Axel Dörfler 24593e2c79 * First baby steps in letting our drivers use the new I/O request/scheduler
architecture: for now, we do this on the lowest layer only, therefore all
  requests are handled synchronously (ie. in the scheduler's thread).
* Instead of using the block_io module, scsi_disk (and scsi_cd) are now
  exporting a device on their own, and use an I/O scheduler with an appropriate
  DMA resource.
* There are still lots of TODOs, and it can easily panic - don't update if
  you intend to demo Haiku.
* scsi_periph now only has an io() function that get an io_operation, instead
  of the previous read/write functions, moved preferred CCB size from those
  functions into the device registration.
* Changed all scsi_periph files to C++.
* scsi_cd ported, too, but untested.
* Removed block_io from image - it will be removed completely soon.
* Temporarily commented an ASSERT() in the ATA bus manager (in case you use
  it); it's sometimes triggered by the code now, and I haven't yet looked into
  the issue -- doesn't seem to harm, at least.


git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@26828 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
2008-08-05 21:11:51 +00:00

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SubDir HAIKU_TOP src add-ons kernel generic scsi_periph ;
UsePrivateHeaders drivers kernel ;
SubDirHdrs $(HAIKU_TOP) src system kernel device_manager ;
# disable debug output, if debugging is disabled
if $(DEBUG) = 0 {
SubDirCcFlags [ FDefines DEBUG_MAX_LEVEL_FLOW=0 DEBUG_MAX_LEVEL_INFO=0 ] ;
}
KernelAddon scsi_periph :
block.cpp
device_icons.cpp
device.cpp
error_handling.cpp
handle.cpp
io.cpp
removable.cpp
scsi_periph.cpp
sync.cpp
;