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* The rxgen960 BSP and i960 RPM support was submitted by Mark BronsonJoel Sherrill1999-10-273-43/+245
| | | | <mark@ramix.com> of RAMIX.
* Patch from Gerwin Pfab <pb@schenk.isar.de> to leave dispatchingJoel Sherrill1999-10-261-3/+4
| | | | | disabled on exit to ISR Thread dispatching. This allows a context switch to finish under high high interrupt rates.
* Removed targets and configurations that are no longer functionalJoel Sherrill1999-10-053-33/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | and not likely to become so. Comments on each configuration are below. + Force CPU386 - This BSP was developed as part of the initial port of RTEMS to the i386. This board has been unavailable for a long time now. + GO32 - This BSP and some CPU code supported djgpp v1.x. This version is now quite old. No one has stepped forward to update the code to v2.x which may be technically impossible anyway. More importantly, go32 has been superceded by the pc386 BSP.
* Bug report and fix from Jay Kulpinski <jskulpin@eng01.gdds.com> whereJoel Sherrill1999-10-051-3/+2
| | | | | | sigemptyset(&old_mask) needed to be added on glibc2 systems. Ian Lance Taylor pointed out that sigemptyset() is portable so Joel removed all conditionals around calls to sigemptyset().
* Typo causing compilation failure spotted by Ralf Corsepius andJoel Sherrill1999-08-261-1/+1
| | | | fixed by Joel.
* Support for MPC505 from Sergei Organov <osv@Javad.RU>. His patch wasJoel Sherrill1999-08-191-0/+17
| | | | | against 3.6.0 so was painful to merge. It should be OK but there is no guarantee and there are no BSPs in the tree to exercise it.
* Patch from Jimen Ching <jimen@adtech-inc.com>:Joel Sherrill1999-08-181-0/+45
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Please take a look at this new patch. It contains a cleaner implementation of the reset operation. These patches are against 4.0.0. But the files did not change from the 3.6.0 release. Also, the cpu.h patch below still applies. I.e. instead of using i960ca_PRCB, use i960_PRCB. Explanation: The previous patch removed the use of the reset instruction, because it always fails. But this was due to the fact that some of the registers were corrupted by the re-init procedure. The new patches save and restore those registers when a re-init is done.
* Slightly cleaner way to switch on the CPU model.Joel Sherrill1999-08-181-6/+10
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* Patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>:Joel Sherrill1999-08-121-14/+8
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | After upgrading my linux box to the brand new SuSE 6.2 release, which is glibc-2.1 based, I came across a bug in RTEMS - IIRC, I even warned you about it about 1/2 a year ago, but nothing has been done since then :-. The *.m4 macros to check for SYSV/IPC are broken for linux/glibc2.1, because they assume that linux always defines union semun, which isn't true anymore for glibc2.1 (the manpage for semctl states _X_OPEN specifies it this way). Therefore I have tried to implement a more general approach for handling SYSV for unix/posix which checks for presence of struct semun, instead of trying to evaluate OS specific preprocessor symbols. This approach is a bit adventureous, because I only tested it with linux/glibc2.1 and linux/libc5, but not under other Unix variants RTEMS supports. I am quite confident it will work on other hosts, too, but who knows :-. [FYI: I think this might also is the cause of some problems with RedHat 6.X / Mandrake linux recently reported on the rtems list -- rtems-4.0.0 can not be build for posix on any glibc2.1 based host] Furthermore the patch below contains a couple of minor fixes and configuration cleanups, which IMO should be applied before releasing a new snapshot. To apply this patch: cd <source-tree> patch -p1 < rtems-rc-19990709-8.diff ./autogen
* Patch from Charles-Antoine Gauthier <charles.gauthier@iit.nrc.ca>Joel Sherrill1999-07-2912-13/+16
| | | | | to correct a typo CPU_HAS_OWN_HOST_TO_NETWORK_ROUTINES was actually typed in as CPU_CPU_HAS_OWN_HOST_TO_NETWORK_ROUTINES.
* Patch from Jiri Gaisler <jgais@ws.estec.esa.nl>:Joel Sherrill1999-07-095-8/+84
| | | | | | + interrupt masking correction + FPU rev.B workaround + minor erc32 related fixes
* Removed hack to set __USER_LABEL_PREFIX__ since late model gcc's andJoel Sherrill1999-07-012-2/+0
| | | | | egcs source tree handle this correctly. No one should be using gcc 2.7.2 anymore.
