commit 6d3c4c09226ad6bdd662e3e52489ef294a6ce298
Add terasic_mtl vt(4) framebuffer driver
terasic_mtl can be built with syscons(4) and vt(4) attachments, selected
at compile time.
commit 33240259b47a7c990a5a88a19f133a5600432a4c
Clear terasic_mtl text buffer on attach
commit d188c2d2412953f949624aa35cd07082830943c9
Update terasic vt(4) driver for FreeBSD r269783
commit d1cc54eee852fa4fc9d359d5bb2171d24ec73369
Safety belt to ensure vt(4) fb parameters are correct
commit 76e6d468ef45711d7952786095fc4791289ebb4b
Improve terasic_mtl_vt fdt parsing
- Use OF_getencprop to avoid need for explicit endian handling
(submitted by ray@freebsd.org)
- Check for expected length and correct pointer type
commit 3e2524b8995ab66e8a9295e4c87cbc7126eeddf4
Correct device_printf usage
commit 9e53e3c8e0766414e25662c95b09cc51c92443b0
Switch framebuffer to match host endianness
Xorg and xf86-video-scfb work much better with a native-endian
framebuffer.
commit 0f49259d596321ed85288ac0e1fb4ee1c966df48
Switch DE4 to vt(4) and enable kbdmux
commit 5bc96ebc89db7d134ad478335090c8477c1677c7
Add missing \n in device_printf calls
Submitted by: emaste
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
to the loader in a similar way to the ACPI tables.
This will be used on arm64 but is not specific to the architecture.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
The various structures in the mod_metadata set of a FreeBSD kernel and
modules contain pointers. The FreeBSD loader correctly deals with a
mismatch in loader and kernel pointer size (e.g. 32-bit i386/ppc
loader, loading 64-bit amd64/ppc64 kernels), but wasn't dealing with
the inverse case where a 64-bit loader was loading a 32-bit kernel.
Reported by: ktcallbox@gmail.com with a bhyve/i386 and ZFS root install
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1129
Reviewed by: neel, jhb
MFC after: 1 week
gzip, and split). "Real" filesystems should always be listed first so
that the "bare" filename is tried before alternate filenames. For PXE
booting in particular this can remove a lot of spurious pathname lookups.
While here, move splitfs to the bottom after the bzip and gzip filesystems
as it is the least often used.
Tested by: Prokash Sinha <psinha@panasas.com>
MFC after: 1 week
ZFS large block support.
Please note that booting from datasets that have recordsize greater
than 128KB is not supported (but it's Okay to enable the feature on
the pool). This *may* remain unchanged because of memory constraint.
Limited safety belt is provided for mounted root filesystem but use
caution is advised.
Illumos issue:
5027 zfs large block support
MFC after: 1 month
have chosen different (and more traditional) stateless/statuful
NAT64 as translation mechanism. Last non-trivial commits to both
faith(4) and faithd(8) happened more than 12 years ago, so I assume
it is time to drop RFC3142 in FreeBSD.
No objections from: net@
moving U-Boot specific code from libfdt.a to a new libuboot_fdt.a. This
needs to be a new library for linking to work correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1054
Reviewed by: ian, rpaulo (earlier version)
MFC after: 1 week
- convert boot1.efi to corrrectly calculate the lba for what the
media reports and convert the size based on what FreeBSD uses.
The existing code would use the 512 byte lba and convert the
size using 4K byte size.
- make fsck_msdosfs read the boot block as 4K so the read doesn't
fail on a 4Kn drive since FreeBSD will error out parition reads
of a block. Make the bpbBytesPerSec check a multiple of 512 since
it can be 512 or 4K depending on the disk. This allows fsck to
pass checking the EFI partition on a 4Kn disk.
To create the EFI file system I used:
newfs_msdos -F 32 -S 4096 -c 1 -m 0xf8 <partition>
This works for booting 512 and 4Kn disks.
Caveat is that loader.efi cannot read the 4Kn EFI partition. This isn't
critical right now since boot1.efi will read loader.efi from the ufs
partition. It looks like loader.efi can be fixed via making some of the
512 bytes reads more flexible. loader.efi doesn't have trouble reading
the ufs partition. This is probably a simple fix.
I now have FreeBSD installed on a system with 4Kn drives and tested the
same code works on 512.
MFC after: 1 week
This involves:
1. Have the loader pass the start and size of the .ctors section to the
kernel in 2 new metadata elements.
2. Have the linker backends look for and record the start and size of
the .ctors section in dynamically loaded modules.
3. Have the linker backends call the constructors as part of the final
work of initializing preloaded or dynamically loaded modules.
Note that LLVM appends the priority of the constructors to the name of
the .ctors section. Not so when compiling with GCC. The code currently
works for GCC and not for LLVM.
Submitted by: Dmitry Mikulin <dmitrym@juniper.net>
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
The powerpc support was the only supported architecture not prepending the elf format name
with "-freebsd" in base this change makes it consistent with other architectures.
On newer version of binutils the powerpc format is also prepended with "-freebsd".
Also modify the kernel ldscripts in that regards.
As a result it is now possible cross build the kernel on powerpc using newer binutils
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D926
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D928
the oabi is still in the tree, but it is expected this will be removed
as developers work on surrounding code.
With this commit the ARM EABI is the only supported supported ABI by
FreeBSD on ARMa 32-bit processors.
X-MFC after: never
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D876
Commit my version of style(9) pass over the firewire code. Now that
other people have started changing the code carrying this is as a
local patch is not longer a viable option.
MFC after: 1 month
The loader previously failed to display on MacBooks and other systems
where the UEFI firmware remained in graphics mode.
Submitted by: Rafael Espíndola
bootloader. Implement the following routines:
pcibios-device-count count the number of instances of a devid
pcibios-read-config read pci config space
pcibios-write-config write pci config space
pcibios-find-devclass find the nth device with a given devclass
pcibios-find-device find the nth device with a given devid
pcibios-locator convert bus device function ti pcibios locator
These commands are thin wrappers over their PCI BIOS 2.1 counterparts. More
informaiton, such as it is, can be found in the standard.
Export a nunmber of pcibios.X variables into the environment to report
what the PCI IDENTIFY command returned.
Also implmenet a new command line primitive (pci-device-count), but don't
include it by default just yet, since it depends on the recently added
words and any errors here can render a system unbootable.
This is intended to allow the boot loader to do special things based
on the hardware it finds. This could be have special settings that are
optimized for the specific cards, or even loading special drivers. It
goes without saying that writing to pci config space should not be
done without a just cause and a sound mind.
Sponsored by: Netflix
u-boot env into the loader(8) env (which also gets them into the kernel
env). You can import selected variables or the whole environment. Each
u-boot var=value becomes uboot.var=value in the loader env. You can also
use 'ubenv show' to display uboot vars without importing them.