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Revision 1.1.1.1 (vendor branch), Tue Mar 4 16:15:16 2008 UTC (16 years, 2 months ago) by nbrk
Branch: OPENBSD_4_2_BASE, MAIN
CVS Tags: jornada-partial-support-wip, HEAD
Changes since 1.1: +0 -0 lines

Import of OpenBSD 4.2 release kernel tree with initial code to support 
Jornada 720/728, StrongARM 1110-based handheld PC.
At this point kernel roots on NFS and boots into vfs_mountroot() and traps.
What is supported:
- glass console, Jornada framebuffer (jfb) works in 16bpp direct color mode
(needs some palette tweaks for non black/white/blue colors, i think)
- saic, SA11x0 interrupt controller (needs cleanup)
- sacom, SA11x0 UART (supported only as boot console for now)
- SA11x0 GPIO controller fully supported (but can't handle multiple interrupt
handlers on one gpio pin)
- sassp, SSP port on SA11x0 that attaches spibus
- Jornada microcontroller (jmcu) to control kbd, battery, etc throught
the SPI bus (wskbd attaches on jmcu, but not tested)
- tod functions seem work
- initial code for SA-1111 (chip companion) : this is TODO

Next important steps, i think:
- gpio and intc on sa1111
- pcmcia support for sa11x0 (and sa1111 help logic)
- REAL root on nfs when we have PCMCIA support (we may use any of supported pccard NICs)
- root on wd0! (using already supported PCMCIA-ATA)

/*	$OpenBSD: inftrees.h,v 1.8 2005/07/20 15:56:46 millert Exp $	*/
/* inftrees.h -- header to use inftrees.c
 * Copyright (C) 1995-2005 Mark Adler
 * For conditions of distribution and use, see copyright notice in zlib.h
 */

/* WARNING: this file should *not* be used by applications. It is
   part of the implementation of the compression library and is
   subject to change. Applications should only use zlib.h.
 */

/* Structure for decoding tables.  Each entry provides either the
   information needed to do the operation requested by the code that
   indexed that table entry, or it provides a pointer to another
   table that indexes more bits of the code.  op indicates whether
   the entry is a pointer to another table, a literal, a length or
   distance, an end-of-block, or an invalid code.  For a table
   pointer, the low four bits of op is the number of index bits of
   that table.  For a length or distance, the low four bits of op
   is the number of extra bits to get after the code.  bits is
   the number of bits in this code or part of the code to drop off
   of the bit buffer.  val is the actual byte to output in the case
   of a literal, the base length or distance, or the offset from
   the current table to the next table.  Each entry is four bytes. */
typedef struct {
    unsigned char op;           /* operation, extra bits, table bits */
    unsigned char bits;         /* bits in this part of the code */
    unsigned short val;         /* offset in table or code value */
} code;

/* op values as set by inflate_table():
    00000000 - literal
    0000tttt - table link, tttt != 0 is the number of table index bits
    0001eeee - length or distance, eeee is the number of extra bits
    01100000 - end of block
    01000000 - invalid code
 */

/* Maximum size of dynamic tree.  The maximum found in a long but non-
   exhaustive search was 1444 code structures (852 for length/literals
   and 592 for distances, the latter actually the result of an
   exhaustive search).  The true maximum is not known, but the value
   below is more than safe. */
#define ENOUGH 2048
#define MAXD 592

/* Type of code to build for inftable() */
typedef enum {
    CODES,
    LENS,
    DISTS
} codetype;

extern int inflate_table OF((codetype type, unsigned short FAR *lens,
                             unsigned codes, code FAR * FAR *table,
                             unsigned FAR *bits, unsigned short FAR *work));