* This is a large patch from Eric Valette <valette@crf.canon.fr> that wasJoel Sherrill1999-06-145-1147/+1238
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | described in the message following this paragraph. This patch also includes a mcp750 BSP. From valette@crf.canon.fr Mon Jun 14 10:03:08 1999 Date: Tue, 18 May 1999 01:30:14 +0200 (CEST) From: VALETTE Eric <valette@crf.canon.fr> To: joel@oarcorp.com Cc: raguet@crf.canon.fr, rtems-snapshots@oarcorp.com, valette@crf.canon.fr Subject: Questions/Suggestion regarding RTEMS PowerPC code (long) Dear knowledgeable RTEMS powerpc users, As some of you may know, I'm currently finalizing a port of RTEMS on a MCP750 Motorola board. I have done most of it but have some questions to ask before submitting the port. In order to understand some of the changes I have made or would like to make, maybe it is worth describing the MCP750 Motorola board. the MCP750 is a COMPACT PCI powerpc board with : 1) a MPC750 233 MHz processor, 2) a raven bus bridge/PCI controller that implement an OPENPIC compliant interrupt controller, 3) a VIA 82C586 PCI/ISA bridge that offers a PC compliant IO for keyboard, serial line, IDE, and the well known PC 8259 cascaded PIC interrupt architecture model, 4) a DEC 21140 Ethernet controller, 5) the PPCBUG Motorola firmware in flash, 6) A DEC PCI bridge, This architecture is common to most Motorola 60x/7xx board except that : 1) on VME board, the DEC PCI bridge is replaced by a VME chipset, 2) the VIA 82C586 PCI/ISA bridge is replaced by another bridge that is almost fully compatible with the via bridge... So the port should be a rather close basis for many 60x/7xx motorola board... On this board, I already have ported Linux 2.2.3 and use it both as a development and target board. Now the questions/suggestions I have : 1) EXCEPTION CODE ------------------- As far as I know exceptions on PPC are handled like interrupts. I dislike this very much as : a) Except for the decrementer exception (and maybe some other on mpc8xx), exceptions are not recoverable and the handler just need to print the full context and go to the firmware or debugger... b) The interrupt switch is only necessary for the decrementer and external interrupt (at least on 6xx,7xx). c) The full context for exception is never saved and thus cannot be used by debugger... I do understand the most important for interrupts low level code is to save the minimal context enabling to call C code for performance reasons. On non recoverable exception on the other hand, the most important is to save the maximum information concerning proc status in order to analyze the reason of the fault. At least we will need this in order to implement the port of RGDB on PPC ==> I wrote an API for connecting raw exceptions (and thus raw interrupts) for mpc750. It should be valid for most powerpc processors... I hope to find a way to make this coexist with actual code layout. The code is actually located in lib/libcpu/powerpc/mpc750 and is thus optional (provided I write my own version of exec/score/cpu/powerpc/cpu.c ...) See remark about files/directory layout organization in 4) 2) Current Implementation of ISR low level code ----------------------------------------------- I do not understand why the MSR EE flags is cleared again in exec/score/cpu/powerpc/irq_stubs.S #if (PPC_USE_SPRG) mfmsr r5 mfspr r6, sprg2 #else lwz r6,msr_initial(r11) lis r5,~PPC_MSR_DISABLE_MASK@ha ori r5,r5,~PPC_MSR_DISABLE_MASK@l and r6,r6,r5 mfmsr r5 #endif Reading the doc, when a decrementer interrupt or an external interrupt is active, the MSR EE flag is already cleared. BTW if exception/interrupt could occur, it would trash SRR0 and SRR1. In fact the code may be useful to set MSR[RI] that re-enables exception processing. BTW I will need to set other value in MSR to handle interrupts : a) I want the MSR[IR] and MSR[DR] to be set for performance reasons and also because I need DBAT support to have access to PCI memory space as the interrupt controller is in the PCI space. Reading the code, I see others have the same kind of request : /* SCE 980217 * * We need address translation ON when we call our ISR routine mtmsr r5 */ This is just another prof that even the lowest level IRQ code is fundamentally board dependent and not simply processor dependent especially when the processor use external interrupt controller because it has a single interrupt request line... Note that if you look at the PPC code high level interrupt handling code, as the "set_vector" routine that really connects the interrupt is in the BSP/startup/genpvec.c, the fact that IRQ handling is BSP specific is DE-FACTO acknowledged. I know I have already expressed this and understand that this would require some heavy change in the code but believe me you will reach a point where you will not be able to find a compatible while optimum implementation