Some of the 00-INDEX files are somewhat outdated and some folders does not contain 00-INDEX at all. Only outdated (with the notably exception of spi) indexes are touched here, the 169 folders without 00-INDEX has not been touched. New 00-INDEX - spi/* was added in a series of commits dating back to 2006 Added files (missing in (*/)00-INDEX) - dmatest.txt was added by commit851b7e16a0
("dmatest: run test via debugfs") - this_cpu_ops.txt was added by commita1b2a555d6
("percpu: add documentation on this_cpu operations") - ww-mutex-design.txt was added by commit040a0a3710
("mutex: Add support for wound/wait style locks") - bcache.txt was added by commitcafe563591
("bcache: A block layer cache") - kernel-per-CPU-kthreads.txt was added by commit49717cb404
("kthread: Document ways of reducing OS jitter due to per-CPU kthreads") - phy.txt was added by commitff76496347
("drivers: phy: add generic PHY framework") - block/null_blk was added by commit12f8f4fc03
("null_blk: documentation") - module-signing.txt was added by commit3cafea3076
("Add Documentation/module-signing.txt file") - assoc_array.txt was added by commit3cb989501c
("Add a generic associative array implementation.") - arm/IXP4xx was part of the initial repo - arm/cluster-pm-race-avoidance.txt was added by commit7fe31d28e8
("ARM: mcpm: introduce helpers for platform coherency exit/setup") - arm/firmware.txt was added by commit7366b92a77
("ARM: Add interface for registering and calling firmware-specific operations") - arm/kernel_mode_neon.txt was added by commit2afd0a0524
("ARM: 7825/1: document the use of NEON in kernel mode") - arm/tcm.txt was added by commitbc581770cf
("ARM: 5580/2: ARM TCM (Tightly-Coupled Memory) support v3") - arm/vlocks.txt was added by commit9762f12d3e
("ARM: mcpm: Add baremetal voting mutexes") - blackfin/gptimers-example.c, Makefile was added by commit4b60779d5e
("Blackfin: add an example showing how to use the gptimers API") - devicetree/usage-model.txt was added by commit31134efc68
("dt: Linux DT usage model documentation") - fb/api.txt was added by commitfb21c2f428
("fbdev: Add FOURCC-based format configuration API") - fb/sm501.txt was added by commite6a0498071
("video, sm501: add edid and commandline support") - fb/udlfb.txt was added by commit96f8d864af
("fbdev: move udlfb out of staging.") - filesystems/Makefile was added by commit1e0051ae48
("Documentation/fs/: split txt and source files") - filesystems/nfs/nfsd-admin-interfaces.txt was added by commit8a4c6e19cf
("nfsd: document kernel interfaces for nfsd configuration") - ide/warm-plug-howto.txt was added by commitf74c91413e
("ide: add warm-plug support for IDE devices (take 2)") - laptops/Makefile was added by commitd49129accc
("Documentation/laptop/: split txt and source files") - leds/leds-blinkm.txt was added by commitb54cf35a7f
("LEDS: add BlinkM RGB LED driver, documentation and update MAINTAINERS") - leds/ledtrig-oneshot.txt was added by commit5e417281cd
("leds: add oneshot trigger") - leds/ledtrig-transient.txt was added by commit44e1e9f8e7
("leds: add new transient trigger for one shot timer activation") - m68k/README.buddha was part of the initial repo - networking/LICENSE.(qla3xxx|qlcnic|qlge) was added by commits40839129f7
,c4e84bde1d
,5a4faa8737
- networking/Makefile was added by commit3794f3e812
("docsrc: build Documentation/ sources") - networking/i40evf.txt was added by commit105bf2fe6b
("i40evf: add driver to kernel build system") - networking/ipsec.txt was added by commitb3c6efbc36
("xfrm: Add file to document IPsec corner case") - networking/mac80211-auth-assoc-deauth.txt was added by commit3cd7920a2b
("mac80211: add auth/assoc/deauth flow diagram") - networking/netlink_mmap.txt was added by commit5683264c39
("netlink: add documentation for memory mapped I/O") - networking/nf_conntrack-sysctl.txt was added by commitc9f9e0e159
("netfilter: doc: add nf_conntrack sysctl api documentation") lan) - networking/team.txt was added by commit3d249d4ca7
("net: introduce ethernet teaming device") - networking/vxlan.txt was added by commitd342894c5d
("vxlan: virtual extensible lan") - power/runtime_pm.txt was added by commit5e928f77a0
