There's basically no real difference in software between a SATA harddisk
and IDE harddisk. The difference in the implementation is for the host
bus adapter protocol and registers layout.
Therefore, there's no point in putting a distinction in software to
these devices.
This change also greatly simplifies and removes stale APIs and removes
unnecessary parameters in constructor calls, which tighten things
further everywhere.
This allows us to remove the PCI::get_interrupt_line API function. As a
result, this removes a bunch of not so great patterns that we used to
cache PCI interrupt line in many IRQHandler derived classes instead of
just using interrupt_number method of IRQHandler class.
Now that the old PCI::Device was removed, we can complete the PCI
changes by making the PCI::DeviceController to be named PCI::Device.
Really the entire purpose and the distinction between the two was about
interrupts, but since this is no longer a problem, just rename it to
simplify things further.
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
Also handle native and compatibility channel modes together, so if only
one IDE channel was set to work on PCI native mode, we need to handle it
separately, so the other channel continue to operate with the legacy IO
ports and interrupt line.
Although unlikely to happen, a user can have an IDE controller that
doesn't support bus master capability. If that's the case, we need to
check for this, and create an IDEChannel (not BMIDEChannel) to allow
IO operations with the controller.
Technically not supported by the original ATA specification, IDE
hot swapping is still in practice possible, so the only sane way
to start support it is with ref-counting the IDEChannel object so if we
remove a PATADiskDevice, it's not gone with it.
Previously, the indexing scheme was that 0 is Primary-Master, 1 is
Primary-Slave, 2 is Secondary-Master, 3 is Secondary-Slave.
Instead of merely matching between numbers to the channel & position,
the IDEController code will try to find all available drives connected to
the two channels, then it will create a Vector with nonnull RefPtr to
them. Then we take use the given index with this Vector.
This new subsystem is somewhat replacing the IDE disk code we had with a
new flexible design.
StorageDevice is a generic class that represent a generic storage
device. It is meant that specific storage hardware will override the
interface. StorageController is a generic class that represent
a storage controller that can be found in a machine.
The IDEController class governs two IDEChannels. An IDEChannel is
responsible to manage the master & slave devices of the channel,
therefore an IDEChannel is an IRQHandler.