| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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that converts the a29k to automake.
This patch contains
* An initial merger of the libcpu/a29k stuff you sent yesterday. AFAIS,
most code inside them seems to be empty stubs. One file even contains a
function called mips_*** which might indicate that this part might
contain mips code or the code the initial porter used as template for
porting. Unfortunately, I don't know anything about the a29k so I can't
comment on the details.
* A dummy bsp_specs to libbsp/29k/portsw
* An update to the automake files related to the a29k.
Note:
* This patch is completely untested, because I don't have a toolchain
for it.
* The files in libcpu/a29k include bsp.h => The libbsp vs. libcpu-issue
hits again.
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and appear to be close for gdb.
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pc686.cfg was not present.
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that converts the a29k to automake.
This patch contains
* An initial merger of the libcpu/a29k stuff you sent yesterday. AFAIS,
most code inside them seems to be empty stubs. One file even contains a
function called mips_*** which might indicate that this part might
contain mips code or the code the initial porter used as template for
porting. Unfortunately, I don't know anything about the a29k so I can't
comment on the details.
* A dummy bsp_specs to libbsp/29k/portsw
* An update to the automake files related to the a29k.
Note:
* This patch is completely untested, because I don't have a toolchain
for it.
* The files in libcpu/a29k include bsp.h => The libbsp vs. libcpu-issue
hits again.
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by all targets and one or more target specific RPMs. This significantly
reduces the conflicts between the RPMs whether installing one or multiple
targets.
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packages.
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Cygwin support to the RPM scripts. The patch from David did not
apply cleanly and Joel ended up making all the modifications
plus some it should have included for consistency by hand. His comments:
I've included a diff against the last (19991203) snapshot RPM scripts that
adds what I think is required for Cygwin support. Basically all this boils
down to is adding EXE extension support. I've added the AC_EXEEXT rule to
conifgure.in (requires a valid 'cc' to work - this is not available in the
standard Cygwin distro). Each of the *.spec.in have @exe_ext@ includes in
them for each program that results in an EXE. The only odity here is that
the chill driver program is a shell script and thus does not require .exe to
be added... The mk*.in have all been updated to process the new exe_ext
rule.
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Eric Norum <eric@cls.usask.ca>.
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Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>.
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the network initialization enhancement request by Jake Janovetz
<janovetz@tempest.ece.uiuc.edu>.
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Janovetz <janovetz@tempest.ece.uiuc.edu> to return a status from
network initialization rather than panic'ing. It changes a bunch
of rtems_panics to printfs and returns a status from
rtems_bsdnet_initialize_network().
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I'd like to propose a change to RTEMS task variables that I think would
make them more useful. I think that it is early enough in their
existence to still make changes to their API.
1) Change type from `int' to `void *'.
2) Add extra argument to task_variable_add -- if non-NULL, a pointer to
a `destructor' function to be called when the task exits. This function
would be called with that task's value of the task variable as its
argument. In many cases, the `dtor' function could be `free'.
rtems_status_code rtems_task_variable_add (
rtems_id tid, void **ptr, void (*dtor)(void *));
rtems_status_code rtems_task_variable_delete (rtems_id tid, void **ptr);
This would be all we'd need to cleanly and efficiently support C++
per-thread exception information without dragging in all that POSIX API
stuff.
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Some excellent sleuthing by Bob Wisdom <bobwis@ascweb.co.uk> revealed
that an empty mbuf at the end of a packet chain would cause the `retire'
function to blow up. Moving the line of code which bumps the transmit
buffer descriptor pointer fixes the problem. Some additional cleanup of
the sendpacket function was also completed.
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is not strict ANSI.
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that addresses the librdbg/rpcgen related problems:
Changes:
* All rpcgen generated files are now kept inside of the source tree
* Fix librdbg/configure to correctly detect presence of rpcgen and awk
* Use rpcgen -m to generated remdeb_svc.c
* Remove msgout/_msgout from awk.svc
* minor cleanups to librdbg/configure.in
ATTENTION --- IMPORTANT:
* With keeping rpc-generated files pre-build inside of the source tree,
you as the packager of RTEMS have to ensure that timestamps are
correctly set up: The generated files must not be older than the *.x
files.
* This is extraordinarily important when
- putting the package on read-only media
- after checking out from CVS
- after modifications to the *.x files
* If one of the *.x files is modified you have to either
- build for i386/pc386 and powerpc/mcp750
- or to invoke the same rpcgen calls as the
librdbg/src/<cpu>/<bsp>/Makefile.am do manually
before checking-in the files to CVS.
Proposal:
We could add something to bootstrap for touching the rpcgen-generated
sources and/or to manually regenerate them.
NOTE FROM JOEL:
Ralf proposed modifying bootstrap to handle rpcgen. I think this
is the best solution as it is something already done in the
snapshot procedure.
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blocking sends when the queue is full. The SuperCore was enhanced
to support blocking on send. The existing POSIX API was debugged
and numerous test cases were added to psxmsgq01 by Jennifer Averett.
SuperCore enhancements and resulting modifications to other APIs
were done by Joel.
There is one significant point of interpretation for the POSIX API.
What happens to threads already blocked on a message queue when the
mode of that same message queue is changed from blocking to non-blocking?
We decided to unblock all waiting tasks with an EAGAIN error just
as if a non-blocking version of the same operation had returned
unsatisfied. This case is not discussed in the POSIX standard and
other implementations may have chosen differently.
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blocking sends when the queue is full. The SuperCore was enhanced
to support blocking on send. The existing POSIX API was debugged
and numerous test cases were added to psxmsgq01 by Jennifer Averett.
SuperCore enhancements and resulting modifications to other APIs
were done by Joel.
There is one significant point of interpretation for the POSIX API.
What happens to threads already blocked on a message queue when the
mode of that same message queue is changed from blocking to non-blocking?
We decided to unblock all waiting tasks with an EAGAIN error just
as if a non-blocking version of the same operation had returned
unsatisfied. This case is not discussed in the POSIX standard and
other implementations may have chosen differently.
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because of the conversion to automake and replaced by a Makefile.am.
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The message queue manager chapter needs to be updated to reflect
completion of the implementation.
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and _CORE_message_queue_Insert_message for posix message queues.
+ Yellow line tested new source
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