which is automatically included during kernel config, and add comments
to individual machine-dependant majors.* files to assign new MI majors
in MI file.
Range 0-191 is reserved for machine-specific assignments, range
192+ are MI assignments.
Follows recent discussion on tech-kern@
* Define a new "MMU type", ARM_MMU_SA1. While the SA-1's MMU is basically
compatible with the generic, the SA-1 cache does not have a write-through
mode, and it is useful to know have an indication of this.
* Add a new PMAP_NEEDS_PTE_SYNC indicator, and try to evaluate it at
compile time. We evaluate it like so:
- If SA-1-style MMU is the only type configured -> 1
- If SA-1-style MMU is not configured -> 0
- Otherwise, defer to a run-time variable.
If PMAP_NEEDS_PTE_SYNC might evaluate to true (SA-1 only or run-time
check), then we also define PMAP_INCLUDE_PTE_SYNC so that e.g. assembly
code can include the necessary run-time support. PMAP_INCLUDE_PTE_SYNC
largely replaces the ARM32_PMAP_NEEDS_PTE_SYNC manual setting Steve
included with the original new pmap.
* In the new pmap, make pmap_pte_init_generic() check to see if the CPU
has a write-back cache. If so, init the PT cache mode to C=1,B=0 to get
write-through mode. Otherwise, init the PT cache mode to C=1,B=1.
* Add a new pmap_pte_init_arm8(). Old pmap, same as generic. New pmap,
sets page table cacheability to 0 (ARM8 has a write-back cache, but
flushing it is quite expensive).
* In the new pmap, make pmap_pte_init_arm9() reset the PT cache mode to
C=1,B=0, since the write-back check in generic gets it wrong for ARM9,
since we use write-through mode all the time on ARM9 right now. (What
this really tells me is that the test for write-through cache is less
than perfect, but we can fix that later.)
* Add a new pmap_pte_init_sa1(). Old pmap, same as generic. New pmap,
does generic initialization, then resets page table cache mode to
C=1,B=1, since C=1,B=0 does not produce write-through on the SA-1.
This merge changes the device switch tables from static array to
dynamically generated by config(8).
- All device switches is defined as a constant structure in device drivers.
- The new grammer ``device-major'' is introduced to ``files''.
device-major <prefix> char <num> [block <num>] [<rules>]
- All device major numbers must be listed up in port dependent majors.<arch>
by using this grammer.
- Added the new naming convention.
The name of the device switch must be <prefix>_[bc]devsw for auto-generation
of device switch tables.
- The backward compatibility of loading block/character device
switch by LKM framework is broken. This is necessary to convert
from block/character device major to device name in runtime and vice versa.
- The restriction to assign device major by LKM is completely removed.
We don't need to reserve LKM entries for dynamic loading of device switch.
- In compile time, device major numbers list is packed into the kernel and
the LKM framework will refer it to assign device major number dynamically.
MALLOC_NOINLINE, and VNODE_OP_NOINLINE. The exceptions are when they
include another config files that already defines the options, or if
they are for an embedded board, just define a few extra options, and
do not already define PIPE_SOCKETPAIR.
* COPTS get -Os
* Comment out all COMPAT_* options
* Comment out System V IPC options
* Comment out KTRACE, IRQSTATS, KMEMSTATS, DIAGNOSTIC
* Comment out unneeded devices (audio, joystick, vnd, sequencer)
...and bump the ramdisk size to 3.5M (ELF binaries are somewhat
larger on-disk due to the way the linker pads out the .data program
section).