- 12 Apr, 2004 28 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jake Moilanen <moilanen@austin.ibm.com> Change the loglevel of an error log printed so it does not goto the console. Since error logs can be upto 2k in size, it can spam the console.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Will Schmidt <willschm@us.ibm.com> Correct comments for the offsets of fields in paca
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jake Moilanen <moilanen@austin.ibm.com> The JS20 uses devfn 0 for a HT->PCI bridge. The PHB devfn assumption does not hold for this case.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jake Moilanen <moilanen@austin.ibm.com> Allow PCI devices to use address that happens to fall in the ISA range, but still protect against ISA device accesses when there is not an ISA bus.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Anton Blanchard <anton@samba.org> Disable SMT snooze by default
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Olof Johansson <olof@austin.ibm.com> RTAS on IBM pSeries runs in real mode, so all pointers being passed in to it need to be in low memory. There's two places in the RAS code that passes in pointers to items on the stack, which might end up being above the limit. Below patch resolves this by creating a buffer in BSS + a lock for serialization. There's no reason to worry about contention on the lock, since rtas_call() also serializes on a single spinlock and this is an infrequent code path in the first place.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> On PPC64, to deal with the restrictions imposed by the PPC MMU's segment design, hugepages are only allowed to be mapping in two fixed address ranges, one 2-3G (for use by 32-bit processes) and one 1-1.5T (for use in 64-bit processes). This is quite limiting, particularly for 32-bit processes which want to use a lot of large page memory. This patch relaxes this restriction, and allows any of the low 16 segments (i.e. those below 4G) to be individually switched over to allow hugepage mappings (provided the segment does not already have any normal page mappings). The 1-1.5T fixed range for 64-bit processes remains.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> This is the iSeries virtual ethernet driver. David Gibson has taken you previous comments and hopefully sitisfied most of them. The driver has also undergone some more testing which showed up some bugs which have been addressed. Unfortunately, Anton is about to submit some other patches of mine which will sightly comflict with this. I will send a patch shortly that will (hopefully) fix that.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org> This patch from Julie DeWandel exports the symbol itLpNaca on iSeries machines, for the use of the viodasd driver.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org> This patch from Julie DeWandel makes CONFIG_VT default to N on iSeries machines which are using the iSeries virtual console driver viocons.c. The VT console and the viocons code can't coexist because they use the same tty numbers, that is, viocons supplies /dev/tty1. Without this patch the user has to figure out somehow that s/he has to turn on CONFIG_EMBEDDED in order to be able to turn off CONFIG_VT, which is really very non-obvious.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org> A recent patch that cleaned up some absolute/virt translation macros forgot one occurence, thus breaking g5 build with iommu support.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Olof Johansson <olof@austin.ibm.com> A bug snuck in during the rewrite of ppc64 IOMMU code. When a {pci,vio}_alloc_consistent() call fails, DMA_ERROR_CODE is returned instead of NULL.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> Found this again while looking at hugepage extensions. Haven't actually had it bite yet - the race is small and the other bug will never be triggered in 32-bit processes, and the function is rarely called on 64-bit processes. This patch fixes two bugs in the (same part of the) PPC64 hugepage code. First the method we were using to free stale PTE pages was not safe with some recent changes (race condition). BenH has fixed this to work in the new way. Second, we were not checking for a valid PGD entry before dereferencing the PMD page when scanning for stale PTE page pointers.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au> The PPC64 version of is_aligned_hugepage_range() is buggy. It is supposed to test not only that the given range is hugepage aligned, but that it lies within the address space allowed for hugepages. We were checking only that the given range intersected the hugepage range, not that it lay entirely within it. This patch fixes the problem and changes the name of some macros to make it less likely to make that misunderstanding again.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org> This patch fixes si_addr on some segfaults in 64 bits mode, it used to be bogus (address not passed to do_page_fault by the asm code after a failure to set an SLB entry).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org> Without this patch, executing an altivec instruction on an altivec capable CPU with a kernel that do not have CONFIG_ALTIVEC set would result in a kernel crash. (Fix forward ported from 2.4 by John Whitney <jwhitney-linuxppc@sands-edge.com>)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: William Lee Irwin III <wli@holomorphy.com> Now the scheduler text is in its own ELF section this branch is asking for an illegal displacement.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: William Lee Irwin III <wli@holomorphy.com> This addresses the issue with get_wchan() that the various functions acting as scheduling-related primitives are not, in fact, contiguous in the text segment. It creates an ELF section for scheduling primitives to be placed in, and places currently-detected (i.e. skipped during stack decoding) scheduling primitives and others like io_schedule() and down(), which are currently missed by get_wchan() code, into this section also. The net effects are more reliability of get_wchan()'s results and the new ability, made use of by this code, to arbitrarily place scheduling primitives in the source code without disturbing get_wchan()'s accuracy. Suggestions by Arnd Bergmann and Matthew Wilcox regarding reducing the invasiveness of the patch were incorporated during prior rounds of review. I've at least tried to sweep all arches in this patch.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Armin Schindler <armin@melware.de> With this patch the ISDN kernel CAPI code uses a per application workqueue with proper locking to prevent message re-ordering due to the fact a workqueue may run on another CPU at the same time. Also some locks for internal data is added. Removed global recv_queue work, use per application workqueue. Added proper locking mechanisms for application, controller and application workqueue function. Increased max. number of possible applications and controllers.
