of virtual address space, leaving userland with 3G, and update comments
to match the new reality.
We knew we were going to have to bite this bullet eventually, and there
are a couple of outstanding PRs related to this issue (9389 and 9313).
Complete solution to those PRs is going to involve some sort of run-time
decision on how large kmem_map should be, as well as changing some data
structure allocation strategies in UVM. However, this change will at
least allow the PR submitter to simply throw resources at the problem.
XXX This is a stopgap fix which can be pulled up to 1.4.x. It only replaces
the arbitrary 16M boundary by an arbitrary 128M boundary. A clean solution
would need changes to the mi loadfile.c parts.
CardBus bus stub, YENTA PCI-CardBus bridge (cbb), 3Com 3C575TX driver
(ex) and Intel fxp driver.
TODO:
o Conform to the KNF more strictly.
o Be unified with pcmcia code as much as possible.
o Add more drivers for CardBus card, such as APA-1480 or USB card.
The affected files are listed below.
sys/arch/i386/conf/files.i386
sys/arch/macppc/conf/files.macppc
sys/conf/files
sys/dev/ic/elinkxl.c
sys/dev/ic/elinkxlvar.h
sys/dev/ic/i82365.c
sys/dev/ic/i82365var.h
sys/dev/isa/i82365_isasubr.c
sys/dev/pci/files.pci
sys/dev/pcmcia/pcmcia.c
sys/dev/pcmcia/pcmciachip.h
The added files are listed below.
sys/arch/i386/conf/CARDBUS
sys/arch/i386/include/rbus_machdep.h
sys/arch/i386/i386/rbus_machdep.c
sys/arch/macppc/include/rbus_machdep.h
sys/arch/macppc/macppc/rbus_machdep.c
sys/dev/cardbus/if_ex_cardbus.c
sys/dev/cardbus/Makefile.cardbusdevs
sys/dev/cardbus/cardbus.c
sys/dev/cardbus/cardbus_map.c
sys/dev/cardbus/cardbusdevs
sys/dev/cardbus/cardbusdevs.h
sys/dev/cardbus/cardbusdevs_data.h
sys/dev/cardbus/cardbusvar.h
sys/dev/cardbus/cardslot.c
sys/dev/cardbus/cardslotvar.h
sys/dev/cardbus/devlist2h.awk
sys/dev/cardbus/files.cardbus
sys/dev/cardbus/if_fxp_cardbus.c
sys/dev/cardbus/pccardcis.h
sys/dev/cardbus/rbus.c
sys/dev/cardbus/rbus.h
sys/dev/pci/pccbb.c
sys/dev/pci/pccbbreg.h
sys/dev/pci/pccbbvar.h
to be the logarithm to base 2 of the alignment, in an ELF environment n is
the actual alignment boundary; thus, adjust the directives accordingly.
Albeit the wonderful i386 architecture doesn't mind the smaller alignment in
an obvious way, it is likely to have resulted in some performance penalty
during the a.out->ELF transition.
big-endian. i386, pc532 and vax still include <machine/byte_swap.h>
and define macros for the {n,h}to{h,n}*() functions. mips also
defines some endian-independent assembly-code aliases for unaligned
memory accesses.
that is priority is rasied. Add a new spllowersoftclock() to provide the
atomic drop-to-softclock semantics that the old splsoftclock() provided,
and update calls accordingly.
This fixes a problem with using the "rnd" pseudo-device from within
interrupt context to extract random data (e.g. from within the softnet
interrupt) where doing so would incorrectly unblock interrupts (causing
all sorts of lossage).
XXX 4 platforms do not have priority-raising capability: newsmips, sparc,
XXX sparc64, and VAX. This platforms still have this bug until their
XXX spl*() functions are fixed.
allocation strategy no longer works at all. Move pmap.new.* to pmap.*.
To read the revision history of PMAP_NEW up until this merge, use cvs
rlog of the old pmap.new.* files.
which set the LDT and share VM space (e.g. new versions of WINE) expect
the LDT to be logically coupled to the address space. Use the new pmap_fork()
interface to copy non-shared user-set LDTs when the address space is forked.
"BUS_SPACE_ALIGNED_POINTER()".
Equal to the param.h "ALIGNED_POINTER()" normally, but obeys additional
requirements of the bus_space_xxx_n() macros. (BUS_SPACE_DEBUG)
and sysctl to export to userland). Also, only use total number of sectors
given in the extended parameters if the physical chs geometry is
marked invalid. Hopefully fixes a problem where BIOSs would not correctly
fill in this field.