for low level interrupt handling code...) In my case this is already true... So please consider removing low level IRQ handling from exec/score/cpu/* and only let there exception handling code... Exceptions are usually only processor dependent and do not depend on external hardware mechanism to be masked or acknowledged or re-enabled (there are probably exception but ...) I have already done this for pc386 bsp but need to make it again. This time I will even propose an API. 3) R2/R13 manipulation for EABI implementation ---------------------------------------------- I do not understand the handling of r2 and r13 in the EABI case. The specification for r2 says pointer to sdata2, sbss2 section => constant. However I do not see -ffixed-r2 passed to any compilation system in make/custom/* (for info linux does this on PPC). So either this is a default compiler option when choosing powerpc-rtems and thus we do not need to do anything with this register as all the code is compiled with this compiler and linked together OR this register may be used by rtems code and then we do not need any special initialization or handling. The specification for r13 says pointer to the small data area. r13 argumentation is the same except that as far as I know the usage of the small data area requires specific compiler support so that access to variables is compiled via loading the LSB in a register and then using r13 to get full address... It is like a small memory model and it was present in IBM C compilers. => I propose to suppress any specific code for r2 and r13 in the EABI case. 4) Code layout organization (yes again :-)) ------------------------------------------- I think there are a number of design flaws in the way the code is for ppc organized and I will try to point them out. I have been beaten by this again on this new port, and was beaten last year while modifying code for pc386. a) exec/score/cpu/* vs lib/libcpu/cpu/*. I think that too many things are put in exec/score/cpu that have nothing to do with RTEMS internals but are rather related to CPU feature. This include at least : a) registers access routine (e.g GET_MSR_Value), b) interrupt masking/unmasking routines, c) cache_mngt_routine, d) mmu_mngt_routine, e) Routines to connect the raw_exception, raw_interrupt handler, b) lib/libcpu/cpu/powerpc/* With a processor family as exuberant as the powerpc family, and their well known subtle differences (604 vs 750) or unfortunately majors (8xx vs 60x) the directory structure is fine (except maybe the names that are not homogeneous) powerpc ppc421 mpc821 ... I only needed to add mpc750. But the fact that libcpu.a was not produced was a pain and the fact that this organization may duplicates code is also problematic. So, except if the support of automake provides a better solution I would like to propose something like this : powerpc mpc421 mpc821 ... mpc750 shared wrapup with the following rules : a) "shared" would act as a source container for sources that may be shared among processors. Needed files would be compiled inside the processor specific directory using the vpath Makefile mechanism. "shared" may also contain compilation code for routine that are really shared and not worth to inline... (did not found many things so far as registers access routine ARE WORTH INLINING)... In the case something is compiled there, it should create libcpushared.a b) layout under processor specific directory is free provided that 1)the result of the compilation process exports : libcpu/powerpc/"PROC"/*.h in $(PROJECT_INCLUDE)/libcpu 2) each processor specific directory creates a library called libcpuspecific.a Note that this organization enables to have a file that is nearly the same than in shared but that must differ because of processor differences... c) "wrapup" should create libcpu.a using libcpushared.a libcpuspecific.a and export it $(PROJECT_INCLUDE)/libcpu The only thing I have no ideal solution is the way to put shared definitions in "shared" and only processor specific definition in "proc". To give a concrete example, most MSR bit definition are shared among PPC processors and only some differs. if we create a single msr.h in shared it will have ifdef. If in msr.h we include libcpu/msr_c.h we will need to have it in each prowerpc specific directory (even empty). Opinions are welcomed ... Note that a similar mechanism exist in libbsp/i386 that also contains a shared directory that is used by several bsp like pc386 and i386ex and a similar wrapup mechanism... NB: I have done this for mpc750 and other processors could just use similar Makefiles... c) The exec/score/cpu/powerpc directory layout. I think the directory layout should be the same than the libcpu/powerpc. As it is not, there are a lot of ifdefs inside the code... And of course low level interrupt handling code should be removed... Besides