Linux-2.6.12-rc2

Initial git repository build. I'm not bothering with the full history,
even though we have it. We can create a separate "historical" git
archive of that later if we want to, and in the meantime it's about
3.2GB when imported into git - space that would just make the early
git days unnecessarily complicated, when we don't have a lot of good
infrastructure for it.

Let it rip!
diff --git a/include/asm-i386/vm86.h b/include/asm-i386/vm86.h
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..40ec82c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/asm-i386/vm86.h
@@ -0,0 +1,208 @@
+#ifndef _LINUX_VM86_H
+#define _LINUX_VM86_H
+
+/*
+ * I'm guessing at the VIF/VIP flag usage, but hope that this is how
+ * the Pentium uses them. Linux will return from vm86 mode when both
+ * VIF and VIP is set.
+ *
+ * On a Pentium, we could probably optimize the virtual flags directly
+ * in the eflags register instead of doing it "by hand" in vflags...
+ *
+ * Linus
+ */
+
+#define TF_MASK		0x00000100
+#define IF_MASK		0x00000200
+#define IOPL_MASK	0x00003000
+#define NT_MASK		0x00004000
+#define VM_MASK		0x00020000
+#define AC_MASK		0x00040000
+#define VIF_MASK	0x00080000	/* virtual interrupt flag */
+#define VIP_MASK	0x00100000	/* virtual interrupt pending */
+#define ID_MASK		0x00200000
+
+#define BIOSSEG		0x0f000
+
+#define CPU_086		0
+#define CPU_186		1
+#define CPU_286		2
+#define CPU_386		3
+#define CPU_486		4
+#define CPU_586		5
+
+/*
+ * Return values for the 'vm86()' system call
+ */
+#define VM86_TYPE(retval)	((retval) & 0xff)
+#define VM86_ARG(retval)	((retval) >> 8)
+
+#define VM86_SIGNAL	0	/* return due to signal */
+#define VM86_UNKNOWN	1	/* unhandled GP fault - IO-instruction or similar */
+#define VM86_INTx	2	/* int3/int x instruction (ARG = x) */
+#define VM86_STI	3	/* sti/popf/iret instruction enabled virtual interrupts */
+
+/*
+ * Additional return values when invoking new vm86()
+ */
+#define VM86_PICRETURN	4	/* return due to pending PIC request */
+#define VM86_TRAP	6	/* return due to DOS-debugger request */
+
+/*
+ * function codes when invoking new vm86()
+ */
+#define VM86_PLUS_INSTALL_CHECK	0
+#define VM86_ENTER		1
+#define VM86_ENTER_NO_BYPASS	2
+#define	VM86_REQUEST_IRQ	3
+#define VM86_FREE_IRQ		4
+#define VM86_GET_IRQ_BITS	5
+#define VM86_GET_AND_RESET_IRQ	6
+
+/*
+ * This is the stack-layout seen by the user space program when we have
+ * done a translation of "SAVE_ALL" from vm86 mode. The real kernel layout
+ * is 'kernel_vm86_regs' (see below).
+ */
+
+struct vm86_regs {
+/*
+ * normal regs, with special meaning for the segment descriptors..