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Andrew Morton authored
The race is that con_close() can sleep, and drops the BKL while tty->count==1. But another thread can come into init_dev() and will take a new ref against the tty and start using it. But con_close() doesn't notice that new ref and proceeds to null out tty->driver_data while someone else is using the resurrected tty. So the patch serialises con_close() against init_dev() with tty_sem. Here's a test app which reproduced the oops instantly on 2-way. It realy needs to be run against all tty-capable devices. /* * Run this against a tty which nobody currently has open, such as /dev/tty9 */ #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <fcntl.h> #include <sys/ioctl.h> #include <linux/kd.h> void doit(char *filename) { int fd,x; fd = open(filename, O_RDWR); if (fd < 0) { perror("open"); exit(1); } ioctl(fd, KDKBDREP, &x); close(fd); } main(int argc, char *argv[]) { char *filename = argv[1]; for ( ; ; ) doit(filename); }
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Andrew Morton authored
Remove the down_tty_sem() and up_tty_sem() and replace them with open-coded up() and down(). This is an equivalent transformation. I assume these functions were created to open the possibility of per-tty semaphores at some time in the future. But the code which is protected by this lock deals with two tty's at the same time, and the next patch will need to release the lock after the tty has been destroyed.
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Andrew Morton authored
con_open() is called on every open of the tty, even if the tty is already all set up. We only need to do that initialisation if the tty is being set up for the very first time (tty->count == 1). So do that: check for tty_count == 1 inside console_sem() and if so, bypass all the unnecessary initialisation. Note that this patch reintroduces the con_close()-vs-init_dev() race+oops. This is because that oops is accidentally prevented because when it happens, con_open() reinstalls tty->driver_data even when tty->count > 1. But that's bogus, and when the race happens we end up running vcs_make_devfs() and vcs_remove_devfs() against the same console at the same time, producing indeterminate results. So the race needs to be fixed again, for real.
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Andrew Morton authored
- Remove unneeded casts of a void * - whitespace consistency.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Olof Johansson <olof@austin.ibm.com> It's currently a boolean, but that means that system_running goes to zero again when shutting down. So we then use code (in the page allocator) which is only designed to be used during bootup - it is marked __init. So we need to be able to distinguish early boot state from late shutdown state. Rename system_running to system_state and give it the three appropriate states.
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Andrew Morton authored
Nobody seems to have any outstanding work against devfs, so...
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> From: "Petri T. Koistinen" <petri.koistinen@iki.fi> 1) Various URLs in the Kconfig files are out of date: update them. 2) URLs should be of form <http://url-goes-here>. 3) References to files in the source should be of form <file:path-from-top> 4) Email addresses should be of form <foo@bar.com>
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@muc.de> Current x86-64 patchkit for 2.6.5. - Add drivers/firmware/Kconfig - Clarify description of CONFIG_IOMMU_DEBUG - Use correct gcc option to optimize for Intel CPUs - Add EDD support (Matt Domsch) - Add workaround for broken IOMMU on VIA hardware. Uses swiotlb there now. - Handle more than 8 local APICs (Suresh B Siddha) - Delete obsolete mtrr Makefile - Add x86_cache_alignment and set it up properly for P4 (128 bytes instead of 64bytes). Also report in /proc/cpuinfo - Minor cleanup in in_gate_area - Make asm-generic/dma-mapping.h compile with !CONFIG_PCI Just stub out all functions in this case. This is mainly to work around sysfs. - More !CONFIG_PCI compile fixes - Make u64 sector_t unconditional
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Ivan Kokshaysky authored
Herbert Xu noted: "The current stxncpy on alpha is still broken when it comes to single word, unaligned, src misalignment > dest misalignment copies. I've attached a program which demonstrates this problem." Ugh, indeed. It fails when there is a zero byte before the data. Thanks. Here is the fix for this (both regular and ev6 version).
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- 03 Apr, 2004 9 commits
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
We default to "long" (which is what POSIX says), but since a number of architectures have used "int" for historical reasons, we need to allow overrides. At least sparc64 needs this. Possibly others, but so far architecture maintainers haven't spoken up. ppc64 and x86-64 are known to be ok with the default "long".
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Richard Henderson authored
From Ivan Kokshaysky <ink@jurassic.park.msu.ru>.
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ssh://are/BK/axp-2.6Richard Henderson authored
into heffalump.twiddle.home:/home/rth/work/linux/axp-2.6
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Richard Henderson authored
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Richard Henderson authored
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Richard Henderson authored
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Richard Henderson authored
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Richard Henderson authored
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- 02 Apr, 2004 3 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Matt Porter <mporter@kernel.crashing.org> Patch fixes a latent bug in the PPC44x tlb management code.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Matt Porter <mporter@kernel.crashing.org> Make a couple 4xx defconfigs functional again.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Matt Porter <mporter@kernel.crashing.org> IDs new PPC44x silicon.
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