- 03 Feb, 2003 2 commits
-
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
We generated the intermediate files that contain checksums for unresolved symbols in .tmp_versions, which had the disadvantage that is obscured what's going on during the build. Just generate them as .ver.[co] right next to the actual objects in the object tree.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
CONFIG_MODVERSIONING was a temporary name introduced to distinguish between the old and new module version implementation. Since the traces of the old implementation are now gone from the build system, we rename the config option back in order to not confuse users more than necessary in 2.6. Also, remove some historic modversions cruft throughout the tree.
-
- 25 Jan, 2003 3 commits
-
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
MODVERDIR was defined in the build-only section, but it's needed for "make mrproper" as well.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
When building linux-2.5.59 with gcc-3.3 (on s390, if that matters), I get a warning like "warning: `__ksymtab___foo' defined but not used" each time that EXPORT_SYMBOL is used. by Arnd Bergmann
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
We support tags and TAGS already, so... by Louis Zhuang
-
- 24 Jan, 2003 12 commits
-
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
Yeah, the final step! Now that we've got the checksums for the exported symbols and the checksums of the unresolved symbols for the module we're loading, let's compare and see. Again, we allow to load a module which has the version info stripped, but taint the kernel in that case.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
We'll need that index to find the version checksum for the symbol in a bit.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
In the case of CONFIG_MODVERSIONING, the build step will only generate preliminary <module>.o objects, and an additional postprocessing step is necessary to record the versions of the unresolved symbols and add them into the final <module>.ko The version information for unresolved symbols is again recorded into a special section, "__versions", which contains an array of symbol name strings and checksum (struct modversion_info). Size is here not an issue, since this section will not be stored permanently in kernel memory. Makefile.modver takes care of the following steps: o Collect the version information for all exported symbols from vmlinux and all modules which export symbols. o For each module, generate a C file which contains the modversion information for all unresolved symbols in that module. o For each module, compile that C file to an object file o Finally, link the <module>.ko using the preliminary <module.o> + the version information above. The first two steps are currently done by not very efficient scripting, so there's room for performance improvement using some helper C code.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
With CONFIG_MODVERSIONING, we need to record the versions of the unresolved symbols in the final <module>.ko, which we only know after we finished the descending build. So we only build <module>.o in that case. Also, keep track of the modules we built, the post-processing step needs a list of all modules. Keeping track is done by touching .tmp_versions/path/to/module.ko
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
For extracting the versions and finding the unresolved symbols, we need multi-part modules to be linked together already, so this patch separates the building of the modules as a .o file from generating the .ko in the next step.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
Store the information on the checksum alongside the rest of the information on exported symbols. To actually use them, we need something to check them against first, though ;) Also, fix some conditional debug code to actually compile.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
Again, the license string is only used at load time, so no need to store it permanently in kernel memory.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
modprobe --force allows to load modules without a matching version magic string. This invalidation is done by clearing the SHF_ALLOC flag, so check it in the kernel. Also, clear the SHF_ALLOC flag unconditionally, since we don't need to store the __vermagic section in the kernel, it's only checked once at load time.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
Up to now, we had a way to store the checksums associated with the exported symbols, but they were not filled in yet. This is done with this patch, using the linker to actually do that for us. The comment added with this patch explains what magic exactly is going on.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
This patch adds the new config option CONFIG_MODVERSIONING which will be the new way of checking for ABI changes between kernel and module code. This and the following patches are in part based on an initial implementation by Rusty Russell and I believe some of the ideas go back to discussions on linux-kbuild, Keith Owens and Rusty. though I'm not sure I think credit for the basic idea of storing version info in sections goes to Keith Owens and Rusty. o Rename __gpl_ksymtab to __ksymtab_gpl since that looks more consistent and appending _gpl instead of putting it into the middle simplifies sharing code for EXPORT_SYMBOL() and EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL() o Add CONFIG_MODVERSIONING o If CONFIG_MODVERSIONING is set, add a section __kcrctab{,_gpl}, which contains the ABI checksums for the exported symbols listed in __ksymtab{,_crc} Since we don't know the checksums yet at compilation time, just make them an unresolved symbol which gets filled in by the linker later.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
Though the CONFIG_MODVERSIONS option was removed with rusty's module rewrite and the associated code broken, a lot of that code was still living on here and there. Now it's gone for good.
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
rusty's module rewrite removed the reference to EXPORT_SYMTAB from linux/module.h, and it's not used anywhere else, either.
-
- 17 Jan, 2003 1 commit
-
-
Kai Germaschewski authored
In a discussion with Sam Ravnborg, the following problem became apparent: Most vmlinux.lds.S (but the ARM ones) used the following construct: __start___ksymtab = .; __ksymtab : AT(ADDR(__ksymtab) - LOAD_OFFSET) { *(__ksymtab) } __stop___ksymtab = .; However, the link will align the beginning of the section __ksymtab according to the requirements for the input sections. If '.' (current location counter) wasn't sufficiently aligned before, it's possible that __ksymtab actually starts at an address after the one __start___ksymtab points to, which will confuse the users of __start___ksymtab badly. The fix is to follow what the ARM Makefiles did for this case, ie __ksymtab : AT(ADDR(__ksymtab) - LOAD_OFFSET) { __start___ksymtab = .; *(__ksymtab) __stop___ksymtab = .; }
-
- 16 Jan, 2003 22 commits
-
-
Linus Torvalds authored
-
-
Russell King authored
__virt_to_bus/__bus_to_virt depended on INTEGRATOR_HDR0_SDRAM_BASE Unfortunately, this is defined in arch-integrator/platform.h, and we really don't want to include it in memory.h. We instead use BUS_OFFSET, which will eventually depend on the CPU number in the system.
