divisor latch registers if the registers wouldn't change.
Use the default console cfcr setting while setting the divisor
latch registers for console i/o. Input may be messed up by
transiently changing the cfcr.
Use a usual cfcr setting while setting the divisor latch registers
in the probe. This shouldn't matter, but this is not the place to
test the UART's handling of 5 bit words.
Removed a stale devfs comment.
- don't include <sys/ioctl.h> in any header. Include <sys/ioccom.h>
instead. This was already done in 4.4Lite for the most important
ioctl headers. Header spam currently increases kernel build
times by 10-20%. There are more than 30000 #includes (not counting
duplicates) for compiling LINT.
- include <sys/types.h> if and only it is necessary to make the header
almost self-sufficient (some ioctl headers still need structs from
elsewhere).
- uniformized idempotency ifdefs. Copied the style in the 4.4Lite
ioctl headers.
It is needed for implementation details but very little of it is
needed for the interface. Include it in the few places that didn't
already include it.
Include <sys/ioccom.h> in <sys/disklabel.h> (as already in
<sys/diskslice.h>) so that all the disk-related headers are almost
self-sufficient.
instead of 0 if there is no input.
pcvt_drv.c:
Partially fixed pccncheckc(). It returned a boolean value instead of
the character that it fetches from the input fifo (if any). I think
it still discards characters after the first for multi-char input.
instead of 0 if there is no input.
syscons.c:
Added missing spl locking in sccncheckc(). Return the same value as
sccngetc() would. It is wrong for sccngetc() to return non-ASCII, but
stripping the non-ASCII bits doesn't help.
still being used just to support printing of the device name in the
probe. Restored the method used in rev.1.6 and changed it to print
the same strings as the previous revision.
Reviewed by: Paul Richards
(1) Add PC98 support to apm_bios.h and ns16550.h, remove pc98/pc98/ic
(2) Move PC98 specific code out of cpufunc.h (to pc98.h)
(3) Let the boot subtrees look more alike
Submitted by: The FreeBSD(98) Development Team
<freebsd98-hackers@jp.freebsd.org>
and xdm, possibly in general.
What was happening was that the server was doing a tcsetattr(.. TCSADRAIN)
on the mouse fd after a write. Since /dev/sysmouse had a null t_oproc,
the drain failed with EIO. Somehow this spammed XFree86 (!@&^#%*& binary
release!!), and the driver was left in a bogus state (ie: switch_in_progress
permanently TRUE).
The simplest way out was to implement a dummy scmousestart() routine to
accept any characters from the tty system and toss them into the void.
It would probably be more correct to intercept scwrite()'s to the mouse
device, but that's executed for every single write to the screen.
Supplying a start routine to eat the characters is only executed for the
mouse port during startup/shutdown, so it should be faster.
-I- to CFLAGS. <sb.h> must currently be used to give the version
of sb.h in the current directory, while "sb.h" in the buggy version
gave the (wrong) version in the source directory. Searching in the
source directory first is normal, but is the reverse of the order
suggested by the 4.4Lite2 #include style. -I- will remove the
ambiguities.
This enables other consumers of the mouse, to get it info via
moused/syscons.
In order to use it run moused (from sysconfig), and then tell
your Xserver that it should use /dev/sysmouse (mknod sysmouse c 12 128)
and it a mousesystems mouse. Everybody will be happy then :)
Remember that moused still needs to know what kind of mouse you
have..
Comments welcome, as is test results...
(A pointer to a const was misused to avoid loading loading the same
value twice, but gcc does exactly the same optimization automatically.
It can see that the value hasn't changed.)
If you define this, it means your keyboard is actually probable using the
brain-dammaged probe routine in syscons, and if the keyboard is NOT found,
then you don't want syscons to activate itself further.
This makes life sane for those of us who use serial consoles most of the
time and want "the right thing" to happen when we plug a keyboard in.
(1) Remove mk30line (moved to /usr/sbin, but not in our source tree yet)
(2) Delete unneeded (well, harmful now :) code to prohibit #including
of isa_device.h from PC98 sources.
(3) Remove files now equal to their ISA/PC-AT counterparts.
Submitted by: The FreeBSD(98) Development Team
during phk's staticize/cleanup commits. pstat needs it, the MAXCONS
option is not visible anywhere else, and pstat uses it to find the bounds
of the sccons[MAXCONS] array, which varies.
