a) communicate the hardware independent part of ARP packets (rfc826) from/to
if_*subr.c in the ongoing effort to rewrite the ARP subsystem for non-Ethernet
networks
b) communicate the hardware independent part of RARP packets (rfc903) from/to
userland sockets to avoid putting link level header format knowledge into
rarpd, when it is enhanced to support non-Ethernet networks.
to "struct trapframe" (the minimal frame) because in most cases, all we
care about is the minimal, invariant part. Further, if the declaration
says we have an arg of type "frame" (big union), then KGDB will try to
print the whole bloody thing out whether you want to see it or not.
trap.c:trap_kdebug() so it can be C code instead of assembly.
Make sure the initial frame pointer is zero so KGDB will know when to
stop trying to follow frame pointers during backtrace.
to "struct trapframe" (the minimal frame) because in most cases, all we
care about is the minimal, invariant part. Further, if the declaration
says we have an arg of type "frame" (big union), then KGDB will try to
print the whole bloody thing out whether you want to see it or not.
Also add the function trap_kdebug() which takes care of calling one of:
kgdb_trap (for KGDB), or kdb_trap, (for DDB) or the Sun PROM monitor.
This logic used to be in locore, but it is better as C code.
to "struct trapframe" (the minimal frame) because in most cases, all we
care about is the minimal, invariant part. Further, if the declaration
says we have an arg of type "frame" (big union), then KGDB will try to
print the whole bloody thing out whether you want to see it or not.
* Define RECOVER to something faster.
* Check for a valid softc in scnsoft. When there is
a "hole" (e.g. you have scn0,scn1, scn4, scn5) the
old code would panic. Thank's to Phil Budne for
finding and fixing this bug.
* Add (commented out) type and asmtype commands. asmtype will
be used to define the gcc constraint used to emit constants
and type will be used to define the type the constant should
get casted to before passing it to printf.