pci_attach_args *" instead of from four separate parameters which in
all cases were extracted from the same "struct pci_attach_args".
This both simplifies the driver api, and allows for alternate PCI
interrupt mapping schemes, such as one using the tables described in
the Intel Multiprocessor Spec which describe interrupt wirings for
devices behind pci-pci bridges based on the device's location rather
the bridge's location.
Tested on alpha and i386; welcome to 1.5Q
<vm/pglist.h> -> <uvm/uvm_pglist.h>
<vm/vm_inherit.h> -> <uvm/uvm_inherit.h>
<vm/vm_kern.h> -> into <uvm/uvm_extern.h>
<vm/vm_object.h> -> nothing
<vm/vm_pager.h> -> into <uvm/uvm_pager.h>
also includes a bunch of <vm/vm_page.h> include removals (due to redudancy
with <vm/vm.h>), and a scattering of other similar headers.
timeout()/untimeout() API:
- Clients supply callout handle storage, thus eliminating problems of
resource allocation.
- Insertion and removal of callouts is constant time, important as
this facility is used quite a lot in the kernel.
The old timeout()/untimeout() API has been removed from the kernel.
directly, call the function pointer (*if_input)(ifp, m). The input routine
expects the packet header to be at the head of the packet, and will adjust
as necessary. Privatize the layer 2 input and output routines, allowing
*_ifattach() to set them up as appropriate.
TULIP_BUSMODE_BIGENDIAN does bswap packet buffers also, so we should use
TULIP_BUSMODE_DESC_BIGENDIAN on big-endian machines. (PR 7027)
XXX 21040 doesn't have this bit, but supporting only 21041+ is better than
nothing.
descriptor count gets miscounted on txprobes. The second (and more
important) is that transmit stalls should now be fixed. The problem
was not due to lack of ring resources but dmamaps. When Jason changed
the driver to use pre-allocated maps (instead of the dynamic ones I
used), and when there were no more maps, the driver just gave up instead
of calling tx_intr to free any transmitted but unreclaimed dma maps.
Since there was nothing being transmitted, no transmit interrupts
would fire to restore things (and OACTIVE prevented other transmits
from happenning). So it stayed starved until another interrupt cause
(like a received packet) "woke" it up.
-use of uninitialized variable in attach (mostly harmless)
-removal of dead code in attach()
-fix of interpretation of SIA blocks on >=21142 (serious, caused strange
things with 10Mbit)
it simple, and allocate one for each transmit and receive descriptor.
In addition to being simpler and faster, this fixes a serious memory leak
in the transmit path.