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1999-03-02changed version to 19990302Joel Sherrill1-1/+1
1999-03-02Patch from Jay Monkman <jmonkman@frasca.com> to address minor issuesJoel Sherrill5-204/+387
in the eth_comm BSP documentation.
1999-03-01Updated Ethernet driver from Erik Ivanenko <erik.ivanenko@utoronto.ca>.Joel Sherrill1-66/+112
Comments follow: Please find attached, the updated network driver. I have verified that it is working as expected, by timestamping the error messages generated from the ISR. If you've taken a look inside, the network driver has a reset thread in addition to the RX and TX threads. It is possible to avoid the additional reset thread by allowing the TX driver to time out and then checking status bits set by the ISR. However, this approach demands that a transmission is necessary for the NIC to be reset. Due to Eric V's ISR handling, I suppose that the reset routine could be called from the "ISR" itself, due to the 8259 interrupt mode, and that the interrupt is acknowledged prior to running the "ISR". (Providing that no NIC interrupts are generated during reset -- I worry about re-entrancy. ) This would be a minor improvement, but you know, I don't want to make this driver my lifes work. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
1999-03-01Patch from Eric Norum <eric@skatter.usask.ca> to eliminate externalJoel Sherrill47-611/+157
IO handlers scheme that was implemented originally just to support sockets. The file system IO switch is more general and works fine.
1999-03-01Part of the automake VI patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>:Joel Sherrill7-22/+193
> 5) rtems-rc-19990202-1.diff/reorg-install.sh > > reorg-install.sh fixes a Makefile variable name clash of RTEMS > configuration files and automake/autoconf standards. > Until now, RTEMS used $(INSTALL) for install-if-change. Automake and > autoconf use $(INSTALL) for a bsd-compatible install. As > install-if-change and bsd-install are not compatible, I renamed all > references to install-if-changed to $(INSTALL_CHANGED) and used > $(INSTALL) for bsd-install (==automake/autoconf standard). When > automake will be introduced install-if-change will probably be replaced > by $(INSTALL) and therefore will slowly vanish. For the moment, this > patch fixes a very nasty problem which prevents adding any automake file > until now (There are still more).
1999-02-24Changed IMFS to use IMFS_NAME_MAX as the maximum length of a basenameJoel Sherrill23-71/+97
rather then NAME_MAX. NAME_MAX is 255 and that lets IMFS chew up memory too fast. Perhaps in the future, the places in IMFS that put a maximum length name string on the stack and the jnode structure does not include a maximu length name string can be fixed so this is not a problem.
1999-02-24Moved mpc860.h around to make things compile.Joel Sherrill2-1/+1
1999-02-24Patch from Charles Gauthier <Charles.Gauthier@iit.nrc.ca> to addressJoel Sherrill3-11/+95
FP issues on this target: The default variants of libc, libm and libgcc assume that a 68881 coprocessor is present. Without the FPSP, any floating point operation, including printf() with a "%f" format specifier, is likely to cause an unimplemented instruction exception. The FPSP works with the default variants of libc, libm and libgcc. It does not work in conjunction with the msoft-float variants. The paranoia test goes into an infinite loop at milestone 40. I am guessing that floor() is returning an incorrect value. The msoft-float variants of libc, libm and libgcc appear to do floating point I/O properly. They only failed in paranoia. Offhand, I can't think of why they would conflict with the FPSP, so I think that there is something wrong with the msoft-float code. It might be my installation. Given my experiences, I decided to install the FPSP in bsp_start(), and to link against the default variants of libc, libm and libgcc. This causes the executables to increase in size by about 60 KB. The README file and the mvme167.cfg specify how to remove the FPSP, and how to link against the msoft-float variants of the libraries. This is not what Eric Norum had done: on my host, his gen68360_040 port links RTEMS code with the msoft-float variants of libc and libm, and the default variant of libgcc. In this configuration, the output of printf() with "%f" is garbage on my target.
