- 30 Dec, 2003 11 commits
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
ALSA Core A try to fix get_id() function - use alloc_bootmem()
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
ALSA sequencer Fixed typo
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
GUS Library Fixed race - scheduling in interrupt
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
Control Midlevel Added snd_ctl_find_hole() function. Added printk when control already exists.
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
RME9652 driver Removed duplicated ADAT3 Sync control
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
USB generic driver Clemens Ladisch <clemens@ladisch.de> deactivate_urbs didn't return the number of still-active URBs when not unlinking asynchronously, which would prevent calling wait_clear_urbs when some URBs actually are being unlinked asynchronously, so these URBs would be freed while still in use. I removed deactivate_urb's return value because wait_clear_urbs does its own counting anyway.
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
Timer Midlevel An attempt to fix the system timer behaviour (lost jiffy ticks)
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
AMD InterWave driver Fixed typo
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
EMU10K1/EMU10K2 driver <pzad@pobox.sk> Center is initialized to analog to prevent noise at startup (SB Live)
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
ALSA<-OSS emulation - added OSS_ALSAEMULVER ioctl - cleanups for put_user()
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Jaroslav Kysela authored
into suse.cz:/home/perex/bk/linux-sound/linux-sound
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- 29 Dec, 2003 29 commits
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bk://gkernel.bkbits.net/net-drivers-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Jeff Garzik authored
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Andrew Morton authored
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Daniele Venzano authored
The attached patch adds support for suspend/resume to the sis900 driver. With this patch on resume the NIC is fully configured and operational, before a module reload was needed because of the complete lack of suspend/resume callbacks. I added two functions, sis900_suspend and sis900_resume, with their pointers in struct pci_driver. A vector of 16 u32 was then needed to the to keep PCI data during suspend. I added it in struct sis900_private. I updated the revision number to reflect my changes. Looking at the code I also killed three typos. The patch doesn't touch any other code. Since I don't know anything on ethernet drivers the rule 'works for me' is fully valid.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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bk://bk.arm.linux.org.uk/linux-2.6-serialLinus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/davem/net-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Thornber <thornber@sistina.com> You can no longer call dm_table_event() from interrupt context.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Thornber <thornber@sistina.com> Make sure that a target has a sensible set of default io restrictions.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Thornber <thornber@sistina.com> Make the version-4 ioctl interface the default kernel configuration option. If you have out of date tools you will need to use the v1 interface.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Thornber <thornber@sistina.com> The dm table size is always known in advance, so we can specify it in dm_table_create(), rather than relying on dynamic resizing.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Thornber <thornber@sistina.com> When setting the size of a Device-Mapper device in the gendisk entry, also try to set the size of the corresponding block_device entry's inode. This is necessary to allow online device/filesystem resizing to work correctly. [Kevin Corry]
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Andrew Morton authored
From: viro@parcelfarce.linux.theplanet.co.uk When we register disks, we mangle the disk names that contain slashes (e.g. cciss/c0d0) replacing them with '!' in corresponding sysfs names. So name_to_dev_t() should mangle the name in the same way before looking for it in /sys/block.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> Entirely revised, and largely rewritten. Has a continuing example now, which I think makes things clearer. Also covers Read Copy Update. This version further deprecates rwlock_t, shuffles sections for better organization.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Alan Cox <alan@redhat.com> VIA audio had a fix from 2.4 missing so any user could spam the system log. Also include a fix for a bug which is pending 2.4 fixing too and causes a bogus warning to be displayed on close of audio file handle.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Alan Cox <alan@redhat.com> Type errors, just fixes a warning
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Alan Cox <alan@redhat.com> Just a warning fix and behaviour tidy. Changing the kiss.mintime variable isn't going to work as its exposed to user space
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Andrew Morton authored
