by allowing the hardware drivers to register keyboard and display
support with the ite framework. Removes the dependence on the hil
keyboard and should make support for dnkbd easier.
An interim fix until wscons arrives.
if the vec pointer is valid rather than using uvm_useracc().
uvm_useracc() just tells you if the permissions of a user mapping allow
the desired access, not whether faulting on that mapping will succeed.
the response queue. Instead of the ad hoc ISP_SWIZZLE_REQUEST, we now have
a complete set of inline functions in isp_inline.h. Each platform is
responsible for providing just one of a set of ISP_IOX_{GET,PUT}{8,16,32}
macros.
The reason this needs to be done is that we need to have a single set of
functions that will work correctly on multiple architectures for both little
and big endian machines. It also needs to work correctly in the case that
we have the request or response queues in memory that has to be treated
specially (e.g., have ddi_dma_sync called on it for Solaris after we update
it or before we read from it).
One thing that falls out of this is that we no longer build requests in the
request queue itself. Instead, we build the request locally (e.g., on the
stack) and then as part of the swizzling operation, copy it to the request
queue entry we've allocated. I thought long and hard about whether this was
too expensive a change to make as it in a lot of cases requires an extra
copy. On balance, the flexbility is worth it. With any luck, the entry that
we build locally stays in a processor writeback cache (after all, it's only
64 bytes) so that the cost of actually flushing it to the memory area that is
the shared queue with the PCI device is not all that expensive. We may examine
this again and try to get clever in the future to try and avoid copies.
Another change that falls out of this is that MEMORYBARRIER should be taken
a lot more seriously. The macro ISP_ADD_REQUEST does a MEMORYBARRIER on the
entry being added. But there had been many other places this had been missing.
It's now very important that it be done.
For NetBSD, it does a ddi_dmamap_sync as appropriate. This gets us out of
the explicit ddi_dmamap_sync on the whole response queue that we did for SBus
cards at each interrupt.
Set things up so that platforms that cannot have an SBus don't get a lot of
the SBus code checks (dead coded out).
Additional changes:
Fix a longstanding buglet of sorts. When we get an entry via isp_getrqentry,
the iptr value that gets returned is the value we intend to eventually plug
into the ISP registers as the entry *one past* the last one we've written-
*not* the current entry we're updating. All along we've been calling sync
functions on the wrong index value. Argh. The 'fix' here is to rename all
'iptr' variables as 'nxti' to remember that this is the 'next' pointer-
not the current pointer.
Devote a single bit to mboxbsy- and set aside bits for output mbox registers
that we need to pick up- we can have at least one command which does not
have any defined output registers (MBOX_EXECUTE_FIRMWARE).
Explicitly decode GetAllNext SNS Response back *as* a GetAllNext response.
Otherwise, we won't unswizzle it correctly.
Nuke some additional __P macros.
overriding FD_SETSIZE. Not overriding it makes it stomp all over memory
(which caused the debug outputs we've seen lately).
It used to work, but toolification of lint broke it.
old PLT format, and one that works with the new.
XXX We currently always use _rtld_bind_start_old() in
_rtld_setup_alpha_pltgot(). We need to add code to peek
into one of the PLT entries to see which format it's in
and pick the correct binding routine.
relocs for local symbols as section-relative REL32 relocs with values based
at 0, whereas previously BFD generated those relocs with values based at the
start address of the section.
This code adjusts all STT_SECTION REL32 relocs which have values less than
the start of the section by adding in the base address of the section. This
may limit section sizes to 2GB, but that shouldn't be a problem for now.
XXX: Needs to be followed-up with binutils list to get closure on which
interpretation is correct (the new ABI or the old one), I just haven't
yet had the time to chase that.
Simon Burge which came from the Debian project.
This is still not TRT, but it's correct, and it gets us closer to future
versions of nvi.
I'll do ART (A Right Thing) when I have time... That's why I'm committing
this now. :-/
This fixes FreeBSD PR#23912
use to find the end of the GOT, rather than relying on _DYNAMIC
to immediately follow the GOT. (A change in current binutils
moved _DYNAMIC, and thus would have broken our Alpha ld.elf_so).
* Add #ifdef'd out code to deal with the new PLT format.
the term used in config(9), autoconf(9) and in Torek's paper.
Also remove (comment out) reference to the 4.4BSD config docs,
since they are not installed in usr/share/doc/smm/02.config and
possibly aren't relevant any longer. From comments made on
tech-kern by jhawk and tls.
to these files.
Apparently, the "magic" which causes the latest version on the
vendor branch to appear at the head in the repository broke when
the netbsd-1-5 tag was added. Thus, merge in the lost revisions from
the vendor tag to work around this.