Removing ifdefs makes the changes more invasive and the suspend/resume code then has to be addressed, which I've avoided. The suspend/resume code path can't be tested on m68k macs and the common code paths I can't easily test on a powermac. This patch should not be needed because the chip reset shouldn't leave the tx and rx interrupts enabled. Those interrupts are explicitly enabled only after request_irq(), so patching the master interrupt enable behaviour should be redundant. But that's not the case in practice. The chip reset code is already messy. I was inclined towards ifdefs and reluctant to share more code after practical experience suggested possible differences in the SCC/ESCC devices. I guess I was hoping that the powermac maintainers might prefer ifdefs to increased risk of destabilising the driver on powermacs... But a more invasive patch would make for better code. I will see if I can borrow a suitable PCI PowerMac.
Please do the more invasive patch, I'll beat it up on powermacs. Cheers, Ben. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-m68k" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html