- 31 Aug, 2003 40 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Hugh Dickins <hugh@veritas.com> It's good that swapon fails on a tmpfs file ("swapfile has holes"), but not good that it then hangs up: note error from setup_swap_extents.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Adrian Bunk <bunk@fs.tum.de> The patch below fixes a compile error in drivers/scsi/advansys.c if !CONFIG_PROC_FS.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Pallipadi, Venkatesh" <venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com> acpi boot time parsing changes to look for HPET
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Pallipadi, Venkatesh" <venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com> This can be a standalone patch. With this patch we basically try to emulate RTC interrupt functions in software using HPET counter 1.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Pallipadi, Venkatesh" <venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com> All changes required to support timer services (gettimeofday) with HPET.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Pallipadi, Venkatesh" <venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com> All the changes required to use HPET in place of PIT as the kernel base-timer at IRQ 0.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Pallipadi, Venkatesh" <venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com> Miscallaneous makefile and config changes
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Pallipadi, Venkatesh" <venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com> High Precision Event Timer (HPET) is next generation timer hardware and has various advantages over legacy 8254 (PIT) timer, like: - Associated registers are mapped to memory space. So, we no longer require in and out on legacy ioports - Memory map address is reported by ACPI (and are not hard-coded) - Each timer can be configured to generate separate interrupts, even sharing lines with PCI devices - HPET has a minimum period of 100 nanosecs and is not fixed. Giving a flexibility of increasing the resolution in future. - Most current implementations has 3 counters, but in future, we can have as many as 32 timers per block, and 8 HPET timer blocks (total 256 timers) - Can support 32bit and 64bit counting (Refer to http://www.intel.com/labs/platcomp/hpet/hpetspec.htm for complete specs) The patchset that follow adds support for High Precision Event Timer (HPET) based timer in kernel. This uses the HPET in LegacyReplacement mode (so that counter 0 will be tied to IRQ0, and counter 1 will be tied to IRQ 8). In this mode, HPET overrides PIT and RTC interrupt lines. The patch will enable HPET by default, on systems where ACPI tables reports this feature. The patch will have no impact on systems that do not support this feature. A major change from previous version is elimination of fixmap for HPET. Based on Andrew Morton's suggestion, we have a new hook in init/main.c for late_time_init(), at which time we can use ioremap, in place of fixmap. Impact on other archs: Calibrate_delay() (and hence loops_per_jiffy calculation) has moved down in main.c, from after time_init() to after kmem_cache_init(). 1/6 - hpet1.patch - main.c change to introduce late_time_init()
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@muc.de> Remove some dead code. CONFIG_SSE2 hasn't been defined for some time, because everything SSE related is handled at runtime based on cpuid.
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Andrew Morton authored
The zone->pressure field is supposed to record the amount of reclaim pressure which this zone is under. We need this info so we know whether to unmap pages from pagetables right from the outset of a balance_pgdat() or try_to_free_pages() invokation. The problem with the current code is that the exponential average gets tugged around too much: as we perform the increasing-priority scan, the pressure metric is made artificially low by the early part of the scan. So instead what we do here is to record within the zone the scanning priority from the zone's previous scan. It is defined as the priority at which the zone achieved the "enough pages free" state. This prev_priority is used on the next scan for the do-we-need-to-be-unmapping-pages decision.
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Andrew Morton authored
Off-by-one in balance_pgdat(): `priority' can never go negative. It causes the scanning priority thresholds to be quite wrong and kswapd tends to go berzerk when there is a lot of mapped memory around.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@suse.de> aka: "vmalloc allocations in ipc needs smp initialized (and vm must be allowed to schedule in 2.6)" In short if you change SEMMNI to 8192 the kernel will crash at boot, beause it tries to call vmalloc before the smp is initialized. The reason is that vmalloc calls into the pte alloc code, and the fast pte alloc is tried first, but that reads into the pte_quicklist, that requires the cpu_data to be initialized (and that happens in smp_init()). the patch is obviously safe, since no piece of kernel (especially the code in the check_bugs and smp_init paths ;) calls into the ipc subsystem. The reason this started to trigger wasn't really that we increased SEMMNI, but what happend is that some IPC data structure grown, and for some reason the corruption due the uninitalized pte_quicklist triggers only for smp boxes with less than 1G (not very common anymore ;). So it wasn't immediatly reproducible on all setups. 2.6 doesn't suffer from the same problem, simply because 2.6 isn't using the quicklist anymore, but I think it would be much more correct to make the same change in 2.6 too, since whatever cond_resched() in the vm paths (and they're definitely allowed to call it), will lead to a crash since the init task isn't initialized and the scheduler can't be invoked yet. (and 2.6 already has the bigger data structures that should trigger the vmalloc all the time on all setups)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Dave Olien <dmo@osdl.org> The raw.c character device Oopses dereferencing a NULL pointer in bd_claim() This problem occurred after bd_claim() in block_dev.c was modified to "claim the whole device when a partition is claimed". raw_open() made the mistake of calling bd_claim BEFORE calling blkdev_get(). At that time, the bdev->bd_contains field has not yet been initialized. Switching the order allows blkdev_get() to initialize those fields before calling bd_claim(). Also fixed up some error return paths: igrab() should never fail under these circumstances since the caller already has a reference to that inode through the bdev at that time. In the event of blkdev_get() failure or set_blocksize() failure, not all the work to unwind from the error was done.
