the MCA DMA controller access. This also means we gain >16MB RAM support.
While here, overhaul the driver to saner state, especially:
* simplify and clean the attach code a lot, and support the 'drive'
locator
* pass proper dev_t to readdisklabel() - formerly, the passed value was
completely broken (used incorrect major and wrong minor), but worked
by accident
* worker thread is now spawned per controller, rather than per-drive;
i/o cannot be done concurrently by different drivers, only one
i/o can be pending at any time
* simplify the command queue code, just sleep appropriately when
!poll case, g/c 'async' code formerly needed, move the bio code
from ed_mca.c to edc_mca.c:edc_bio()
* put all string arrays used by edc_dump_status_block() within #ifdef EDC_DEBUG,
and use numbers instead if it's not defined; this cuts object size by 5KB
* other misc cleanups
interface, using the code from dev/mca/edc_mca.c:edc_setup_dma()
as a base. Use ISA routines for dmamap/dmamem functions, primarily
to get the buffer bouncing for >16MB RAM machines. The MCA DMA
channel is stored in unused upper 4 bits of ISA DMA cookie's
id_flags, hopefully that's not too disgusting :)
Export mca_dmamap_create(), which returns map suitable for further DMA
operations using MCA DMA controller.
mca_busprobe(): also report if machine has 32bit DMA (feature byte 2
bit 1)
Use symbolic names for DMA controller commands - I've finally got
info what they mean from Tymm Twillman's Linux include/asm/mca_dma.h.
No more magic constants! Also fix bug in the way DMA counter has been
setup - for 16bit DMA, it's necessary to tell the controller _half_
the byte count. This was wrong in the former code.
at all, it's only needed in LKM case
use #if defined(LKM) || defined(_LKM) condition for netbsd32_execve.c,
to DTRT when either compiled statically into kernel with LKM support,
or compiled as a LKM
state standard conformancy - besides RLIMIT_AS (which is not supported
currently), getrlimit()/setrlimit() conform to SUSv2
use more standard description cookie for error return in RETURN VALUES
mention also ulimit of sh(1), besides limit of csh(1)
* return EINVAL if specified current limit exceeds specified hard limit.
This behaviour is required by SUSv2 (noted by Giles Lean on tech-kern)
* return EINVAL if an attempt is made to lower stack size limit below
current usage; this addresses bin/3045 by Jason Thorpe, and conforms to SUSv2