that I do not understand why 1) things are compiled in the wrap directory, 2) some includes are moved to rtems/score, I think the "preinstall" mechanism enables to put everything in the current directory (or better in a per processor directory), 5) Interrupt handling API ------------------------- Again :-). But I think that using all the features the PIC offers is a MUST for RT system. I already explained in the prologue of this (long and probably boring) mail that the MCP750 boards offers an OPENPIC compliant architecture and that the VIA 82586 PCI/ISA bridge offers a PC compatible IO and PIC mapping. Here is a logical view of the RAVEN/VIA 82586 interrupt mapping : --------- 0 ------ | OPEN | <-----|8259| | PIC | | | 2 ------ |(RAVEN)| | | <-----|8259| | | | | | | 11 | | | | | | <---- | | | | | | | | | | | | --------- ------ | | ^ ------ | VIA PCI/ISA bridge | x -------- PCI interrupts OPENPIC offers interrupt priorities among PCI interrupts and interrupt selective masking. The 8259 offers the same kind of feature. With actual powerpc interrupt code : 1) there is no way to specify priorities among interrupts handler. This is REALLY a bad thing. For me it is as importnat as having priorities for threads... 2) for my implementation, each ISR should contain the code that acknowledge the RAVEN and 8259 cascade, modify interrupt mask on both chips, and reenable interrupt at processor level, ..., restore then on interrupt return,.... This code is actually similar to code located in some genpvec.c powerpc files, 3) I must update _ISR_Nesting_level because irq.inl use it... 4) the libchip code connects the ISR via set_vector but the libchip handler code does not contain any code to manipulate external interrupt controller hardware in order to acknoledge the interrupt or re-enable them (except for the target hardware of course) So this code is broken unless set_vector adds an additionnal prologue/epilogue before calling/returning from in order to acknoledge/mask the raven and the 8259 PICS... => Anyway already EACH BSP MUST REWRITE PART OF INTERRUPT HANDLING CODE TO CORRECTLY IMPLEMENT SET_VECTOR. I would rather offer an API similar to the one provided in libbsp/i386/shared/irq/irq.h so that : 1) Once the driver supplied methods is called the only things the ISR has to do is to worry about the external hardware that triggered the interrupt. Everything on openpic/VIA/processor would have been done by the low levels (same things as set-vector) 2) The caller will need to supply the on/off/isOn routine that are fundamental to correctly implements debuggers/performance monitoring is a portable way 3) A globally configurable interrupt priorities mechanism... I have nothing against providing a compatible set_vector just to make libchip happy but as I have already explained in other mails (months ago), I really think that the ISR connection should be handled by the BSP and that no code containing irq connection should exist the rtems generic layers... Thus I really dislike libchip on this aspect because in a long term it will force to adopt the less reach API for interrupt handling that exists (set_vector). Additional note : I think the _ISR_Is_in_progress() inline routine should be : 1) Put in a processor specific section, 2) Should not rely on a global variable, As : a) on symmetric MP, there is one interrupt level per CPU, b) On processor that have an ISP (e,g 68040), this variable is useless (MSR bit testing could be used) c) On PPC, instead of using the address of the variable via __CPU_IRQ_info.Nest_level a dedicated SPR could be used. NOTE: most of this is also true for _Thread_Dispatch_disable_level END NOTE -------- Please do not take what I said in the mail as a criticism for anyone who submitted ppc code. Any code present helped me a lot understanding PPC behavior. I just wanted by this mail to : 1) try to better understand the actual code, 2) propose concrete ways of enhancing current code by providing an alternative implementation for MCP750. I will make my best effort to try to brake nothing but this is actually hard due to the file layout organisation. 3) make understandable some changes I will probably make if joel let me do them :-) Any comments/objections are welcomed as usual. -- __ / ` Eric Valette /-- __ o _. Canon CRF (___, / (_(_(__ Rue de la touche lambert 35517 Cesson-Sevigne Cedex FRANCE Tel: +33 (0)2 99 87 68 91 Fax: +33 (0)2 99 84 11 30 E-mail: valette@crf.canon.fr
* At the request of Gumby, the cpu is now halted rather than spinningJoel Sherrill1999-05-281-1/+1
| | | | on a fatal exception.
* Patch from Daniel Kelley <dank@icube.com>:Joel Sherrill1999-05-182-8/+8
| | | | | | I found a small buglet in the mips64orion _CPU_ISR_Set_level; the original was wiping out the level argument, and then comparing the current interrupt level with some random value of v0. See patch below.
