A preserved package may not be deleted by pkg_delete(1) (unless the -f
option is given), and the preserved capability will be carried into
any binary package. pkg_add(1) will also keep the preserved capability
if it was present in the binary package.
The "preserve" capability can be given to a package by using the
PKG_PRESERVE definition in a package Makefile in pkgsrc.
Ride on the recently-bumped lib/version.h for new functionality.
external cache enable bit -- this allows software to enable or disable the
(external) L2 cache on the R5k and Rm527x and the (external) L3 cache on
the Rm7k. If the (external) cache is disabled, treat it as if there were
no cache for the purposes of the cache setup code.
Also, update sgimips code to use the new name.
Uploaded scripts work better if they are little endian, as the
card's engine expects, so convert to le first.
Also clean up attach routine a bit (use pa_id and PCI_REVISION
instead of fetching it ourselves).
This makes the driver work on my macppc G4, it can decode and
display video and tuner input. Sound does not seem to work, but
this may be my wonky formac bktr-for-macintosh card.
unless ACPI_FDC_DEBUG
array returned from _FDE contains UINT32 values, not UINT8; also change
the magic number '14' to '5 * sizeof(UINT32)' for clarity
remove XXX for the tape presence comment; it's Just Okay to not use the info
fdc_acpi_getknownfds(): if fdc_acpi_nvtotype() returns NULL, don't
attempt to attach the drive at all
XXX not tested
which is safer than the loop there used to be here.
wi_mwrite_bap: if wi_write_bap fails, don't keep on going: this
way you avoid writing garbage to the radio. First time you see
an odd-length mbuf, copy the remainder of the chain to sc_txbuf
and from there to the MAC. This way, you do not read an mbuf past
the end of its data (occasionally you will cross a page doing
that!) and you avoid expensive, excess seeks in the radio's own
buffer chain.
wi_rx_intr: clamp the frame length told to us by the driver to the
most bytes we can fit in our mbuf cluster.
I am still getting e-mails from my testers telling me how much
better this makes things.