03-18-2011
Well so I ask you another way.
Do you see any solution of that problem?
Corona688 suggested adding general-purpose UEFI support to Linux. If that is the only way to do that I have to consider that.
Quote:
Originally Posted by fpmurphy
Now if you set up things so that your NIC is found when UEFI is probing devices, then you could write an UEFI app that could access the NIC flash, get driver image and store it in the ESP. It could then unload the existing driver and load the new driver in its place. All this needs to be done before the OS boots.
That is also kind of solution, but:
- it should work only for RedHat - not for all OSes (how would you determine the OS from UEFI?)
- it should work under BIOS machines and UEFI machines - not only UEFI machines
Quote:
Originally Posted by Corona688
DOS is an extremely simple operating system. It doesn't have or need device drivers for basic functionality and it doesn't modify the system environment much at all. It relies on BIOS calls(i.e. firmware code) almost exclusively instead.
Oh, I know DOS. I tought you were talking about some addons to DOS.
Last edited by Chrisdot; 03-18-2011 at 08:05 PM..
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LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
sysmon
SYSMON(4) BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual SYSMON(4)
NAME
sysmon -- system monitoring and power management interface
DESCRIPTION
The machine-independent sysmon is a general purpose framework for system monitoring and power management. The main components of sysmon
include:
o An ioctl(2) interface available via /dev/sysmon. The userland counterparts include utilities such as envstat(8) and daemons such
as powerd(8).
o An interface for the purpose of delivering different system and power events to userspace; sysmon_pswitch(9).
o A general purpose sensor framework, sysmon_envsys(9).
o A general purpose task queue, sysmon_taskq(9).
o An interface for watchdog timers.
FILES
/dev/sysmon
SEE ALSO
envsys(4), swsensor(4), envstat(8), powerd(8), wdogctl(8), pmf(9)
AUTHORS
Jason R. Thorpe <thorpej@NetBSD.org>
BSD
June 22, 2011 BSD