* Intel i960HA support submitted by Jimen Ching <jimen@adtech-inc.com>Joel Sherrill1999-04-192-6/+77
| | | | | based on 3.6.0. It was very lucky that this went in as well as it did.
* MPC821 support and PPC patches from Andrew Bray <andy@madhouse.demon.co.uk>:Joel Sherrill1999-04-071-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | In c/src/exec/score/cpu/powerpc/rtems/score/ppc.h: A lot of hardware interrupts were omitted. Patch enclosed. I have also added the 821. In c/src/exec/score/cpu/powerpc/rtems/score/cpu.h: My patch adds the 821. In c/src/exec/score/cpu/powerpc/cpu.c: I have added the MPC821, and also fixed up for the missing hardware interrupts. It is also inconsistent with c/src/lib/libcpu/powerpc/mpc860/vectors/vectors.S. This has been fixed. In c/src/lib/libcpu/powerpc/mpc860/vectors/vectors.S: Fixed an inconsistency with cpu.c. I also include some new files to go with the above patches. These are the cpu library rtems-19990331/c/src/lib/libcpu/powerpc/mpc821/* and c/src/exec/score/cpu/powerpc/mpc821.h which are minor modifications of the 860 equivalents. Other comments: The various accesses to the DPRAM on the 860 are done with a linktime symbol. This could be done dynamically at run time by reading the immr register, and masking off the lower 16 bits. This takes the same amount of time as loading an address constant, and the same number of instructions as well (2). In c/src/lib/libcpu/powerpc/mpc860/console-generic/console-generic.c: This will silently fail if you attempt to use SCC1. This is only relevant if you are not using SCC1 for ethernet. This file also sets one of port B output pins for each port. This is NOT generic, it should be in the BSP specific console driver.
* Fixed paths to include files so this will build.Joel Sherrill1999-03-318-0/+2581
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* Corrected name of constant so this would compile.Joel Sherrill1999-02-241-1/+1
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* Moved back up in tree.Joel Sherrill1999-02-198-0/+4202
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* Moved asm.h back up in tree.Joel Sherrill1999-02-1914-0/+1728
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* Moved to proper rtems/scoreJoel Sherrill1999-02-1927-6045/+289
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* Part of the automake VI patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>:Joel Sherrill1999-02-1834-0/+13100
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | > 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
* Yet another part of automake VI from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de>:Joel Sherrill1999-02-187-2466/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | > 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
* Patch from Emmanuel Raguet <raguet@crf.canon.fr>:Joel Sherrill1999-02-181-1/+9
| | | | | | | You will find enclosed a patch which contains, for Intel PC386 target : - an Ethernet driver for DEC21140 device based boards. - a simple cache management with paging mechanism.
* Patch from Eric Norum <eric@skatter.usask.ca> to make m68360.h usableJoel Sherrill1999-01-202-714/+732
| | | | | | | | outside RTEMS. Comment: I found a couple of places other than RTEMS where I'd like to use the declarations supplied in m68360.h. To make this easier to do, I've redone the declarations in m68360.h to use standard C types.
* Patch from Jiri Gaisler <jgais@ce.chalmers.se>:Joel Sherrill1999-01-191-0/+2
| | | | | | | | getting the spurious trap handling to work required a couple more fixes - I have attached a patch against rtems-4.0.0 with the necessary changes. I also added functionality so that the address of the trapped instruction is reported and in case of a data access error, the data address is also reported.
* Switched to use of ASM compilation conditional.Joel Sherrill1998-12-151-2/+2
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* Changed reference from no_cpu to mips64orion.Joel Sherrill1998-12-153-3/+3
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* Patch from Ralf Corsepius <corsepiu@faw.uni-ulm.de> to rename allJoel Sherrill1998-12-147-0/+2964
| | | | | .s files to .S in conformance with GNU conventions. This is a minor step along the way to supporting automake.
* Patch from Ian Lance Taylor <ian@airs.com>.Joel Sherrill1998-10-281-11/+19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | I just happened across the sync_io support in c/src/exec/score/cpu/unix/cpu.c (is this documented anywhere?). That looked more useful than the signal driven I/O I was using before, so I tried it. I ran across a few bugs in the way it uses select. Select changes its fd_set arguments, so you can't use global variables for them. You have to copy them into local variables first. If select returns -1 with errno set to EINTR, then it has not changed any of the fd_sets. You can't start looking at them. When clearing a descriptor, the code has the usual select off by one error when setting sync_io_nfds. I don't see how this code could ever have worked correctly. I have appended a patch for the problems I found.
