CONFIG_CNTRL bits by making the "conn" argument to epconfig()
a u_int, not a u_int16_t, and by defining 100mbit media
bits in the upper 16 bits.
A redesigned interface that fixes this properly is in the pipeline.
rather than unknown.
* Look for 100mbit interfaces, and for any present, set corresponding
bits in `conn' argument to epconfig(). epconfig() will now print
100Mbit media by name.
that their child busses can be attached after the PCI bus
autoconfiguration for their parent bus is done.
This works because:
(1) there can be at most one ISA/EISA bridge per PCI bus, and
(2) any ISA/EISA bridges must be attached to primary PCI
busses (i.e. bus zero).
That boils down to: there can only be one of these outstanding
at a time, it is cleared when configuring PCI bus 0 before any
subdevices have been found, and it is run after all subdevices
of PCI bus 0 have been found.
This (or something like it) is needed because there are some (legacy)
PCI devices which can show up as ISA/EISA devices as well (the prime
example of which are VGA controllers). If you attach ISA from a
PCI-ISA/EISA bridge, and the bridge is seen before the video board is,
the board can show up as an ISA device, and that can (bogusly)
complicate the PCI device's attach code, or make the PCI device not be
properly attached at all.
This could be done with machine-dependent code, but as more ports
add support for PCI (and PCI-ISA/EISA bridges) more will need it.
The i386 port could (perhaps should) be converted to use it as well.
2841, plus some fixes to make the patches work on the Alpha. Seems to
improve the NCR driver a lot. We probably should try to incorporate
any updates that have happened since, too.
(This fixes problems with the printf format fixes i checked in yesterday.
ptrdiff_t is an 'int' on the i386 but a 'long' on the alpha, so the cast
really is necessary... *sigh*)
ISA-compatible port space of PCI buslogic cards.
* Add call to bha_pci.c to disable the ISA-compatible ports of a PCI
device. The ISA-compatible ports are enabled by default, which
causes the card to be autoconfigured a second time as an ISA device,
which appears to deadlock the card.
* Change bha_cmd() to return the number of bytes it actually received
in response to a command, or -1 on error.
* Use heuristics (checking for bha-only registers, and checking the size
of the response to BHA_INQURE_EXTENDED) to bha_find, to make sure the
bha driver never matches an aha (Adaptec 1542 or compatible) device.
A single kernel should now boot on either Adaptec or BusLogic controllers,
provided we always probe for BusLogic devices before Adaptec devices,
but this has not yet been verified.
- No more distinction between i/o-mapped and memory-mapped
devices. It's all "bus space" now, and space tags
differentiate the space with finer grain than the
bus chipset tag.
- Add memory barrier methods.
- Implement space alloc/free methods.
- Implement region read/write methods (like memcpy to/from
bus space).
This interface provides a better abstraction for dealing with
machine-independent chipset drivers.
dev/microcode/aic7xxx_seq.h,
dev/ic/aic7xxxreg.h:
Remove intrinsic knowledge about SDTR and WDTR messages and replace it
with a generic message system that allows the kernel driver to handle
SDTR, WDTR and any other type of extended message it chooses too. This
makes the sequencer code much simpler, makes extended message handling
debuggable since the bulk of the work is in the kernel driver, and saves
lots of instruction space.
Regen microcode header file.
dev/ic/aic7xxx.c, dev/ic/aic7xxxvar.h:
Add code to handle WDTR and SDTR negotiation in light of the changes in
the message interface to the sequencer. Don't reject targets that
negotiate async by sending an SDTR with a 0 offset. Use an sdtr message
with 0,0 to negotiate async when a target suggests a period that is too
long for us to handle. Some tape and cdrom drives don't like us doing
the message reject that we did in the past.
Fix a problem with handing the QUEUE FULL condition.
Fix a race condition (most likely the cause of the SCB paging problems) that
might allow the sequencer to get unpaused before the condition that caused
it to be paused (a SEQINT) was handled.
Race condition pointed out by Doug Ledford <dledford@dialnet.net> and
by "Dan Willis" <dan@plutotech.com>.
dev/pci/ahc_pci.c:
Add support for the 2940AU, an aic7860 based controller.
dev/pci/pcidevs.h, dev/pci/pcidevs_data.h:
Add product IDs for the 2940AU, aic7860 and aic7855.
Regen data file.
scsi/scsi_message.h:
Add MSG_EXT_SDTR_LEN and MSG_EXT_WDTR_LEN - the length of bytes in these
extended messages.
Thanks to Chuck Cranor <chuck@maria.wustl.edu> for testing these changes
out for me.
multi-channel driver), or to SCSI_CHANNEL_ONLY_ONE if a
single-channel driver.
(2) use scsiprint() rather than a locally-defined autoconfig print
function, and kill any locally-defined print function.
a char *, because that's what was really intended, and because
if the print function modifies the string, various things could become
unhappy (so the string should _not_ be modified).
the lowest bit set. This isn't any more or less valid according to the PCI
spec, but it deals with lame devices that don't implement all of the top
bits.
values, i.e. 0xfffffffe and 0xffffffff respectively. The changed
definitions were incorrect, according to the PCI Local Bus Specification
(Revision 2.0). Further rationale and a workaround for the broken
devices that instigated the change provided in a message to
current-users@netbsd.org, dated Mon, 05 Aug 1996 22:06:58 -0400,
message ID 16773.839297218@ux2.sp.cs.cmu.edu>.
While I'm here, convert driver to use <machine/bus.h> and the new PCI
I/O space interface (the new PCI interrupt interface was already in-use).
