o Honor NE2000DVF_{AX88190,DL10019} flags by setting the ED_FLAGS_xxxx
flag.
o Mark linksys combo_ecard as ax88190
o Set the type_str to AX88190 for the ax88190 cards.
This fixes ax88190 based cards, for the most part, but doesn't seem to fix
the mii based dl10019 cards (aka linksys cards).
card is ejected while we're in this routine.
yamamoto-san's original patch had a small race window for AX88190
chips, which I corrected by limiting the number of iterations we'd try
to reset the bits to be about 15ms rather than forever. This seems to
work for me, but I don't have a large collections of cards based on
this chipset.
Submitted by: YAMAMOTO Shigeru
built without support for miibus PHYs. Most ed cards don't need
miibus support, so it's useful to be able to avoid the bloat of
all the mii devices for small fixed-purpose kernels.
storing a flag in the global variable 'linksys' during the probe
routine and reading it during the attach routine. We now have the
ED_VENDOR_LINKSYS vendor code stored in sc->vendor, so check that
instead.
not from the probe routine. This was an oversight when I originally
ported the miibus support to -current, though it was mostly harmless.
We now set the vendor code to the new value ED_VENDOR_LINKSYS in
ed_pccard_Linksys() at probe time. Then ed_pccard_attach() checks
the vendor code, and sets up the miibus if appropriate.
Reviewed by: imp
bolted to a ne-2000 chip. This is necessary for the NetGear FA-410TX
and other cards.
This also requires you add mii to your kernel if you have an ed driver
configured.
This code will result in a couple of timeout messages for ed on the
impacted cards. Additional work will be needed, but this does work
right now, and many people need these cards.
Submitted by: Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
* a ">" is really ">=" ;
* do not try to fetch zero-sized blocks from the card;
* make sure that bpf gets the packets it wants even with
bridging active;
o Move the ax88190 code to its own function.
o Move all device_method_t, driver_t and DRIVER_MODULE definitions to the
end of files.
o Wrap a few lines > 80 characters.
o Use the same devclass for all ed drivers. This allows machines with
multiple types of cards to have their cards numbered correctly. Before,
you could wind up with two ed0's.
o Protect if_edvar.h from multiple includes because I was there.
require the addition of flag 0x80000 to their config line in
pccard.conf(5). This flag is not optional. These Linksys cards will
not be recognized without it.
Reviewed by: imp, iwasaki
using a cardbus based system with pccbb providing the pcic interface).
Something isn't quite right.. when the driver allocates and activates
its resources, the IO space that was requested reads as all zeros (versus
the original 0xff's as it normally is when there is no device responding).
Also, deactivate the resources before releasing them. OLDCARD doesn't
seem to care but NEWCARD/CARDBUS get rather unhappy if you release
a resource that hasn't been deactivated yet.
Make pcic_p.c only compile with oldcard kernels.
ether_ifdetach().
The former consolidates the operations of if_attach(), ng_ether_attach(),
and bpfattach(). The latter consolidates the corresponding detach operations.
Reviewed by: julian, freebsd-net
of the individual drivers and into the common routine ether_input().
Also, remove the (incomplete) hack for matching ethernet headers
in the ip_fw code.
The good news: net result of 1016 lines removed, and this should make
bridging now work with *all* Ethernet drivers.
The bad news: it's nearly impossible to test every driver, especially
for bridging, and I was unable to get much testing help on the mailing
lists.
Reviewed by: freebsd-net
first. This will fix a few cards that hang on the WD probe. He tells
me that PAO went one step farther and removed the WD proble completely
and none of the cards in the 2.x database broke in PAO3. Since I'm
more conservative in this code, I'm just swapping the order, which he
said also fixed his problem.
Reviewed by: mdodd, iwasaki
Submitted by: sanpai@sanpai.org
too many, so I removed the checks for the valid OUIs. We already do a
checksum of the entire ethernet address, so extra checking against the
OUI shouldn't be needed.
Many ed-based Ethernet PC-cards can't get correct MAC address without
this patch.
