had set splhigh() but returned without restoring the previous spl.
The PowerBook keyboard works better, now, but still starts to flake
out pretty badly at 70+ wpm.
- Add initial IOP support. ADB doesn't work yet for me, but it's here so
that others will be encouraged to work on it. ADB_HW_IOP basically
is configured as a NOP so that serial consoles will continue to work.
- Roll via1_intr and via2_intr into the intr.c scheme--this also required
changing rtclock_intr to grovel the stack differently so that hardclock
gets the right arguments and softclock() doesn't get all reentrant.
- Make via1 interrupts parallel to via2 interrupts--handlers get a pass-
through pointer and we can register handlers. Register via1 interrupt
with intr_establish()--normally level 1, level 6 for A/UX scheme.
- Use intr_establish() to set real via2 interrupt handler instead of the
hacked function pointer.
- Reorganize adb-direct interrupts so that a function call is removed.
- Implement A/UX interrupts for all Quadras right now. We may need to
special case some Quadras, but Linux folks are reporting success on
several models.
- Fix intrnames to be accurate for the normal, PSC, and A/UX interrupt
configurations.
the hp300 port.
- Interrupts 3-6 use this immediately. Interrupt 7 is a special case,
and the VIA interrupts (1 and 2) will be addressed when that code is
rototilled.
- Modify the zs front end to register with the appropriate interrupt
controller: through the PSC on the AV Quadras, and direct to
interrupt 4 on the rest. Arrange to have the appropriate zsc_softc
supplied to us at interrupt time.
- Modify the direct ADB driver (and its PowerManager cousin) to call
intr_dispatch(), rather than zshard(). XXX This is a kludge, but at
least limits the brokenness to the ADB drivers, now.
As a side effect, this should fix PR 5590. Thanks to Bill Studenmund for
correctly determining the cause of the problem reported there.