+ */
+	long ebx;
+	long ecx;
+	long edx;
+	long esi;
+	long edi;
+	long ebp;
+	long eax;
+	long __null_ds;
+	long __null_es;
+	long __null_fs;
+	long __null_gs;
+	long orig_eax;
+	long eip;
+	unsigned short cs, __csh;
+	long eflags;
+	long esp;
+	unsigned short ss, __ssh;
+/*
+ * these are specific to v86 mode:
+ */
+	unsigned short es, __esh;
+	unsigned short ds, __dsh;
+	unsigned short fs, __fsh;
+	unsigned short gs, __gsh;
+};
+
+struct revectored_struct {
+	unsigned long __map[8];			/* 256 bits */
+};
+
+struct vm86_struct {
+	struct vm86_regs regs;
+	unsigned long flags;
+	unsigned long screen_bitmap;
+	unsigned long cpu_type;
+	struct revectored_struct int_revectored;
+	struct revectored_struct int21_revectored;
+};
+
+/*
+ * flags masks
+ */
+#define VM86_SCREEN_BITMAP	0x0001
+
+struct vm86plus_info_struct {
+	unsigned long force_return_for_pic:1;
+	unsigned long vm86dbg_active:1;       /* for debugger */
+	unsigned long vm86dbg_TFpendig:1;     /* for debugger */
+	unsigned long unused:28;
+	unsigned long is_vm86pus:1;	      /* for vm86 internal use */
+	unsigned char vm86dbg_intxxtab[32];   /* for debugger */
+};
+
+struct vm86plus_struct {
+	struct vm86_regs regs;
+	unsigned long flags;
+	unsigned long screen_bitmap;
+	unsigned long cpu_type;
+	struct revectored_struct int_revectored;
+	struct revectored_struct int21_revectored;
+	struct vm86plus_info_struct vm86plus;
+};
+
+#ifdef __KERNEL__
+/*
+ * This is the (kernel) stack-layout when we have done a "SAVE_ALL" from vm86
+ * mode - the main change is that the old segment descriptors aren't
+ * useful any more and are forced to be zero by the kernel (and the
+ * hardware when a trap occurs), and the real segment descriptors are
+ * at the end of the structure. Look at ptrace.h to see the "normal"
+ * setup. For user space layout see 'struct vm86_regs' above.
+ */
+
+struct kernel_vm86_regs {
+/*
+ * normal regs, with special meaning for the segment descriptors..
+ */
+	long ebx;
+	long ecx;
+	long edx;
+	long esi;
+	long edi;
+	long ebp;
+	long eax;
+	long __null_ds;
+	long __null_es;
+	long orig_eax;
+	long eip;
+	unsigned short cs, __csh;
+	long eflags;
+	long esp;
+	unsigned short ss, __ssh;
+/*
+ * these are specific to v86 mode:
+ */
+	unsigned short es, __esh;
+	unsigned short ds, __dsh;
+	unsigned short fs, __fsh;
+	unsigned short gs, __gsh;
+};
+
+struct kernel_vm86_struct {
+	struct kernel_vm86_regs regs;
+/*
+ * the below part remains on the kernel stack while we are in VM86 mode.
+ * 'tss.esp0' then contains the address of VM86_TSS_ESP0 below, and when we
+ * get forced back from VM86, the CPU and "SAVE_ALL" will restore the above
+ * 'struct kernel_vm86_regs' with the then actual values.
+ * Therefore, pt_regs in fact points to a complete 'kernel_vm86_struct'
+ * in kernelspace, hence we need not reget the data from userspace.
+ */
+#define VM86_TSS_ESP0 flags
+	unsigned long flags;
+	unsigned long screen_bitmap;
+	unsigned long cpu_type;
+	struct revectored_struct int_revectored;
+	struct revectored_struct int21_revectored;
+	struct vm86plus_info_struct vm86plus;
+	struct pt_regs *regs32;   /* here we save the pointer to the old regs */
+/*
+ * The below is not part of the structure, but the stack layout continues
+ * this way. In front of 'return-eip' may be some data, depending on
+ * compilation, so we don't rely on this and save the pointer to 'oldregs'
+ * in 'regs32' above.
+ * However, with GCC-2.7.2 and the current CFLAGS you see exactly this:
+
+	long return-eip;        from call to vm86()
+	struct pt_regs oldregs;  user space registers as saved by syscall
+ */
+};
+
+void handle_vm86_fault(struct kernel_vm86_regs *, long);
+int handle_vm86_trap(struct kernel_vm86_regs *, long, int);
+
+#endif /* __KERNEL__ */
+
+#endif