Submitted by: Takanori Watanabe <takawata@shidahara1.planet.sci.kobe-u.ac.jp>
Reviewed by: Warner Losh <imp@village.org>
o Expose ed_stop and call it early to shutdown the hardware.
o When releasing the interrupt, pass the cookie for the irq, not
a pointer to the cookie (this is the base problem).
o Release other resources used, just like the ep driver
problem.
o Create new timeout routine so we don't detach the card inside a ISR
but instead drop back to spl0 via a timeout of 0.
o Actually delete the child of the pccard device rather than just faking
it badly.
o Fix sio, ed and ep to have pccard detach routines that are int rather
than void.
o Fix ep and ed pccard detach routines to use if_detach rather than just
if_down. if_detach destroys the device, while if_down just marks it
down. In this incarnation of the pccard things, we map the disable
the slot action to detach the driver, which removes the driver from the
device tree. When that is done, a panic would soon follow as the
ifconfig tried to down the device.
Didn't fix:
o Should cache the pccard dev child's pointer in struct slot
o remove now unused parts of struct slot
o Any driver using softc after detach has been called. sio's softc used
to be statically allocated, so you could check sc->gone, but that is
now gone.
o Didn't remove gone from softc of drivers that use the old pccard method.
Didn't test:
o ed driver changes
o sio driver changes on pccards
o suspend (no laptop or apm support on my desktop)
yet, but that should be resolved shortly. Non memory mapped ed
devices should work, but I cannot test this since my only ed card is
memory mapped.
Submitted by: Matt Dodd <mdodd@freebsd.org>
bootup. Somehow my backout of an abortaive attempt at shared
memory autoconfiguration included this line:
sc->mem_shared = 1;
Which is fairly important as it turns out.
Since I performed my pre-commit testing on a different box with a generic
NE2000 I didn't catch this. Pointy hat.
now lives in the respective bus front end files.
- Add various function prototypes to if_edvar.h
- Clean up some debugging code that snuck into if_ed_isa.c
- Turn on the right bits in files.i386
resource_list_release. This removes the dependancy on the
layout of ivars.
* Move set_resource, get_resource and delete_resource from
isa_if.m to bus_if.m.
* Simplify driver code by providing wrappers to those methods:
bus_set_resource(dev, type, rid, start, count);
bus_get_resource(dev, type, rid, startp, countp);
bus_get_resource_start(dev, type, rid);
bus_get_resource_count(dev, type, rid);
bus_delete_resource(dev, type, rid);
* Delete isa_get_rsrc and use bus_get_resource_start instead.
* Fix a stupid typo in isa_alloc_resource reported by Takahashi
Yoshihiro <nyan@FreeBSD.org>.
* Print a diagnostic message if we can't assign resources to a PnP
device.
* Change device_print_prettyname() so that it doesn't print
"(no driver assigned)-1" for anonymous devices.
This means that we will not have to have a bpf and a non-bpf version
of our driver modules.
This does not open any security hole, because the bpf core isn't loadable
The drivers left unchanged are the "cross platform" drivers where the respective
maintainers are urged to DTRT, whatever that may be.
Add a couple of missing FreeBSD tags.
Doug Rabson's work, with a few tweaks from Warner Losh and I. There are
still some quirks to resolve, but the old driver is presently breaking
the build.
`ED_P1_MAR + i' and `ED_P1_PAR + i', respectively.
- convert ED_PC_RESET and ED_PC_MISC into relative offset from
ED_PC_ASIC_OFFSET (those macros are not used in current source).
Submitted by: chi@bd.mbn.or.jp (Chiharu Shibata)
the new PnP code. Since the bulk of the driver changes are not being
committed at this time, it will not affect the driver. The code is being
committed early to allow others synchronise changes.
#define COMPAT_PCI_DRIVER(name,data) DATA_SET(pcidevice_set,data)
.. to 2.2.x and 3.x if people think it's worth it. Driver writers can do
this if it's not defined. (The reason for this is that I'm trying to
progressively eliminate use of linker_sets where it hurts modularity and
runtime load capability, and these DATA_SET's keep getting in the way.)
i386 platform boots, it is no longer ISA-centric, and is fully dynamic.
