
benchmark tools, but experimentation on my K5-P90 system, with VIA
VP-1 chipset and Quantum Fireball 1080 drives, shows that disk i/o on
raw partitions imposes perhaps 5% cpu load. cpu load during
filesystem i/o drops a lot, from near 100% to anywhere between 30% and
70%. (the improvement may not be as large on an Intel chipset; from
what i can tell, the VIA VP-1 may not be very efficient with PCI I/O.)
disk performance improves by 5% or 10% with these drives.
real, visible, end-user performance improvement on a single user
machine is about nil. :) a kernel compile was sped up by a whole three
seconds. it *does* feel a bit better-behaved when the system is
swapping heavily, but a better disk driver is not the fix for *that*
problem.
THE CODE:
this code is a patch to wd.c and wd82371.c, and associated header
files. it should be considered alpha code; more work needs to be
done.
wd.c has fairly clean patches to add calls to busmaster code, as
implemented in wd82371.c and potentially elsewhere (one could imagine,
say, a Mac having a different DMA controller).
wd82371.c has been considerably reworked: the wddma interface that it
presents has been changed (expect more changes), many bugs have been
fixed, a new internal interface has been added for supporting
different chipsets, and the PCI probe has been considerably extended.
the interface between wd82371.c and wd.c is still fairly clean, but
i'm not sure it's in the right place. there's a mess of issues around
ATA/ATAPI that need to be sorted out, including ATAPI support, CD-ROM
support, tape support, LS-120/Zip support, SFF-8038i DMA, UltraDMA,
PCI IDE controllers, bus probes, buggy controllers, controller timing
setup, drive timing setup, world peace and kitchen sinks. whatever
happens with all this and however it gets partitioned, it is fairly
clear that wd.c needs some significant rework-- probably a complete
rewrite.
timing setup on disk controllers is something i've entirely punted on.
on my development machine, it appears that the BIOS does at least some
of the necessary timing setup. i chose to restrict operation to
drives that are already configured for Mode4 PIO and Mode2 multiword
DMA, since the timing is essentially the same and many if not most
chipsets use the same control registers for DMA and PIO timing.
does anybody *know* whether BIOSes are required to do timing setup for
DMA modes on drives under their care?
error recovery is probably weak. early on in development, i was
getting drive errors induced by bugs in the driver; i used these to
flush out the worst of the bugs in the driver's error handling, but
problems may remain. i haven't got a drive with bad sectors i can
watch the driver flail on.
complaints about how wd82371.c has been reindented will be ignored
until the FreeBSD project has a real style policy, there is a
mechanism for individual authors to match it (indent flags or an emacs
c-mode or whatever), and it is enforced. if i'm going to use a source
style i don't like, it would help if i could figure out what it *is*
(style(9) is about half of a policy), and a way to reasonably
duplicate it. i ended up wasting a while trying to figure out what
the right thing to do was before deciding reformatting the whole thing
was the worst possible thing to do, except for all the other
possibilities.
i have maintained wd.c's indentation; that was not too hard,
fortunately.
TO INSTALL:
my dev box is freebsd 2.2.2 release. fortunately, wd.c is a living
fossil, and has diverged very little recently. included in this
tarball is a patch file, 'otherdiffs', for all files except wd82371.c,
my edited wd82371.c, a patch file, 'wd82371.c-diff-exact', against the
2.2.2 dist of 82371.c, and another patch file,
'wd82371.c-diff-whitespace', generated with diff -b (ignore
whitespace). most of you not using 2.2.2 will probably have to use
this last patchfile with 'patch --ignore-whitespace'. apply from the
kernel source tree root. as far as i can tell, this should apply
cleanly on anything from -current back to 2.2.2 and probably back to
2.2.0. you, the kernel hacker, can figure out what to do from here.
if you need more specific directions, you probably should not be
experimenting with this code yet.
to enable DMA support, set flag 0x2000 for that drive in your config
file or in userconfig, as you would the 32-bit-PIO flag. the driver
will then turn on DMA support if your drive and controller pass its
tests. it's a bit picky, probably. on discovering DMA mode failures
or disk errors or transfers that the DMA controller can't deal with,
the driver will fall back to PIO, so it is wise to setup the flags as
if PIO were still important.
