tables. Some drivers needed some slight re-arrangement of declarations
to accommodate this. Change the USB pnp tables slightly to allow
better compatibility with the system by moving linux driver info from
start of each entry to the end. All other PNP tables in the system
have the per-device flags and such at the end of the elements rather
that at the beginning.
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3458
socket-buffer implementations, introduce a return value for MCLGET()
(and m_cljget() that underlies it) to allow the caller to avoid testing
M_EXT itself. Update all callers to use the return value.
With this change, very few network device drivers remain aware of
M_EXT; the primary exceptions lie in mbuf-chain pretty printers for
debugging, and in a few cases, custom mbuf and cluster allocation
implementations.
NB: This is a difficult-to-test change as it touches many drivers for
which I don't have physical devices. Instead we've gone for intensive
review, but further post-commit review would definitely be appreciated
to spot errors where changes could not easily be made mechanically,
but were largely mechanical in nature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1440
Reviewed by: adrian, bz, gnn
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
These device IDs have an AR3012 bluetooth device that shows up with
bcdDevice=1 when it doesn't have the firmware loaded, and bcdDevice=2
when it's ready to speak full HCI.
Tested:
* AR5B225 PCIe - AR9485 + AR3012
Submitted by: "YAMAMOTO, Shigeru" <shigeru@iij.ad.jp>
Reviewed by: adrian
In PC-BSD 9.1, VIMAGE is enabled in the kernel config.
For laptops with Bluetooth capability, such as the HP Elitebook 8460p,
the kernel will panic upon bootup, because curthread->td_vnet
is not initialized.
Properly initialize curthread->td_vnet when initializing the Bluetooth stack.
This allows laptops such as the HP Elitebook 8460p laptop
to properly boot with VIMAGE kernels.
As pointed out by hselasky@, USB_IF_CSI is the wrong macro here since we want
to declare the device's interface class, subclass and protocol, not class,
subclass and driver info.
Follow-up to r244704.
PR: kern/174707
Approved by: glebius
MFC after: 1 week
sorted according to the mode which they support:
host, device or dual mode
- Add generic tool to extract these data:
tools/bus_autoconf
Discussed with: imp
Suggested by: Robert Millan <rmh@debian.org>
PR: misc/157903
MFC after: 14 days
USB isochronous transfer support is required for Bluetooth SCO.
While i'm here change u_int to uint and update TODO.
This should produce no visible changes unless the device is
broken (or really old).
MFC after: 3 months
It does not work with ng_ubt(4) and require special driver and firmware.
Obtained from: Marcel Holtmann < marcel at holtmann dot org >
Submitted by: Rainer Goellner < rainer at jabbe dot de >
MFC after: 3 days
there are at least two versions of the adapter. Version 1 (product ID 0x2200)
of the adapter does not work with ng_ubt(4) and require special driver and
firmware. Version 2 (product ID 0x3800) seems to work just fine, except it
does not have bDeviceClass, bDeviceSubClass and bDeviceProtocol set to required
(by specification) values. This change forces ng_ubt(4) to attach to the
version 2 adapter.
Obtained from: Marcel Holtmann <marcel at holtmann dot org>
Submitted by: Rainer Goellner <rainer at jabbe dot de>
The original idea was to use it for firmware upgrading and similar
operations. In real life almost all Bluetooth USB devices do not
need firmware download. If device does require firmware download
then ugen(4) (or specialized driver like ubtbcmfw(8)) should be
used instead.
MFC after: 3 days
The big lines are:
NODEV -> NULL
NOUDEV -> NODEV
udev_t -> dev_t
udev2dev() -> findcdev()
Various minor adjustments including handling of userland access to kernel
space struct cdev etc.