Most old drivers compile and run without modification via 'compatability
shims' to enable a smoother transition. eisa, isapnp and pccard* are
not yet using the new resource manager. Once fully converted, all drivers
will be loadable, including PCI and ISA.
(Some other changes appear to have snuck in, including a port of Soren's
ATA driver to the Alpha. Soren, back this out if you need to.)
This is a checkpoint of work-in-progress, but is quite functional.
The bulk of the work was done over the last few years by Doug Rabson and
Garrett Wollman.
Approved by: core
const char *. Originally I was going to add casts from const char * to
char * in some of the pci device drivers, but the reality is that the
pci device probes return constant quoted strings.
FreeBSD/alpha. The most significant item is to change the command
argument to ioctl functions from int to u_long. This change brings us
inline with various other BSD versions. Driver writers may like to
use (__FreeBSD_version == 300003) to detect this change.
The prototype FreeBSD/alpha machdep will follow in a couple of days
time.
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>.
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.
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
* 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
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.
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.
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
previous hackery involving struct in_ifaddr and arpcom. Get rid of the
abominable multi_kludge. Update all network interfaces to use the
new machanism. Distressingly few Ethernet drivers program the multicast
filter properly (assuming the hardware has one, which it usually does).
to TAILQs. Fix places which referenced these for no good reason
that I can see (the references remain, but were fixed to compile
again; they are still questionable).
type to be int so that errors can be returned.
2) Use the new SIOCSIFMTU ether_ioctl support in the few drivers that are
using ether_ioctl().
3) In if_fxp.c: treat if_bpf as a token, not as a pointer. Don't bother
testing for FXP_NTXSEG being reached in fxp_start()...just check for
non-NULL 'm'. Change fxp_ioctl() to use ether_ioctl().
function ed_attach_NE2000_pci() in if_ed.c passes
an uninitialized block of memory (got with malloc())
to ed_attach. This prevents a proper initialization
of the device descriptor and in my case causes a panic
during the probe, while printing out device info.
Reviewed by: phk
Submitted by: Luigi Rizzo <luigi@iet.unipi.it>
is only used by the icu support modules and by a few drivers that know
too much about the icu (most only use it to convert `n' to `IRQn'). isa.h
is only used by ioconf.c and by a few drivers that know too much about
isa addresses (a few have to, because config is deficient).
All new code is "#ifdef PC98"ed so this should make no difference to
PC/AT (and its clones) users.
Ok'd by: core
Submitted by: FreeBSD(98) development team
is enabled by having an "device ed0 at isa? [...]" config line.
The first PCI card will get a unit number one higher than the highest
defined for any ISA card of the ED type, e.g. if ed0 and ed1 are
configured, then the PCI cards will be ed2, ed3, ...
BEWARE: If you have configured your kernel as ed0 with the port address
as assigned by the PCI BIOS, then your card will be found by both the
PCI and ISA probes, and bad things may happen. Make sure to restore
the original port address form the GENERIC kernel for the ed0 device!
Reviewed by: davidg
- fill in and use ifp->if_softc
- use if_bpf rather than private cookie variables
- change bpf interface to take advantage of this
- call ether_ifattach() directly from Ethernet drivers
- delete kludge in if_attach() that did this indirectly
Fixed two cases of "=" that should have been "==" in card type comparison.
Simplified expression that checks for interface up/down.
Moved ed_ring_copy to before its first use so that it's inlined as intended.
Change mbuf allocation policy so that a received packet is stored in just
an mbuf header (no cluster) if it will fit in one.
Removed ifnet.if_init and ifnet.if_reset as they are generally unused.
Change the parameter passed to if_watchdog to be a ifnet * rather than
a unit number. All of this is an attempt to move toward not needing an
array of softc pointers (which is usually static in size) to point to
the driver softc.
if_ed.c:
Changed some of the argument passing to some functions to make a little
more sense.
if_ep.c, if_vx.c:
Killed completely bogus use of if_timer. It was being set in such a way
that the interface was being reset once per second (blech!).
misplaced extern declarations (mostly prototypes of interrupt handlers)
that this exposed. The prototypes should be moved back to the driver
sources when the functions are staticalized.
