Searched hist:"5244 eac9" (Results 1 – 10 of 10) sorted by relevance
/freebsd/sys/powerpc/include/ |
H A D | sr.h | 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)
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H A D | pte.h | 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)
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H A D | param.h | 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)
|
H A D | md_var.h | 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)
|
H A D | pmap.h | 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)
|
/freebsd/sys/powerpc/aim/ |
H A D | locore.S | 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)
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H A D | mmu_oea.c | 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)
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/freebsd/sys/powerpc/powerpc/ |
H A D | trap.c | 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)
|
H A D | vm_machdep.c | 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)
|
H A D | machdep.c | 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code) 5244eac9 Thu Feb 14 01:39:11 GMT 2002 Benno Rice <benno@FreeBSD.org> Complete rework of the PowerPC pmap and a number of other bits in the early boot sequence.
The new pmap.c is based on NetBSD's newer pmap.c (for the mpc6xx processors) which is 70% faster than the older code that the original pmap.c was based on. It has also been based on the framework established by jake's initial sparc64 pmap.c.
There is no change to how far the kernel gets (it makes it to the mountroot prompt in psim) but the new pmap code is a lot cleaner.
Obtained from: NetBSD (pmap code)
|