used in the SMC EtherPower II.
Media control isn't yet supported, due to some MII infrastructure
problems which I hope to address soon. This isn't a huge deal, since
the PHY defaults to auto-negotiate mode.
Also, the device just programs the multicast hash table to accept all
multicast, to avoid a hardware bug that causes the multicast address
filter to lose in 10Mb/s mode. This bug will be fixed in a more sane
way once the media control issues are dealt with.
Add handling of DMA boundary barrier in _bus_dmamap_load_buffer(). This
affects all bus_dmamap_load* functions of bus_dma(9).
While I'm there fix a bug where the dm_segs array could be overflowded by one.
issues of the XPG.
* Move setkey() prototype from <unistd.h> to this file. (XPG4)
* Move mkstemp(), mktemp(), ttyslot() and valloc() prototypes from <unistd.h>
to this file. (XPG4.2)
* Remove mknod() prototype; it's located in <sys/stat.h> (XPG4.2).
* Remove re_comp() and re_exec() prototypes; their location is <re_comp.h>
(XPG4.2).
* Move setkey() prototype to <stdlib.h> (XPG4).
* Move mkstemp(), mktemp(), ttyslot() and valloc() prototypes to <stdlib.h>
(XPG4.2).
Assign copyright to TNF.
* in command completion, append a space to a definite match
* in local path completion, append a space or / to a definite match,
depending if the path is a non-directory or directory respectively
(nothing added to remote path completion yet, until a simple sane method
of determining if the path is a directory or not is available).
of last resort when trying to communicate information about
bogus behaviour of PCI devices to the MI autoconfiguration code.
In general, bogus behaviour should be handled by drivers, but there
are some types of bogons which can't be addressed that way. The
only quirk currently defined is one which indicates that the device
is multi-function even though the device's header says otherwise.
(Mmm, Intel 82371FB PCI-to-ISA Bridge (PIIX); you'd think that at least
Intel would have gotten it right...)
of functions on a given device. Also, clean up the #if 0'd
major-debugging-spew code so that it's all one piece, so that
it's a bit prettier, and so that it prints out quirk information.
of last resort when trying to communicate information about
bogus behaviour of PCI devices to the MI autoconfiguration code.
In general, bogus behaviour should be handled by drivers, but there
are some types of bogons which can't be addressed that way. The
only quirk currently defined is one which indicates that the device
is multi-function even though the device's header says otherwise.
(Mmm, Intel 82371FB PCI-to-ISA Bridge (PIIX); you'd think that at least
Intel would have gotten it right...)