and late_abort_fixup(), based on the abort model in use, rather than the CPU
type. This cleans up the code and makes it smaller. Only tested on an
ARM6 -- I can't find my ARM710a card right now.
network interfaces. This works by pre-computing the pseudo-header
checksum and caching it, delaying the actual checksum to ip_output()
if the hardware cannot perform the sum for us. In-bound checksums
can either be fully-checked by hardware, or summed up for final
verification by software. This method was modeled after how this
is done in FreeBSD, although the code is significantly different in
most places.
We don't delay checksums for IPv6/TCP, but we do take advantage of the
cached pseudo-header checksum.
Note: hardware-assisted checksumming defaults to "off". It is
enabled with ifconfig(8). See the manual page for details.
Implement hardware-assisted checksumming on the DP83820 Gigabit Ethernet,
3c90xB/3c90xC 10/100 Ethernet, and Alteon Tigon/Tigon2 Gigabit Ethernet.
network interfaces. This works by pre-computing the pseudo-header
checksum and caching it, delaying the actual checksum to ip_output()
if the hardware cannot perform the sum for us. In-bound checksums
can either be fully-checked by hardware, or summed up for final
verification by software. This method was modeled after how this
is done in FreeBSD, although the code is significantly different in
most places.
We don't delay checksums for IPv6/TCP, but we do take advantage of the
cached pseudo-header checksum.
Note: hardware-assisted checksumming defaults to "off". It is
enabled with ifconfig(8). See the manual page for details.
Implement hardware-assisted checksumming on the DP83820 Gigabit Ethernet,
3c90xB/3c90xC 10/100 Ethernet, and Alteon Tigon/Tigon2 Gigabit Ethernet.
the value of "next-server" from the DHCP (or BOOTP) reply. This is
not the DHCP server's IP address (except by chance), so instead of
"server" make it print "next-server".
when the system is "warm", i.e. interrupts are not blocked anymore.
This seems to be necessary on my PS/2 Model 70 keyboard - without this,
system ends up in endless loop calling the keyboard intr routine if a key
is pressed when polling. This _may_ be just specific to level-triggered
interrupts PS/2 MCA uses, though it's more likely it's just the way the
particular keyboard controller works.
Discussed on tech-kern@.
untested, since I have no P-4032 board, but it's no worse than
the current situation, which is "totally non-working P-4032
support in the ARC port, of all places".