* Patch from Eric Valette <valette@crf.canon.fr>:Joel Sherrill1998-08-311-6/+17
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Eric> NB : there is still a bug on PC386 serial line : exit does not Eric> flush the remaining output queue. As this is not a bug in the Eric> driver itself but somewhere in PC386 initialization/termios Eric> relationship it will be part of another patch. Eric> NB2 : As Emmanuel excerced the exception hanlder code, while Eric> porting the SMC driver to the new BSD stack, we found a bug Eric> in the exception handler : it shall not delete the current Eric> thread in case we are running at interrupt level. This will Eric> be part of another patch... So here is the patch. This patch fixes the two problems mentionned above + it use vpath mechanism intead of copying the irq related files in the right directory. This avoid to compile them each time and is more homogenous with other Makefiles.
* Patch from Eric Valette <valette@crf.canon.fr>:Joel Sherrill1998-08-211-0/+90
| | | | | | | | | | Here is a patch that enables to catch exception and get message before crashing RTEMS :) It should be generic to any Intel port although enabled only for pc386 BSP... [Joel] I fixed the bug I introduced in irq_asm.s...
* Spacing changesJoel Sherrill1998-08-211-1/+0
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* Patch from Eric Valette <valette@crf.canon.fr>:Joel Sherrill1998-08-191-1/+8
| | | | | | | - Use the "hlt" instruction for the Idle thread, - Optimise interrupt PATH leadding to thread wakeup, - Preparation for Intel exception management that should come before the end of the week...
* Automatic CPU type detection code from Eric Valette <valette@crf.canon.fr>.Joel Sherrill1998-08-052-0/+2
| | | | Enabled on the pc386.
* Merged patch from David Fiddes <D.J.Fiddes@hw.ac.uk> to add ColdFireJoel Sherrill1998-08-012-2/+18
| | | | specific register macros and correct code in rtems.s.
* Patch from Eric VALETTE <valette@crf.canon.fr>:Joel Sherrill1998-07-231-99/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | Here is a enhanced version of my previous patch. This patch enables to potentially share the new interrupt management code for all Intel targets (pc386, go32 and force386) bsp. Note : this patch is complete only for pc386. It still needs to be completed for go32 and force386. I carrefully checked that anything needed is in for force386 (only some function name changes for IDT manipulation and GDT segment manipulation). But anyway I will not be able to test any of theses targets...
* Added freebsd support from Dario Alcocer <alcocer@connectnet.com>.Joel Sherrill1998-06-181-2/+7
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* Added optimized version of memcpy.c to this directory since RTEMS makesJoel Sherrill1998-06-121-0/+87
| | | | | | important distinctions between CPU models which are not made by gcc. These distinctions help give us a more optimized memcpy(). This is important for message queues and KA9Q.
* Corrected macros for assembly language program sections.Joel Sherrill1998-06-032-4/+4
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* Fixed CVS IdJoel Sherrill1998-04-271-1/+1
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* Added bh, ch, dh, bl, cl, and dl register macros.Joel Sherrill1998-04-152-0/+14
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* Ralf Corsepius suggested a way to get rid of UNIX compiler files and use ↵Joel Sherrill1998-04-141-1/+0
| | | | gcc-target-default.cfg
* Added "sigemptyset()" call to insure that the memcmp() would work.Joel Sherrill1998-03-311-0/+4
| | | | | It appears that the new glibc does not clear all the bits of the signal set with a sigprocmask.
* Changed int to unsigned32 to match cpu.h.Joel Sherrill1998-03-271-1/+1
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* m68k software interrupt stack support from Chris Johns and Eric Norum.Joel Sherrill1998-03-251-4/+0
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* Added _XOPEN_SOURCE definition to allow use of UNIX IPC.Joel Sherrill1998-03-241-0/+1
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* Real definition for the beginning of the data section per Eric Norum'sJoel Sherrill1998-03-242-4/+4
| | | | suggestion.
* Rename hppa1_1 to hppa1.1 and switched to using __XXX__ macros forJoel Sherrill1998-03-241-4/+4
| | | | the CPU family name constants.