-
Russell King authored
Only default BLK_DEV_IDEDMA on BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_ICS if ARCH_ACORN is set, not if ARM is set. There are PCI ARM systems out there!
-
Russell King authored
Ensure that we clean up properly after initialisation error, releasing all claimed resources in an orderly manner and returning the correct error code.
-
Russell King authored
-
Russell King authored
-
Russell King authored
-
Russell King authored
-
Russell King authored
Add cfbfillrect / cfbcopyarea / cfbimgblt objects for SA1100fb. Remove redundant "pm" member.
-
Jeff Wiedemeier authored
Found a buglet in the marvel code -- doesn't change the number of IRQS just the logic to get there.. This applies on top of the other marvel code. /jeff
-
Richard Henderson authored
into kanga.twiddle.net:/home/rth/linux/axp-2.5
-
Richard Henderson authored
-
Richard Henderson authored
to header files where they belong.
-
Richard Henderson authored
of AGP and SRMCONS patches.
-
Richard Henderson authored
From Jeff.Wiedemeier@hp.com.
-
Richard Henderson authored
(Titan / Marvel), Kconfig and headers. From Jeff Wiedemeier.
-
Martin J. Bligh authored
Patch from Erich Focht This adds a hook to rebalance globally across nodes every NODE_BALANCE_RATE iterations of the rebalancer. This allows us to easily tune on an architecture specific basis how often we wish to rebalance - machines with higher NUMA ratios (more expensive off-node access) will want to do this less often. It's currently set to 100 for NUMA-Q and 10 for other machines. If the imbalance between nodes is > 125%, we'll rebalance them. The hook for this is added to the NUMA definition of cpus_to_balance, so again, no impact on non-NUMA machines.
-
Martin J. Bligh authored
Patch from Michael Hohnbaum This adds a hook, sched_balance_exec(), to the exec code, to make it place the exec'ed task on the least loaded queue. We have less state to move at exec time than fork time, so this is the cheapest point to cross-node migrate. Experience in Dynix/PTX and testing on Linux has confirmed that this is the cheapest time to move tasks between nodes. It also macro-wraps changes to nr_running, to allow us to keep track of per-node nr_running as well. Again, no impact on non-NUMA machines.
-
Martin J. Bligh authored
Patch from Martin J. Bligh This adds a small hook to the find_busiest_queue routine to allow us to specify a mask of which CPUs to search over. In the NUMA case, it will only balance inside the node (much cheaper to search, and stops tasks from bouncing across nodes, which is very costly). The cpus_to_balance routine is conditionally defined to ensure no impact to non-NUMA machines. This is a tiny NUMA scheduler, but it needs the assistance of the second and third patches in order to spread tasks across nodes.
-
Christoph Hellwig authored
Another left-over from ancient module code, it was supposed to return non-zero if the module has a use count, but currently it always evaluates to 0. There are a few users of different types: (1) ioctl that perform a while(MOD_IN_USE) MOD_DEC_USE_COUNT loop. Just rip them out, we now have forced module unloading. (2) printk's that moan if the use-count in not zero in the exitfunc. Just rip them out, this can't happen. (3) if(MOD_IN_USE) MOD_DEC_USE_COUNT constructs in ->close of a few serial drivers. Just remove the conditional, we did a MOD_INC_USE_COUNT in ->open. (4) This one is interesting: drivers/sbus/char/display7seg.c uses the module use count to track openers. Replace this with an atomic_t. In addition remove tons of stale comments in network driver that aren't understandable for anyone who doesn't know ancient Linux module semantics.
-
Andi Kleen authored
x86-64 updates for 2.5.58. Changes only x86-64 specific files. - Rewrote module allocation. Lots of bugs fixed. Module loading should work now again. - Kconfig help fixes from Randy Dunlap - Makefile cleanups from Pavel Machek and Sam Ravnborg - Assembly cleanups from Pavel - defconfig update - Better strlen_user/strnlen_user - Merge with i386: new ptrace commands, 32bit vsyscall signal trampolines new deactivate_mm, add asm/bug.h - Make sure initramfs is freed after booting (thanks to Kai for the hint) - User per cpu data for profile counters (Ravikiran Thirumalai) - 32bit compat_* updates from Stephen Rothwell - Fix race in context switch. The exception handler for bogus segment loads in __switch_to needs to keep interrupts disabled, otherwise an interrupt can deadlock on scheduler locks. Also make sure they don't printk or set oops_in_progress during printk because printk does a wake_up too. - Disable 64bit GS base changes for processes. I cannot get it to work reliably. - Clear IOPL on kernel entry
-