when the system is "warm", i.e. interrupts are not blocked anymore.
This seems to be necessary on my PS/2 Model 70 keyboard - without this,
system ends up in endless loop calling the keyboard intr routine if a key
is pressed when polling. This _may_ be just specific to level-triggered
interrupts PS/2 MCA uses, though it's more likely it's just the way the
particular keyboard controller works.
Discussed on tech-kern@.
0xfe on my gateway 2000 circa 1993). That should not affect broken controllers
that choke on the kbc_auxtest, because for those the write/read test succeeds.
mouse port seem to interpret the "test aux port" (0xa9) command differently,
leading to a non-working keyboard.
Now we try to echo a byte through the aux port by means of the "echo aux"
(0xd3) command, which is what Linux does.
Thanks to Christoph Badura for detailed reports and testing.
from devices connected to pckbc:
- Do actual sample collection in pckbc.
- Add rndsource_element_t to the slot data.
- Change pckbc_set_inputhandler() to take an additional argument,
the name of the device, which is (eventually) passed into
rnd_attach_source() to identify the source.
- Change callers of pckbc_set_inputhander() appropriately.
timeout()/untimeout() API:
- Clients supply callout handle storage, thus eliminating problems of
resource allocation.
- Insertion and removal of callouts is constant time, important as
this facility is used quite a lot in the kernel.
The old timeout()/untimeout() API has been removed from the kernel.