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Andrew Morton authored
The arch ioctl tables are doing this: struct foo ioctl_start[] = { ... }; struct foo ioctl_end[0]; and fs/compat.c expects that the table lies between &ioctl_end and &ioctl_start. Problem is, gcc-3.3 puts ioctl_end into bss, even if it is initialised. It doesn't work. So we do away with the ioctl_end thing and add int ioctl_table_length = ARRAY_SIZE(ioctl_start); to each architecture.
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Andrew Morton authored
- Remove duplicated implementation of attrib_to_str() - Make mtrr_strings[] static to if.c
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Andrew Morton authored
From: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@SteelEye.com> Most is just simple fixes; however, the needless change from atomic to non-atomic operations in smp_invalidate_interrupt() caused me a lot of pain to track down since it introduced some very subtle bugs. I've also taken phys_cpu_present_map out of smp.h. Since it physid_mask_t is defined in mpspec.h anyway, and contains a duplicate definition, I don't believe it can hurt anything.
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Andrew Morton authored
extern decls in .c files are evil. Put the send_sigio(), fcntl_setlease() and fcntl_getlease() into fs.h.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ulrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com> I'm not entirely sure about this change. But it seems to be necessary. The dnotify code stores the PID in the file structure. The entire process shares the file and any signal (is it used for that?) should be sent to the process (thread group), not the individual thread. Also keep in mind that threads can go away while the process (and therefore file descriptor) remain. And the ID of the thread can be reused. Somebody who knows this code should take a good look. (Looks right to me...)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Randy.Dunlap" <rddunlap@osdl.org> - use kernel.h min() and max(); - C99 initializers; - Tidy up the scheule_work() callbacks (none of them take an arg)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Randy.Dunlap" <rddunlap@osdl.org> fix arcnet printk parameter types
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu, Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org> Adds an explicit check for the new modutils in the build system. Generally we should avoid these sorts of hardwired checks for the right versions of things, but we are still getting a significant number of problem reports due to people not having the new tools. Let's help them out.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "John Stoffel" <stoffel@lucent.com> Quick patch to get my 8 port Cyclades Cyclom-Y ISA card to work. (It doesn't look to be very SMP-robust, but then the 2.4 dirver probably isn't either).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> I moved a while ago and I'm also not at SGI anymore.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Nick Piggin <piggin@cyberone.com.au> In the anticipatory scheduler, don't anticipate against the very first IO request which a process issues. This solves a very specific problem wherein a process starts, submits a single IO then exits.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Dmitry Torokhov <dtor_core@ameritech.net> While working on my GPM patches found out that EV_MSC was forgotten...
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Andrew Morton authored
From: viro@parcelfarce.linux.theplanet.co.uk On Wed, Aug 27, 2003 at 01:46:37AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > > LILO seems to be oopsing in HDIO_GETGEO ioctl for some reason, in > generic_ide_ioctl(). > > I'm not sure quite why though. Could one of your patches affected this > area? The last one (fix for hd_struct handling). The fix follows:
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Randy.Dunlap" <rddunlap@osdl.org> This patch removes warnings on non-matching parameter types to printk and incorrect function types (n_hdlc).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Peter Chubb <peterc@gelato.unsw.edu.au> Currently, the context switch counters reported by getrusage() are always zero. The appended patch adds fields to struct task_struct to count context switches, and adds code to do the counting. The patch adds 4 longs to struct task struct, and a single addition to the fast path in schedule().
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Christophe Saout <christophe@saout.de> - acpi_pci_link_get_irq() returns 0 on error, not -ENODEV. - Fix mpparse.c tpyo.
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Andrew Morton authored
This printk doesn't impart any information.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jaroslav Kysela <perex@suse.cz> The do_no_page() function in mm/memory.c does accounting for reserved pages (++mm->rss), but in zap_pte_range() we don't decrement rss if the page was reserved. So don't account for PageReserved pages in the rss. (Maybe it would be better to fix zap_pte_range in the opposite direction..)
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Andrew Morton authored
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Andrew Morton authored
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Adrian Bunk <bunk@fs.tum.de> Remove CONFIG_KCORE_AOUT: the ability to present /proc/kcore in a.out format. I've checked with various arch maintainers. It won't be missed.
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Andrew Morton authored
We get a linkage error with CONFIG_KCORE_AOUT because there is no implementation of kclist_add() and kclist_del(). Also fix a warning in the a.out version of read_kcore(). Maybe we should just remove kcore a.out support. m68knommu and h8300 are setting CONFIG_KCORE_AOUT in their defconfigs though.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: <ffrederick@prov-liege.be> Flesh out the bad_inode file and inode operations tables with new additions.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil> This patch corrects a typo in an ifdef that enables xattr operations for special files in the ext2 code; otherwise, extended attributes cannot be obtained or set on such inodes.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil> This patch reworks the SELinux binprm hook functions to use a security structure for the linux_binprm rather than directly stuffing the security identifier into the void* security field. It also performs some cleanup of the SELinux binprm hook functions, and one miscellaneous fix.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil>, James Morris <jmorris@redhat.com> This patch corrects several format specifiers in the SELinux security server code.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil>, Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> This patch changes the SELinux avtab to use vmalloc/vfree; the table is too large for kmalloc on s390.
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