- const poisoning for the copy routines.
- fu* su* fixes:
XXX:
1. These are poorly named [better names should have real sizes in them]
2. Not all of them are in use implemented
3. Interface is broken; no way to detect errors in fu*
4. The kernel man 9 pages for copy, fetch and store leave a lot to be
desired.
* New patchable variable maxphysmem to limit physical memory.
That's useful to simulate small machines for testing install
kernels.
* Make debugging crashdumps with gdb -k work.
* microtime is moved to clock.c.
* Reserve memory for symbol table when ddb is configured.
* Move checks for RB_KDB into consinit.
* Fix a typo in delay().
* Disable generation of profiling prologue for proc_trampoline,
sigcode, idle, handle_trap, flush_icache, svc and interrupt.
* A few tweaks to make kgdb and ddb work nicer.
* Support for bpf added.
* Don't duplicate code, use ether_ifattach instead.
* Recode plipreceive and pliptransmit in assembler.
This improves performance from 40 kbyte/s to 50 kbyte/s
between a 30mhz pc532 and a 25mhz i386.
dev/microcode/aic7xxx_seq.h,
dev/ic/aic7xxxreg.h:
Remove intrinsic knowledge about SDTR and WDTR messages and replace it
with a generic message system that allows the kernel driver to handle
SDTR, WDTR and any other type of extended message it chooses too. This
makes the sequencer code much simpler, makes extended message handling
debuggable since the bulk of the work is in the kernel driver, and saves
lots of instruction space.
Regen microcode header file.
dev/ic/aic7xxx.c, dev/ic/aic7xxxvar.h:
Add code to handle WDTR and SDTR negotiation in light of the changes in
the message interface to the sequencer. Don't reject targets that
negotiate async by sending an SDTR with a 0 offset. Use an sdtr message
with 0,0 to negotiate async when a target suggests a period that is too
long for us to handle. Some tape and cdrom drives don't like us doing
the message reject that we did in the past.
Fix a problem with handing the QUEUE FULL condition.
Fix a race condition (most likely the cause of the SCB paging problems) that
might allow the sequencer to get unpaused before the condition that caused
it to be paused (a SEQINT) was handled.
Race condition pointed out by Doug Ledford <dledford@dialnet.net> and
by "Dan Willis" <dan@plutotech.com>.
dev/pci/ahc_pci.c:
Add support for the 2940AU, an aic7860 based controller.
dev/pci/pcidevs.h, dev/pci/pcidevs_data.h:
Add product IDs for the 2940AU, aic7860 and aic7855.
Regen data file.
scsi/scsi_message.h:
Add MSG_EXT_SDTR_LEN and MSG_EXT_WDTR_LEN - the length of bytes in these
extended messages.
Thanks to Chuck Cranor <chuck@maria.wustl.edu> for testing these changes
out for me.
for NOEXEC and NOSUID, and make sure the interpreter file is executable.
The mount point checks are done because, even though the interpreter
is not the program being 'executed', code from the interpreter is being
executed, and so the mount point's flags should be respected.
exceptions, which puts the address of the instruction we faulted
on in a different location. Copy it and handle as we normally would,
restoring the saved PC before returning.
The FPE should probably be reworked to take advantage of the 68LC040's
precalculated effective address, at some point.
to signal that the build is happening on a machine with an ELF
toolchain. This is temporary, until a better toolchain-recognition
scheme is worked out.
- Only pass user trace traps and breakpoints on to trap().
Gets rid of some hair in the trace/breakpoint trap cases.
- Before entering the debugger, switch to a temporary
stack so that the debugger can alter the stack pointer.
- Add glue for KGDB (still not complete).
Some other minor cleanup:
- Protect against some bad pointer derefs.
- Be more a little more verbose when a fatal trap
occurs to aid debugging.
- Only pass user trace traps and breakpoints on to trap().
- Before entering the debugger, switch to a temporary
stack so that the debugger can alter the stack pointer.
- Add glue for KGDB (still not complete).
Clearly mark the MMU enable trampoline code.
the keyboard to work. Fixes a bug where booting with `-d' worked
only on systems using a serial console.
While I'm here, eliminate some redundancy in the ite console intialization
code.
This fixes a critical bug where a clock interrupt would happen sometime
between the call to hp300_calibrate_delay() and when proc0 is initialized.