'controller wdc0 at isa? port "IO_WD1" bio irq 14 flags 0xa0ffa0ff
vector wdintr' should work with nearly any PCI IDE controller.
i would *strongly* suggest booting single-user at first, and thrashing
the drive a bit while it's still mounted read-only. this should be
fairly safe, even if the driver goes completely out to lunch. it
might save you a reinstall.
one way to tell whether the driver is really using DMA is to check the
interrupt count during disk i/o with vmstat; DMA mode will add an
extremely low number of interrupts, as compared to even multi-sector
PIO.
boot -v will give you a copious register dump of timing-related info
on Intel and VIAtech chipsets, as well as PIO/DMA mode information on
all hard drives. refer to your ATA and chipset documentation to
interpret these.
WHAT I'D LIKE FROM YOU and THINGS TO TEST:
reports. success reports, failure reports, any kind of reports. :)
send them to cgull+ide@smoke.marlboro.vt.us.
i'd also like to see the kernel messages from various BIOSes (boot -v;
dmesg), along with info on the motherboard and BIOS on that machine.
i'm especially interested in reports on how this code works on the
various Intel chipsets, and whether the register dump works
correctly. i'm also interested in hearing about other chipsets.
i'm especially interested in hearing success/failure reports for PCI
IDE controllers on cards, such as CMD's or Promise's new busmastering
IDE controllers.
UltraDMA-33 reports.
interoperation with ATAPI peripherals-- FreeBSD doesn't work with my
old Hitachi IDE CDROM, so i can't tell if I've broken anything. :)
i'd especially like to hear how the drive copes in DMA operation on
drives with bad sectors. i haven't been able to find any such yet.
success/failure reports on older IDE drives with early support for DMA
modes-- those introduced between 1.5 and 3 years ago, typically
ranging from perhaps 400MB to 1.6GB.
failure reports on operation with more than one drive would be
appreciated. the driver was developed with two drives on one
controller, the worst-case situation, and has been tested with one
drive on each controller, but you never know...
any reports of messages from the driver during normal operation,
especially "reverting to PIO mode", or "dmaverify odd vaddr or length"
(the DMA controller is strongly halfword oriented, and i'm curious to
know if any FreeBSD usage actually needs misaligned transfers).
performance reports. beware that bonnie's CPU usage reporting is
useless for IDE drives; the best test i've found has been to run a
program that runs a spin loop at an idle priority and reports how many
iterations it manages, and even that sometimes produces numbers i
don't believe. performance reports of multi-drive operation are
especially interesting; my system cannot sustain full throughput on
two drives on separate controllers, but that may just be a lame
motherboard.
THINGS I'M STILL MISSING CLUE ON:
* who's responsible for configuring DMA timing modes on IDE drives?
the BIOS or the driver?
* is there a spec for dealing with Ultra-DMA extensions?
* are there any chipsets or with bugs relating to DMA transfer that
should be blacklisted?
* are there any ATA interfaces that use some other kind of DMA
controller in conjunction with standard ATA protocol?
FINAL NOTE:
after having looked at the ATA-3 spec, all i can say is, "it's ugly".
*especially* electrically. the IDE bus is best modeled as an
unterminated transmission line, these days.
for maximum reliability, keep your IDE cables as short as possible and
as few as possible. from what i can tell, most current chipsets have
both IDE ports wired into a single buss, to a greater or lesser
degree. using two cables means you double the length of this bus.
SCSI may have its warts, but at least the basic analog design of the
bus is still somewhat reasonable. IDE passed beyond the veil two
years ago.
--John Hood, cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us
Mask the read value from the count register in order to return zero correctly
after TC, as per intel datasheet : "If it is not autoinitialised, this
register will have a count of FFFFH after TC"
comments. Remove reduntant extra addition that was unncessary, and
unneeded mask (asuming inb works correctly).
Submitted by: Stephen McKay <syssgm@dtir.qld.gov.au>
handlers don't skew the results of isa_dmastatus. The function can be
safely called with interrupts disabled.
Submitted by: Stephen McKay <syssgm@dtir.qld.gov.au>
- removed TEST_ALTTIMER.
- removed APIC_PIN0_TIMER.
- removed TIMER_ALL.
apic_vector.s:
- new algorithm where a CPU uses try_mplock instead of get_mplock:
if successful continue as before.
if fail set ipending bit, mask INT (to avoid recursion), cleanup & iret.
This allows the CPU to return to successful work, while the ISR will be run
by the CPU holding the lock as part of the doreti dance.
we use lazy masking INTREN()/INTRDIS() might be called with INTs enabled.
