- 22 Mar, 2003 18 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
This function was recently converted to use rwsem locking. But it is called from interrupts in (at least) buffer_io_error(). And we do want a function like this to be robust and atomic. So convert it to use spinlocking.
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Andrew Morton authored
Filesystems which are using generic_file_llseek() do not need lock_kernel() in their readir implementations. All operations (including llseek) are serialised by the directory's i_sem. Just fix ext2 and ext3 for now. Others may need locking between readdir and who-knows-what.
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Andrew Morton authored
This function is called a lot. Every brk(). The atomic_add() against a global counter hurts on large SMP machines. The patch simply reduces the rate at which that atomic operation is performed, by accumulating a per-cpu count which is spilled into the global counter when the local counter overflows. It trades off efficiency for a little inaccuracy. I tried various implementations involving kmalloc_percpu() and open-coded per-cpu arrays in a generic "per-cpu counter" thing. They all were surprisingly sucky - the additional cache misses involved in walking the more complex data structures really showed up.
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Andrew Morton authored
vmtruncate() does not need lock_kernel(). And lock_kernel() is not taken by other vmtruncate() callers.
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Andrew Morton authored
Turn on MS_ONE_SECOND in ext2 and ext3.
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Andrew Morton authored
For some filesystems (ext3, reiserfs at least), ->dirty_inode() is very expensive. The kernel is currently calling mark_inode_dirty() at up to 1000 times/sec/inode. But there is no need to do this if the filesystem cannot store high-resolution times on-disk. This patch restores the optimisation of only dirtying the filesystem inode when its on-disk representation has actually changed. The filesystem will set the MS_ONE_SECOND flag in sb->s_flags to indicate that it wishes to receive this treatment. The patch does reduce the call rate to ext3_mark_inode_dirty() from 1000/sec to 1/sec, but it doesn't make much difference at all to performance because we're calling ext3_mark_inode_dirty() from other callsites as well. Those can be optimised too.
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Andrew Morton authored
ppc64 support for file file-offset-in-pte
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Andrew Morton authored
Path from Andi Kleen <ak@muc.de> Add x86_64 support for file offsets in pte's.
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Andrew Morton authored
filemap_populate() is currently doing page-at-a-time synchronous I/O. Add a call to do_page_cache_readahead() in there so we do a big slurp of IO first. This is minimal - a lot of the filemap_populate() code can be rationalised yet.
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Andrew Morton authored
This patch requires arch support. I have patches for ia32, ppc64 and x86_64. Other architectures will break. It is a five-minute fix. See http://mail.nl.linux.org/linux-mm/2003-03/msg00174.html for implementation details. Patch from: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu> the attached patch, against BK-curr, is a preparation to make remap_file_pages() usable on swappable vmas as well. When 'swapping out' shared-named mappings the page offset is written into the pte. it takes one bit from the swap-type bits, otherwise it does not change the pte layout - so it should be easy to adapt any other architecture to this change as well. (this patch does not introduce the protection-bits-in-pte approach used in my previous patch.) On 32-bit pte sizes with an effective usable pte range of 29 bits, this limits mmap()-able file size to 4096 * 2^29 == 2 TBs. If the usable range is smaller, then the maximum mmap() size is reduced as well. The worst-case i found (PPC) was 2 hw-reserved bits in the swap-case, which limits us to 1 TB filesize. Is there any other hw that has an even worse ratio of sw-usable pte bits? this mmap() limit can be eliminated by simply not converting the swapped out pte to a file-pte, but clearning it and falling back to the linear mapping upon swapin. This puts the limit into remap_file_pages() alone, but i really hope no-one wants to use remap_file_pages() on a 32-bit platform, on a larger than 1-2 TB file. sys_remap_file_pages() is now enforcing the 'prot' parameter to be zero. This restriction might be lifted in the future - i really hope we can have more flexible remapping once 64-bit platforms are commonplace - eg. things like memory debuggers could just use the permission bits directly, instead of creating many small vmas. i've tested swappable nonlinear ptes and they are swapped out/in correctly. some other changes in -A0 relative to 2.5.63-BK: - slightly smarter TLB flushing in install_page(). This is still only a stupid helper functions - a more efficient 'walk the pagecache tree and pagetable at once and use TLB-gather' implementation is preferred. - cleanup: pass on pgprot_t instead of unsigned long prot. - some sanity checks to make sure file_pte() rules are followed. - do not reduce the vma's default protection to PROT_NONE when using remap_file_pages() on it. With swappable ptes this is now safe.
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Paul Mackerras authored
This patch fixes a couple of bugs and compile errors in the powerbook media bay driver. It was getting initialized after the IDE subsystem, whereas it needs to be initialized before so that the IDE subsystem can see the CD-ROM drive in the bay.
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Paul Mackerras authored
This patch updates the mac53c94 scsi HBA driver, used on older powermacs, to correspond with the recent scsi subsystem changes, to use the PCI DMA API, to not panic, and to use a spinlock instead of save_flags/restore_flags/cli/sti.
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Paul Mackerras authored
This patch updates the `mesh' scsi driver used on older powermacs to correspond with recent changes in the scsi subsystem (things like using cmd->device->id instead of cmd->target).
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Paul Mackerras authored
This patch forward-ports various fixes to the driver for the PMU (power manager unit) on powermacs and powerbooks from 2.4, and in particular, some improvements to the battery charge calculations. From Ben Herrenschmidt.
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Paul Mackerras authored
The patch below removes the uses of save_flags/restore_flags/cli etc. from the macserial driver and replaces them with a spinlock.
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Paul Mackerras authored
This patch updates the CUDA driver (the power/reset/ADB controller on older powermacs) to fix some SMP issues and to match the 2.4 version of the driver. From Ben Herrenschmidt.
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Paul Mackerras authored
This patch updates include/linux/adb.h and include/linux/pmu.h with some additional definitions that we need on powermacs and powerbooks.
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bk://ppc.bkbits.net/for-linus-ppcLinus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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- 24 Mar, 2003 1 commit
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Allen Curtis authored
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- 23 Mar, 2003 6 commits
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Paul Mackerras authored
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Allen Curtis authored
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Paul Mackerras authored
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Paul Mackerras authored
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Paul Mackerras authored
into samba.org:/home/paulus/kernel/for-linus-ppc
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Paul Mackerras authored
into samba.org:/home/paulus/kernel/for-linus-ppc
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- 22 Mar, 2003 15 commits
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Dominik Brodowski authored
Convert the pcnet_cs driver to use the new registration call.
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Dominik Brodowski authored
Remove the linked list of pcmcia_drivers. It didn't even handle removal of a driver properly, so it won't be missed all that much.
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Dominik Brodowski authored
Register all pcmcia drivers with the pcmcia bus within the old register_pccard_driver() function. Alternatively, a new registration function "pcmcia_register_driver()" (and its counterpart, "pcmcia_unregister_driver()") can be used.
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Dominik Brodowski authored
Register a bus_type pcmcia_bus_type. This means the initialization of the ds module needs to be done in two levels: one quite early (subsys_initcall) so that drivers may use the bus_type; the other one must stay that late (late_initcall). As only one initcall can be specified within one module, some tweaking is needed.
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Dominik Brodowski authored
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http://fbdev.bkbits.net/fbdev-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into penguin.transmeta.com:/home/penguin/torvalds/repositories/kernel/linux
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Alan Cox authored
Since it gets 1 device right it wasnt hard to fix 8)
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Alan Cox authored
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Alan Cox authored
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Alan Cox authored
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Alan Cox authored
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Alan Cox authored
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Alan Cox authored
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Alan Cox authored
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