1999-02-24Switch to using standard compile rule for assembly.Joel Sherrill1-4/+2
1999-02-24Patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>. The following emailJoel Sherrill1-8/+19
is long but I hate to lose the information so I am including it here. > I am still fixing and recompiling but this is the issue that was not the > result of another patch. This is a fundamental build issue that I value > your opinion on. This is difficult issue (I.e. I have no destinct solution for it) Background: (gnu-) make's implicit rules apply CFLAGS, CPPFLAGS, CXXFLAGS, ASFLAGS and LDFLAGS (cf. make.info/Implicit Rules/Catalogue of Rules), only. In brief: CPPFLAGS .. passed to the c-preprocessor CFLAGS ... passed to the c-compiler CXXFLAGS ... equivalent to CFLAGS but passed to the c++ compiler (Attention: CFLAGS is not passed to the c++ compiler) ASFLAGS .. equivalent to CFLAGS, but passed to the assembler LDFLAGS .. equivalent to CFLAGS, but passed to the linker A bit oversimplifying, these make rules are as follows .c.o: $(CC) $(CPPFLAGS) $(CFLAGS) -c .cc.o: $(CXX) $(CPPFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS) -c .S.s: $(CPP) $(CPPFLAGS) .s.o: $(AS) $(ASFLAGS) My reading of the documentation (make.info) is that {AS|AR|CC|CXX|CPP}FLAGS are ment to be passed to the related tools directly, however examinating the rule set of gmake (gmake -p -f /dev/null") shows that many rules use $(CC) instead of the related tools (eg. linker rules) etc. I.e. these flags should not rely on being passed through cpp or gcc. With gcc being the common frontend for all of these tools of a gnu-toolchain the situation becomes difficult (Which option is passed to whom and which tool really uses it?), because these variable can also contain the toolchain's frontend (eg. AS=gcc, LD=gcc, CPP=gcc -E). For some commonly used options the situation is quite clear: * -g -> CFLAGS * -OX -> CFLAGS * -D -> CPPFLAGS * -A -> CPPFLAGS But where to add -m, -B, -specs, -qrtems_XXX ? * -B, -specs, -qrtems_XXX are gcc-frontend options * -m is a combinations of flags to go to different destinations, in many (all?) cases, the following is valid -m is expanded by gcc into a set of -D and -A options -m is interpreted by cc1 as a machine flag to generate a specific instruction set. -m is interpreted by gcc as an implicit linker search path for multilibs to set up calls to LD. >From my point of view this indicates we can either destingush between these different usages (= separately add -m to CFLAGS, LDFLAGS etc) or to add it to CPPFLAGS and use gcc (the frontend) instead of calling each tool directly (less error prone) -- I vote for CPPFLAGS, but I am not sure. ----------------- Now, where to add CPU_CFLAGS? AFAIS, in probably all cases CPU_CFLAGS contain -D -A, and -m options, only. * -D and -A are supposed to go to CPPFLAGS * -mXXX options can have multiple meanings (It can be gcc, collect2/ld and cc1/cc1plus option simultaneously) Here, I made a mistake - I destinguished between CPU_DEFINES to be added to CPPFLAGS and CPU_CFLAGS to be added to CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS (cf. gcc-target-default.cfg), generally assuming CPU_CFLAGS are CFLAGS. This breaks preprocessing *.S into *.i files because CPU_CFLAGS flags were not added to CPPFLAGS. Hence *all* *.S were compiled without taking -mXX-flags into account. The i960/cvme BSP was the only one which explicitly checked for a specific -m flag (-mca) and refused to compile without it -- all other CPUs/BSPs silently swallowed this. IMO, we can either 1) add CPU_CFLAGS and CPU_DEFINES to CPPFLAGS, thus silently convert CPU_CFLAGS's meaning into CPU_DEFINES (Alternative