This means another higher prio INT to the same cpu could attempt to
re-enter the critical region, but would spin waiting for the lock. Since
it is the owner, it would deadlock.
- s_lock_init()
- s_lock()
- s_lock_try()
- s_unlock()
Created lock for IO APIC and apic_imen (SMP version of imen)
- imen_lock
Code to use imen_lock for access from apic_ipl.s and apic_vector.s.
Moved this code *outside* of mp_lock.
It seems to work!!!
the file so that this compiles without forward declarations of that
data. (It is impossible to forward-declare static data in Gnu C.
Declaring it as static is correct, but causes bogus warnings from
gcc -Wredundant-decls. Declaring it as extern works, but causes
correct warnings from gcc -pedantic and is undefined in ANSI C.
We usually declare it as extern. Here it was once really extern,
but botched staticization left it as static here and apparently-
extern in a header file.)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
another system, such as NetBSD, CVS: then name the system in this
line, otherwise delete it. CVS: Reviewed by: CVS: Before
committing changes please have someone check your work and CVS:
include their name here. If the change is trivial and you have not
else; i.e., CVS: they sent us a patch or a new module, then
include their name/email CVS: address here. If this is your work
then delete this line. CVS:
----------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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.
If the configuration option PSM_HOOKAPM is defined and the APM device
is available, the psm driver will issue the ENABLE command to the
pointing device at the resume APM event if the device was open when
the system went into suspended mode. If the option
PSM_RESETAFTERSUSPEND is specified in addition to PSM_HOOKAPM, the
driver will try to reset the pointing device before sending the
ENABLE command.
Built-in PS/2-type pointing devices in some laptops (all the reports I
heard were about Toshiba models) sometimes don't work immediately
after the system is resumed. The device MAY become available after a
while. The system may exhibit the same symptom in other OS's too
(no, FreeBSD is not the only OS that is suffering :-).
I don't know the correct way of solving this yet, but it's been
reported that issuing the ENABLE command after resumption wakes up the
pointing device.
Without PSM_HOOKAPM, the psm driver behaves in the same way as before.
Problem reported in the bsd-nomads mailing list in Japan.
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...)
- added Xcpustop IPI code to support stop_cpus()/restart_cpus().
it is off by default, enable via smptests.h:TEST_CPUSTOP
intr_machdep.h:
- moved +ICULEN to lower level.
- added entry for Xcpustop.
This eliminates a lot of #ifdef SMP type code. Things like _curproc reside
in a data page that is unique on each cpu, eliminating the expensive macros
like: #define curproc (SMPcurproc[cpunumber()])
There are some unresolved bootstrap and address space sharing issues at
present, but Steve is waiting on this for other work. There is still some
strictly temporary code present that isn't exactly pretty.
This is part of a larger change that has run into some bumps, this part is
standalone so it should be safe. The temporary code goes away when the
full idle cpu support is finished.
Reviewed by: fsmp, dyson
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.
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
that lkm's can use them for fiddling the masks without being dependent on
which mode the kernel is compiled in (SMP or UP). This is particularly
for ppp_tty.c which has some domain crossing between the net and tty
subsystems. The values are not used in the spl code, they are for
reference only (ie: the compiled code uses immediate values rather than
an indirect 32 bit address and 32 bit data fetch).
top of the hardware interrupt handlers. Apparently this is slightly
faster with the bit scanning instruction that looks these up - this set of
changes reverts the original change.
Reviewed by: bde
rather than inlines. These are compiled with -fomit-frame-pointer and
work out pretty close to the original routines, but it might be a fraction
slower. The reason for doing this is to prevent the SWI_* and HWI_* values
from being compiled into drivers and lkms etc which is one of the things
that prevents the same lkm from being used on both SMP and UP kernels.
This gives us a lot more scope for experimenting with the splxxx
implementaton for SMP parallelism etc.
Reviewed by: bde
Hopefully I've done the proper magic to merge changes between 1.17 and
1.17.2.1 into the main trunk. Description of those changes follows:
Brought in changes sent to me in late 1995 by Rich Murphey.
I cleaned up a few things and am currently running these under
2.2-970205-GAMMA.
The changes deal with software debouncing apparently necessary on
todays faster hardware, and also some problems with the use of the -Select
line for the TW-523 sync. This driver allows use of +PaperEnd as an
alternative.