("PM: Introduce core framework for run-time PM of I/O devices (rev. 17)") - power/charger-manager.txt was added by commit3bb3dbbd56
("power_supply: Add initial Charger-Manager driver") - RCU/lockdep-splat.txt was added by commitd7bd2d68aa
("rcu: Document interpretation of RCU-lockdep splats") - s390/kvm.txt was added by5ecee4b
(KVM: s390: API documentation) - s390/qeth.txt was added by commitb4d72c08b3
("qeth: bridgeport support - basic control") - scheduler/sched-bwc.txt was added by commit88ebc08ea9
("sched: Add documentation for bandwidth control") - scsi/advansys.txt was added by commit4bd6d7f356
("[SCSI] advansys: Move documentation to Documentation/scsi") - scsi/bfa.txt was added by commit1ec90174bd
("[SCSI] bfa: add readme file") - scsi/bnx2fc.txt was added by commit12b8fc10ea
("[SCSI] bnx2fc: Add driver documentation") - scsi/cxgb3i.txt was added by commitc3673464eb
("[SCSI] cxgb3i: Add cxgb3i iSCSI driver.") - scsi/hpsa.txt was added by commit992ebcf14f
("[SCSI] hpsa: Add hpsa.txt to Documentation/scsi") - scsi/link_power_management_policy.txt was added by commitca77329fb7
("[libata] Link power management infrastructure") - scsi/osd.txt was added by commit78e0c621de
("[SCSI] osd: Documentation for OSD library") - scsi/scsi-parameter.txt was created/moved by commit163475fb11
("Documentation: move SCSI parameters to their own text file") - serial/driver was part of the initial repo - serial/n_gsm.txt was added by commit323e84122e
("n_gsm: add a documentation") - timers/Makefile was added by commit3794f3e812
("docsrc: build Documentation/ sources") - virt/kvm/s390.txt was added by commitd9101fca3d
("KVM: s390: diagnose call documentation") - vm/split_page_table_lock was added by commit49076ec2cc
("mm: dynamically allocate page->ptl if it cannot be embedded to struct page") - w1/slaves/w1_ds28e04 was added by commitfbf7f7b4e2
("w1: Add 1-wire slave device driver for DS28E04-100") - w1/masters/omap-hdq was added by commite0a29382c6
("hdq: documentation for OMAP HDQ") - x86/early-microcode.txt was added by commit0d91ea86a8
("x86, doc: Documentation for early microcode loading") - x86/earlyprintk.txt was added by commita1aade4788
("x86/doc: mini-howto for using earlyprintk=dbgp") - x86/entry_64.txt was added by commit8b4777a4b5
("x86-64: Document some of entry_64.S") - x86/pat.txt was added by commitd27554d874
("x86: PAT documentation") Moved files - arm/kernel_user_helpers.txt was moved out of arch/arm/kernel by commit37b8304642
("ARM: kuser: move interface documentation out of the source code") - efi-stub.txt was moved out of x86/ and down into Documentation/ in commit4172fe2f8a
("EFI stub documentation updates") - laptops/hpfall.c was moved out of hwmon/ and into laptops/ in commitefcfed9bad
("Move hp_accel to drivers/platform/x86") - commit5616c23ad9
("x86: doc: move x86-generic documentation from Doc/x86/i386"): * x86/usb-legacy-support.txt * x86/boot.txt * x86/zero_page.txt - power/video_extension.txt was moved to acpi in commit70e66e4df1
("ACPI / video: move video_extension.txt to Documentation/acpi") Removed files (left in 00-INDEX) - memory.txt was removed by commit00ea8990aa
("memory.txt: remove stray information") - gpio.txt was moved to gpio/ in commitfd8e198cfc
("Documentation: gpiolib: document new interface") - networking/DLINK.txt was removed by commit168e06ae26
("drivers/net: delete old parallel port de600/de620 drivers") - serial/hayes-esp.txt was removed by commitf53a2ade0b
("tty: esp: remove broken driver") - s390/TAPE was removed by commit9e280f6693
("[S390] remove tape block docu") - vm/locking was removed by commit57ea8171d2
("mm: documentation: remove hopelessly out-of-date locking doc") - laptops/acer-wmi.txt was remvoed by commit020036678e
("acer-wmi: Delete out-of-date documentation") Typos/misc issues - rpc-server-gss.txt was added as knfsd-rpcgss.txt in commit030d794bf4
("SUNRPC: Use gssproxy upcall for server RPCGSS authentication.") - commitb88cf73d92
("net: add missing entries to Documentation/networking/00-INDEX") * generic-hdlc.txt was added as generic_hdlc.txt * spider_net.txt was added as spider-net.txt - w1/master/mxc-w1 was added as mxc_w1 by commita5fd9139f7