Added idempotency guards to <machine/conf.h>. "ioconf.h" can't be
included when building LKMs so define a wart in bsd.kmod.mk to help
guard against including it.
Remove confusing backwards compatibility code that allowed driver to be
used in pre-4.4 releases. The 3COM card's use -link2 to switch tranceivers.
(no functional changes here)
Submitted by: Mike Mitchell, supervisor@alb.asctmd.com
This is a bulk mport of Mike's IPX/SPX protocol stacks and all the
related gunf that goes with it..
it is not guaranteed to work 100% correctly at this time
but as we had several people trying to work on it
I figured it would be better to get it checked in so
they could all get teh same thing to work on..
Mikes been using it for a year or so
but on 2.0
more changes and stuff will be merged in from other developers now that this is in.
Mike Mitchell, Network Engineer
AMTECH Systems Corporation, Technology and Manufacturing
8600 Jefferson Street, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87113 (505) 856-8000
supervisor@alb.asctmd.com
scheduled for demolition. This is a first step: get rid of if_zereg.h,
by adding the five extra definitions to if_edreg.h.
Also add some definitions which will become needed when if_ze.c gets
replaced entirely by pccard and if_ed.c. (this is a 2.1.0 candidate)
the 802.3 frames generated by the DC21040 (which does automatic padding
of less-than-minimum frames) and the frames generated by the 'ed'
driver, I've found that there is indeed a bug in the size of "ETHER_MIN_LEN"
as reported by several people, John Hay being the most recent. The driver
was actually setting the length to 6+6+2+50 (64 bytes), which when adding
in the CRC (which is automatically appended to the frame and not included
in the length), the minimum frame is 4 bytes larger than it is supposed to
be. All of this is confirmed by tcpdump showing 50 bytes of data for
minimum frames from the 'ed' cards and 46 bytes from 'de' cards. This
analysis has also revealed that there is garbage in the un-filled in
portion at the end of the minimum frames from the 'ed' driver; I don't
plan to fix this.
For those where it was easy, drivers were also fixed to call
dev_attach() during probe rather than attach (in keeping with the
new design articulated in a mail message five months ago). For
a few that were really easy, correct state tracking was added as well.
The `fd' driver was fixed to correctly fill in the description.
The CPU identify code was fixed to attach a `cpu' device. The code
was also massively reordered to fill in cpu_model with somethingremotely
resembling what identifycpu() prints out. A few bytes saved by using
%b to format the features list rather than lots of ifs.
properly from the beginning:
1) The `kern_devconf' struct should be a part of the driver's
`softc' structure (now it is).
2) The `description' should say what the device actually is,
rather than just giving a model number (now it does).
3) The device should be registered even if the probe fails, so
that it can be reconfigured later.
4) For netifs, the device state should follow the IFF_UP flag.
Other network interfaces should follow this example. (Please?) Eventually
there should be a rundown routine doing the equivalent of setting IFF_UP
off, and perhaps more if warranted.
- /sys/i386/isa/if_ed.c doesn't quite know how to deal with SMC EtherEZ
ethernet cards. The EtherEZ looks just like the Elite Ultra, except it
has only 8K of shared memory. The only way to have it properly detected
is to zero and test a few bytes of memory just about the first 8K region.
If it clears properly, it's an Elite Ultra, otherwise it's an EtherEZ.
I've also got an EtherEZ patch for netboot (Makefile, ether.c and ether.h).