Actually the current ddb_init interface sucks, since there is no
magic number for a.out and it applies heuristics. It would be nice
if the boot blocks passed more info.
minor of libc and the major of libutil). For little-endian architectures
merge the bnswap() assembly versions with nto* and hton* using symbols
aliasing. Use symbol renaming for the bswap function in this case to avoid
namespace pollution.
Declare bswap* in machine/bswap.h, not machine/endian.h. For little-endian
machines, common code for inline macros go in machine/byte_swap.h
Sync libkern with libc.
Adjust #include in kernel sources for machine/bswap.h.
expressions is a GNU C extension; mark as such them with __extension__ to
suppress portability warnings. Addresses kern/3562 and misc/6185, as suggested
by Dave Sainty <dave@dtsp.co.nz>.
- cpu_set_kpc() now takes void *arg third argument, passed to the
entry point.
- cpu_fork() allows parent to be non-curproc iff parent is proc0.
When forking non-curproc, assume its state has already been saved.
- Adjust various pieces of machine-dependent code to account of all of this.
XXX Actually, libc appears to use only 7 of the previous 10, so increasing
the size isn't actually necessary! But there was a gap at the end before,
so we'll keep it.
signal mask since a 1.3 binary may attempt to invoke sigreturn(2) directly
for an alternate exit from the signal handler. If we don't do this, it will
get a garbage signal mask if it tries to do that.
* Increase the size of sigset_t to accomodate 128 signals -- adding new
versions of sys_setprocmask(), sys_sigaction(), sys_sigpending() and
sys_sigsuspend() to handle the changed arguments.
* Abstract the guts of sys_sigaltstack(), sys_setprocmask(), sys_sigaction(),
sys_sigpending() and sys_sigsuspend() into separate functions, and call them
from all the emulations rather than hard-coding everything. (Avoids uses
the stackgap crap for these system calls.)
* Add a new flag (p_checksig) to indicate that a process may have signals
pending and userret() needs to do the full (slow) check.
* Eliminate SAS_ALTSTACK; it's exactly the inverse of SS_DISABLE.
* Correct emulation bugs with restoring SS_ONSTACK.
* Make the signal mask in the sigcontext always use the emulated mask format.
* Store signals internally in sigaction structures, rather than maintaining a
bunch of little sigsets for each SA_* bit.
* Keep track of where we put the signal trampoline, rather than figuring it out
in *_sendsig().
* Issue a warning when a non-emulated sigaction bit is observed.
* Add missing emulated signals, and a native SIGPWR (currently not used).
* Implement the `not reset when caught' semantics for relevant signals.
Note: Only code touched by the i386 port has been modified. Other ports and
emulations need to be updated.
bus_space(9), if drivers want it (they shouldn't; easy to convert) they
can define it right before including bus.h. There's been a release since
the interfaces were (slightly) changed, and no code in the source tree
uses the old interfaces as far as I can tell.
tty structures, and on some machines (namely the DraCo internal lpt, and some
multi-i/o boards for Amigas and DraCos), tying spltty to the pretty high printer
interupt level would hurt serial performance.
On all affected ports but Amiga, spllpt() has been defined in machine/intr.h
to be spltty(), thus preserving old behaviour. Portmasters are encouraged to
change is, if they feel something else is better (e.g., one of its own were
possible).
address on 2 architectures anyhow. Also, move the definition of the `label_t'
type inside _KERNEL protection, since it is specific to the in-kernel
setjmp()/longjmp() implementations.
as with user-land programs, include files are installed by each directory
in the tree that has includes to install. (This allows more flexibility
as to what gets installed, makes 'partial installs' easier, and gives us
more options as to which machines' includes get installed at any given
time.) The old SYS_INCLUDES={symlinks,copies} behaviours are _both_
still supported, though at least one bug in the 'symlinks' case is
fixed by this change. Include files can't be build before installation,
so directories that have includes as targets (e.g. dev/pci) have to move
those targets into a different Makefile.
is defined, the bus_space macros will check to ensure that the bus address
and the target buffer (if applicable) are aligned properly for the size
of the type being used. If they are not, a message will be displayed on
the console.
While strict alignment is not strictly necessary on the x86, ensuring
proper alignment can aid performance, and help make drivers more portable
to architectures (like the Alpha and StrongARM) which _do_ require strict
alignment.