("w1: add 1-wire master driver for i.MX27 / i.MX31") - s390/zfcpdump.txt was added as zfcpdump by commit6920c12a40
("[S390] Add Documentation/s390/00-INDEX.") Signed-off-by: Henrik Austad <henrik@austad.us> Reviewed-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com> [rcu bits] Acked-by: Rob Landley <rob@landley.net> Cc: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz> Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Cc: Rob Herring <robh+dt@kernel.org> Cc: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> Cc: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org> Cc: "H. Peter Anvin" <hpa@zytor.com> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu> Cc: Gleb Natapov <gleb@kernel.org> Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Cc: Len Brown <len.brown@intel.com> Cc: James Bottomley <JBottomley@parallels.com> Cc: Jean-Christophe Plagniol-Villard <plagnioj@jcrosoft.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
The Amiga Buddha and Catweasel IDE Driver (part of ide.c) was written by Geert Uytterhoeven based on the following specifications: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Register map of the Buddha IDE controller and the Buddha-part of the Catweasel Zorro-II version The Autoconfiguration has been implemented just as Commodore described in their manuals, no tricks have been used (for example leaving some address lines out of the equations...). If you want to configure the board yourself (for example let a Linux kernel configure the card), look at the Commodore Docs. Reading the nibbles should give this information: Vendor number: 4626 ($1212) product number: 0 (42 for Catweasel Z-II) Serial number: 0 Rom-vector: $1000 The card should be a Z-II board, size 64K, not for freemem list, Rom-Vektor is valid, no second Autoconfig-board on the same card, no space preference, supports "Shutup_forever". Setting the base address should be done in two steps, just as the Amiga Kickstart does: The lower nibble of the 8-Bit address is written to $4a, then the whole Byte is written to $48, while it doesn't matter how often you're writing to $4a as long as $48 is not touched. After $48 has been written, the whole card disappears from $e8 and is mapped to the new address just written. Make sure $4a is written before $48, otherwise your chance is only 1:16 to find the board :-). The local memory-map is even active when mapped to $e8: $0-$7e Autokonfig-space, see Z-II docs. $80-$7fd reserved $7fe Speed-select Register: Read & Write (description see further down) $800-$8ff IDE-Select 0 (Port 0, Register set 0) $900-$9ff IDE-Select 1 (Port 0, Register set 1) $a00-$aff IDE-Select 2 (Port 1, Register set 0) $b00-$bff IDE-Select 3 (Port 1, Register set 1) $c00-$cff IDE-Select 4 (Port 2, Register set 0, Catweasel only!) $d00-$dff IDE-Select 5 (Port 3, Register set 1, Catweasel only!) $e00-$eff local expansion port, on Catweasel Z-II the Catweasel registers are also mapped here. Never touch, use multidisk.device! $f00 read only, Byte-access: Bit 7 shows the level of the IRQ-line of IDE port 0. $f01-$f3f mirror of $f00 $f40 read only, Byte-access: Bit 7 shows the level of the IRQ-line of IDE port 1. $f41-$f7f mirror of $f40 $f80 read only, Byte-access: Bit 7 shows the level of the IRQ-line of IDE port 2. (Catweasel only!) $f81-$fbf mirror of $f80 $fc0 write-only: Writing any value to this register enables IRQs to be passed from the IDE ports to the Zorro bus. This mechanism has been implemented to be compatible with harddisks that are either defective or have a buggy firmware and pull the IRQ line up while starting up. If interrupts would always be passed to the bus, the computer might not start up. Once enabled, this flag can not be disabled again. The level of the flag can not be determined by software (what for? Write to me if it's necessary!). $fc1-$fff mirror of $fc0 $1000-$ffff Buddha-Rom with offset $1000 in the rom chip. The addresses $0 to $fff of the rom chip cannot be read. Rom is Byte-wide and mapped to even addresses. The IDE ports issue an INT2. You can read the level of the IRQ-lines of the IDE-ports by