- /sys/i386/isa/syscons.c wraps at the next to the last column rather than
the last column, like it should. You don't really notice this unless you
use certain programs that write all the way out to, say, the 80th column,
like VMSmail. Along with a one-line fix for this are some changes to
implement a non-blinking cursor. Put 'options "NOBLINK_CURSOR"' in your
config file and give it a try. :)
Submitted by: wpaul
and into ether_input(). It was silly to have bpf want this one way and
ether_input want it another way. Ripped out trailer support from the few
remaining drivers that still had it.
and all SCSI devices (except that it's not done quite the way I want). New
information added includes:
- A text description of the device
- A ``state''---unknown, unconfigured, idle, or busy
- A generic parent device (with support in the m.i. code)
- An interrupt mask type field (which will hopefully go away) so that
. ``doconfig'' can be written
This requires a new version of the `lsdev' program as well (next commit).
else has been probed. This feature could go away again, if we can curb the
problem another way.
if_ed.c, syscons.c: Set the above flag. ed# because it needs it, syscons
because it looks stupid to "detect" the display you have already filled up
with text :-)
bt742a.c: Check bt_cmd() return-val during probe, thus failing on adaptec's.
Also silenced various printf's during the probe.
isa.c: Probe devices with the above flag set before the rest. Reduce the
number of "conflict" messages per device to one.
***
Please test the GENERIC-kernel now, if nobody can make it fail, GENERICAH
and GENERICBT has a finite and short life-expectancy...
***
of mb_offset given the right sequence of 1 and 0 byte mbufs. This bug
was discovered by John Hood who also provided this fix - which is a
rewrite of the routine (and is easier to understand than the code I wrote).
Submitted by: John Hood <cgull@smoke.marlboro.vt.us>
the first place was so that BPF could grok trailer packets. I've since
decided that this is a job for tcpdump to decipher (if at all). Also
fixed up checks for received packet length to better cope with ancient
starlan boards.
- Delete redundant declarations.
- Add -Wredundant-declarations to Makefile.i386 so they don't come back.
- Delete sloppy COMMON-style declarations of uninitialized data in
header files.
- Add a few prototypes.
- Clean up warnings resulting from the above.
NB: ioconf.c will still generate a redundant-declaration warning, which
is unavoidable unless somebody volunteers to make `config' smarter.
``changes'' are actually not changes at all, but CVS sometimes has trouble
telling the difference.
This also includes support for second-directory compiles. This is not
quite complete yet, as `config' doesn't yet do the right thing. You can
still make it work trivially, however, by doing the following:
rm /sys/compile
mkdir /usr/obj/sys/compile
ln -s M-. /sys/compile
cd /sys/i386/conf
config MYKERNEL
cd ../../compile/MYKERNEL
ln -s /sys @
rm machine
ln -s @/i386/include machine
make depend
make
finally have the f**king documentation!):
1) Changed all the numeric register offsets to symbolic ones (it should
have been this way originally).
2) If 16 bit, disable the shared memory when not using it. Apparantly
switching between 8/16bit mode makes the Ultra unhappy unless
this is done (i.e. it trashes the bus).
Yes, I know that IFADDR ioctl is supposed to be deprecated... Note
that the patch was modified by me to fit better into the driver. -DG
...
While porting CAP to 386bsd/pk0.2.4 and now to FreeBSD Release 1.0
I found a couple of bugs associated with the packet filter. Here
are the fixes. I'm posting them here because they apply to
FreeBSD and 386bsd/pk0.2.4 and possibly to other *BSD.
The first occurs when using the packet filter to write raw
ethernet packets. The header consisting of the sender and
destination addresses and the protocol is removed and later
added back on, but with the byte order of the protocol reversed.
The fix ensures that the byte order in the protocol field is
swapped when it is removed.
The second fix ensures that SIOCGIFADDR works for BPF as claimed
in the man pages, by adding it to the ed driver. Similar fixes
will be needed for other ethernet drivers.
Dave Matthews.
a binary link-kit. Make all non-optional options (pagers, procfs) standard,
and update LINT to reflect new symtab requirements.
NB: -Wtraditional will henceforth be forgotten. This editing pass was
primarily intended to detect any constructions where the old code might
have been relying on traditional C semantics or syntax. These were all
fixed, and the result of fixing some of them means that -Wall is now a
realistic possibility within a few weeks.
