Intel 855 chips present the same pci id for both heads. This prevents
us from attaching to the dummy second head. All other chips that I
am aware of either only present a single pci id, or different ids
for each head so that we only match on the correct head.
Allocate memory from different pools. This allows the OS to track memory
allocations for us, much like the linux memory debugging. This will ease
tracking down memory leaks since the OS can track the number of allocations
from each pool and help to point us in the right direction. Also replace
drm_alloc and friends with static __inline__ versions while we are here.
The current code can sleep in an interrupt handler, that is bad. So
instead if we can't grab the lock, flag it and run the tasklet on
unlock.
Signed-off-by: Robert Noland <rnoland@2hip.net>
We needed to specifically check for driver support and test the correct
vbl_received value. Also pulled over support for _DRM_VBLANK_NEXTONMISS
from the linux code.
This header file is shared across linux and bsd, but is not installed
for user space to access. It's the place to put prototypes and data
types that aren't platform or chipset specific, but still internal to
the drm.
The data is now in kernel space, copied in/out as appropriate according to the
This results in DRM_COPY_{TO,FROM}_USER going away, and error paths to deal
with those failures. This also means that XFree86 4.2.0 support for i810 DRM
is lost.
As a fallout, replace filp storage with file_priv storage for "unique
identifier of a client" all over the DRM. There is a 1:1 mapping, so this
should be a noop. This could be a minor performance improvement, as everything
on Linux dereferenced filp to get file_priv anyway, while only the mmap ioctls
went the other direction.
This was used to make all ioctl handlers return -errno on linux and errno on
*BSD. Instead, just return -errno in shared code, and flip sign on return from
shared code to *BSD code.
drm_mtrr_{add,del} for handling the MTRR setup. Still has a LOR issue
with DRM_VERIFYAREA_READ/DRM_COPY_FROM_USER_UNCHECKED in savage_bci.c
-- this won't work with the fine-grained locking in use, and just doing
a single copyin to a temporary will probably work fine. Also note that
the module leaks approximately 4 kb on unload.