This ends up dereferencing a bad pointer in itimerdecr(), which scribbles
over the first page of kernel text, specifically vectors 46 and 47 (decimal).
To complicate matters, the way the bug manifested itself was different
depending on whether or not DDB was configured into the kernel. When
DDB is in the kernel, kernel text is mapped read/write. When DDB is not
in the kernel, kernel text is mapped read-only. Note that the kernel
scribble happens early, typically before the console is initialized.
In the non-DDB case, the kernel will hang as soon as it's loaded because
the access causes a fault (before the console is initialized, so you
don't see the trap).
In the DDB case, the access does _not_ cause a fault. However, the
mechanism used to enter the kernel debugger is to issue a "trap #15".
Conveniently, this is one of the corrupted vectors (47), thus rendering
DDB useless (it actually caused a recursive panic/trap loop).
This _WILL_ be in the first 1.2 official patch.
include files containing model-specific I/O device configuration.
Add more options and devices (ccd, LKM, etc), as appropriate for
documentation and as examples in a "template" GENERIC config file,
even though not all of these work completely yet.
and shell script support to be optional (conditioned on EXEC_SCRIPT).
Remove the implicit inclusion of EXEC_ECOFF when COMPAT_OSF1 and/or
COMPAT_ULTRIX is included, and of EXEC_ELF32 when COMPAT_LINUX and/or
COMPAT_SVR4 is included.
queue.h list/queue head initializer macros. mountlist was converted so
that panics (or other reboots) early on in kernel startup don't cause
sys_sync() to croak. vnode_free_list was converted because it was nearby.
- This driver supports the on-board mbus-based cgfourteen (sometimes referred
to as "SX") video hardware present on SS20-class machines.
- It does *not* support any of the SX acceleration features.
- It does support the 8-bit mode of the hardware, and looks to X like
a cgthree.
- It does support the cg6-style hardware cursor, even when running X in
cgthree emulation.
- It does support DPMS power-down of compatible displays on later-revision
cg14's.
- There is code to support the true color (32-bit) mode of the cg14 as
cg8 emulation, but it is disabled by default because it is most likely
broken. #define CG14_CG8 to turn it on.
The driver is not yet installed in the conf files, but I will do so
shortly...
Check only the IR bit of the CIAA Interrupt Control Register when testing
for a level 6 interrupt. An interrupt only occurs if IR is set, and IR is
only set if the individual mask bits are set. The individual interrupt
status bits can be set without causing an interrupt if the corresponding
enable bits are not set.
from arch/mips/mips/locore.S to arch/pmax/pmax/locore_machdep.S.
* Move ARC-specific locore code (vmstat -i counters) to
arch/pica/pica/locore_machdep.S.
* When the mips3 locore support is known to work, both ports can now use
arch/mips/mips/locore.S.
wrappers for:
gets.c getenv.c strcat.c strcpy.c
so they compile again (if _KERNEL is defined).
For bootblock space reasons it would be prereable to call the PROM entrypoints
directly, via the macro wappers in de_prom.h, rather than C function wrappers.
* Create arch/mips/Makefile.inc with source list of generic MIPS-cpu
files for tags
* Use mips/Makefile.inc and updated tag list in pmax/Makefile
* Try building bootblocks in arch/pmax/stand.
clock_attach() time (for now).
This removes our dependance on the DraCo ROM access timing and frees
the second CIA on Amigas.
b) support for DraCo rev. >= 4 native timer chips.
* When we are transferring in DATA (in asc_dma_in) and the target
is an async device, there is sometimes an extra byte in the FIFO.
If so, we need to drain that byte out of the fifo, but if and only
if the target is async. See also the comments in asc_dma_in()
in the related Mach mk84 asc driver (scsi_53C94_hdw.c), which
has an identical fix but applied in more restrictive conditions
than we need, with async *disk* targets, as well as async tapes.
* Add a watchdog and timeout active SCSI requests, to eliminate any
potential for deadlock due to applying the fix above on newer
silicon versions of the 53c94 which may not have the above problem.
Should use the MI scsi per-target timeout instead, when available.
for a level 6 interrupt. An interrupt only occurs if IR is set, and IR is
only set if the individual mask bits are set. The individual interrupt
status bits can be set without causing an interrupt if the corresponding
enable bits are not set.