From: jbarnes@sgi.com (Jesse Barnes) Just a quick patch to fix MAINTAINERS for sn2.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Pádraig Brady <P@draigBrady.com> Watchdog driver for the Winbond w83627hf which is on the last 3 motherboards I got here for test (tyan, advantech, force).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Johannes Stezenbach <js@convergence.de> the patch below removes warnings like: warning: signed and unsigned type in conditional expression when compiling userspace applications against a glibc built with 2.6 kernel headers (like on Debian unstable).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jeff Garzik <jgarzik@pobox.com> I've seen this patch floating around. Not sure the origin, but it's surfaced on lkml and also when I was poking around handhelds.org CVS for iPAQ patches: on non-PCs, particularly system-on-chip devices but not just there, you have a custom "platform bus" that is the root of pretty much all other devices and buses. It's something I wanted to make sure people didn't forget; to make sure the legacy_bus didn't get "legacied out of existence." ;-)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Roland McGrath <roland@redhat.com> I believe I have identified a failure mode that Linus saw a couple weeks back when tracking down some other fork/exit sorts of races. We saw this come up on rare occasions with the RHEL3 kernel's backport of the new code (while trying to track down other race failure modes we have yet to fix, sigh). I am talking about the following scenario: > Btw, even with the fix, doing a "while : ; ./crash t 10 ; done" will > eventually result in a stuck process: > > 1415 tty1 D 0:00 ./crash > > This is some kind of deadlock: most of the fifty threads are in "D" > state, with a trace something like > > [<c011fbe3>] schedule+0x360/0x7f8 > [<c0120539>] wait_for_completion+0xd4/0x1c3 > [<c0128c9e>] do_exit+0x627/0x6a4 > [<c0128ddd>] do_group_exit+0x3d/0x177 > [<c0130c13>] dequeue_signal+0x2d/0x84 > [<c0133911>] get_signal_to_deliver+0x390/0x575 > [<c010a541>] do_signal+0x6c/0xf1 > [<c01200be>] default_wake_function+0x0/0x12 > [<c01200be>] default_wake_function+0x0/0x12 > [<c013d50f>] do_futex+0x6d/0x7d > [<c013d635>] sys_futex+0x116/0x12f > [<c010a601>] do_notify_resume+0x3b/0x3d > [<c010a82e>] work_notifysig+0x13/0x15 > > except for one that is trying to core-dump: > > [<c0120539>] wait_for_completion+0xd4/0x1c3 > [<c01200be>] default_wake_function+0x0/0x12 > [<c01200be>] default_wake_function+0x0/0x12 > [<c02101aa>] rwsem_wake+0x86/0x12d > [<c01738af>] coredump_wait+0xa8/0xaa > [<c0173a26>] do_coredump+0x175/0x26c > > and three that are just doing a regular "exit()" system call: > > [<c011fbe3>] schedule+0x360/0x7f8 > [<c011e19a>] recalc_task_prio+0x90/0x1aa > [<c0120539>] wait_for_completion+0xd4/0x1c3 > [<c01200be>] default_wake_function+0x0/0x12 > [<c01200be>] default_wake_function+0x0/0x12 > [<c0210207>] rwsem_wake+0xe3/0x12d > [<c0128c9e>] do_exit+0x627/0x6a4 > [<c0128d4d>] next_thread+0x0/0x53 > [<c010a7e3>] syscall_call+0x7/0xb > > However, the rest of the system is totally unaffected by this deadlock: > it's only deadlocked withing the thread group itself, nobody else cares. What happens here is a race between an exiting thread checking mm->core_waiters in __exit_mm, and the thread taking the core-dump signal (in coredump_wait) examining the first thread's ->mm pointer and incrementing mm->core_waiters to account for it. There is no synchronization at all in __exit_mm's use of mm->core_waiters. If the coredump_wait thread reads tsk->mm when tsk is in __exit_mm between checking mm->core_waiters and clearing tsk->mm, then it will increment mm->core_waiters and the total count will later exceed the number of threads that will ever decrement it and synchronize. Hence it blocks forever. The following patch fixes the problem by using mm->mmap_sem in __exit_mm. The read lock must be held around checking mm->core_waiters and clearing tsk->mm so that coredump_wait (which gets the write lock) cannot come in between and do bogus bookkeeping.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Dave Olien <dmo@osdl.org> Here's a patch that changes the DAC960 driver from having one request queue for ALL disks on the controller, to having a request queue for each logical disk. This turns out to make little difference for deadline scheduler, nor for AS scheduler under light IO load. But under AS scheduler with heavy IO, it makes about a 40% difference on dbt2 workload. Here are the measured numbers: The 2.6.0-test11-D kernel version includes this mutli-queue patch to the DAC960 driver. For non-cached dbt2 workload (heavy IO load) Scheduler kernel/driver NOTPM(bigger is better) AS 2.6.0-test11-D 1598 AS 2.6.0-test11 973 deadline 2.6.0-test11 1640 deadline 2.6.0-test11-D 1645 For cached dbt2 workload (lighter IO load) AS 2.6.0-test11-D 4993 AS 2.6.-test6-mm4 4976, 4890, 4972 deadline 2.6.0-test11-D 4998 Can this be included in 2.6.0? I know it's not a "critical patch" in the sense that something won't work without it. On the other hand, the change is isolated to a driver.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Paul Clements <Paul.Clements@SteelEye.com> A previous "cleanup" on the nbd.h header file broke userspace compiles. I've added an #ifdef __KERNEL__ so that userspace doesn't need to worry about the nbd_device structure, which is only used in-kernel. The patch allows me to compile my nbd tools with the 2.6 nbd.h.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Tonnerre Anklin <thunder@keepsake.ch> This spinlock was used uninitialized. Gave me a lot of warnings.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Manfred Spraul <manfred@colorfullife.com> if alloc_slabmgmt fails, then kmem_freepages() calls sub_page_state(), altough nr_slab was not yet increased. The attached patch fixes that by moving the inc_page_state into kmem_getpages().
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> Steve Youngs, Stephen Hemminger Three more MODULE_ALIASes. Trivial, but useful if people want things to "just work" in 2.6.0.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu> i've attached a minor fix for the 2.6.1 timeframe - we clearly meant __struct_cpy_bug(). Newest versions of gcc warn about this.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Manfred Spraul <manfred@colorfullife.com> slab_reclaim_pages is increased even if get_free_pages fails. The attached patch moves the update to the correct position.
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