this change is in preparation for amd64. the systab calling
convention was also changed to return uintptr (as segattach
returns a pointer) and the arguments are now passed as
va_list which handles amd64 arguments properly (all arguments
are passed in 64bit quantities on the stack, tho the upper
part will not be initialized when the element is smaller
than 8 bytes).
this is partial. xalloc needs to be converted in the future.
when user does read of exactly 12*12 bytes on draw
ctl file, the snprint() adds one more \0 byte writing
beyond the user buffer and corrupting memory.
fix this by not snprint()ing the final space and add
it manually.
according to a comment in linux driver, reading Isrc2
register caused interrupts to be disabled. we used
to read Isrc2 in ifstat() and it was confirmed that
reading ifstat locks up ethernet. removing the Isrc2
read in ifstats, and also reenable interrupts after
reading Isrc2 when the interrupt was not for us.
(this is from the linux driver)
in replenish(), set ring software write pointer (Sring.wp)
*before* the hardware write index register. otherwise
rx() could get status notification for completed
receive but wont find the rx descriptor in the ring.
handle uint wrap arround when calculating ring fill
count and remaining count.
the stats and ifstats files in the 3rd level of a netif
are not per connection, but for the interface.
this made fstat fail for /net/ether0/N/*stats where N > 0
as the NETID() bits in the qid didnt compare.
cachechars() used to skip over characters on its own when
loadchar() could not find the character or a PJW replacement.
this resulted in wrong width calculation. now we just return
and handle the case inside _string and _stringwidth.
fix subfont leak in stringwidth()
remove annoying prints in stringwidth()
scrollwheel now works proportional to y mouse position.
special case is when shift is hold down. then scrollwheel
will work like before and scroll one line up or down.
from erik quanstros 9fans post:
i think the list insertion code needs a single-read
test that f->alarm != 0. to prevent the 0 from
acting like a fencepost. e.g. trying to insert -10 into
list -40 -30 0 -20.
if(alarms.head) {
l = &alarms.head;
for(f = *l; f; f = f->palarm) {
>> fw = f->alarm;
>> if(fw != 0 && (long)(fw - when) >= 0) {
up->palarm = f;
*l = up;
goto done;
}
l = &f->palarm;
}
*l = up;
}