New files are same as old (except for whitespace differences), except
that the new GENERIC doesn't have melody, because GENERIC defines
DRACO and the latter can't have it.
While we're here, enable RAIDframe (and RAID_AUTOCONFIG) by default for
architectures that I'm comfortable can deal with it being on by default.
Also: bump the number of 'raid' devices from 4 to 8, since 4 seems to
be insufficient in practise.
conf/GENERIC:
conf/files.amiga:
- Bring in wsfont definitions.
dev/grfabs_reg.h:
- Add macros for decomposing palette entries.
dev/amidisplaycc.c:
- Support for fonts, either wsfonts compiled into kernel
or runtime-loadable by ioctl. Font width still limited to 8,
height may vary.
- Limited support for mapped displays. No way to adjust display
mode. Palette setting works.
- Prettier default palette (white on black).
- Probes correctly as WSDISPLAY_TYPE_AMIGACC.
- Support for screen blanking.
and with the comment '4.2BSD TCP/IP bug compat. Not recommended'
Add commented out 'TCP_DEBUG # Record last TCP_NDEBUG packets with SO_DEBUG'
(All hail amiga and atari which make some attempt to automate the
multiplicity of config files...)
option for System V semaphores. It appears that there are no overrides
in the code and each file has the following added.
options SYSVSEM # System V semaphores
+#options SEMMNI=10 # number of semaphore identifiers
+#options SEMMNS=60 # number of semaphores in system
+#options SEMUME=10 # max number of undo entries per process
+#options SEMMNU=30 # number of undo structures in system
options SYSVSHM # System V shared memory
If anyone thinks that this is incorrect for any of these files, please
correct it.
Note - the i386 port was not forgotten. It was done separately.
We default to the (newer, more sane) 22.1184 MHz value, but set it from
the iobzclock variable (in Hz), which is initialized from the IOBZCLOCK
configuration option and patchable.
XXX we should time the clock at system startup.
- add ioblix_zbus to the GENERIC configuration.
broken/fragile. Unlikely to be of much use, and confuses new users
when their system crashes when they, or their dhclient stumble over
it. See kern/10500, kern/8994 for the gory details.
Note: enabling these will cause disk device renumbering if any IDE were
present (i.e. if sd0 was IDE drive 0, that drive will become wd0 and sd0
will be the first real SCSI drive.