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Revision tags: release/13.4.0-p5, release/13.5.0-p1, release/14.2.0-p3, release/13.5.0, release/14.2.0-p2, release/14.1.0-p8, release/13.4.0-p4, release/14.1.0-p7, release/14.2.0-p1, release/13.4.0-p3, release/14.2.0, release/13.4.0, release/14.1.0, release/13.3.0 |
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8595e76a |
| 12-Jan-2024 |
Marius Strobl <[email protected]> |
uart(4): Honor hardware state of NS8250-class for tsw_busy
In 9750d9e5, I brought the equivalent of the TS_BUSY flag back in a mostly hardware-agnostic way in order to fix tty_drain() and, thus, TIO
uart(4): Honor hardware state of NS8250-class for tsw_busy
In 9750d9e5, I brought the equivalent of the TS_BUSY flag back in a mostly hardware-agnostic way in order to fix tty_drain() and, thus, TIOCDRAIN for UARTs with TX FIFOs. This proved to be sufficient for fixing the regression reported. So in light of the release cycle of FreeBSD 10.3, I decided that this change was be good enough for the time being and opted to go with the smallest possible yet generic (for all UARTs driven by uart(4)) solution addressing the problem at hand.
However, at least for the NS8250-class the above isn't a complete fix as these UARTs only trigger an interrupt when the TX FIFO became empty. At this point, there still can be an outstanding character left in the transmit shift register as indicated via the LSR. Thus, this change adds the 3rd (besides the tty(4) and generic uart(4) bits) part I had in my tree ever since, adding a uart_txbusy method to be queried in addition for tsw_busy and hooking it up as appropriate for the NS8250-class.
As it turns out, the exact equivalent of this 3rd part later on was implemented for uftdi(4) in 9ad221a5.
While at it, explain the rational behind the deliberately missing locking in uart_tty_busy() (also applying to the generic sc_txbusy testing already present).
(cherry picked from commit 353e4c5a068d06b0d6dcfa9eb736ecb16e9eae45)
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Revision tags: release/14.0.0 |
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95ee2897 |
| 16-Aug-2023 |
Warner Losh <[email protected]> |
sys: Remove $FreeBSD$: two-line .h pattern
Remove /^\s*\*\n \*\s+\$FreeBSD\$$\n/
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4d846d26 |
| 10-May-2023 |
Warner Losh <[email protected]> |
spdx: The BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD identifier is obsolete, drop -FreeBSD
The SPDX folks have obsoleted the BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD identifier. Catch up to that fact and revert to their recommended match of
spdx: The BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD identifier is obsolete, drop -FreeBSD
The SPDX folks have obsoleted the BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD identifier. Catch up to that fact and revert to their recommended match of BSD-2-Clause.
Discussed with: pfg MFC After: 3 days Sponsored by: Netflix
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Revision tags: release/13.2.0, release/12.4.0, release/13.1.0, release/12.3.0, release/13.0.0, release/12.2.0 |
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bf103254 |
| 01-Sep-2020 |
Mateusz Guzik <[email protected]> |
uart: clean up empty lines in .c and .h files
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Revision tags: release/11.4.0, release/12.1.0, release/11.3.0, release/12.0.0, release/11.2.0 |
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718cf2cc |
| 27-Nov-2017 |
Pedro F. Giffuni <[email protected]> |
sys/dev: further adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 2-Clause license, however the tool I was using misidentified many licenses so this was mostly a manual - error
sys/dev: further adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 2-Clause license, however the tool I was using misidentified many licenses so this was mostly a manual - error prone - task.
The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way, superceed or replace the license texts.
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Revision tags: release/10.4.0, release/11.1.0, release/11.0.1, release/11.0.0, release/10.3.0, release/10.2.0, release/10.1.0, release/9.3.0 |
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d76a1ef4 |
| 19-Jan-2014 |
Warner Losh <[email protected]> |
Introduce grab and ungrab upcalls. When the kernel desires to grab the console, it calls the grab functions. These functions should turn off the RX interrupts, and any others that interfere. This mak
Introduce grab and ungrab upcalls. When the kernel desires to grab the console, it calls the grab functions. These functions should turn off the RX interrupts, and any others that interfere. This makes mountroot prompt work again. If there's more generalized need other than prompting, many of these routines should be expanded to do those new things.
Should have been part of r260889, but waasn't due to command line typo.
