a struct device * corresponding to the ISA bus device. The ISA DMA
controller driver functions have been renamed and now take a struct
isa_dma_state *, and are called indirectly by machine-dependent code
which provides the DMA state.
These changes allow e.g. `ofisa' (the OpenFirmware configuration
mechanism for the ISA bus, used by e.g. Sharks) to use the MI ISA
DMA controller code.
>date: 1997/07/18 00:26:22; author: fvdl; state: Exp; lines: +10 -10
>Work around possible race condition with 2 drives on one controller
>in wd_get_parms. PR 3773, from Onno van der Linden (onno@simplex.nl)
S: ----------------------------------------------------------------------
It is configured (in config files) as 'awdc'/'awd', but shows up as
'wdc'/'wd', so that a minimal amount of code had to be modified to make
the name change work. This is only intended to be temporary, anyway.
This can be disabled (to save a bit of space) with the NO_KERNEL_RCSIDS
options, which is present but commented out in the ALPHA config file.
In ELF-format kernels, these strings are present in the kernel binary but
are not loaded into memory. (In ECOFF-format kernels, there's no easy way
to keep them from being loaded, so they _are_ loaded into memory.)
and PC-ish keyboard controller. (Actually, on alphas, the built-in PPI
(in the SIO) appears to be a lobotomized version of the original, but
i'd not call that a bad thing.) This driver should eventually handle all
speaker tone requests and keyboard commands, but for now it just maps
the relevant ports and passes them on to the keyboard and mouse drivers,
which are now its children (rather than children of ISA).
even if PCI and the IDs are right), just for sanity, before declaring
success. Split the single 0x3b0 -> 0x3df allocation into three seperate
ones: 0x3b0 -> 0x3bc (leaving the 4 ports available for lpt),
0x3c0 -> 0x3cf, and 0x3d0 -> 0x3df. The former chunk has to be split
off if the lpt can exist there, and it's sort-of pretty to have each
group (based on second hex digit) have its own handle.