. preserve a multi-char sequence in a small static buffer inside
pccngetc(), so it won't be clobbered later (used to happen when
breaking into DDB user Ctrl-Alt-ESC), and
. simplify the ``keystroke is present'' determination in sgetc(), thus
making pccncheck() actually working without waiting for a keystroke.
for work regardless of whether there was an interrupt. This needs more
work, it should be able to run better when there are more than 3 host
cards present, ie: all cards in polling-only mode with no IRQ. (The
host cards have a choice of 3 irq's, 11, 12, or 15, or just polling)
little more reliably. So far I've received a couple of positive
responses and no objections to these changes.
There are two one-line changes:
- In wdprobe(), when testing the error status of drives, don't
unconditionally decide that there is no controller present if we
read back a value of 0x81 (drive 0 okay, drive 1 failed) twice
in a row. This may be caused by having an ATAPI CD-ROM jumpered
as a master on the controller with no slave.
- In wdgetctlr(), when checking for a status of WDCS_READY, check the
value twice. The first time may be bogus. This stops a phantom wd2
device from being detected when an ATAPI CD-ROM is attached to the
secondary controller alone as a slave. (This can cause installation to
fail when sysinstall attempts to open the phantom device and wedges the
system as a result. This has bitten me a couple of times on some
Gateway 2000 machines.)
. make pccncheck() work even when interrupts are disabled, so the
``Press a key on the console...'' procedure will work,
. make kernel colors #ifndef, so they can be overridden from the
config file,
. use shutdown_nice() instead of cpu_reset() if Ctrl-Alt-Del is
enabled,
. allow pccngetc() to return more than a single character, so the
arrow keys will work (and thus visual UserConfig!),
. fix a warning.
This closes all know PRs related to pcvt, in particular #845, #1236,
and #1265. PR #991 is a duplicate for 845, and PR #1283 has already
been fixed earlier in rev 1.11 of pcvt_conf.h.
Submitted by: Ulf Kieber (kieber@sax.de), for the kernel color fix
and then never accept for sending packet from upper layer anymore
(i.e. ping -f )
Reviewed by: David Greenman <dg@root.com>
Submitted by: amurai@spec.co.jp
blocked in a write() while waiting for the output to drain, sleep only
for tp->t_timeout, not forever. This only seems to happen when there is
either a modem lockup holding the hardware flow control down, or due to
some problem in the driver with processes attempting to write after the
modem has hung up (eg: elm, tf).
Saves about 280 butes of source per driver, 56 bytes in object size
and another 56 bytes moves from data to bss.
No functional change intended nor expected.
GENERIC should be about one k smaller now :-)
#ifdef DIAGNOSTIC case, and a warning only otherwise.
People who want them to break into the debugger can always set the
breakpoint explicitly. The existing behaviour was a misfeature from
the beginning, in the (wrong) assumption that the SCSI controller must
always be of essential importance to the entire system.
make it more intelligible, improve the partially bogus locking, and
allow for a ``quick re-acquiration'' from a pending release of timer 0
that happened ``recently'', so it was not processed yet by clkintr().
This latter modification now finally allows to play XBoing over
pcaudio without losing sounds or getting complaints. ;-) (XBoing
opens/writes/closes the sound device all over the day.)
Correct locking for sysbeep().
Extensively (:-) reviewed by: bde
of this patch, which had not actually been reviewed by Joerg or Paul!
(I'll better stop committing files after midnight ...)
I'm now commiting the latest code, which has been reported to work.
Minor correction to the previous commit message for this file:
The first PCI Lance in a system will get a name of lnc1, the second
will be known as lnc2 and so on. An arbitrary number of cards is
supported in a system ...
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
This code applies to several systems with integrated Ethernet
chip, for example from HP or Compaq. It should also support
PCI Ethernet cards based on the AMD PCI Lance chip.
This code has been reviewed (visually) by Paul Richards and
tested (using an ISA Lance board) by Joerg Wunsch.
Since the parameters to nearly each and every single function
had to be changed (generally from unit number to lnc_soft*),
there is some potential for buglets having crept in ...
BEWARE: If you had lnc0 configured to have the ISA probe find
your PCI Lance, then it should now be found by the PCI probe,
and should be automatically configured as pci1 (!!! note the "1").
Reviewed by: paul, joerg
(author's explaination):
Bit 15 is the flag to request a transmit complete interrupt. The
driver was apparently written to minimize interrupts, and if not for a
3-COM design quirk, everything would be just ducky.