Reviewed by: bde (with reservations)
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Revision tags: release/10.0.0, release/9.2.0 |
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167cb33f |
| 21-Aug-2013 |
Ian Lepore <[email protected]> |
Make the uart ns8250 high-level interface public rather than static. This makes it easier to implement new drivers which are "mostly ns8250" but with some small difference such as needing to enable c
Make the uart ns8250 high-level interface public rather than static. This makes it easier to implement new drivers which are "mostly ns8250" but with some small difference such as needing to enable clocks or poke a non-standard register at probe or attach time.
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Revision tags: release/8.4.0, release/9.1.0, release/8.3.0_cvs, release/8.3.0, release/9.0.0, release/7.4.0_cvs, release/8.2.0_cvs, release/7.4.0, release/8.2.0, release/8.1.0_cvs, release/8.1.0, release/7.3.0_cvs, release/7.3.0, release/8.0.0_cvs, release/8.0.0, release/7.2.0_cvs, release/7.2.0, release/7.1.0_cvs, release/7.1.0, release/6.4.0_cvs, release/6.4.0, release/7.0.0_cvs, release/7.0.0, release/6.3.0_cvs, release/6.3.0, release/6.2.0_cvs, release/6.2.0, release/5.5.0_cvs, release/5.5.0, release/6.1.0_cvs, release/6.1.0, release/6.0.0_cvs, release/6.0.0, release/5.4.0_cvs, release/5.4.0, release/4.11.0_cvs, release/4.11.0, release/5.3.0_cvs, release/5.3.0, release/4.10.0_cvs, release/4.10.0, release/5.2.1_cvs, release/5.2.1, release/5.2.0_cvs, release/5.2.0, release/4.9.0_cvs, release/4.9.0 |
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27d5dc18 |
| 06-Sep-2003 |
Marcel Moolenaar <[email protected]> |
The uart(4) driver is an universal driver for various UART hardware. It improves on sio(4) in the following areas: o Fully newbusified to allow for memory mapped I/O. This is a must for ia64 and
The uart(4) driver is an universal driver for various UART hardware. It improves on sio(4) in the following areas: o Fully newbusified to allow for memory mapped I/O. This is a must for ia64 and sparc64, o Machine dependent code to take full advantage of machine and firm- ware specific ways to define serial consoles and/or debug ports. o Hardware abstraction layer to allow the driver to be used with various UARTs, such as the well-known ns8250 family of UARTs, the Siemens sab82532 or the Zilog Z8530. This is especially important for pc98 and sparc64 where it's common to have different UARTs, o The notion of system devices to unkludge low-level consoles and remote gdb ports and provides the mechanics necessary to support the keyboard on sparc64 (which is UART based). o The notion of a kernel interface so that a UART can be tied to something other than the well-known TTY interface. This is needed on sparc64 to present the user with a device and ioctl handling suitable for a keyboard, but also allows us to cleanly hide an UART when used as a debug port.
Following is a list of features and bugs/flaws specific to the ns8250 family of UARTs as compared to their support in sio(4): o The uart(4) driver determines the FIFO size and automaticly takes advantages of larger FIFOs and/or additional features. Note that since I don't have sufficient access to 16[679]5x UARTs, hardware flow control has not been enabled. This is almost trivial to do, provided one can test. The downside of this is that broken UARTs are more likely to not work correctly with uart(4). The need for tunables or knobs may be large enough to warrant their creation. o The uart(4) driver does not share the same bumpy history as sio(4) and will therefore not provide the necessary hooks, tweaks, quirks or work-arounds to deal with once common hardware. To that extend, uart(4) supports a subset of the UARTs that sio(4) supports. The question before us is whether the subset is sufficient for current hardware. o There is no support for multiport UARTs in uart(4). The decision behind this is that uart(4) deals with one EIA RS232-C interface. Packaging of multiple interfaces in a single chip or on a single expansion board is beyond the scope of uart(4) and is now mostly left for puc(4) to deal with. Lack of hardware made it impossible to actually implement such a dependency other than is present for the dual channel SAB82532 and Z8350 SCCs.
The current list of missing features is: o No configuration capabilities. A set of tunables and sysctls is being worked out. There are likely not going to be any or much compile-time knobs. Such configuration does not fit well with current hardware. o No support for the PPS API. This is partly dependent on the ability to configure uart(4) and partly dependent on having sufficient information to implement it properly.
As usual, the manpage is present but lacks the attention the software has gotten.
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