Only try to build Linux support on Linux. We should probably disable all
OS-dependent DDXes if we don't have a workable OS (and only build
Xephyr/Xfake), but that's future work.
If we're mapping something in the "legacy range" (0-1Mb), we shouldn't
expand the requested range to the entire 0-1Mb range. Typically this
is for mapping the VGA frame buffer, and some platforms support mmap of
the frame buffer but not the entire 0-1Mb range.
For example, HP sx1000 and sx2000 ia64 platforms can have memory from
0-0x9ffff, VGA frame buffer from 0xa0000-0xbffff, and memory from
0xc0000-0xfffff. On these platforms, we can't map the entire 0-1Mb
range with the same attribute because the memory only supports WB,
while the frame buffer supports only UC. But an mmap of just the
frame buffer should work fine.
Mach64 driver bails out on ia64 because it cannot map device
memory. It turns out that some bogus and unneeded code attempts
to find the root bridge of the device and fails to do so proberly
as there this host-to-pci bridge is not existant. This code has
been around for years although it completely unclear what it had
been intended for. Fixing this by eliminating the bogus code.
Add a server flag (AllowEmptyInput), which will inhibit adding the
standard keyboard and mouse drivers, if there are no input devices in the
config file.
Take various extra precautions with copying levels across (thanks Chris
Lee for a gdb session), including allocating when we don't already have a
coherent map.
Only free type components if they're present.
Allocate geometry and compat components if we don't already have them in
the dest map.
Add a generic 'ring the bell' function (console bell on Linux and BSD,
/dev/audio on Solaris), and add DDX functions for this. Make this the
core keyboard's bell.
Port Xvfb and Xnest to this.
Port XFree86 to this, with OS-specific hooks for Linux, BSD, and Solaris
taken from foo_io.c in the old layer.
Solaris headers are very literal - if you ask for POSIX_C_SOURCE 199309L,
they limit to only the functions in that standard and no more, unless you
also specify __EXTENSIONS__ to allow functions beyond the standard base.
Move the bell into an OS function, and use that if it's declared; else,
fall back to using the driver's function.
Remove the Linux keyboard bell function; just move it into the OS layer.
Use named initialisers when converting the old structures, and eliminate
unused functions.
Only rewind time when we're more than (original delta + 250ms) away from
executing the timer.
When we're walking the timer list, use a goto to iterate all of them from
the start again, since timers may drop out of the list.
Don't bother trying to be smart in TimerSet, we'll pick it up in
WaitForSomething anyway.