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authorDmitry Torokhov <dtor@insightbb.com>2006-10-08 08:14:30 +0400
committerJeff Garzik <jeff@garzik.org>2006-12-02 08:11:57 +0300
commit5c877fe58c5df19646204b144b978b99c2ef074f (patch)
tree266adc98dd8a3feebba558817259bd87dfa2d1d3 /drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c
parentb4341135794fdad85f995a378da424e4f4128e4d (diff)
downloadlinux-5c877fe58c5df19646204b144b978b99c2ef074f.tar.xz
[PATCH] atmel: whitespace cleanup
NET: atmel: whitespace cleanup Signed-off-by: Dmitry Torokhov <dtor@mail.ru> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c')
-rw-r--r--drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c74
1 files changed, 37 insertions, 37 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c b/drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c
index 785664090bb4..5c410989c4d7 100644
--- a/drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c
+++ b/drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c
@@ -5,12 +5,12 @@
Copyright 2000-2001 ATMEL Corporation.
Copyright 2003 Simon Kelley.
- This code was developed from version 2.1.1 of the Atmel drivers,
- released by Atmel corp. under the GPL in December 2002. It also
- includes code from the Linux aironet drivers (C) Benjamin Reed,
- and the Linux PCMCIA package, (C) David Hinds.
+ This code was developed from version 2.1.1 of the Atmel drivers,
+ released by Atmel corp. under the GPL in December 2002. It also
+ includes code from the Linux aironet drivers (C) Benjamin Reed,
+ and the Linux PCMCIA package, (C) David Hinds.
- For all queries about this code, please contact the current author,
+ For all queries about this code, please contact the current author,
Simon Kelley <simon@thekelleys.org.uk> and not Atmel Corporation.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ MODULE_SUPPORTED_DEVICE("Atmel at76c50x PCMCIA cards");
event is received. The config() and release() entry points are
used to configure or release a socket, in response to card
insertion and ejection events. They are invoked from the atmel_cs
- event handler.
+ event handler.
*/
static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link);
@@ -133,22 +133,22 @@ static void atmel_detach(struct pcmcia_device *p_dev);
device IO routines can use a flag like this to throttle IO to a
card that is not ready to accept it.
*/
-
+
typedef struct local_info_t {
dev_node_t node;
struct net_device *eth_dev;
} local_info_t;
/*======================================================================
-
+
atmel_attach() creates an "instance" of the driver, allocating
local data structures for one device. The device is registered
with Card Services.
-
+
The dev_link structure is initialized, but we don't actually
configure the card at this point -- we wait until we receive a
card insertion event.
-
+
======================================================================*/
static int atmel_probe(struct pcmcia_device *p_dev)
@@ -184,12 +184,12 @@ static int atmel_probe(struct pcmcia_device *p_dev)
} /* atmel_attach */
/*======================================================================
-
+
This deletes a driver "instance". The device is de-registered
with Card Services. If it has been released, all local data
structures are freed. Otherwise, the structures will be freed
when the device is released.
-
+
======================================================================*/
static void atmel_detach(struct pcmcia_device *link)
@@ -202,11 +202,11 @@ static void atmel_detach(struct pcmcia_device *link)
}
/*======================================================================
-
+
atmel_config() is scheduled to run after a CARD_INSERTION event
is received, to configure the PCMCIA socket, and to make the
device available to the system.
-
+
======================================================================*/
#define CS_CHECK(fn, ret) \
@@ -237,12 +237,12 @@ static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link)
did = handle_to_dev(link).driver_data;
DEBUG(0, "atmel_config(0x%p)\n", link);
-
+
tuple.Attributes = 0;
tuple.TupleData = buf;
tuple.TupleDataMax = sizeof(buf);
tuple.TupleOffset = 0;
-
+
/*
This reads the card's CONFIG tuple to find its configuration
registers.
@@ -258,7 +258,7 @@ static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link)
In this loop, we scan the CIS for configuration table entries,
each of which describes a valid card configuration, including
voltage, IO window, memory window, and interrupt settings.
