Implemented wscons for CV64 and CV64/3D. Other graphics cards drivers are
prepared for it, but will not be attempted before Xorg is not running.
The wscons support is disabled by default. A GENERIC kernel should behave
like always. Use WSCONS to try out a kernel with wscons support.
Done by rkujawa@ and phx@.
NetBSD Foundation Membership still pending.) This stack was written by
Iain under sponsorship from Itronix Inc.
The stack includes support for rfcomm networking (networking via your
bluetooth enabled cell phone), hid devices (keyboards/mice), and headsets.
Drivers for both PCMCIA and USB bluetooth controllers are included.
- Use EXIT_SUCCESS/EXIT_FAILURE where appropriate.
- Cut long lines.
- Properly indent continuation of lines.
- Sort includes.
- Replace u_int with unsigned int.
- Remove parenthesis around return values.
- Add blank line at the beginning of functions without local parameters.
- Cast *printf calls to void.
change wsconsctl(4) so that this is configurable.
This is specially useful for mice that provide page up/down buttons instead
of a real wheel and that do not send events repeatedly from the hardware.
(E.g.: Logitech Marble Mouse.)
No objections in tech-kern@.
denote that a flag was readable/writeable, but that is achieved by passing
a 0 as the flags.
Thanks to uwe@ for finding this out and explaining me why it was wrong.
At the moment this only affects the display part, hiding console colors,
border color and/or console scrollback if their respective ioctls are
not supported by the running kernel.
Trying to write to these variables will still fail with the correct ioctl
error message.
at the moment.
This includes the addition of two new wsdisplay ioctls, WSDISPLAY_{G,S}BORDER,
one to get the actual color and one to set it, respectively. Possible colors
match those defined by ANSI (and listed in wsdisplayvar.h).
It also adds two accessops to the underlying graphics device, getborder and
setborder, which mach their ioctl counterparts.
Two kernel options are added: WSDISPLAY_CUSTOM_BORDER, which enables the
ioctls described above (to customize the border color from userland after
boot), and WSDISPLAY_BORDER_COLOR, which sets the color at boot time.
The former is enabled by default on the GENERIC kernel, but not on INSTALL
(among others). The later is always commented out, leaving the usual black
border as a default.
wsconsctl is modified to allow accessing this value easily. For example,
'wsconsctl -d -w border=blue'.