wsmouse(4) can attach directly at arckbd(4) and I can dispose of the
ugly arcwsmouse(4) and arcwskbd(4) interpositions. Do that, and purge
them from the documentation as well.
- renamed to MEMORY_DISK_RBFLAGS to better fit the rest of the
MEMORY_DISK options(4)
- change default value to RB_AUTOBOOT instead of RB_SINGLE, and adapt
the config(5) files accordingly
- document this option inside options(4)
See also http://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-kern/2008/12/25/msg003924.html
Reviewed by abs@ in private mail.
them in the mi "files" file, and remove include statements from md files.
These shouldn't pull in additional kernel code when not in use, so it
shouldn't do any harm except a risk of namespace collisions which
should be easy to fix.
just options CPU_IN_CKSUM.
Include std.arm in all arm platform std files.
This should reenable the asm in_cksum code for all arm platforms.
Also remove the now unused in_cksum_arm.S.
- Reduce available SPL levels for hardware devices to none, vm, sched, high.
- Acquire kernel_lock only for interrupts at IPL_VM.
- Implement threaded soft interrupts.
SEMMNI, SEMMNS, SEMUME and SHMMAXPGS.
They can be tweaked via sysctl now. Ports that were setting values on
them weren't touched, I only removed the ones that were commented out.
This branch was a major cleanup and rototill of many of the various OEA
cpu based PPC ports that focused on sharing as much code as possible
between the various ports to eliminate near-identical copies of files in
every tree. Additionally there is a new PIC system that unifies the
interface to interrupt code for all different OEA ppc arches. The work
for this branch was done by a variety of people, too long to list here.
TODO:
bebox still needs work to complete the transition to -renovation.
ofppc still needs a bunch of work, which I will be looking at.
ev64260 still needs to be renovated
amigappc was not attempted.
NOTES:
pmppc was removed as an arch, and moved to a evbppc target.
driver uses the board's DMA system, uses the machine-independent WD33C93
driver, works on NetBSD/acorn26, and doesn't share a name with six other
machine-dependent SCSI drivers. Not tested on acorn32, but it seems to
work tolerably well on my A540.
This is more flexible than the old acorn26 bus_space, which means that single
read/write operations are slower, but multi and region operations have the
potential to be faster, and particularly insane podules might be supportable.
In theory the acorn32 mainbus and podulebus code ought to be shareable, but
acorn26 needs the extra overhead of saving R14_svc on some operations so
I've made my own version for now. Also the acorn32 bus_spaces are a mess.
is necessary to ensure that GCC saves R14_svc on entry to every function,
and thus that page faults within the kernel are safe (since they corrupt
R14_svc). I think this used to be the default, but it's not any more.
ones and those for specific machines of developers. PR 32304.
OK'ed by rpaulo.
N.B. stf is a cloning device, so it still must be enabled by
"ifconfig stf0 create".
was developed as part of Google's Summer of Code 2005 program. This
change adds the kernel code, the mount_tmpfs utility, a regression test
suite and does all other related changes to integrate these.
The file-system is still *experimental*. Therefore, it is disabled by
default in all kernels. However, as typically done, a commented-out
entry is added in them to ease its setup.
Note that I haven't commited the required mountd(8) changes to be able
to export tmpfs file-systems because NFS support is still very unstable
and because, before enabling it, I'd like to do some other changes.
OK'ed by my project mentor, William Studenmund (wrstuden@).