-
+
We make no assumptions about the card to be configured: we use
just the information available in the CIS. In an ideal world,
this would work for any PCMCIA card, but it requires a complete
@@ -274,17 +274,17 @@ static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link)
if (pcmcia_get_tuple_data(link, &tuple) != 0 ||
pcmcia_parse_tuple(link, &tuple, &parse) != 0)
goto next_entry;
-
+
if (cfg->flags & CISTPL_CFTABLE_DEFAULT) dflt = *cfg;
if (cfg->index == 0) goto next_entry;
link->conf.ConfigIndex = cfg->index;
-
+
/* Does this card need audio output? */
if (cfg->flags & CISTPL_CFTABLE_AUDIO) {
link->conf.Attributes |= CONF_ENABLE_SPKR;
link->conf.Status = CCSR_AUDIO_ENA;
}
-
+
/* Use power settings for Vcc and Vpp if present */
/* Note that the CIS values need to be rescaled */
if (cfg->vpp1.present & (1<<CISTPL_POWER_VNOM))
@@ -293,11 +293,11 @@ static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link)
else if (dflt.vpp1.present & (1<<CISTPL_POWER_VNOM))
link->conf.Vpp =
dflt.vpp1.param[CISTPL_POWER_VNOM]/10000;
-
+
/* Do we need to allocate an interrupt? */
if (cfg->irq.IRQInfo1 || dflt.irq.IRQInfo1)
link->conf.Attributes |= CONF_ENABLE_IRQ;
-
+
/* IO window settings */
link->io.NumPorts1 = link->io.NumPorts2 = 0;
if ((cfg->io.nwin > 0) || (dflt.io.nwin > 0)) {
@@ -315,18 +315,18 @@ static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link)
link->io.NumPorts2 = io->win[1].len;
}
}
-
+
/* This reserves IO space but doesn't actually enable it */
if (pcmcia_request_io(link, &link->io) != 0)
goto next_entry;
/* If we got this far, we're cool! */
break;
-
+
next_entry:
CS_CHECK(GetNextTuple, pcmcia_get_next_tuple(link, &tuple));
}
-
+
/*
Allocate an interrupt line. Note that this does not assign a
handler to the interrupt, unless the 'Handler' member of the
@@ -334,31 +334,31 @@ static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link)
*/
if (link->conf.Attributes & CONF_ENABLE_IRQ)
CS_CHECK(RequestIRQ, pcmcia_request_irq(link, &link->irq));
-
+
/*
This actually configures the PCMCIA socket -- setting up
the I/O windows and the interrupt mapping, and putting the
card and host interface into "Memory and IO" mode.
*/
CS_CHECK(RequestConfiguration, pcmcia_request_configuration(link, &link->conf));
-
+
if (link->irq.AssignedIRQ == 0) {
- printk(KERN_ALERT
+ printk(KERN_ALERT
"atmel: cannot assign IRQ: check that CONFIG_ISA is set in kernel config.");
goto cs_failed;
}
-
- ((local_info_t*)link->priv)->eth_dev =
+
+ ((local_info_t*)link->priv)->eth_dev =
init_atmel_card(link->irq.AssignedIRQ,
link->io.BasePort1,
did ? did->driver_info : ATMEL_FW_TYPE_NONE,
&handle_to_dev(link),
- card_present,
+ card_present,
link);
- if (!((local_info_t*)link->priv)->eth_dev)
+ if (!((local_info_t*)link->priv)->eth_dev)
goto cs_failed;
-
-
+
+
/*
At this point, the dev_node_t structure(s) need to be
initialized and arranged in a linked list at link->dev_node.
@@ -376,11 +376,11 @@ static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link)
}
/*======================================================================
-
+
After a card is removed, atmel_release() will unregister the
device, and release the PCMCIA configuration. If the device is
still open, this will be postponed until it is closed.
-
+
======================================================================*/
static void atmel_release(struct pcmcia_device *link)
@@ -517,7 +517,7 @@ static void atmel_cs_cleanup(void)
HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
- POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
+ POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
module_init(atmel_cs_init);