Adjust the data port address by adding the two low order bits of
the register number. The address port takes only a word address
(i.e. ignores the two low order bits written to it).
mode 1. Omission of this bit makes all config register accesses fail in
on recent chip sets ...
(The problem was reported and debug output provided by: Steve Passe)
- vector.s <- stub called by i386/exception.s
- icu_vector.s <- UP
- apic_vector.s <- SMP
Split icu.s into UP and SMP specific files:
- ipl.s <- stub called by i386/exception.s (formerly icu.s)
- icu_ipl.s <- UP
- apic_ipl.s <- SMP
This was done in preparation for massive changes to the SMP INTerrupt
mechanisms. More fine tuning, such as merging ipl.s into exception.s,
may be appropriate.
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).
be (eventually) architecture independent. It provides an emulation
of the ISA interrupt registration function register_intr(), but that
function does no longer manipulated the interrupt controller and
interrupt descriptor table, but calls the architecture dependent
function setup_icu() for that purpose.
After the ISA/EISA bus code has been modified to directly call the new
interrupt registartion functions (intr_create() and intr_connect()),
the emulation of register_intr() should be dropped.
The C level interrupt handler function should take a (void*) argument,
and the function pointer type (inthand2_t) should defined in some other
place than isa_device.h.
This commit is a pre-requisite for the removal of the PCI specific shared
interrupt code.
Reviewed by: dfr,bde
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
- doesn't break my system.
- NOT yet verified on the affected motherboard.
Stifle an annoying dma_start busy message for the sound cards.
Submitted by: "John S. Dyson" <toor@dyson.iquest.net>
. It makes cd9660 root f/s working again.
. It makes CD9660 a new-style option.
. It adds support to mount an ISO9660 multi-session CD-ROM as the root
filesystem (the last session actually, but that's what is expected
behaviour).
Sigh. The CDIOREADTOCENTRYS did a copyout() of its own, and thus has
been unusable for me for this work. Too bad it didn't simply stuff
the max 100 entries into the struct ioc_read_toc_entry, but relied on
a user supplied data buffer instead. :-( I now had to reinvent the
wheel, and created a CDIOREADTOCENTRY ioctl command that can be used
in a kernel context.
While doing this, i noticed the following bogosities in existing CD-ROM
drivers:
wcd: This driver is likely to be totally bogus when someone tries
two succeeding CDIOREADTOCENTRYS (or now CDIOREADTOCENTRY)
commands with requesting MSF format, since it apparently
operates on an internal table.
scd: This driver apparently returns just a single TOC entry only for
the CDIOREADTOCENTRYS command.
I have only been able to test the CDIOREADTOCENTRY command with the
cd(4) driver. I hereby request the respective maintainers of the
other CD-ROM drivers to verify my code for their driver. When it
comes to merging this CD-ROM multisession stuff into RELENG_2_2 i will
only consider drivers where i've got a confirmation that it actually
works.
simplifies some assumptions and stops some code compile problems.
This should fix the compile hiccup in PR#3491, but smp kernel profiling
isn't likely to be fixed by this.
Peter Wemm <peter@spinner.DIALix.COM>, Steve Passe <smp@csn.net>
removed all the IPI_INTS code.
made the XFAST_IPI32 code default, renaming Xfastipi32 to Xinvltlb.
cleanup of i386/isa/isa_device.h to eliminate SMP dependancies:
made the id_irq member of struct isa_device an u_int.
made the id_drq member of struct isa_device an int.
removed all other '#ifdefs' concerning SMP & APIC_IO.
removed SMP/APIC_IO dependancies from if_ze.c.
1) i586_bcopy() problem
There have been a number of reports that the syscons doesn't work
properly if i586_bcopy() is enabled.
The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The
symptom is that the system looks frozen during device probe or just
before the main installation menu. The workaround was to specify the
flag 0x01 to the npx device so that i586_bcopy() is disabled.
The patch forces the syscons to call generic_bcopy() when copying
to/from the video memory, even if CPU is Pentium and i586_bcopy() is
enabled. i586_bcopy() is still called for copy operations between
non-video memory regions.
PR: kern/2277, kern/3066, kern/3107, kern/3134
2) video mode parameter table problem
The syscons reads and uses the video mode parameter table provided by
the VGA BIOS to set VGA registers when changing video mode and
modifying font data. It appears that in some VGA BIOSes the table is
not ordered as the syscons expects, and this leads to screen
corruption.
