static void const * const __set_##set##_sym_##sym
__attribute__((__section__("set_" #set),__unused__)) = &sym
becomes:
static void const * const __set_##set##_sym_##sym
__section("set_" #set) __unused = &sym
Like the other macros, these #define away for unrecognized compilers or
lint.
Also, fix the argments in the previous commit for the non-gcc case. lint
might be a bit happier about that. Note that the gcc <= 2.6 case
needs some research.
expand to __attribute__((packed)) and __attribute__((aligned(x)))
respectively. Replace the handful of gcc-ism's that use
__attribute__((aligned(16))) etc around the kernel with __aligned(16).
There are over 400 __attribute__((packed)) to deal with, that can come
later. I just want to use __packed in new code rather than add more
gcc-ism's.
In mpttimeout, call mpt_intr just on the offchance that we missed
an interrupt. We can check to see whether or not the command that
is timing out got completed.
When we *do* decide to timeout a command, set the command state to
REQ_TIMEOUT and then invoke another timeout (hz/10)- mpttimeout2.
This allows us to catch a couple cases we've seen where the command
we timed out on in fact is ready to be completed by the firmware.
In any case, it's only after mpttimeout2 is called that we actually
take down the private state and free the request itself. CAM has
been notified in mpttimeout anyway. This whole area should be redone,
but that will take 105% of my available game time for this month.
Fix a couple of missing (and not useful, at presnet) CAMLOCK_2_MPTLOCK
and MPTLOCK_2_CAMLOCK locations.
Split mpt_notify into mpt_ctlop, which handles all reply completions
that have 0x800000000 or'd into the ContextID. This function can, in
fact, call mpt_event_notify_reply, which handles the traditional
async event notifications. While we're at it, put in the extremely
important (but currently untested) code that send back an Ack to
an Event Notification (if the Event Notification is marked with
AckRequired). Note that an Ack also generates another ctlop completion,
tra la.
Fix up mpt_done substantially to try and get how we plug into CAM
correctly done. Remove bogus CAM_RELEASE_SIMQ settings.
Do some cleanups in mpt_action that are related to speed negotiation
for Ultra4 cards. This is an area that is still quite fragile and
worrisome as config data being read back often doesn't make sense or
jibe with the documentation.
At any rate, after these changes were done, I was finally able to
get Lars Eggert's dual 320M disk system to stay up under load all
weekend- hopefully we're in good enough for now shape.
MFC after: 1 week
Define the CFG_DAGA_OFF offset as 128 bytes instead of 40- gives us
a more reasonable headroom.
When reading a config page, zero out the entire request area- not just
the length of the request. This is because we cleverly (cheezily) return
configuration data back into the allocated request area, so it's nice
to make sure we start with a clean area to write on.
MFC after: 1 week
Instead, based upon whether ISP_DAC_SUPPORTED is defined, typedef
isp_dma_addr_t appropriately.
If ISP_DAC_SUPPORTRED is defined, the DMA_WD2/DMA_WD3 macros do something
useful, else they define to '0'.
defined, we set the address space limitation to BUS_SPACE_UNRESTRICTED,
otherwise to BUS_SPACE_MAXADDR_32BIT.
If we have a 1240, ULTRA2 or better, or an FC card, the boundary limit
is BUS_SPACE_UNRESTRICTED and segment limit is BUS_SPACE_MAXADDR_32BIT.
The older 1020/1040 cards have boundary and segment limits of
BUS_SPACE_MAXADDR_24BIT.
disabling memory write invalidate unconditionally. It looks like
they've decided that MWI just doesn't work with these devices.
Also, remove now-irrelevant code that set PCI write boundary values
based on the cache line size.
MFC after: 2 weeks
the cumulative exit status being overwritten when directory permissions
were being set. This was particularly bad when called from mv(1) to
perform a cross-device move as the original files were deleted even if
the copy failed.
Reported by: Slaven Rezic <slaven.rezic@berlin.de>
Patch by: bde
PR: 42789
From current testsuite results, the optimizer bugs don't appear to exist
anymore. RTH@cygnus.com did a lot of work on the Alpha ELF code generator
for GCC 3.2[.0]. A recent FreeBSD/AXP GCC bootstrap is at
http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-testresults/2002-09/msg00604.html
In this bootstraps, all gcc libraries are built with -O2 and c-torture
gives -O2 a real workout. None of the remaining failures have anything
to do with -O2 optimizer bugs.
Submitted by: Loren James Rittle <rittle@latour.rsch.comm.mot.com>