- 01 Oct, 2002 9 commits
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Christoph Hellwig authored
I see you just applied my patch to make destroy_workqueue do the flush. Fix up XFS for it.
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Christoph Hellwig authored
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Christoph Hellwig authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
into penguin.transmeta.com:/home/penguin/torvalds/repositories/kernel/linux
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Christoph Hellwig authored
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Christoph Hellwig authored
This is a huge performance drop for SMP, but at least XFS is working again. Expect a better solution soon.
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Ingo Molnar authored
This is the next iteration of the workqueue abstraction. The framework includes: - per-CPU queueing support. on SMP there is a per-CPU worker thread (bound to its CPU) and per-CPU work queues - this feature is completely transparent to workqueue-users. keventd automatically uses this feature. XFS can now update to work-queues and have the same per-CPU performance as it had with its per-CPU worker threads. - delayed work submission there's a new queue_delayed_work(wq, work, delay) function and a new schedule_delayed_work(work, delay) function. The later one is used to correctly fix former tq_timer users. I've reverted those changes in 2.5.40 that changed tq_timer uses to schedule_work() - eg. in the case of random.c or the tty flip queue it was definitely the wrong thing to do. delayed work means a timer embedded in struct work_struct. I considered using split struct work_struct and delayed_work_struct types, but lots of code actively uses task-queues in both delayed and non-delayed mode, so i went for the more generic approach that allows both methods of work submission. Delayed timers do not cause any other overhead in the normal submission path otherwise. - multithreaded run_workqueue() implementation the run_workqueue() function can now be called from multiple contexts, and a worker thread will only use up a single entryy - this property is used by the flushing code, and can potentially be used in the future to extend the number of per-CPU worker threads. - more reliable flushing there's now a 'pending work' counter, which is used to accurately detect when the last work-function has finished execution. It's also used to correctly flush against timed requests. I'm not convinced whether the old keventd implementation got this detail right. - i switched the arguments of the queueing function(s) per Jeff's suggestion, it's more straightforward this way. Driver fixes: i have converted almost every affected driver to the new framework. This cleaned up tons of code. I also fixed a number of drivers that were still using BHs (these drivers did not compile in 2.5.40). while this means lots of changes, it might ease the QA decision whether to put this patch into 2.5. The pach converts roughly 80% of all tqueue-using code to workqueues - and all the places that are not converted to workqueues yet are places that do not compile in vanilla 2.5.40 anyway, due to unrelated changes. I've converted a fair number of drivers that do not compile in 2.5.40, and i think i've managed to convert every driver that compiles under 2.5.40.
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Paul Mackerras authored
The patch below is a forward-port from 2.4 of a fix that went in to the 2.4.x PCMCIA code some time back. It makes sure that that we request I/O and memory regions from the correct resource (the parent of the PCMCIA bridge chip, for PCMCIA bridges connected to a PCI bus) rather than always requesting them from the top-level ioport_resource or iomem_resource.
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Hugh Dickins authored
Alessandro Suardi and Zlatko Calusic independently reported that Oracle cannot start on recent 2.5: excellent research by Zlatko quickly pointed to vm_pgoff buglet in the new split_vma.
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- 30 Sep, 2002 13 commits
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Linus Torvalds authored
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http://linux-scsi.bkbits.net/scsi-for-linus-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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James Bottomley authored
into mulgrave.(none):/home/jejb/BK/scsi-for-linus-2.5
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Mike Anderson authored
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Rolf Fokkens authored
Hi! Since the introduction of USER_HZ the SG_[GS]ET_TIMEOUT ioctls may have a serious BUG as userspace uses a different HZ from the HZ in kernelspace. In x86 HZ=1000 and USER_HZ=100, resulting in confusing timouts as the kernel measures time 10 times as fast as userspace. This patch is an attempt to fix this by transforming USER_HZ based timing to HZ based timing before storing it in timeout. To make sure that SG_GET_TIMEOUT and SG_SET_TIMEOUT behave consistently a field timeout_user is added which stores the exact value that's passed by SG_SET_TIMEOUT and it's returned on SG_GET_TIMEOUT. Rolf Fokkens fokkensr@fokkensr.vertis.nl P.S. this is the second post of this patch
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James Bottomley authored
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Andrew Morton authored
But it's called from scsi_add_lun()->scsi_alloc_sdev() before the type is known. The type is -1 all the time in scsi_initialise_merge_fn() and scsi always bounces. This patch makes it do the right thing - just enable block-highmem for all scsi devices. Jens had this to say: "I guess that block-highmem has been around long enough, that I can use the term 'historically' at least in the kernel sense :-) This extra check was added for IDE because each device type driver (ide-disk, ide-cd, etc) needed to be updated to not assume virtual mappings of request data was valid. I only did that for ide-disk, since this is the only one where bounce buffering really hurt performance wise. So while ide-cd and ide-tape etc could have been updated, I deemed it uninteresting and not worthwhile. Now, this was just carried straight into the scsi counter parts, conveniently, because of laziness. A quick glance at sr shows that it too can aviod bouncing easily (no changes needed). st may need some changes, though. So again, for scsi it was a matter of not impacting existing code in 2.4 too much. So TYPE_DISK check can be killed in 2.5 if someone does the work of checking that it is safe. I'm not so sure it will make eg your SCSI CD-ROM that much faster :-)"
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David Gibson authored
This removes an unused label in fs/devfs/base.c
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
into kroah.com:/home/greg/linux/BK/gregkh-2.5
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Randy Dunlap authored
It needs s/malloc.h/slab.h/ . It also forgets to free some memory on an error exit patch. Patch for 2.5.39 follows.
