is now allocated (and partially filled in) by the new
mga_driver_preinit function.
This allows the driver to detect the type of card (i.e., G200 class vs.
G400 class) on its own. The chipset value passed to mga_dma_init is now
ignored. This same technique is used by the radeon DRM.
As a result of this, mga_driver_pretakedown was converted to
mga_driver_postcleanup. This routine gets called in some other places
than might be expected, and it sets the dev_private pointer to NULL.
That little gem took over an hour to track down. :(
platform-specific drm_device_is_agp function. Added implementation of
this function the the Linux-specific portion of the MGA driver to
detect PCI G450 cards. Added code to the Linux-specific portion of the
generic DRM layer to not initialize AGP infrastructure if the card is
not AGP (this matches what already existed in BSD).
Bumped the driver date and the driver patch-level for MGA.
This mostly fixes bugzilla #3248. The BSD side still needs an
implementation of mga_driver_device_is_agp.
code. Remove the "drv" from sisdrv, as it's unnecessary. Use the
drm_pci functions in i915 instead of per-os implementations of the
same. Avoid whitespace within fields in drm_pciids.txt (one of the r300
definitions), since it breaks the bsd pciids script. Tested on sis,
mga, r128. i915 needs more work.
from __HAVE_DMA. This will be useful for adding vblank sync support to
sis and tdfx. Rename dma_service to irq_handler, which is more
accurately what it is.
- Fix the #if _HAVE_DMA_IRQ in radeon, r128, mga, i810, i830, gamma to have
the right number of underscores. This may have been a problem in the
case that the server died without doing its DRM_IOCTL_CONTROL to
uninit.
just a single instance. Moved the PCI ID lists from <card>_drv.c in BSD
to <card>.h. The PCI ID lists include a driver private field, which may
be used by drivers for chip family or other information. Based on work
by jonsmirl.
- Make tdfx_drv.c and tdfx.h match other drivers.
- Fixed up linking of sis shared files.
Tested with Radeon and SiS on Linux and FreeBSD, including a Linux setup
with
2 SiS cards in a machine, but only one head being used (with DRI)