solution: rename CPU_CFLAGS to CPU_DEFINES and merge CPU_FLAGS with CPU_DEFINES). or 2) destinguish between CPU_DEFINES and CPU_CFLAGS. In this case we would need to check the contents of each CPU_CFLAGS in custom/*.cfg and move the some parts of the contents to CPU_DEFINES and keep other parts in CPU_CFLAGS (CFLAGS must contain options for the c/c++-compiler only!). Though Solution 2) is the clearer one, I implemented 1) which is the simplier one (the patch below). ATTENTION: This patch is small in size, but affects almost everything. ------------ Additional complications araise with linking: Some BSPs call LD and AS directly (esp. gcc-2.7 make-exe rules). If LD=gcc then LDFLAGS are supposed to be gcc-options, but if LD=ld then LDFLAGS is supposed to contain ld-options. An analog thought is valid for AS, but luckily enough ASFLAGS is not used of inside the whole source tree. Most RTEMS' custom/*.cfg use $(CC) $(CFLAGS) to link with gcc-2.8 make-exe rules. With the patch below (CPU_CFLAGS added to CPPFLAGS) this means CPU_CFLAGS will not be passed to the linker, which is incorrect for multilibbed CPU's. gmake's default rule set contains a variety of rules for linking, all ending up in calling $(CC) $(LDFLAGS) for linking at their very end. IMO, this means we should use something like LINK.o = $(CC) $(LDFLAGS) in gcc-target-default.cfg + modify all gcc-2.8 make-exe rules to use $(LINK.o) ....... + setup LDFLAGS according to the requirements of the above. I.e. we should use $(CC) for linking instead of calling the linker (LD) directly and set LDFLAGS = $(CPPFLAGS) $(CFLAGS) or similar.
1999-02-24Removed dependency on bsp.h.Joel Sherrill1-1/+3
1999-02-24Corrected name of file.Joel Sherrill1-1/+1
1999-02-24Changed to include FPSP in library.Joel Sherrill1-0/+2
1999-02-24Changed from $(INSTALL) to $(INSTALL_CHANGE).Joel Sherrill2-3/+3
1999-02-24Corrected Makefile.in to account for placement of include files.Joel Sherrill4-4/+4
1999-02-24Corrected name of constant so this would compile.Joel Sherrill1-1/+1
1999-02-19Accidentally moved.Joel Sherrill4-2101/+0
1999-02-19Moved back up in tree.Joel Sherrill4-0/+2101
1999-02-19Accidentally moved erc32.hJoel Sherrill1-521/+0
1999-02-19Moved erc32.h back up in tree.Joel Sherrill2-0/+1042
1999-02-19Moved asm.h back up in tree.Joel Sherrill8-0/+970
1999-02-19Accidentally moved asm.hJoel Sherrill8-1143/+0
1999-02-19Moved to proper rtems/scoreJoel Sherrill23-738/+423
1999-02-19Added new PowerPC boards.Joel Sherrill1-0/+6
1999-02-19Enhanced to support -qrtems_debug.Joel Sherrill1-3/+9
1999-02-19BSP for Vista Score603e added.Joel Sherrill44-0/+6467
1999-02-18Updated to reflect addition of new BSPs.Joel Sherrill2-0/+9
1999-02-18Patch from Ian Lance Taylor <ian@airs.com>:Joel Sherrill1-6/+6
Here is a patch which slightly improves the i386 interrupt handling macros. These macros were written to use both input and output parameters, which is not necessary. This patch changes them to use only an input or output parameter, as appropriate. It also changes the constraints to permit the interrupt level to be loaded directly in and out of memory, rather than always requiring a register.
1999-02-18Renamed network to wd8003.Joel Sherrill4-4/+4
1999-02-18Patch from Emmanuel Raguet <raguet@crf.canon.fr>. Missed adding this fileJoel Sherrill1-0/+540
earlier to CVS.
1999-02-18Added INSTALL rule to Makefile.Joel Sherrill9-3/+19
1999-02-18Patch from Emmanuel RAGUET <raguet@crf.canon.fr> to add filesJoel Sherrill5-8/+942
that were accidentally not committed earlier. The DECNet driver is being added as its own directory to avoid forcing the driver to have to pull in the complete set of network drivers.
