function prefix "undinet_" and the variable name "undinic" in undinet.c,
so that we can reserve the variable name "undi" for a struct undi_device.
The idea is that we preserve the Etherboot 5.4 convention that the "UNDI"
code refers to our using an underlying UNDI stack, while the "PXE" code
refers to our providing a PXE API.
the only one we actually use). This allows REAL_EXEC fragments to
contain proper references to constraints (e.g. "%w0"), rather than having
to force the use of specific registers.
Note that the "num_constraints" parameter is now completely obsolete, and
that we can probably reduce the syntax to something like
__asm__ __volatile__ ( REAL_CODE ( "asm statements" )
: output constraints
: input constraints
: clobber );
which would look much more natural, and avoid the need to always specify
a clobber list.
Add userptr_t to libkir.h, to allow it to at least compile.
the kernel), which encapsulates the information needed to refer to an
external buffer. Under normal operation, this can just be a void *
equivalent, but under -DKEEP_IT_REAL it would be a segoff_t equivalent.
Use this concept to avoid the need for bounce buffers in int13.c,
which reduces memory usage and opens up the possibility of using
multi-sector reads.
Extend the block-device API and the SCSI block device implementation
to support multi-sector reads.
Update iscsi.c to use user buffers.
Move the obsolete portions of realmode.h to old_realmode.h.
MS-DOS now boots an order of magnitude faster over iSCSI (~10 seconds
from power-up to C:> prompt in bochs).
typical build will now include 880 bytes of PCI support code, compared to
2327 bytes in Etherboot 5.4.
(There is a slight cost of around 5 extra bytes per access to a
non-constant config space address; this should be an overall win.
Driver-specific accesses will usually be to constant addresses, for
which there is no additional cost.)
Use .text16.data section with "aw" attributes, to avoid section type
conflicts when placing both code and data into .text16.
Add __from_{text16,data16}.
I want to get to the point where any header in include/ reflects a
standard user-level header (e.g. a POSIX header), while everything that's
specific to gPXE lives in include/gpxe/. Headers that reflect a Linux
header (e.g. if_ether.h) should also be in include/gpxe/, with the same
name as the Linux header and, preferably, the same names used for the
definitions.