to -current.
Thanks goes to Ulrike Nitzsche <ulrike@ifw-dresden.de> for giving me
a chance to test this. Only the PCI driver is tested though.
One final patch will follow in a separate commit. This is so that
everything up to here can be dragged into 2.2, if we decide so.
Reviewed by: joerg
Submitted by: Matt Thomas <matt@3am-software.com>
importing it onto a vendor branch first, in the hope that this will
make future maintenance easier.
The conflicts are (hopefully) unimportant. More commits that actually
bring this into the source tree will follow.
Submitted by: Matt Thomas (thomas@lkg.dec.com)
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.
EISA slots to probe. This is mainly intended to allow installing the
system on an HP Netserver with an on-board AIC7xxx EISA SCSI
controller, that is sitting on EISA slot # 11.
Documentation updates explaining this hack will follow shortly.
Note that this can go away again as soon as the EISA device probing
is more intelligent about the address space clash with the PCI address
space.
2.2 candidate.
Not objected by: freebsd-core :)
uses one or the other. This required some changes to the ahc_reset()
function, and how early the probes had to allocate their softc.
Turn the AHC_IN/OUT* macros into inline functions and lowercase their names
to indicate this change. Geting AHC_OUTSB to work as a macro doing
conditional memory mapped I/O would have been too gross.
3COM 3C590 Etherlink III PCI,
3COM 3C595 Fast Etherlink PCI,
3COM 3C592 Etherlink III EISA,
3COM 3C590 Fast Etherlink EISA,
3COM 3C900 Etherlink XL PCI and
3COM 3C905 Fast Etherlink XL PCI.
This driver is based on OpenBSD's driver. I modified it to run under FreeBSd
and made it actually work usefully.
Afterwards, nao@tom-yam.or.jp (HAMADA Naoki) added EISA support as well as
early support for 3C900 Etherlink XL PCI and 3C905 Fast Etherlink XL PCI.
He also split up the driver in a bus independant and bus dependant parts.
Especially the 3c59X support should be pretty stable now.
Submitted by: partly nao@tom-yam.or.jp (HAMADA Naoki)
Obtained from:partly OpenBSD
<net/if_arp.h> and fixed the things that depended on it. The nested
include just allowed unportable programs to compile and made my
simple #include checking program report that networking code doesn't
need to include <sys/socket.h>.
before attaching. Without this fix, 3c579(EISA) never make
any H/W inturrupt.
Reviewed by: "Justin T. Gibbs" <gibbs@freefall.freebsd.org>, nao@sbl.cl.nec.co.jp and owner-current on mailing list ;-)
Submitted by: amurai@spec.co.jp, nao@sbl.cl.nec.co.jp
NetBSD/OpenBSD support Submitted by:Noriyuki Soda <soda@sra.co.jp>,
Pete Bentley <pete@demon.net>,
Charles M. Hannum <mycroft@mit.edu>,
Theo de Raadt <deraadt@theos.com>
channel B first as approriate.
Even if the BIOS is diabled, the ECU will still set the primary channel
bit, SCSI ID, RESET_SCSI bit, and BOFF_TIME, so use them.
Cleanse the SCSI subsystem of its internally defined types
u_int32, u_int16, u_int8, int32, int16, int8.
Use the system defined *_t types instead.
eisaconf.c:
Cosmetic formatting chagnes.
The eisaconf probe for the 3Com 3c579 and the 3c509 when in eisa
configuration mode.
aha1742.c aic7770.c bt74x.c:
Only call eisa_registerdev after the probe is successfully.
eisaconf.c:
Increase kdc->kdc_datalen during the eisa_reg* functions instead of
in the eisa_add* functions since eisa_registerdev has already been
called and we have a kdc to manipulate.
- Call eisa_registerdev as soon as we have a device match. This allows the
"eisa_add_*" routines to tweak kdc_datalen as the kdc grows and shrinks.
eisaconf.c
- externalize the linked lists that hold our ioaddrs and maddrs.
this driver no longer needs to maintain an array of configured units.
Pass "softc" pointers instead of unit numbers to many functions that
did a conversion for unit->softc anyway.
aic7770.c:
Simplify the initialization of adapters by pulling all card specific
initialization to the card specific modules.
eisaconf.c:
outb 0x80 instead of 0xc80. The top byte is truncated anyway, and 0x80
was what was intended.
all the other bt_XXX() functions in i386/scsi/bt*.
This the important effect of forcing a link error if the user is
still using the old "vector btintr" which is dangerously wrong
after Justin's updates to the driver.
The correct isa vector line for the bt driver is "vector bt_isa_intr".
Justin mentioned this in the commit message and updated LINT and
GENERIC. This change is to enforce that.. :-)
Convert the remaining sysctl stuff to the new way of doing things.
the devconf stuff is the reason for the large number of files.
Cleaned up some compiler warnings while I were there.