1999-02-18Added comments.Joel Sherrill1-0/+20
1999-02-18Added NE2000 Driver from Ian Lance Taylor <ian@airs.com>. Comments:Joel Sherrill4-2/+998
Both the ne2000 and the wd80x3 are based on the National Semiconductor 8390 chip, so there is a fair amount of overlap between the two drivers. It would be possible in principle to combine some code into a separate set of subroutines called by both. In fact, the drivers in both OpenBSD and Linux work this way. I didn't bother, because for the relatively simple drivers used by RTEMS, the overlap is not especially large, and any reasonable use of subroutines would lead to slightly less efficient code. This ne2000 driver uses two transmit buffers. While one packet is being transmitted over the Ethernet, RTEMS will upload another. Since uploading a packet to the ne2000 is rather slow, I don't think there is any point to having more than two transmit buffers. However, the code does make it possible, by changing NE_TX_BUFS, although that would of course reduce the number of receive buffers. I suspect that the wd80x3 driver would benefit slightly from copying the multiple transmit buffer code. However, I have no way to test that.
1999-02-18Fixed top of file.Joel Sherrill1-1/+3
1999-02-18MVME167 BSP submitted by Charles Gauthier <Charles.Gauthier@iit.nrc.ca>.Joel Sherrill24-0/+4003
1999-02-18Missed this file in the merge.Joel Sherrill1-0/+412
1999-02-18Part of the automake VI patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>:Joel Sherrill646-341/+1629
> 5) rtems-rc-19990202-1.diff/reorg-install.sh > > reorg-install.sh fixes a Makefile variable name clash of RTEMS > configuration files and automake/autoconf standards. > Until now, RTEMS used $(INSTALL) for install-if-change. Automake and > autoconf use $(INSTALL) for a bsd-compatible install. As > install-if-change and bsd-install are not compatible, I renamed all > references to install-if-changed to $(INSTALL_CHANGED) and used > $(INSTALL) for bsd-install (==automake/autoconf standard). When > automake will be introduced install-if-change will probably be replaced > by $(INSTALL) and therefore will slowly vanish. For the moment, this > patch fixes a very nasty problem which prevents adding any automake file > until now (There are still more).
1999-02-18Part of the automake VI patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>:Joel Sherrill86-0/+17420
> 4) rtems-rc-19990202-0.diff /reorg-score-cpu.sh > > reorg-score-cpu.sh reorganizes the cpu/<cpu>/* subdirectories in a > similar manner than previous reorg scripts did. rtems-rc-19990202-0.diff > contains the diffs after reorg-score-cpu.sh has been run on a > rtems-19981215 snapshot + my patches up to rtems-rc-19990131-2.diff. > > This patch is rather nasty and may break something. However, I've tested > it for about 10 different target/bsp pairs and believe to have shaken > out most bugs. I wonder about the following .h files that were not moved: a29k/asm.h a29k/cpu_asm.h i386/asm.h i960/asm.h m68k/asm.h m68k/m68302.h m68k/m68360.h m68k/qsm.h m68k/sim.h mips64orion/asm.h mips64orion/cpu_asm.h mips64orion/mips64orion.h no_cpu/asm.h no_cpu/cpu_asm.h powerpc/asm.h powerpc/mpc860.h sh/asm.h sparc/asm.h sparc/erc32.h
1999-02-18Another part of automake VI patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>Joel Sherrill1-0/+72
> 4) rtems-rc-19990202-0.diff /reorg-score-cpu.sh > > reorg-score-cpu.sh reorganizes the cpu/<cpu>/* subdirectories in a > similar manner than previous reorg scripts did. rtems-rc-19990202-0.diff > contains the diffs after reorg-score-cpu.sh has been run on a > rtems-19981215 snapshot + my patches up to rtems-rc-19990131-2.diff. > > This patch is rather nasty and may break something. However, I've tested > it for about 10 different target/bsp pairs and believe to have shaken > out most bugs. I wonder about the following .h files that were not moved: a29k/asm.h a29k/cpu_asm.h i386/asm.h i960/asm.h m68k/asm.h m68k/m68302.h m68k/m68360.h m68k/qsm.h m68k/sim.h mips64orion/asm.h mips64orion/cpu_asm.h mips64orion/mips64orion.h no_cpu/asm.h no_cpu/cpu_asm.h powerpc/asm.h powerpc/mpc860.h sh/asm.h sparc/asm.h sparc/erc32.h