Prior to loading the outbound packet into the FIFO, the driver checks
to see if there's enough space to contain the packet. If not, the
driver requests a transmit-available interrupt when there is
sufficient room. Unfortunately, the card is continuing to process the
prior FIFO, and by the time the driver sets the threshold for a
transmit available interrupt, the space is already available. When
this occurs, the 3COM card ignores the interrupt request, and the
driver is hung waiting for an interrupt that will never occur.
There's probably a more elegant solution, but requesting the transmit
complete interrupt was the easiest to implement. An alternative fix
might be to check free FIFO space again, after requesting the transmit
available interrupt, but I haven't bothered pursuing this. Since the
patch, my 3C590 (PCI, same FIFO interface as 3C509) has been rock
solid.
Submitted by: mevans@candle.com (Mike Evans)
based on the HD64570 chip. Both the 1 and 2 port cards is supported.
Line speeds of up to 2Mbps is possible. At this speed about 95% of the
bandwidth is usable with 486DX processors.
The standard FreeBSD sppp code is used for the link level layer. The
default protocol used is PPP. The Cisco HDLC protocol can be used by
adding "link2" to the ifconfig line in /etc/sysconfig or where ever
ifconfig is run.
At the moment only the X.21 interface is tested. The others may need
tweaks to the clock selection code.
Testing with the high frequency of 20000 Hz (to find problems) only found
the problem that this frequency is too high for slow i386's.
Disable interrupts while setting the timer frequency. This was unnecessary
before rev.1.57 and forgotten in rev.1.57. The critical (i8254) interrupts
are disabled in another way at boot time but not in the sysctl to change
the frequency.
via an ioctl (MOUSE_ACTION).
Fixed a couple of bugs (destructive cursor, uncut, jitter).
Now applications can use the mouse via the MOUSE_MODE ioctl, its
possible to have a signal sent on mouseevents, makeing an event loop
in the application take over mouseevents.
things tend to work better if you write the settings to the correct
register.. (*blush*). This subtle bug has been haunting me for ages, and
will solve a few problems that have been reported to me.
Also, take a shot at fixing the serial BREAK processing, what was there
before never really worked. (There is a PR on this I think)
Real support for a Textmode mousecursor, works by reprogramming the
charset. Together with this support for cut&paste in text mode.
To use it a userland daemon is needed (moused), which provides
the interface to the various mice protokols.
Bug fixes here and there, all known PR's closed by this update.
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).
to match (pc98/random_machdep.c probably requires a similar change). This
is a problem area for the PC98 merge - all PC98 ifdefs in <machine/*.h> are
kludges to work around incorrect layering.
Original version by John Hay.
Simplified timestamp code by reading the time exactly when necessary.
This may slow down the interrupt handler with extra calls to microtime(),
but only in bad configurations - the input fifo should normally be
disabled if timestamps on input are being used, since otherwise the
timestamp won't be precisely associated with any particular input event.
The interrupt handler remains slowed down by one test and branch for
each input (and now DCD change) event - avoiding this is not practical
yet.
The simplifications also fixed:
- timestamps for input sometimes being clobbered by output and modem
status interrupts.
- valid timestamps not being available unless the port is configured with
vector siointrts. siointrts no longer exists.
- compiler warnings about siointr* in some configurations.
Simplified timestamp and probe code by depending on recent changes in
microtime() and DELAY() to preserve the interrupt enable flag.
enable flag instead of enable_intr() to restore it to its usual state.
getit() is only called from DELAY() so there is no point in optimising
its speed (this wasn't so clear when it was extern), and using
enable_intr() made it inconvenient to call DELAY() from probes that need
to run with interrupts disabled.
parameters to printf() using the "D" format. (Why this even worked on
my box during testing I don't know, but as soon as I powered it on/off
it quite working.)
using the existing files using the existing PCCARD support. Now that
this is in place I would like to fixup the PCCARD hooks and remove the
if_zp driver. At this point, we support everything we used to support
*AND MORE* with the PCCARD code.
Submitted by: Naoki Hamada <nao@sbl.cl.nec.co.jp> (via the Nomad release)
[ This works on both my 3C589B and 3C589C ]
My 3C509B-COMBO works fine with the following patch. Switching between
UTP and BNC is quite easy. (Just type 'ifconfig ep0 link1 -link2' or 'ifconifg
ep0 link2 -link1'.)