The problem prevented users from installing 2.2(.1)-RELEASE. The
symptom is the corrupt screen or strange vertical lines soon after the
kernel is loaded into memory (just after the kernel decompression).
The patch performs simplistic test and if it fails, set video_mode_ptr
to NULL so that the video mode switching won't happen.
This is an interim kludge. There should be a better way to deal with
the problem.
PR: kern/2498, conf/2775, conf/3354
Reviewed by: sos
Tested by: PR originators (not all of them, though)
The SMP source was merged into 3.0-current last nite and this broke
the make of sbin/dset.
Should make things work for non-SMP case.
People making SMP kernels will need to edit i386/isa/isa_device.h, re-enabling
'#include "opt_smp.h"'. People making SMP worlds will have to punt for now...
I'm thinking about the real solution, but for now the goal is to NOT break
the world!
There are various options documented in i386/conf/LINT, there is more to
come over the next few days.
The kernel should run pretty much "as before" without the options to
activate SMP mode.
There are a handful of known "loose ends" that need to be fixed, but
have been put off since the SMP kernel is in a moderately good condition
at the moment.
This commit is the result of the tinkering and testing over the last 14
months by many people. A special thanks to Steve Passe for implementing
the APIC code!
have successfully built, booted, and run a number of different ELF
kernel configurations, including GENERIC. LINT also builds and
links cleanly, though I have not tried to boot it.
The impact on developers is virtually nil, except for two things.
All linker sets that might possibly be present in the kernel must be
listed in "sys/i386/i386/setdefs.h". And all C symbols that are
also referenced from assembly language code must be listed in
"sys/i386/include/asnames.h". It so happens that failure to do
these things will have no impact on the a.out kernel. But it will
break the build of the ELF kernel.
The ELF bootloader works, but it is not ready to commit quite yet.
delay after we reset the card to allow the card to come back to life.
It appears the newer card takes longer to reset.
Submitted by: Samuel Lam <skl@ScalableNetwork.com>
type mismatches. There was no problem in practice (at least on 386's).
The timeout args still get bogusly cast from int to `void *' via
caddr_t and back to int.
type mismatches. mcd and scd were/are particularly bogus. They
used a general purpose function taking 2 args for the timeout
function and fudged varargs stuff to supply the second arg for the
timeout case. This broke `cc -mrtd'. Bounce through a timeout
function instead. The timeout arg still gets bogusly cast from
int to `void *' and back.
type mismatches. There was no problem in practice (at least on 386's).
Don't cast NULL in calls to timeout functions. pcvt is fully prototyped
and doesn't support K&R.
Timeout functions take args of type `void *', so use magic numbers of
type `void *' for UPDATE_* to reduce the danger of wrong conversions.
Removed FreeBSD-pre-1.1-related TIMEOUT_FUNC_T macro. It was especially
bogus for the pre-1.1 case.
1) Dell Latitude XPi
This laptop has a strange, IMHO broken :-), keyboard controller which
wouldn't disable the keyboard interrupt. The kludge is to disable tty
intr. during set_keyboard(), used for changing LED and setting
typematic.
The patch also changes the function name:
set_keyboard() -> set_keyboard_param()
Although it is a static function, the name corrides with a routine in
`syscons' and is confusing when debugging the kernel which has both
`syscons' and `pcvt' with DDB. (Suggested by Bruce)
2) doreset() bug
doreset() failed to preserve some bits in the keyboard controller's
command byte during keyboard reset. This bug may put some keyboard
controllers in old motherboards (386 and 486) in a strange state,
resulting in complete keyboard lockup or random key input.
Reviewed by: Joerg
Increase the delay in read_eeprom_data() by two orders of magnitude.
> A better fix would be to make read_eeprom_data() call
> f_is_eeprom_busy() after the DELAY().
Submitted by: Samuel Lam <skl@ScalableNetwork.com>
for the ix driver.
Add a shutdown hook that resets the etherexpress so that Windoze can find
the card after a warm boot.
Submitted by: Aaron Smith <aaron@tau.veritas.com>
Obtained From: NetBSD
resetting the keyboard.
Well, sorry, this bug is totally my fault. I DID intend to preserve
them, but somehow I failed.
The bug puts some old keyboard controllers in a strange state,
resulting in keyboard freeze or random key input.
The fix closes PR kern/3067.
Use the name argument almost the same in all LKM types. Maintain
the current behavior for the external (e.g., modstat) name for DEV,
EXEC, and MISC types being #name ## "_mod" and SYCALL and VFS only
#name. This is a candidate for change and I vote just the name without
the "_mod".
