but if not then try to boot "netbsd", "netbsd.bak", "netbsd.old", and
"onetbsd" (in that order) until one is found or until the list of names
is exhausted.
machines with old firmware which doesn't pass it in the boot device
can work. Assume that if the ethernet address isn't passed in, it
uses the old (dain-bramaged) 'read' interface works on my 3000/300LX.
structure to allow netboot information to be hard-coded in network
boot blocks, so that they can be made to work even on systems with
firmware which doesn't support the new "ethernet address in boot device"
convention.
Eliminate obsolete global kernel variable "struct timezone tz"
Add RTC_OFFSET option
Add global kernel variable rtc_offset, which is initialized by
RTC_OFFSET at kernel compile time.
on i386, x68k, mac68k, pc532 and arm32, RTC_OFFSET indicates how many
minutes west (east) of GMT the hardware RTC runs. Defaults to 0.
Places where tz variable was used to indicate this in the past have
been replaced with rtc_offset.
Add sysctl interface to rtc_offset.
Kill obsolete DST_* macros in sys/time.h
gettimeofday now always returns zeroed timezone if zone is requested.
settimeofday now ignores and logs attempts to set non-existant kernel
timezone.
add SysV Shared Memory support, since it can be used by the X server.
add 'ppp' to the list of pseudo-devices, and sort the list to recover
from the renaming of 'rd' to 'md'.
other slight cleanups.
__builtin_classify_type() into harmless values, so that lint doesn't
get confused, think they're real functions, and that they're being
invoked in the wrong ways.
using __weak_alias in libc, __indr_reference should probably be defined
to do nothing (but defined, so that duplicate functions/variables aren't
compiled). However, when not using __weak_alias, __indr_reference causes
them to be omitted completely, which is a lose. So, until weak aliases
are going to be used, don't define __weak_alias or __indr_reference.
for by crt0. Actually clear a1 and a2, because unless a shared loader (i.e.
_not_ the kernel) set them when invoking crt0, they should be zero, and
the kernel DEBUG code wouldn't necessarily have them be. Pass a pointer
to the proc's ps_strings structure in a3.
on indirect-config busses a (permanent) softc that they could share
between 'match' and 'attach' routines:
Define __BROKEN_INDIRECT_CONFIG so that old autoconfiguration
interfaces are used, until drivers are converted to use the new
interfaces (actually, converted back to use the _older_ interfaces)
which prohibit indirect configuration devices from receiving a softc
in their match routine that they can share with their attach routine.
Lets users over-ride with makeoptions COPTS="..." in kernel config files.
Leave `mandatory' flags (like -msoft-float which on m68k enforces no
FP in kernel) in CFLAGS.
>Pay attention to DMA errors as reported by DMAINTR() returning -1. If this
>happens reset everything.
>
>Re-schedule a timeout when first attempting to abort an operation.
>Cancel any queued timer events before re-scheduling a timeout, so esp_abort()
>can be called from other places besides the timeout handler.
the chipset space init functions multiple times, since that would clobber
extent allocations made between the two calls. Also, deal with the
fact that the APECS and LCA no longer shared common chipset functions.
the same things, but the extent maps have to be managed differently,
since the two chipsets provide different memory and I/O region mapping
possibilities.
and PC-ish keyboard controller. (Actually, on alphas, the built-in PPI
(in the SIO) appears to be a lobotomized version of the original, but
i'd not call that a bad thing.) This driver should eventually handle all
speaker tone requests and keyboard commands, but for now it just maps
the relevant ports and passes them on to the keyboard and mouse drivers,
which are now its children (rather than children of ISA).
>One control block per target is insufficient if you have a full complement
>of targets attached and access those simultaneously (like in a ccd(4) array).
>We (now) allocate (somewhat arbitrarily) three per target.
>Noticed by Marshall Midden.
don't machine check when a PCI Master Abort is signalled. This can
happen, for instance, when configuration space for a device that isn't
present is examined. When this is detected, act like we normally would
when machine checks are posted while examining nonexistant devices.
enabled (from the attach routine), and add comments as to why.
Some PALcode apparently 'saves' a clock interrupt for the kernel,
and if the clock interrupt handler is enabled at attach time, it
will be run when that interrupt hits, i.e. right after the spl0()
at the end of autoconfiguration. That would cause hardclock to be
run, but proc0's p_stats isn't set up by then, which would cause
hardclock to crash.
rather than and-ing 16G-1. That just strips the k0seg bits, rather
than making the false assumption that the physical address is going
to be in the lower 16G. That doesn't apply for CIA device-space
addresses, for instance.
even if PCI and the IDs are right), just for sanity, before declaring
success. Split the single 0x3b0 -> 0x3df allocation into three seperate
ones: 0x3b0 -> 0x3bc (leaving the 4 ports available for lpt),
0x3c0 -> 0x3cf, and 0x3d0 -> 0x3df. The former chunk has to be split
off if the lpt can exist there, and it's sort-of pretty to have each
group (based on second hex digit) have its own handle.
ioctl and mmap routines take a void *, rather than a struct device *,
so that they can be set up to work more easily when using a 'struct device *'
isn't appropriate. Add a cookie (void *) to be passed to the mmap and
ioctl routines. Rename a few struct members, and shuffle them into
a more sensible order.
front-ends. Unfortunately, because of the way ISA and PCI are currently
probed, if you have a PCI VGA board in your machine and both drivers
in your kernel, the ISA VGA driver may accidentally match the PCI board.
For now, the only solution to this is to not put both drivers in
the GENERIC kernels.
the Digital Semiconductor AlphaPC 164 Motherboard Technical Reference
Manual. This may not work, but it's the best i can do with the
documentation I have.
is set in the RPB's rpb_variation field. This fixes a bug where machines
(e.g. the 3000/900) would see that they could touch memory where a built-in
PMAGB-BA, assume that it was there, and panic later because the memory they
were accessing didn't look like PMAGB-BA registers (because it wasn't).