wider variety of systems. Include the deivers from pci_intel.c in
pci_config.c (I hope this is what was intended; my system works ok).
Use pmap_mapdev(). Automatically map any large linear frame buffers
or whatnot in VGA-style devices which ordinarily would not have their
own drivers, and don't call not_supported() for them. (This shuts up
complaints about my Matrox card.) Include the beginnings of what could
eventually become dynamically-loadable PCI devices. Allow for the
possibility of PCI devices simply providing a PCI veneer over an existing
ISA device, and shut up about them, too.
Make autoconfiguration text conform more to the style of other supported
buses.
as the previous one, and better integrated with the build scheme.
Define OLDTIMEZONES to get backward-compatibility links added.
Define LEAPSECONDS if you want leap-second support.
to a reasonable compromise:
MASTER_SITES now contains a space seperated list of sites for which each
DISTFILE may be retrieved. This should be a directory spec, which will be
concatenated with each file in DISTFILES. HOME_LOCATION is *gone* now
and isn't used for anything, so you can delete it from your Makefiles.
If you want to force a fetch from a given location, simply do something like:
MASTER_SITES= ftp://fnord.foo.bar/pub/dist
DISTFILES= a.tar.gz b.tar.gz
Your entry in MASTER_SITES will be tried first to fetch a.tar.gz and
b.tar.gz, followed by any master sites we have set up (right now, only
freebsd.cdrom.com).
you download the microcode to the DSP everytime you power on your system.
They provide a dos-program to do so, but no other support. This commit adds
code to the sio-driver, which implement an ioctl, which will down-load the
micro-code.
To get this functionality, you must define DSI_SOFT_MODEM.
The program to actually employ the ioctl is not included, but the entire
source looks like this:
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
main()
{
unsigned char buffer[100000];
int i;
read(0,buffer,100000);
if((i = ioctl(1,TIOCDSIMICROCODE,buffer)) < 0)
perror("ioctl");
return i;
}
And you use it like this:
smload < data144b.dsi > /dev/ttyid3
You need to copy the *.DSI files from the dos-media provide with your modem.
You can see what is downloaded by issuing the ATI3 command to the modem.
DSI's scheme for what code you can run on your modem isn't violated by this.
Poul-Henning Kamp
phk@freefall.cdrom.com