| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Reviewed by: imp, current@
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
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Make the eisa no match printf closer to pci.
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a comment saying its probe routine needs to be fixed.
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o return (foo);
o if (a == NULL) in preference to if (!a)
o () and {} reduction
o minor indentation fixes
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only required to support probing of the Adaptec 284X VLB SCSI controller
which becomes visible in EISA space if you perform these writes. 284X
probing is moving to an ISA attachment.
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This passed testing because the variable happened to be 0 in most cases.
Compile warning found by: David Syphers <dsyphers AT u.washington.edu>
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unconditionally, stop after the first one (system board) if no EISA hardware
is detected. This fixes a boot hang (i.e. Thinkpad) when ACPI is disabled.
Also, split the probe code into a separate function and do some style cleanup.
Note that the Adaptec 2842 VLB controller probe is broken by this change
and will fail to probe. It should be fixed separately.
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the cvs add function.
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all of the interface between the driver and the bus. This will enable
us to stop special casing eisa bus attachments in modules and treat them
like we treat all other busses.
In the longer run, we need to eliminate much (all?) of these interfaces
and switch to using the standard bus_alloc_resource(), but that's not
done right now.
# I've not updated the modules to include eisa, etc, just yet
Tested on: Compaq Proliant 3000/333 purchased for eisa work
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Also some minor style cleanups.
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Change all in-tree consumers to include <sys/limits.h>
Discussed on: standards@
Partially submitted by: Craig Rodrigues <rodrigc@attbi.com>
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of slots (10).
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nexus(4) in the case of machines w/o equivalent bridges on a PCI bus.
Reported by: winter
Pointy hat to: jhb
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of reimplementing it.
- #undef EISA_ACCESSOR after use like we do for other accessors.
Reviewed by: tmm
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This mistake seems to have been benign until very recently, probably
until msmith's PCI code reshuffle which cleaned up a lot of things.
Still, my AIC7770 doesn't work again, but it at least probes the
EISA bus now.
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fondling implementation details.
Created with: sed(1)
Reviewed by: md5(1)
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Submitted by: josh@zipperup.org
Submitted by: Robert Drehmel <robd@gmx.net>
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It was not discussed and should probably not happen.
Requested by: msmith and others
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the type argument to *_HEAD and *_ENTRY is a struct.
Suggested by: phk
Reviewed by: phk
Approved by: mdodd
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Collect together the components of several drivers and export eisa from
the i386-only area (It's not, it's on some alphas too). The code hasn't
been updated to work on the Alpha yet, but that can come later.
Repository copies were done a while ago.
Moving these now keeps them in consistant place across the 4.x series
as the newbusification progresses.
Submitted by: mdodd
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device_add_child_ordered(). 'ivars' may now be set using the
device_set_ivars() function.
This makes it easier for us to change how arbitrary data structures are
associated with a device_t. Eventually we won't be modifying device_t
to add additional pointers for ivars, softc data etc.
Despite my best efforts I've probably forgotten something so let me know
if this breaks anything. I've been running with this change for months
and its been quite involved actually isolating all the changes from
the rest of the local changes in my tree.
Reviewed by: peter, dfr
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Submitted by: phk
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'int irq' -> 'struct irq_node *irq'
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eisa_add_intr() which now takes an additional arguement (one of
EISA_TRIGGER_LEVEL or EISA_TRIGGER_EDGE).
The flag RR_SHAREABLE has no effect when passed to
bus_alloc_resource(dev, SYS_RES_IRQ, ...) in an EISA device context as
the eisa_alloc_resource() call (bus_alloc_resource method) now deals
with this flag directly, depending on the device ivars.
This change does nothing more than move all the 'shared = inb(foo + iobsse)'
nonesense to the device probe methods rather than the device attach.
Also, print out 'edge' or 'level' in the IRQ announcement message.
Reviewed by: dfr
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during device announcement. (irq, ioport, maddr)
Reviewed by: dfr, peter
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- device_print_child() either lets the BUS_PRINT_CHILD
method produce the entire device announcement message or
it prints "foo0: not found\n"
Alter sys/kern/subr_bus.c:bus_generic_print_child() to take on
the previous behavior of device_print_child() (printing the
"foo0: <FooDevice 1.1>" bit of the announce message.)
Provide bus_print_child_header() and bus_print_child_footer()
to actually print the output for bus_generic_print_child().
These functions should be used whenever possible (unless you can
just use bus_generic_print_child())
The BUS_PRINT_CHILD method now returns int instead of void.
Modify everything else that defines or uses a BUS_PRINT_CHILD
method to comply with the above changes.
- Devices are 'on' a bus, not 'at' it.
- If a custom BUS_PRINT_CHILD method does the same thing
as bus_generic_print_child(), use bus_generic_print_child()
- Use device_get_nameunit() instead of both
device_get_name() and device_get_unit()
- All BUS_PRINT_CHILD methods return the number of
characters output.
Reviewed by: dfr, peter
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This allows the bus to print an informative message about unknown devices.
Submitted by: Matthew N. Dodd <winter@jurai.net>
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Obtained from: Warner Losh <imp@freebsd.org>
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manager and prevented IOPort allocation beyond the first EISA slot from
working. subr_rman.c should have trapped this on the way into the system
rather than tripping over the wreckage.
Head banged into wall repeatedly by: "Matthew N. Dodd" <winter@jurai.net>
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motherboard will have a card for the "motherboard" on slot 0.
eisa0: <EISA bus> on motherboard
mainboard0: <ASU5101 (System Board)> at slot 0 on eisa0
This should stop the probe "detecting" an EISA bus everywhere that has
a 'controller eisa0' line regardless of whether it's really there.
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to the BUS_SETUP_INTR call.
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had a quirk that made a shim rather hard to implement properly and it was
just easier to convert the drivers in one go. The changes to the
buslogic driver go beyond just this - the whole driver was new-bus'ed
including pci and isa. I have only tested the EISA part of this so far.
Submitted by: Doug Rabson <dfr@nlsystems.com>
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<sys/linker_set.h> in those files that use only the linker set
definitions.
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for possible buffer overflow problems. Replaced most sprintf()'s
with snprintf(); for others cases, added terminating NUL bytes where
appropriate, replaced constants like "16" with sizeof(), etc.
These changes include several bug fixes, but most changes are for
maintainability's sake. Any instance where it wasn't "immediately
obvious" that a buffer overflow could not occur was made safer.
Reviewed by: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
Reviewed by: Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>
Reviewed by: Mike Spengler <mks@networkcs.com>
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releasing EISA irqs.
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Found by: -Wunused
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Clean up the match routines so that they return const char *
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warnings.
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