The kernel version is only partially tested.
Change-Id: I9a2f6c78087154ab137eadbced99062a8a2dd688
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/918
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Since it handles physical address it should really be this.
It's not like many drivers actually used it anyway. It shouldn't harm
compatibility, drivers calling it with only 32bit would leave garbage in
the higher bits but since on x86 it's a noop anyway, it would end up in
the MSB register tha's ignored because it expects a 32bit result.
- Various cleanups to the USB-audio side, which is similar
- Add in the UVC (USB Video) specific info with parsing of some of the
descriptors (most of the "control" part).
* Added a directory argument for notify_{stat/attribute}_changed().
* This allows to watch only a directory, and get the notifications for
all of its files, not just add/remove entry notifications.
It provides a way for filesystems to cache a lookup failure and
therefore prevents repeated lookups of missing entries. This is a
common scenario for example in command lookup and compiling, where
each directory in PATH or each include directory is searched for the
given entry.
This isn't really a bus_manager yet, but just minimal support so
we can get rid of hardcoded ARM SoC support from the core kernel
code.
Needs lots of work, like proper handling of #address-cells and
the like. Also, generic attribute handling, device_manager
integration, and I could go on for hours ;)
* Added VFS helper function check_access_permissions() that combines
several partially correct versions to the one true version (tm).
* All but BFS (since recently) missed the S_IXOTH for root on directories,
and all but packagefs missed proper group handling.
* Create new interface for cpuidle modules (similar to the cpufreq
interface)
* Generic cpuidle module is no longer needed
* Fix and update Intel C-State module
* virtio_scsi can have 16384 luns, though we cap at 256 as our scsi_ccb
only uses uchar as a type for target_lun and target_id members.
* minor code cleanup in scsi_scan_bus().
* The UNMAP command is theoretically much faster, as it can get many block
ranges instead of just a single range.
* Furthermore, the ATA TRIM command resembles it much better.
* Therefore, fs_trim_data now gets an array of ranges, and we use SCSI UNMAP
to trim.
* Updated BFS code to collect array ranges to fully support the new
fs_trim_data possibilities.
* No need for the atomically changed variables to be declared as
volatile.
* Drop support for atomically getting and setting unaligned data.
* Introduce atomic_get_and_set[64]() which works the same as
atomic_set[64]() used to. atomic_set[64]() does not return the
previous value anymore.
Finishing and refactoring the draft, initially implemented during April-May 2012
NOTE: startingFrameNumber returned to device contains the number of the
next free frame right after the last packed of submitted data. For more
details please Look into corresponding [haiku-development] discussion
started at 03 Jul 2013.
Partially fixes#1045.
devfs_io() can't fall back to calling vfs_synchronous_io(), if the
device driver doesn't support handling requests asynchronously. The
presence of the io() hook leads the VFS (do_iterative_fd_io()) to
believe that asynchronous handling is supported and set a
finished-callback on the request which calls the io() hook to start the
next chunk. Thus, instead of iterating through the request in a loop
the iteration happens recursively. For sufficiently fragmented requests
the stack may overflow (ticket #9900).
* Introduce a new vnode operation supports_operation(). It can be called
by the VFS to determine whether a present hook is actually currently
supported for a given vnode.
* devfs: implement the new hook and remove the fallback handling in
devfs_io().
* vfs_request_io.cpp: use the new hook to determine whether the io()
hook is really supported.