Bob Wirka wrote:
First, thanks for the responses to my earlier post. I appreciate it.
The ethernet driver code is now executing at boot time; adding either
'__initcall(init_fcn)' or 'init_module(init_fcn)' will cause the
kernel to call 'init_fcn'. That's the good news.
The bad news is that the initializatin code causes a kernel oops when
accessing the 'net_device' structure that is passed to it by the
kernel (as a pointer). When the code either reads or writes to the
'net_device' structure you get:
Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address 00010f24
Can anyone shed some light on this? I've printed out the value of the
'net_device' pointer, and it's not a null pointer.
Thanks,
Bob Wirka
Realtime Control Works
---------------ORIGINAL POST----------------------------
Bob Wirka wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to build a kernel that mounts a NFS root file system. This
is an embedded system; it uses an SMSC LAN91C111 network chip that is
hardwired to I/O addres 0x300 and IRQ 5. I've been using the driver
(as supplied by SMSC) as a module, and it works fine. Now I'm trying
to incorporate it into the kernel build so that I can mount an NFS
file system when the system boots.
I've added the source code to the kernel tree, and modified the
Makefile(s) and Config.in files so that the driver <<appears>> to be
compiled into the kernel. The kernel will load, but the chip is not
initialized and the NFS fails.
Since I don't know how to pass the io address and irq number to the
kernel, I've hard-coded them into the driver's init function (which I
don't see being called).
If someone could point me in the right direction, I'd appreciate it.
You should just configure the SMSC driver to be built in. The
module_init_call will be called correctly
on boot after the network core has been initialized. If you use an
initcall it will be too early, before
networking is ready. You could use a deviceinitcall that would happen
at the right time.
|