As the situation is right now, importing one of the commands the
script replaces, requires a doc/UPDATING step.
By moving the script to a shared folder, and symlinking it once per
command, this allows for separatly installed files on the system,
instead of one file being symlinked multiple times.
Change-Id: I0dae96982bca5168b852ed70fff61442441b929f
This commit separates the low-level keyboard driver from TTY, putting
it in a separate driver (PCKBD). The commit also separates management
of raw input devices from TTY, and puts it in a separate server
(INPUT). All keyboard and mouse input from hardware is sent by drivers
to the INPUT server, which either sends it to a process that has
opened a raw input device, or otherwise forwards it to TTY for
standard processing.
Design by Dirk Vogt. Prototype by Uli Kastlunger.
Additional changes made to the prototype:
- the event communication is now based on USB HID codes; all input
drivers have to use USB codes to describe events;
- all TTY keymaps have been converted to USB format, with the effect
that a single keymap covers all keys; there is no (static) escaped
keymap anymore;
- further keymap tweaks now allow remapping of literally all keys;
- input device renumbering and protocol rewrite;
- INPUT server rewrite, with added support for cancel and select;
- PCKBD reimplementation, including PC/AT-to-USB translation;
- support for manipulating keyboard LEDs has been added;
- keyboard and mouse multiplexer devices have been added to INPUT,
primarily so that an X server need only open two devices;
- a new "libinputdriver" library abstracts away protocol details from
input drivers, and should be used by all future input drivers;
- both INPUT and PCKBD can be restarted;
- TTY is now scheduled by KERNEL, so that it won't be punished for
running a lot; without this, simply running "yes" on the console
kills the system;
- the KIOCBELL IOCTL has been moved to /dev/console;
- support for the SCANCODES termios setting has been removed;
- obsolete keymap compression has been removed;
- the obsolete Olivetti M24 keymap has been removed.
Change-Id: I3a672fb8c4fd566734e4b46d3994b4b7fc96d578
Most systems provide the full version number in the
'release' field and the kernel version in 'version'.
Minix used to split the full version number between
release and version which caused problems for pkgsrc
and other applications. This patch brings Minix's
uname in line with other systems such as NetBSD.
It also brings the getty banner in line with NetBSD.
Old Minix uname:
sysname->Minix
nodename->10.0.2.15
release->3
version->2.1
machine->i686
New Minix uname:
sysname->Minix
nodename->10.0.2.15
release->3.2.1
version->Minix 3.2.1 (GENERIC)
machine->i686
Change-Id: I966633dfdcf2f9485966bb0d0d042afc45bbeb7d
* Renamed struct timer to struct minix_timer
* Renamed timer_t to minix_timer_t
* Ensured all the code uses the minix_timer_t typedef
* Removed ifdef around _BSD_TIMER_T
* Removed include/timers.h and merged it into include/minix/timers.h
* Resolved prototype conflict by renaming kernel's (re)set_timer
to (re)set_kernel_timer.
Change-Id: I56f0f30dfed96e1a0575d92492294cf9a06468a5
Not all services involved in block I/O go through VM to access the
blocks they need. As a result, the blocks in VM may become stale,
possibly causing corruption when the stale copy is restored by a
service that does go through VM later on. This patch restores support
for forgetting cached blocks that belong to a particular device, and
makes the relevant file systems use this functionality 1) when
requested by VFS through REQ_FLUSH, and 2) upon unmount.
Change-Id: I0758c5ed8fe4b5ba81d432595d2113175776aff8
Previously, VFS would reopen a character device after a driver crash
if the associated file descriptor was opened with the O_REOPEN flag.
This patch removes support for this feature. The code was complex,
full of uncovered corner cases, and hard to test. Moreover, it did not
actually hide the crash from user applications: they would get an
error code to indicate that something went wrong, and have to decide
based on the nature of the underlying device how to continue.
- remove support for O_REOPEN, and make playwave(1) reopen its device;
- remove support for the DEV_REOPEN protocol message;
- remove all code in VFS related to reopening character devices;
- no longer change VFS filp reference count and FD bitmap upon filp
invalidation; instead, make get_filp* fail all calls on invalidated
FDs except when obtained with the locktype VNODE_OPCL which is used
by close_fd only;
- remove the VFS fproc file descriptor bitmap entirely, returning to
the situation that a FD is in use if its slot points to a filp; use
FILP_CLOSED as single means of marking a filp as invalidated.
Change-Id: I34f6bc69a036b3a8fc667c1f80435ff3af56558f
The T_DUMPCORE implementation was not only broken - it would currently
produce a coredump of the tracer process rather than the traced
process - but also deeply flawed, and fixing it would require serious
alteration of PM's internal state machine. It should be possible to
implement the same functionality in userland, and that is now the
suggested way forward. For now, also remove the (identical) utilities
using T_DUMPCORE: dumpcore(1) and gcore(1).
Change-Id: I1d51be19c739362b8a5833de949b76382a1edbcc
These days, DEV_OPEN calls to character drivers block the calling
thread until completion or failure, and thus never return SUSPEND to
the caller. The same already applied to BDEV_OPEN calls to block
drivers. It has thus become impossible for a process to enter a state
of being blocked on a device open call.
There is currently no support for restarting device open calls to
restarted character drivers. This support was present in the _DOPEN
logic, but was already no longer triggering. In the future, this case
should be handled by the thread performing the open request.
Change-Id: I6cc1e7b4c9ed116c6ce160b315e6e060124dce00
- change all sync char drivers into async drivers;
- retire support for the sync protocol in libchardev;
- remove async dev style, as this is now the default;
- remove dev_status from VFS;
- clean up now-unused protocol messages.
Change-Id: I6aacff712292f6b29f2ccd51bc1e7d7003723e87
- pass in file system type through mount(2), and return this type in
statvfs structures as generated by [f]statvfs(2);
- align mount flags field with NetBSD's, splitting out service flags
which are not to be passed to VFS;
- remove limitation of mount ABI to 16-byte labels, so that labels
can be made larger in the future;
- introduce new m11 message union type for mount(2) as side effect.
Change-Id: I88b7710e297e00a5e4582ada5243d3d5c2801fd9
eepromread could only read EEPROMs through the /dev/i2c interface.
Once the cat24c256 driver is started and claims/reserves the
device, it can no longer be read through the /dev/i2c interface.
This patch adds support for reading from EEPROMs through the
/dev/eeprom interface. For example, to read the on-board eeprom
on the BBB, one would do `eepromread -f /dev/eepromb1s50 -i`.
Change-Id: If08ce37231e593982eeb109bdd6d5458ad271108
. build writeisofs as a native tool too for it
. also mkfs.mfs: make missing file in proto nonlethal
. make setup script a little more self-sufficient
. hdboot: use INSTALL_FILE instead of INSTALL so that the
results get added to the METALOG
Change-Id: Id233e4c861f81046bf6c4be0510b8a3bf39ff9be
Replaces commands/hexdump as well as commands/od.
No Minix-specific changes were needed.
test/testsh2.sh was modified to match the spacing
used in the output of the NetBSD od command.
Change-Id: I65ee1d30e8cdd546097462df7c38c2d38f3e891d
Replaces commands/write. No Minix-specific changes needed.
The NetBSD version lacks a few features that were present
in the Minix version: cbreak mode, verbose, and shell escapes,
but the main write(1) functionality is there and working.
Change-Id: I87b9589c54d3595d26247d221bb3d1f613feeb8c