- 07 Jan, 2003 11 commits
-
-
Henning Meier-Geinitz authored
This patch adds vendor/product ids for two Visioneer scanners. The patch is on top of the ioctl patch.
-
Henning Meier-Geinitz authored
This patch removes the link in Kconfig to Documentation/usb/scanner-hp-sane.txt which was removed by the documentation update.
-
Henning Meier-Geinitz authored
This patch updates the documentation for the USB scanner driver. The details: Documentation/usb/scanner.txt: - Amended for linux-2.5.54 - Added information about read_timeout - Added more details about /proc/bus/usb/devices - Added/updated links - Added pointers two "special" scanner drivers - Reordering, spell-checking, formatting - Used /dev/usb/scanner[0-15] instead of /dev/usbscanner[0-15] - Removed some basic USB configuration stuff - Added EHCI - Removed some more references to HP Documentation/usb/scanner-hp-sane.txt: Removed completely. This was a very outdated text for some HP scanners. All of this is explained in the documentation of the user-space SANE tools. Links and a short explanation about SANE was added to scanner.txt instead. This is the (slightly adapted) patch you already apllied for 2.4.
-
Henning Meier-Geinitz authored
This patch adds locking to ioctl_scanner() which was completely lacking until now. The patch is originally from Oliver Neukum <oliver@neukum.name>. The patch was forward-ported from 2.4.
-
Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
-
Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
-
Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
-
Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
This was suggested by many people, Randy Dunlap being the most vocal :)
-
Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
Thanks to Dave Jones for pointing this out.
-
Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
Thanks to Dave Jones for pointing this out.
-
Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
-
- 06 Jan, 2003 22 commits
-
-
Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
Thanks to Dave Jones for pointing this out.
-
Matthew Dharm authored
This patch removes the (often troublesome) usb_stor_transfer_length() function. We've finally gotten all the command initiators to send the correct values in the srb->request_bufflen field, so this is no longer needed. There are probably some sanity checks that can also be removed now, but that's for a later patch.
-
Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
-
David Brownell authored
I wrote this a while back, finally debugged it. This covers some functionality that 2.5 newly demands of all HCDs: control requests can be queued. (Example: a user mode driver can talk on one interface, and a kernel mode one can talk on another, no need to handshake about who can make control requests.) The good news is that all the HCDs seem (light testing) to do the right things ... until some of the requests (intentionally) trigger routine faults (like protocol stalls) which the HCDs need to recover from. At that point, uhci-hcd started acting confused (it's got newish queueing code); details will come separately. The other two HCDs acted fine. I had expected more trouble there, maybe it'll show up later on.
-
David Brownell authored
OK here's the version that without the kernel version #ifdef that helped the backport ... it fixes the build by restoring the "debug support only if CONFIG_USB_DEBUG" semantics.
-
Oliver Neukum authored
this is the 2.5 version of the 2.4 fix - proper freeing of skbs
-
Petko Manolov authored
this diff is agains the latest linux-2.5; set mac address at dev->open() (as per Jeff Garzik :-)
-
Petko Manolov authored
Same as the previous email, just against latest linux-2.5 tree. Sorry about the diffs - i can't sync with usb-2.5.
-
David Brownell authored
More Zaurii. That model will be interesting from the perspective of "usb gadget drivers", lots of flexible endpoints are available.
-
David Brownell authored
These don't affect the hang I'm hunting for, but paranoia argues the patch is better integrated than not: - prevent resubmit-from-completion looping in_irq if the transfers complete really fast. (likely never seen, but...) - grab ehci lock before reading irq status; should be harmless except in one host error cleanup-after-death
-
Rusty Russell authored
Various archs (i386, m68k, s390, s390x, m68k, parisc, um, x86_64) implement kernel_text_address. Put this in kernel/extable.c, and the module iteration inside module.c. Other than cleanliness, this finally allows the module list and lock to be static to kernel/module.c (you didn't think I actually cared about those archs did you?) It also drops the module->init_size to zero when it's discarded, so bounds checking is simplified (and the /proc/modules size statistic will be more accurate, too).
-
Rusty Russell authored
The declaration of `module_frob_arch_sections' in moduleloader.h (and the definitions in most of the module.c files) are inconsistent with the definition in the PPC's module.c -- in the latter the first two arguments are not declared `const', whereas everyplace else they are. PS. secstrings can be modded to: if an arch can't handle discarding init, it simply renames the .init sections.
-
Richard Henderson authored
Oops in fb_set_cmap caused by palette_cmap.transp uninitialized. By inspection, fb_blank appears to have the same problem.
-
bk://linux-dj.bkbits.net/agpgartLinus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
-
Bjorn Helgaas authored
This removes the agpgart assumption that memory is contiguous.
-
Bjorn Helgaas authored
[Forward port of a 2.4 patch that got applied last month -- DJ] AGP/DRM currently assume that GATT entries can be converted to physical addresses with a simple mask. Additionally, agpgart assumes in a couple places that the mask is ~0xfff, i.e., that all the GART control bits are in the low 12 bits. Both assumptions are bogus, so: Make agp_memory.memory[] (exported from agpgart to DRM) contain physical addresses, not GATT entries. DRM assumes agp_memory contains GATT entries, and it converts them to physical addresses with "paddr = agp_memory.memory[i] & mask". 460GX requires both a shift and a mask, so exporting plain physical addresses and a mask of ~0UL allows agpgart to add 460GX support without requiring DRM interface changes.
-
Dave Jones authored
-
Dominik Brodowski authored
- global loops_per_jiffy, x86 cpu_khz and x86 fast_gettimeoffset_quotient can only be safely adjusted on UP - x86 per-CPU loops_per_jiffy does not depend on TSC - save reference values so that rounding errors do not accumulate
-
Dominik Brodowski authored
Clean up searching code for best frequency multiplier, and add a safety check. Also, SAFE_FREQ wasn't used.
-
Dominik Brodowski authored
The "get current speed" algorithm wasn't aware of the disable/enable bit, and the policy verification function wasn't aware of the N44 / O17 bug. Also, some unused code is removed.
-
Adrian Bunk authored
-
bk://kernel.bkbits.net/davem/net-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
-
- 05 Jan, 2003 7 commits
-
-
David S. Miller authored
into kernel.bkbits.net:/home/davem/net-2.5
-
David S. Miller authored
into kernel.bkbits.net:/home/davem/sparc-2.5
-
Dipankar Sarma authored
1. All the memory barriers are SMP-only avoiding unnecessary overhead on UP. 2, My forward porting merge of the rt_rcu patch dropped two changes in rt_intern_hash() in around 2.5.43 that ordered the writes while inserting a dst entry at the start of a hash chain. The dst entry updates must be visible to other (weakly ordered) CPUs before it is inserted. The necessary smp_wmb()s are added. 3. Comments to go with the write ordering.
-
Stephen Rothwell authored
-
Hideaki Yoshifuji authored
-
Arnd Bergmann authored
-
Pablo Menichini authored
-