* merged in Garrett Wollman's strict prototype changes
*
* Revision 2.15 1993/11/29 16:32:58 davidg
* From Thomas Sandford <t.d.g.sandford@comp.brad.ac.uk>
* Add support for the 8013W board type
* change all splnet's to splimp's
*
* Revision 2.13 1993/11/22 10:53:52 davidg
* patch to add support for SMC8216 (Elite-Ultra) boards
* from Glen H. Lowe
*
* Revision 2.12 1993/11/07 18:04:13 davidg
* fix from Garrett Wollman:
* add a return(0) at the end of ed_probe so that if the various device
* specific probes fail that we just don't fall of the end of the function.
* Novell probe changed to be invasive because of too many complaints
* about some clone boards not being reset properly and thus not
* found on a warmboot. Yuck.
*
* Revision 2.10 1993/10/23 04:07:12 davidg
* increment output errors if the device times out (done via watchdog)
*
* Revision 2.9 1993/10/23 04:01:45 davidg
* increment input error counter if a packet with a bad length is
* detected.
* increase maximum time to wait for transmit DMA to complete to 120us.
* call ed_reset() if the time limit is reached instead of trying
* to abort the remote DMA.
*
* Revision 2.7 1993/10/15 10:49:10 davidg
* minor change to way the mbuf pointer temp variable is assigned in
* ed_start (slightly improves code readability)
*
* Revision 2.6 93/10/02 01:12:20 davidg
* use ETHER_ADDR_LEN in NE probe rather than '6'.
* patch from vak@zebub.msk.su (Serge V.Vakulenko) to work around
* a hardware bug in cheap WD clone boards where the PROM checksum
* byte is always zero
* Added software NIC reset in NE probe to work around a problem
* with some NE boards where the 8390 doesn't reset properly on
* power-up. Remove initialization of IMR/ISR in the NE probe
* because this is inherent in the reset.
* added no multi-buffer override for 3c503
*
* Revision 2.1 93/09/29 12:32:12 davidg
* changed multi-buffer count for 16bit 3c503's from 5 to 2 after
* noticing that the transmitter becomes idle because of so many
* packets to load.
*
* Revision 2.0 93/09/29 00:00:19 davidg
* many changes, rewrites, additions, etc. Now supports the
* NE1000, NE2000, WD8003, WD8013, 3C503, 16bit 3C503, and
* a variety of similar clones. 16bit 3c503 now does multi
* transmit buffers. Nearly every part of the driver has
* changed in some way since rev 1.30.
1) fixed 3c503 lock-up if the thinwire cable was disconnected at boot time
2) 8013EBT boards now work (quite well!) in 16bit/16k mode
3) ED_NO_DOUBLE_BUFFERING flag now works
4) slightly higer performance (about 3%) with 16bit WD/SMC boards
5) support for WD8013WC (10BaseT) boards
Additionally, the probe code has been reorganized to be much cleaner. This
revision of the driver is 1.25. The release notes have been updated as well.
profiling, and various protection checks that cause security holes
and system crashes.
* Changed min/max/bcmp/ffs/strlen to be static inline functions
- included from cpufunc.h in via systm.h. This change
improves performance in many parts of the kernel - up to 5% in the
networking layer alone. Note that this requires systm.h to be included
in any file that uses these functions otherwise it won't be able to
find them during the load.
* Fixed incorrect call to splx() in if_is.c
* Fixed bogus variable assignment to splx() in if_ed.c
* them in cpufunc.h. Modified wait loop in reset to look a little better.
* Added read for talley counters to prevent an infinite loop on old
* 8003E's if they (the counters) overflow.
asic register even if the board isn't a 3c503. This caused old 8003E's not
to work because they ignore IO address bits >10bits and the 3c503 asic is
located at +0x400....the offset was ignored by the 8003E and so the
value was written to one of the NIC registers. The bug was discovered by
Wolfgang Solfrank.
8bit or 16bit operation, and a flag to disable transmitter double buffering.
See the updated "ed.relnotes" file for information about how to set
the flags.
This should be considered the first "production" release. It still
needs a manual page, though.