it implemented under the label `shortcut:' and only use it in these
cases: (1) after successful re-relection, (2) after receiving command-complete
status, and (3) during message-in handshake.
for front-ends to override the allocation to avoid alignment
handling in their DMA engines. Note that that ncr53c9x_msgout()
can request a 1 byte DMA transfer that would be difficult to break up.
as console input. (Previously, it did always succeed.)
(closes PR kern/5372 by Jason R Thorpe)
Make error messages cleaner and add some "#ifdef DEBUG" to reduce noise.
needs some testing, but it seems to produce sound. The driver was written
by me, but since I don't have the hardware the debugging and testing was
done by Andreas Gustafsson <gson@araneus.fi>, Chuck Cranor
<chuck@maria.wustl.edu>, and Phil Nelson <phil@cs.wwu.edu>. Thanks.
Cute buglet: you can end up with zero CCBs if there were no targets
seen by the adapter. Always leave a minimum so the adapter can
finish attaching- it may be there w/o targets for a reason.
the capacity based on the c/h/s numbers. In fact, don't use the c/h/s
numbers for much of anything.
For ATA-4 drives or later, always use LBA mode, since it's now required.
Collectively, this allows >8GB disks (like the 12GB Bigfoot) to work.
Compute the disk block addr at command queing time rather than exec time.
This fix a bug which could lead to data corruption on disk: when a command
was reexecuted after an error condition (from wdcunwedge), the partition
offset was re-added to the block addr, leading to a transfert at the wrong
disk block.
This should fix the problem reported by some laptop's users, where the
first disk read after a suspend/resume returned garbage.
into sys/dev/dec and split into a clockfns layer and a "middle" layer
for other DEC systems which use mcclocks with each onchip byte
register padded out to a 32-bit word.
Clone alpha/alpha/mcclock (also duplicated in pmax port) into
sys/dev/dec, and ifdef for default clockrates on pmax and alpha.
Use new machinery on pmax for ibus,ioasic attached mcclocks.