Also, correct a "corrected" printf.
device and a printable "external name" (name + unit number), thus eliminating
if_name and if_unit. Updated interface to (*if_watchdog)() and (*if_reset)()
to take a struct ifnet *, rather than a unit number.
naming conflicts between bus attachments on ports that can have
multiple instances of the LANCE.
Add a real PCI front-end for PCnet-PCI Ethernet cards.
Changed struct ifnet to have a pointer to the softc of the underlying
device and a printable "external name" (name + unit number), thus eliminating
if_name and if_unit. Updated interface to (*if_watchdog)() and (*if_reset)()
to take a struct ifnet *, rather than a unit number.
bus-independent core driver. Tested on all three bus types, including
an isa 3c509 masquerading as an eisa device (use ep* at eisa? slot ? in
your kernel config file to catch this one).
XXX Driver still needs to be converted to <machine/bus.h>
(soon to be documented on mailing lists; eventually in section 9 manual
pages), most importantly:
(1) support interrupt pin swizzling on non-i386 systems with
PCI-PCI bridges (per PPB spec; done, but meaningless, on i386).
(2) provide pci_{io,mem}_find(), to determine what I/O or memory
space is described by a given PCI configuration space
mapping register.
(3) provide pci_intr_map(), pci_intr_string(), and
pci_intr_{,dis}establish() to manipulate and print info about
PCI interrupts.
(4) make pci functions take as an argument a machine-dependent
cookie, to allow more flexibility in implementation.
(1) use pci_{io,mem}_find(), to determine what I/O or memory
space is described by a given PCI configuration space
mapping register, and bus_{io,mem}_map() to map it.
(2) use pci_intr_map(), pci_intr_string(), and
pci_intr_{,dis}establish() to manipulate and print info about
PCI interrupts.
(5) make pci functions take as an argument a machine-dependent
cookie, to allow more flexibility in implementation.
- split softc size and match/attach out from cfdriver into
a new struct cfattach.
- new "attach" directive for files.*. May specify the name of
the cfattach structure, so that devices may be easily attached
to parents with different autoconfiguration semantics.
pcibus and pci.
(2) remove the #ifdef i386 from pci.c, and provide a machine-dependent
hook (pci_md_attach_hook()) to do any machine-dependent attachment
gunk, e.g. on the i386 printing out the configuration mode (if bus 0)
(3) don't pass max device number for a given bus in, use
PCI_MAX_DEVICE_NUMBER, which can be defined on a per-machine basis.
(defaults to 32. on i386, it's 32 if pci conf mode == 1, 16 if 2.)
assumes that pci_map_mem/pci_map_io provide interfaces which utilitize
bus_{io,mem}_handle_t's, or types which are compatible. This works on the
i386, and will change eventually anyway.)
for U_INT8, INT16, U_INT16 definitions. Convert structs and
definitions in ncr_reg.h (e.g. ncrcmd, the chip register layout, etc.)
to use these definitions.
Add INB_OFF, INL_OFF, and OUTL_OFF macros to access specified offsets into
I/O or memory space. Convert register dumps (etc.), and cache snoop
test to use these new macros, so that nothing accesses the device
I/O or memory space directly. (Register dumps now come from I/O space
if NCR_IOMAPPED. They used to bogusly use memory space.)
Add a new relocation type for script entries, RELOC_KVAR. Allow scripts
access to mono_time.tv_sec, mono_time, and ncr_cache via this
mechanism, and convert scripts to use it. An ncrcmd is only 32 bits
wide, and KVAs may be > 32 bits wide (e.g. on Alpha), leading to
linker problems. This is a safer way to do this anyway; relocation is
more deterministic this way, and doesn't rely on KVAs not looking like
other relocation types.
Panic if an unmatched relocation other than 'zero' is specified. That's
now a script bug. (This used to be used to convert KVAs of kernel
variables referenced in the script to PCI bus physical addresses,
and that is now handled by RELOC_KVAR relocations.)
Figure out and print the model of chip.
assumes that pci_map_mem/pci_map_io provide interfaces which utilitize
bus_{io,mem}_handle_t's, or types which are compatible. This works on the
i386, and will change eventually anyway.)
attaching, and to the devices when attaching them. #include <machine/bus.h>
to make this backward compatible with old #include requirements.
Also, clean up idempotency so that isa/eisa/pci "var.h" headers are
consistent (make them all idempotent).
and attach the secondary pci bus as a 'pci' device. Note that this support
is incomplete and will not yet work for ports other than that i386. (The
i386 can rely on the PCI interrupt 'line' information to determine
interrupt mapping, which is not necessarily possible on other systems.)
(1) remove the 'UNSUPP' keyword from the device list,
because it can't be reasonably used (becuase different
devices may be supported on different machines, for
good reason).
(2) enhance pci_devinfo so that class/subclass information
is optional (so pci_devinfo can be used by drivers that
match classes of devices, and want to look up the
devices' names easily).
(3) more known vendors and devices.
and for the PCI attachment of said chipset ("if_fpa"), also from Matt Thomas.
Arguably, pdq* doesn't belong in sys/dev/ic, but it's going to be shared by
various bus attachment devices at some point in the future, and there's no
other place that seems to fit as well.
to match. (now, comparisons are comparisons, code doing them doesn't
have to mask.) define types for the various parts of the registers'
contents, where practical.
vendor & product IDs and class information, which is printed if device
isn't found. Optionally (via "PCIVERBOSE" option) does table lookup
to try to see if it knows what the device really is (informational only...).
(pci_attach_subdev()). remove pciattach() function and the pcicd cfdriver
struct, the former because thre are a lot of attachment actions which really
are machine-dependent (perhaps even "most"), and the latter because now that
both pcimatch() and pciattach() are machine-dependent it's bad style to
declare them here and it gains nothing.