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David Brownell authored
Here are the scatterlist primitives there's been mail about before. Now the code has passed basic sanity testing, and is ready to merge into Linus' tree to start getting wider use. Greg, please merge! To recap, the routines are a utility layer packaging several usb core facilities to improve system performance. It's synchronous. The code uses functionality that drivers could use already, but generally haven't: - Request queueing. This is a big performance win. It lets device drivers help the hcds avoid wasted i/o bandwidth, by eliminating irq and scheduling latencies between requests. It can make a huge difference at high speed, when the latencies often exceed the time to handle each i/o request! - The new usb_map_sg() primitives, leveraging IOMMU hardware if it's there (better than entry-at-a-time mapping). - URB_NO_INTERRUPT transfer flag, a hint to hcds that they can avoid a 'success irq' for this urb. Only the urb for the last scatterlist entry really needs an IRQ, the others can be eliminated or delayed. (OHCI uses this today, and any HCD can safely ignore it.) The particular functionality in these APIs seemed to meet Matt's requirements for usb-storage, so I'd hope the 2.5 usb-storage code will start to use these routines in a while. (And maybe those two scanner drivers: hpusbscsi, microtek.) Brief summary of testing: this code seems correct for normal reads and writes, but the fault paths (including cancelation) haven't been tested yet. Both EHCI and OHCI seem to be mostly OK with these more aggressive queued loads, but may need small updates (like the two I sent yesterday). Unfortunately I have to report that UHCI and urb queueing will sometimes lock up my hardware (PIIX4), so while we're lots better than 2.4 this is still a bit of a trouble spot for now. I'll be making some testing software available shortly, which will help track down remaining HCD level problems by giving the queuing APIs (and some others!) a more strenuous workout than most drivers will, in their day-to-day usage. - Dave
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Matthew Dharm authored
Greg, attached is a patch designed for diagnostic purposes. Please apply to the 2.5 tree -- yes, we'll be removing this at some point in the future. It appears that we have a problem clearing halts. This patch causes a very clear message to be printed whenever a usb_stor_clear_halt() manages to work. So far, I haven't seen such a thing happen. And I've seen _lots_ of STALL conditions. This problem has likely been around for a while... however, it hasn't been noticed before because usb-storage was difficult to use because of other bugs. Heck, the most recent 'bk pull' is the first one for me in _months_ which let me boot all the way into X11. I'm going to hold my patch queue until this is resolved. On my test setup, it's easy to see this failing. I've tried with 4 different devices, with both UHCI and EHCI drivers. I don't want to confuse this problem with other patches... 'result' in this function always seems to be -32. Which is odd, because control endpoints shouldn't do that. I'm open to suggestions as to where to look for this bug, but my instincts are telling me that this is a core or HCD issue, not a usb-storage issue. On a positive note, this means that the error-recovery system gets a good workout.
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bk://bk.arm.linux.org.ukLinus Torvalds authored
into penguin.transmeta.com:/home/penguin/torvalds/repositories/kernel/linux
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- 01 Oct, 2002 4 commits
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Russell King authored
into flint.arm.linux.org.uk:/usr/src/linux-bk-2.5/linux-2.5-rmk
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Russell King authored
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Russell King authored
This corrects spelling mistakes, adds missed configuration for cpufreq, corrects free_irq comment, etc.
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Russell King authored
Add "IRQ_" prefix to these sa1111 irq numbers.
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- 30 Sep, 2002 14 commits
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Russell King authored
We must clear down all currently pending IRQs before servicing any IRQ on the chip. This prevents immediate recursion into the interrupt handling paths when we service the first IRQ.
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Russell King authored
This cset updates sa1100 code for the now merged cpufreq next-gen.
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Russell King authored
Update sa1100fb for recent fbcon changes, and move stork LCD power handling into machine specific file.
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Russell King authored
This didn't follow the LDM model correctly. The SA1111 is always a device on the root bus.
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Russell King authored
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Russell King authored
This cset updates the SA1111 core, PCMCIA, OHCI and keyboard drivers, allowing them to take advantage of the Linux device manager code; this implements initial suspend/resume support for the SA1111 in the core. Many existing drivers currently rely on the old PM-based interface for suspend/resume support.
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David Brownell authored
In a test where some memory corruption happened, I noticed an oops (null pointer exception in_irq) that's avoidable. Here's a patch that avoids it ... anyone seeing the err() is likely to hang some process, but that's better than the alternative. (Also inlines some used-once routines, saving a bit of space to make up for the new diagnostic.)
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David Brownell authored
In doing some more extensive testing of the urb queueing behavior, I noticed that (a) IOC wasn't always being set for each urb, while for now it needs to be set; (b) a qh patchup wasn't done quite where it should be. This resolves those two issues, as well as making it a bit less noisy to unlink lots of urbs at the once.
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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David Brownell authored
This has minor usbcore cleanups: DOC: - the changes passing a usb_interface to driver probe() and disconnect() weren't reflected in their adjacent docs. likewise they still said it was possible to get a null usb_device_id (no more). - the (root) hub API restrictions from rmk's ARM patch weren't flagged - mention the non-dma-coherent cache issue for usb_buffer_alloc() - mention disconnect() cleanup issue with usb_{control,bulk}_msg() [ you can't cancel those urbs from disconnect() ] CODE - make driver ioctl() use 'usb_interface' too ... this update also resolves an old 'one instance per device' bad assumption - module locking on driver->ioctl() was goofy, kept BKL way too long and didn't try_inc_mod_count() like the rest of usbcore - hcd unlink code treated iso inappropriately like interrupt; only interrupt still wants that automagic mode - move iso init out of ohci into shared submit_urb logic - remove interrupt transfer length restriction; hcds that don't handle packetization (just like bulk :) should be updated, but device drivers won't care for now.
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
/sbin/hotplug is now called when any device is added or removed from the system.
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