[ I tested this with the additional PC-CARD patches and it works on both
connectors on my 3C589B and 3C589C ]
Reviewed by: nate
Submitted by: Naoki Hamada <nao@sbl.cl.nec.co.jp>
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
sometimes already been released at the time pcaclose() is called, but
this is now prevented from deadlocking by checking for a running timer
at the start of pca_wait().
At least, i can now play xboing again with pcaudio, this used to hang
the entire system previously within a few seconds.
wdp_fixedcyl) gives it directly. wdp_removedcyl is "reserved" except
in ancient ATA-1 drafts and shouldn't be added. This fixes PR 1288.
Changed some fields and comments in struct wdparams to match a less-
ancient ATA draft.
Fixed bit number for `rdy' in status string.
gcc only inlines memcpy()'s whose count is constant and didn't inline
these. I want memcpy() in the kernel go away so that it's obvious that
it doesn't need to be optimized. Now it is only used for one struct
copy in si.c.
ansi and traditional cpp.
The nesting rules of macros are different, which required some changes.
Use __CONCAT(x,y) instead of /**/.
Redo some comments to use /* */ rather than "# comment" because the ansi
cpp cares about those, and also cares about quote matching.
on the baud rate, dont get upset if it's been hung up by setting B0.
Instead, sleep for a short time, as the host controller takes a while
to go through the state changes.
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
unreasonable time. I've got a PCI mainboard that simply doesn't grok
it, so continuing with a warning (and a keyboard that's working
nevertheless :) seems to be better than spin-looping forever.
second delay. My ps/2 mouse is now found reliably on my ThinkPad (it
didn't before) and still works on my NEC Versa.
Submitted by: Richard Wiwatowski <rjwiwat@adelaide.on.net>
config file instead of hard-coding it in the driver. No functional
differences.
This is based on the code Richard Wiwatowski <rjwiwat@adelaide.on.net>
sent to the mailing list.
- Prepend PSM_ to some defines to avoid any possible name-space problems
- Use some already defined constants instead of magic #'s where appropriate.
[ No functional changes (yet) ]
it empties all of the 256 byte incoming fifo, as it can spend more time
processing one port than intended, especially if data is streaming in
at 115.2K. The port fifo will be emptied and dumped into the tty system
and left until next time. I've been running this for quite some time on
one of my systems here.
Also, if the tty layer is blocked or full it lets the hardware assert the
flow control rather than loosing the data.
Compile for FreeBSD-2.2
Fix some compile warnings about function declarations
-current's VM include files have changed lately, this needed to be updated.
Use correct major number.
This is now two seperate drivers that support (I think) all of Stallions's
range, including the high performance intelligent cards, and their older
cards.
Submitted by: Greg Ungerer (gerg@stallion.oz.au)
(User-mode parts and patches to follow)
boards by Greg Ungerer (gerg@stallion.oz.au). (v0.0.1 alpha)
This is a multiple import of all revisions available to build up
a history.
This driver supports only some of the Stallion range, in particular, not
the highly intelligent cards. That comes in shortly.
Submitted by: Greg Ungerer (gerg@stallion.oz.au)
time. The results are currently ignored unless certain temporary options
are used.
Added sysctls to support reading and writing the clock frequency variables
(not the frequencies themselves). Writing is supposed to atomically
adjust all related variables.
machdep.c:
Fixed spelling of a function name in a comment so that I can log this
message which should have been with the previous commit.
Initialize `cpu_class' earlier so that it can be used in startrtclock()
instead of in calibrate_cyclecounter() (which no longer exists).
Removed range checking of `cpu'. It is always initialized to CPU_XXX
so it is less likely to be out of bounds than most variables.
clock.h:
Removed I586_CYCLECTR(). Use rdtsc() instead.
clock.c:
TIMER_FREQ is now a variable timer_freq that defaults to the old value of
TIMER_FREQ. #define'ing TIMER_FREQ should still work and may be the best
way of setting the frequency.
Calibration involves counting cycles while watching the RTC for one second.
This gives values correct to within (a few ppm) + (the innaccuracy of the
RTC) on my systems.
regarding apm to LINT
- Disabled the statistics clock on machines which have an APM BIOS and
have the options "APM_BROKEN_STATCLOCK" enabled (which is default
in GENERIC now)
- move around some of the code in clock.c dealing with the rtc to make
it more obvios the effects of disabling the statistics clock
Reviewed by: bde
common labels for LINT. There are still some common declarations for the
!KERNEL case in tcp_debug.h and spx_debug.h. trpt depends on the ones in
tcp_debug.h.
