Rather than an "iointr" routine that decomposes a vector into an
IRQ, we maintain a vector table directly, hooking up each "iointr"
routine at the correct vector. This also allows us to hook device
interrupts up to specific vectors (c.f. Jensen).
We can shave even more cycles off, here, and I will, but it requires
some changes to the alpha_shared_intr stuff.
pci_attach_args *" instead of from four separate parameters which in
all cases were extracted from the same "struct pci_attach_args".
This both simplifies the driver api, and allows for alternate PCI
interrupt mapping schemes, such as one using the tables described in
the Intel Multiprocessor Spec which describe interrupt wirings for
devices behind pci-pci bridges based on the device's location rather
the bridge's location.
Tested on alpha and i386; welcome to 1.5Q
Like the 1000A, the AlphaServer 1000 has a daughtercard assembly that
integrates the CPU and core logic, so these can be ev4/apecs or ev5/cia.
New systype, and, sigh, another way of doing interrupts and another
mystery icu.
Kill off some EVCNT_COUNTERS calls, since [A] it has to be rewritten anyway
before it can be useful, and [B] #ifdefs do not belong at every call site,
a common API should be defined and the implementations conditionalized, not
all the calls. Duhh.