Change the DISPATCH macro to MOD_DISPATCH for consistency with the
other macros.
Add an LKM_ANON #define to eliminate the magic -1 and associated
signed/unsigned warnings.
Add MOD_PRIVATE to support wcd.c's poking around in the lkm structure.
Change source in tree to use the new interface.
Reviewed by: Bruce Evans
(see LINT). There is a new low-level console type that is more suitable
for use with gdb-remote.
Fixed setting of speed at probe time for the serial console (if any).
Reviewed by: dfr
if all registers are 0xff.
This allows me to run with flags 0xc0ff on my IBM-DMCA-21440 disk, which
gives 5MB/sec sequential read :-)
If you have a laptop, try adding flag 0x4000 to your disk, and tell me if
it makes any difference for you.
change typematic rate, or the X server (XFree86 or Accelerated X)
starts up.
So far, there have been two independent reports from Dell Latitude XPi
notebook/laptop owners. The Latitude seems to be the only system which
suffers from this problem. (I don't know the problem is with the
entire Latitude line or with only some Latitude models) No problem
report has been heard about other systems (I certainly cannot
reproduce the problem in my -current and 2.2 systems).
In 3.0-CURRENT, 2.2-RELEASE and 2.2-GAMMA-970310, when programming the
keyboard LED/repeat-rate, `set_keyboard()' in `syscons' tells the
keyboard controller not to generate keyboard interrupt (IRQ1) and then
enable tty interrupts, expecting the keyboard interrupt doesn't occur.
It appears that somehow Latitude's keyboard controller still generates
the keyboard interrupt thereafter, and `set_keyboard()' doesn't see
the return code from the keyboard because it is consumed by the
keyboard interrupt handler.
The patch entirely disables tty interrupts while setting LED and
typematic rate in `set_keyboard()', making the routine behave more
like the previous versions of `syscons' (versions in 2.1.X and
2.2-ALPHA, -BETA, and some -GAMMAs). The reporter said this patch
eliminated the problem.
(I also found another typo/bug, but the reporter and I found that it
wasn't the cause of the problem...)
This should go into RELENG_2_2.
print "at <not configured>" for iobase == -1 (autodetect not happens)
and not print anything for iobase == -2 (none)
Old code treat this two special config numbers as big port numbers.
<sys/ioctl_compat.h> and sometimes <sys/filio.h> instead of
<sys/ioctl.h> in tty-related files. <sys/ttycom.h> is still
usually imported bogusly via <sys/termios.h>.
and fixed everything that depended on getting it from the wrong
place. Most of the broken things actually only depended on getting
the declaration of their interrupt handler from "ioconf.h".
supports All Cyrix CPUs, IBM Blue Lightning CPU and NexGen (now AMD)
Nx586 CPU, and initialize special registers of Cyrix CPU and msr of
IBM Blue Lightning CPU.
If revision of Cyrix 6x86 CPU < 2.7, CPU cache is enabled in
write-through mode. This can be disabled by kernel configuration
options.
Reviewed by: Bruce Evans <bde@freebsd.org> and
Jordan K. Hubbard <jkh@freebsd.org>
form `tv = time'. Use a new function gettime(). The current version
just forces atomicicity without fixing precision or efficiency bugs.
Simplified some related valid accesses by using the central function.
can't perform overlapping commands on both of its channels.
To enable the CMD640B work-around, the kernel must be compiled with
"options CMD640". Without that option there should be no difference
in the code produced compared to the previous revision of wd.c.
Submitted by: Wolfgang Helbig <helbig@ba-stuttgart.de>
effect immediately, but required a following (normally redundant) G0
into GL mapping. This adds one layer of indirection (thus might make it
slower), but fixes the broken box character drawing in pcvt.
Hellmuth and Bruce are unfortunately too busy too review this right now,
but i wanna have it in 2.2 since it has often been asked in the past.
Warning: this won't work yet with PCVT_SCANSET=2 along in early
console mode (boot -c, or boot -d).
A big thanks to Kazutaka, and a word of apologies for delaying the
review for that long time...
Submitted by: yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp (Kazutaka YOKOTA)
valid signals, else return EINVAL for ioctl VT_SETMODE.
this fixes a problem that anybody with vty access can panic the system.
2.2-Candidate (and 2.1.0 I believe)
Reviewed-by: sos