Clarified GUS DMA Settings.
Other misc. changes.
This should hold us over until I can finish cleaning up TASD, and finish
reintegrating all of the FreeBSD changes to the sound driver. At that time
this document will be removed, and it's information moved to the handbook.
channel at the same time. The functions isa_dma_acquire() and
isa_dma_release() should be used in all ISA drivers which call isa_dmastart().
This can be used more generally to register the usage of DMA channels in
any driver, but it is required for drivers using isa_dmastart() and friends.
Clean up sanity checks, error messages, etc.
Remove isa_dmadone_nobounce(), it is no longer needed
Reviewed by: bde
They don't have BUSY de-asserted by the time they ACK (and thus cause
an interrupt). The workaround is to try seeing if the BUSY will be
de-asserted soon, and if not, to use an incremental backoff and
semi-polled mode instead of the fixed timeout with 1/2 s we've been
using previously (that caused the printer to run really slooow).
Printers that have been working previously should not be affected by
this.
Always delay using one inb(0x84) after each i/o in rtcin() - don't
do this conditional on the bogus option DUMMY_NOPS not being defined.
If you want an optionally slightly faster rtcin() again, then inline
it and use a better named option or sysctl variable. It only needs
to be fast in rtcintr().
Added scsi control devices.
Converted almost everything that I changed to use devfs_add_devswf()
and verbose id macros.
st.c:
Renamed enrst* to erst* since that's what the current name is (enrst
seems to be an old name).
determine if the interface had been assigned an IP address.
This code prevented the interface from receiving ethernet
broadcasts if it had no IP address assigned, and appeared
to be an optimization that is not completely needed.
Add support for LKM operation.
Change M_NOWAIT on buffer memory allocation to M_WAIT in hopes we'll be
able to get ourselves a nice fat buffer from the kernel if we suspend.
Note: The LKM support looks kinda screwy in two areas, where I found
problems with the kernel proper. First, calling dev_attach()
at module load time will cause a panic. I haven't investigated.
Secondly, I had to manually call qcam_drvinit() to register the
device softc structure by hand at module load time. This seems
bogus, it should be called as a core part of the module load
process for character/block device drivers.
1. Create 2 x 8k transmit buffer blocks in place of the 16k block previously.
With this change the speed as tested with ttcp on a 2Mbit link went up
from 206kbyte/s to 236kbyte/s.
2. Change the rest of the functions to also have the definition of the
return value on a sepperate line.
3. Remove some unused variables.
4. Add code to recover from DMA underruns.
5. Reorder ar_get_packets() to handle errors better.
6. Only allocate a mbuf cluster if the data is more than the mbuf.
(and in a second diff in addition to the above)
7. Stops the occasional DMA underruns that occurred when 2 channels
are running at 2Mbit/s.
Submitted by: John Hay <jhay@mikom.csir.co.za>
iterations of 30uS so that really fast systems stop getting
timeout messages from the Riscom driver.
Reviewed by: ache, peter@nmti.com (Peter da Silva)
- split driver into FreeBSD specific and camera specific portions
(qcamio.c can run in user mode, with a Linux "driver top" etc,
and qcam.c should be trivial to port to NetBSD and BSDI.)
- support for 4bppand bidirectional transfers working better
- start of interleaved data-transfers byte-stream decodes (some of this
stuff has been pulled out for the moment to make it easier to debug)
At this point, anyone who wants to port it to other platforms should feel
free to do so. Please feed changes directly back to me so that I can produce
a unified distribution.
doesn't break support for the older models (tested with my 3C589B).
Reviewed by: Joshua Gahm <jgahm@BBN.COM>
Submitted by: hosokawa@mt.cs.keio.ac.jp (HOSOKAWA Tatsumi)
prevent it from conflicting with other drivers (like the aic7xxx driver).
Most of the work was in spliting out common portions of the driver and
making them generic enough to be called from the eisaconf probe.
- Clean up the access to our ifnet structure by caching a pointer
to it instead of always digging through our softc structure.
Submitted by: Watchdog fixes by Serge A. Babkin <babkin@hq.icb.chel.su>
- 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
for me, but has gotten a bit flakey in bidirectional parallel port mode.
Fix a bug in bidirectional parallel port transfers, more work is still
needed here (testers welcome).
Minor cleanup.