Searched hist:281494 (Results 1 - 25 of 62) sorted by relevance

123

/freebsd-11.0-release/sys/arm64/arm64/
H A Dautoconf.c281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dbcopy.c281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dbus_machdep.c281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dbus_space_asm.S281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dclock.c281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dcopystr.c281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Ddump_machdep.c281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Din_cksum.c281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dsys_machdep.c281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Duio_machdep.c281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
/freebsd-11.0-release/sys/arm64/conf/
H A DDEFAULTS281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
/freebsd-11.0-release/sys/arm64/include/
H A D_bus.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dbus.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dbus_dma.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dclock.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dcounter.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Ddb_machdep.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Ddebug_monitor.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Ddump.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dhypervisor.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Din_cksum.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dkdb.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dmemdev.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dmetadata.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
H A Dresource.h281494 Mon Apr 13 14:44:03 MDT 2015 andrew Bring in the start of the arm64 kernel.

This is only the minimum set of files needed to boot in qemu. As such it is
missing a few things.

The bus_dma code is currently only stub functions with a full implementation
from the development tree to follow.

The gic driver has been copied as the interrupt framework is different. It
is expected the two drivers will be merged by the arm intrng project,
however this will need to be imported into the tree and support for arm64
would need to be added.

This includes code developed by myself, SemiHalf, Ed Maste, and Robin
Randhawa from ARM. This has been funded by the FreeBSD Foundation, with
early development by myself in my spare time with assistance from Robin.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D2199
Reviewed by: emaste, imp
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation

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