. use a structure for the tag instead of an integer constant,
. add bus_space_{peek,poke}_N() (and G/C `badaddr()'),
. fix a few drivers which have dependencies on the implementation.
* move all exec-type specific information from struct emul to execsw[] and
provide single struct emul per emulation
* elf:
- kern/exec_elf32.c:probe_funcs[] is gone, execsw[] how has one entry
per emulation and contains pointer to respective probe function
- interp is allocated via MALLOC() rather than on stack
- elf_args structure is allocated via MALLOC() rather than malloc()
* ecoff: the per-emulation hooks moved from alpha and mips specific code
to OSF1 and Ultrix compat code as appropriate, execsw[] has one entry per
emulation supporting ecoff with appropriate probe function
* the makecmds/probe functions don't set emulation, pointer to emulation is
part of appropriate execsw[] entry
* constify couple of structures
CPU support taken from a combination of NetBSD/amiga and NetBSD/x68k.
At this time, MVME-172 works but MVME-177 is untested. Since the '177
is otherwise identical to the MVME-167, this should *just work*.
rather than assigning to the whole field, set or clear individual flags,
which implies that the B_BUSY and B_INVAL flags will remain set.
this allows us to make the assertion in brelse() that B_BUSY is set,
which is the purpose of all this.
maps standard boot flags to corresponding RB_* values
use BOOT_FLAG() in port's MD code as appropriate
as discussed on tech-kern, add new boot flags -v, -q for booting
verbosely or quietly, and corresponding AB_VERBOSE/AB_QUIET
boot flags; also add FreeBSD-compatible bootverbose macro and
NetBSD-specific bootquiet macro
for hpcmips, use new bootverbose instead of it's own hpcmips_verbose
Tested on i386, and to limited extend (compile of affected files) also for
mvme68k, hp300, luna68k, sun3.
backend.
The VME2chip can use this to translate a VMEbus irq to a cpu irq.
The VMEchip (on mvme147) can't deal with the VMEbus irq and cpu irq
being different so we just panic in that case for now.
routine. Works similarly fto pmap_prefer(), but allows callers
to specify a minimum power-of-two alignment of the region.
How we ever got along without this for so long is beyond me.
Currently, the major onboard devices are supported (disk, network,
rs232 and VMEbus). However, work is still need to support the remaining
devices (eg. IndustryPack sites).
These boards are available with a dazzling array of build options. At
this time, the following options are *required*:
o Real floating point hardware (the 68LC040 model isn't tested),
o The VMEchip2 must be present,
o If offboard VMEbus RAM is not present, at least 8MB of onboard
RAM is required.
o Even if offboard VMEbus RAM *is* present, at least 4MB of onboard
RAM is required. (Boards with 1 or 2MB onboard RAM *can* be
supported with offboard RAM, but not without some funky values in
the VMEbus Master mapping registers.)
There is no support for boards other than those in the -LX 200/300 series.
treated as just another available VMEbus slave image as far as
bus_dma(9) is concerned.
To preserve faster onboard memory, mvmebus_dmamem_alloc() will
allocate first from the offboard VMEbus RAM slave image if present,
and assuming its address modifier matches the caller's constraints.
This can be overidden by specifying the BUS_DMA_ONBOARD_RAM flag.
deal with dynamic address modifier generation based on the CPU's
function code pins.
Also implement VMEbus slave mode for mvme147. (Not yet 100% working.)
in the non-MULTIPROCESSOR case (LOCKDEBUG requires it). Scheduler
lock is held upon entry to mi_switch() and cpu_switch(), and
cpu_switch() releases the lock before returning.
Largely from Bill Sommerfeld, with some minor bug fixes and
machine-dependent code hacking from me.
vme_dmamem*.
This is still a work in progress, but seems to DTRT on mvme167 so far.
TODO:
. Get VMEbus slave mode going on mvme147. This should be easy.
. Fix up the A16 slave mappings.
. Bounce buffer support. (Messy, but pretty much a `must have'.)
. Figure out how to deal with `location monitor' interrupts
within the framework. (Useful for Busnet, among other things.)
. It would be nice to make use of the VMEchip2's DMA facilities...
Debugger(). Use db_printf() instead.
This fixes a problem whereby it was impossible to enter the debugger
if the CPU was spinning in lockmgr() for the proclist lock, because
printf() calls logwakeup(), which eventually calls proclist_lock_read(),
which then spins in lockmgr() yet again...
[Note: This change was prematurely committed to the 1.5 branch by
mistake. Since it would've been pulled up anyway, I won't
be sending a pullup request.]