1999-02-18Yet another part of automake VI from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>:Joel Sherrill54-15615/+24
> 4) rtems-rc-19990202-0.diff /reorg-score-cpu.sh > > reorg-score-cpu.sh reorganizes the cpu/<cpu>/* subdirectories in a > similar manner than previous reorg scripts did. rtems-rc-19990202-0.diff > contains the diffs after reorg-score-cpu.sh has been run on a > rtems-19981215 snapshot + my patches up to rtems-rc-19990131-2.diff. > > This patch is rather nasty and may break something. However, I've tested > it for about 10 different target/bsp pairs and believe to have shaken > out most bugs. I wonder about the following .h files that were not moved: a29k/asm.h a29k/cpu_asm.h i386/asm.h i960/asm.h m68k/asm.h m68k/m68302.h m68k/m68360.h m68k/qsm.h m68k/sim.h mips64orion/asm.h mips64orion/cpu_asm.h mips64orion/mips64orion.h no_cpu/asm.h no_cpu/cpu_asm.h powerpc/asm.h powerpc/mpc860.h sh/asm.h sparc/asm.h sparc/erc32.h
1999-02-18Part of the automake VI patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>:Joel Sherrill12-74/+24
> 3) rtems-rc-19990131-2.diff > > This patch removes generating bsp_specs from leaf.cfg and generates > bsp_specs from inside of c/Makefile instead. > > The motivation behind this patch is to avoid "polluting" Makefiles by > unneccessary rules from included Makefile-fragments (*.cfg-files) and > try to handle files by explicit rules in Makefiles instead (FYI: > automake-1.4 physically includes Makefile fragments at the time > automake is run, not at the time make is run as RTEMS Makefile.ins do > now) > > Nevertheless, this patch is rather uncritical, almost cosmetical - If > you don't like it, then dump it ;-, however I doubt that subsequent > patches will apply then ;-.
1999-02-18Added rejected patch from automake VI from Ralf Corsepius.Joel Sherrill1-6/+9
1999-02-18Part of automake VI patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>:Joel Sherrill2-49/+27
> 2) rtems-rc-19990131-1.diff > > Rework of compilers/*.cfg files (esp. gcc-target-default.cfg) to adapt > the flags/makefile variables to automake and make standards (cf. > make.info - implicit rules/variables). > > This patch is rather risky and may probably break things, but is an > essential step towards automake. > > FWIW: It also reverts the i386-ASMFLAGS/ASFLAGS-patch, which was wrong, > as I had to experience ;-.
1999-02-18Part of automake VI Patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>.Joel Sherrill1-0/+3
> Adds variables to the custom/*cfg files to specify the location of > tools. The purpose is to remove hard-coded paths from the Makefiles. > > In later steps this eases moving the tools to other locations.
1999-02-18Part of the targopts.h change in generation patch from Ralf CorsepiusJoel Sherrill1-2/+6
<corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>.
1999-02-18Corrected.Joel Sherrill1-36/+0
1999-02-18Readded.Joel Sherrill1-0/+14
1999-02-18Should have been removed earlier.Joel Sherrill43-5878/+0
1999-02-18Patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>:Joel Sherrill12-69/+60
This patch removes generation of targopts.h from leaf.cfg and generates it in location at score/include/rtems/score instead. To achieve this: * all rules in other Makefile.ins which have accessed targopts.h have been removed. * c/Makefile.in has been modified to generate the directories before doing anything else. I.e. to ensure the directories exist before any preinstall rule fires (This part is a bit kludgy, but it seems to work. Please check if the interaction with libhwapi still works).