The siisata driver supports the Silicon Image SteelVine family of SATA-II
controllers, interfacing the hardware with the ata(4) and atapi(4) sub-
systems.
The following controllers are supported by the siisata driver:
Silicon Image SiI3124 4-port PCI/PCI-X
Silicon Image SiI3132 2-port PCI-Express x1
Silicon Image SiI3531 1-port PCI-Express x1
SATA Native Command Queueing is not yet supported.
Device hot swapping is not yet supported.
Silicon Image's Software RAID is not yet supported by the
ataraid(4) driver.
Approved by: core (christos), releng (bouyer)
and DVD's behave like floppy discs. Writing is supported upto and including
version 2.01; version 2.50 and 2.60 will follow.
Also extending the UDF implementation to support symbolic links and
hardlinks.
Added are the mmcformat(8) tool to format rewritable CD/DVD discs and
newfs_udf(8).
Limitations:
all operations can be performed on the file system though the
sheduling is currently optimised for archiving workloads.
mv(1)/rename(2) is currently only implemented for non-directories.
which use libcrypto (and those which use those libraries again),
as libcrypto's major number was recently bumped. The pam modules
share a major with libpam, so they are all bumped as well.
test module after the introduction of bsd.kmodule.mk. The files list was
inconsistent with the new module structure and the Makefile did not use the
correct variable to specify the installation of the module. Hi ad@!
aps(4), finsio(4), itesio(4), nsclpcsio(4), smsc(4) and ug(4).
These drivers aren't enabled in GENERIC kernels, so having the LKMs
in base will simplify future testing.
Changes beyond OpenBSD's driver:
- Improved support for AMD K8
- Added support for AMD Barcelona, AMD Phenom and AMD Griffin
Tested on various single and multi-socket machines.
Review and OK xtreame
btuartd(8) should be named btattach(8) for consistency
with other parts of NetBSD
make btattach(8) a single-use tool for less complexity
device specicific initialisation (from btuart(4)) is carried
out prior to activating the line discipline (in btattach(8)),
which simplifies the API somewhat and means that the user
tool and the kernel do not need to be kept in sync.
btuart(4) driver is much reduced; naming is made consistent
and all tsleep() and delay() are removed to userland