reading from the three (two for Buddha-only) registers $f00, $f40 and $f80. This way more than one I/O request can be handled and you can easily determine what driver has to serve the INT2. Buddha and Catweasel expansion boards can issue an INT6. A separate memory map is available for the I/O module and the sysop's I/O module. The IDE ports are fed by the address lines A2 to A4, just as the Amiga 1200 and Amiga 4000 IDE ports are. This way existing drivers can be easily ported to Buddha. A move.l polls two words out of the same address of IDE port since every word is mirrored once. movem is not possible, but it's not necessary either, because you can only speedup 68000 systems with this technique. A 68020 system with fastmem is faster with move.l. If you're using the mirrored registers of the IDE-ports with A6=1, the Buddha doesn't care about the speed that you have selected in the speed register (see further down). With A6=1 (for example $840 for port 0, register set 0), a 780ns access is being made. These registers should be used for a command access to the harddisk/CD-Rom, since command accesses are Byte-wide and have to be made slower according to the ATA-X3T9 manual. Now for the speed-register: The register is byte-wide, and only the upper three bits are used (Bits 7 to 5). Bit 4 must always be set to 1 to be compatible with later Buddha versions (if I'll ever update this one). I presume that I'll never use the lower four bits, but they have to be set to 1 by definition. The values in this table have to be shifted 5 bits to the left and or'd with $1f (this sets the lower 5 bits). All the timings have in common: Select and IOR/IOW rise at the same time. IOR and IOW have a propagation delay of about 30ns to the clocks on the Zorro bus, that's why the values are no multiple of 71. One clock-cycle is 71ns long (exactly 70,5 at 14,18 Mhz on PAL systems). value 0 (Default after reset) 497ns Select (7 clock cycles) , IOR/IOW after 172ns (2 clock cycles) (same timing as the Amiga 1200 does on it's IDE port without accelerator card) value 1 639ns Select (9 clock cycles), IOR/IOW after 243ns (3 clock cycles) value 2 781ns Select (11 clock cycles), IOR/IOW after 314ns (4 clock cycles) value 3 355ns Select (5 clock cycles), IOR/IOW after 101ns (1 clock cycle) value 4 355ns Select (5 clock cycles), IOR/IOW after 172ns (2 clock cycles) value 5 355ns Select (5 clock cycles), IOR/IOW after 243ns (3 clock cycles) value 6 1065ns Select (15 clock cycles), IOR/IOW after 314ns (4 clock cycles) value 7 355ns Select, (5 clock cycles), IOR/IOW after 101ns (1 clock cycle) When accessing IDE registers with A6=1 (for example $84x), the timing will always be mode 0 8-bit compatible, no matter what you have selected in the speed register: 781ns select, IOR/IOW after 4 clock cycles (=314ns) aktive. All the timings with a very short select-signal (the 355ns fast accesses) depend on the accelerator card used in the system: Sometimes two more clock cycles are inserted by the bus interface, making the whole access 497ns long. This doesn't affect the reliability of the controller nor the performance of the card, since this doesn't happen very often. All the timings are calculated and only confirmed by measurements that allowed me to count the clock cycles. If the system is clocked by an oscillator other than 28,37516 Mhz (for example the NTSC-frequency 28,63636 Mhz), each clock cycle is shortened to a bit less than 70ns (not worth mentioning). You could think of a small performance boost by overclocking the system, but you would either need a multisync monitor, or a graphics card, and your internal diskdrive would go crazy, that's why you shouldn't tune your Amiga this way. Giving you the possibility to write software that is compatible with both the Buddha and the Catweasel Z-II, The Buddha acts just like a Catweasel Z-II with no device connected to the third IDE-port. The IRQ-register $f80 always shows a "no IRQ here" on the Buddha, and accesses to the third IDE port are going into data's Nirwana on the Buddha. Jens Schönfeld february 19th, 1997 updated may 27th, 1997 eMail: sysop@nostlgic.tng.oche.de