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authorDominik Brodowski <linux@dominikbrodowski.net>2010-08-15 08:38:38 +0200
committerDominik Brodowski <linux@dominikbrodowski.net>2010-09-29 17:20:25 +0200
commit2262054e74b4b26ed56a8535c1259f6c6c2862a4 (patch)
treefbcd0aa7879408b9676c2df6c7514e5d7428880a /drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c
parent06b3a1d12f41b592972643f8b84015d6c03dc576 (diff)
pcmcia: remove obsolete and wrong comments
What's worse than no comment? A wrong comment. Several PCMCIA device drivers contained the same comments, which were based on how the PCMCIA subsystem worked in the old days of 2.4., and which were originally part of a "dummy_cs" driver. These comments no longer matched at all what is happening now, and therefore should be removed. Tested-by: Wolfram Sang <w.sang@pengutronix.de> Signed-off-by: Dominik Brodowski <linux@dominikbrodowski.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c')
-rw-r--r--drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c69
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 69 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c b/drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c
index fabe91a8db2..c96e19da294 100644
--- a/drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c
+++ b/drivers/net/wireless/atmel_cs.c
@@ -63,42 +63,15 @@ MODULE_SUPPORTED_DEVICE("Atmel at76c50x PCMCIA cards");
/*====================================================================*/
-/*
- The event() function is this driver's Card Services event handler.
- It will be called by Card Services when an appropriate card status
- 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.
-*/
-
static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link);
static void atmel_release(struct pcmcia_device *link);
-/*
- The attach() and detach() entry points are used to create and destroy
- "instances" of the driver, where each instance represents everything
- needed to manage one actual PCMCIA card.
-*/
-
static void atmel_detach(struct pcmcia_device *p_dev);
typedef struct local_info_t {
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)
{
local_info_t *local;
@@ -116,15 +89,6 @@ static int atmel_probe(struct pcmcia_device *p_dev)
return atmel_config(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)
{
dev_dbg(&link->dev, "atmel_detach\n");
@@ -134,14 +98,6 @@ static void atmel_detach(struct pcmcia_device *link)
kfree(link->priv);
}
-/*======================================================================
-
- 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.
-
- ======================================================================*/
-
/* Call-back function to interrogate PCMCIA-specific information
about the current existance of the card */
static int card_present(void *arg)
@@ -176,18 +132,6 @@ static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link)
link->config_flags |= CONF_ENABLE_IRQ | CONF_AUTO_SET_VPP |
CONF_AUTO_AUDIO | CONF_AUTO_SET_IO;
- /*
- 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
- and accurate CIS. In practice, a driver usually "knows" most of
- these things without consulting the CIS, and most client drivers
- will only use the CIS to fill in implementation-defined details.
- */
if (pcmcia_loop_config(link, atmel_config_check, NULL))
goto failed;
@@ -196,11 +140,6 @@ static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link)
goto failed;
}
- /*
- 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.
- */
ret = pcmcia_enable_device(link);
if (ret)
goto failed;
@@ -223,14 +162,6 @@ static int atmel_config(struct pcmcia_device *link)
return -ENODEV;
}
-/*======================================================================
-
- 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)
{
struct net_device *dev = ((local_info_t*)link->priv)->eth_dev;