- 08 Nov, 2002 15 commits
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Paul Mackerras authored
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Paul Mackerras authored
With these changes the boot wrapper successfully builds, although this may not be the absolute best way to do things.
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Paul Mackerras authored
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Paul Mackerras authored
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Paul Mackerras authored
This didn't compile since sd_find_target is gone, and is to move into userspace anyway.
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Paul Mackerras authored
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Paul Mackerras authored
This moves the sections which are read-only (e.g. exception table, kallsyms data) to go before the read/write data section, and the feature fixup section into the init data area. It also adds the initramfs section.
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Tom Rini authored
defaults for the advanced kernel config options.
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Paul Mackerras authored
We need __div64_32 exported, and flush_icache_page is now a noop so it shouldn't be exported.
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Tom Rini authored
This simplifies the C code by removing some #ifdefs.
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Paul Mackerras authored
into samba.org:/home/paulus/kernel/for-linus-ppc
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Paul Mackerras authored
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Paul Mackerras authored
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Paul Mackerras authored
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Paul Mackerras authored
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- 07 Nov, 2002 1 commit
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bk://source.mvista.com/linux-2.5-for-paulusPaul Mackerras authored
into samba.org:/home/paulus/kernel/for-linus-ppc
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- 06 Nov, 2002 24 commits
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Neil Brown authored
Just a new PCI ID (and get twice the MegaHz :-).
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Rob Weryk authored
This makes VT8653 (VIA Apollo Pro266T) work with AGP. I had someone test it and verify it works.
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Paul Mackerras authored
This fixes a minor typo in sl82c105.c which stops it from compiling.
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Paul Mackerras authored
This updates the powermac IDE driver in 2.5 so it uses the 2.5 kernel interfaces and types rather than the 2.4 ones. It also makes it use blk_rq_map_sg rather than its own code to set up scatter/gather lists in pmac_ide_build_sglist, and makes it use ide_lock instead of io_request_lock.
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Paul Mackerras authored
This updates the macserial driver in 2.5 so it compiles and works. The main changes are to use schedule_work instead of task queues and BHs. The patch also removes the wait_key method. I know we need to change macserial to use the new serial infrastructure. I'm posting this patch in case it is useful to anyone trying to compile up a kernel for a powermac at the moment.
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Davide Libenzi authored
- Some constant adjusted - Comments added - Better hash initialization - Correct timeout setup - Added __KERNEL__ bypass to avoid userspace inclusion problems - Cleaned up locking - Function poll_init_wait() now calls poll_init_wait_ex() - Event return fix ( Jay Vosburgh ) - Use <linux/hash.h> for the hash
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Neil Brown authored
If a rpc operation indicates that response should be dropped (e.g. kmalloc failure) we must still call pc_release to release anything it may have allocated.
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Neil Brown authored
This allows NFSv3 to manage 4096byte symlinks. Also remove now-unused svcbuf_reserver function. This was used to reserve space in output buffer for 'data', but now this is stored in separate page.
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Neil Brown authored
rq_res->len was not always updated properly. It is only needed in the sendto routine, so we calculate it just before that is called, and don't bother updating it anywhere else.
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Neil Brown authored
From Hirokazu Takahashi <taka@valinux.co.jp> This patch changes read and readdir in nfsd. read: If the file supports readpage, we use it to collect pages out of the page cache and to attache them directly to the outgoing nfs reply. The reduces the number of copies by one, and if the filesystem/device driver didn't copy the data, and if the network card can support not copying the data, then you get zero-copy reads. readdir: A separate page is used for stoing the readdir response so that a fill PAGE_SIZE bytes of reply can be supported.
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Neil Brown authored
From Hirokazu Takahashi <taka@valinux.co.jp> As all rpc server replies are now in well defined pages, we can use ->sendpage to send these replies, and so make use for zero-copy transmit on network cards that support it.
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Neil Brown authored
A partial block write over a block on a failed device would need to pre-read that block, which means pre-read all blocks in stripe and generate that block. But the generate-block code never checked for this possibility, so it wouldn't happen.
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Neil Brown authored
When analysing a stripe in handle_stripe we set bits R5_Wantread or R5_Wantwrite to indicate if a read or write is needed. We don't actually schedule the IO immediately as this is done under a spinlock (sh->lock) and generic_make_request can block. Instead we check these bits after the lock has been lifted and then schedule the IO. But once the lock has been lifted we aren't safe against multiple access, and it is possible that the IO will be scheduled never, or twice. So, we use test_and_clear to check and potentially schedule the IO. This wasn't a problem in 2.4 because the equivalent information was stored on the stack instead of in the stripe. We also make sure bi_io_vec[0] has correct values as a previous call to generic_make_request may have changed them.
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Neil Brown authored
From Angus Sawyer <angus.sawyer@dsl.pipex.com>: 1. Null pointer dereference in end_sync_read r1_bio->read_disk is not initialised correctly in sync_request . this is used in end_sync_read to reference the structure conf->mirror[read_disk].rdev which with one disk missing is NULL. 2. Null pointer dereference in mempool_free() This is a race between close_sync() conf->r1_bufpool =3D NULL and put_buf() mempool_free(). bio completion -> resume_device -> put_buf -> mempool_free(r1_bufpool) | [ wakeup] | close_sync() -> r1_bufpool = NULL; The patch attached reorders the mempool_free before the barrier is released and merges resume_device() into put_buf(), (they are only used together). Otherwise I have kept the locking and wakeups identical to the existing code. (maybe this could be streamlined) 3. BUG() at close_sync() if (waitqueue_active(&conf->wait_resume). This occurs with and without the patch for (2). I think this is a false BUG(). From what I understand of the device barrier code, there is nothing wrong with make_request() waiting on wait_resume when this test is made. Therefore I have removed it (the wait_idle test is still correct). 4. raid1 tries to start a resync if there is only one working drive, which is pretty pointless, and noisy. We notice that special case and avoid the resync.
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Neil Brown authored
Roughly in order of patch: 1/ xor.h is never needed in md.c 2/ set sb_loaded when we 'sync' mddev to rdev as well as when we load sb into rdev from disk. 2/ due to lifetime changes, active count can be 2 when we stop array 3/ due to lifetime changes, we need to explicitly clear the ->pers when we stop an array 4/ autostart can only work for 0.90.0 superblocks. None others would be silly enough to store device numbers for all devices in the superblock... 5/ we had lost the setting of 'sb' when auto-starting an array. 6/ Code currently calls export_rdev(start_rdev) when IS_ERR(start_rdev), which causes an oops. 7/ /proc/mdstat contents error: code does not take into account that delayed resyncs can wait with curr_resync = 1 or 2. 8/ There is a premature "return NOTIFY_DONE", that possibly was in for debugging once...
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Trond Myklebust authored
Make sure we drain the entire list of pages that failed to get added to the mapping.
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bk://linux-scsi.bkbits.net/scsi-dledfordLinus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Christoph Hellwig authored
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Christoph Hellwig authored
SGI Modid: 2.5.x-xfs:slinx:132214a
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Christoph Hellwig authored
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Christoph Hellwig authored
SGI Modid: 2.5.x-xfs:slinx:132176a
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Stephen Lord authored
SGI Modid: 2.5.x-xfs:slinx:132045a
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Stephen Lord authored
SGI Modid: 2.5.x-xfs:slinx:131939a
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