- 20 Feb, 2004 1 commit
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ralf Baechle <ralf@linux-mips.org> Below following 125547 lines of patches, all to arch/mips and include/asm-mips. I'm going to send the remaining stuff of which the one or other bit may need to be discussed in smaller bits.
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- 19 Feb, 2004 39 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@suse.de> This fixes some more problems introduced by the IA32e merge on x86-64 - Make it compile on UP again. - Let the microcode driver build as a module
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Andrew Morton authored
Remove an unneeded WSET() which snuck in there.
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Andrew Morton authored
The sysrq-T output currently tries to display the mimimum amount of free stack which each task has ever had available. It has been busted for years, because we forgot to zero out the stack when it is first created. Fix that up, adding a conig option for it. If the option is disabled, or the arch is not x86 then the free stack usage will display as zero.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Herbert Poetzl <herbert@13thfloor.at> sys_ptrace() for v850, if pid == 1, doesn't put the struct task_struct (child), the following patch should fix that ...
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Arjan van de Ven <arjanv@redhat.com> fix obvious non-C-standard stubs on ppc64
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/gregkh/linux/usb-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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bk://gkernel.bkbits.net/net-drivers-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Jeff Garzik authored
into redhat.com:/spare/repo/net-drivers-2.5
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Benjamin Herrenschmidt authored
This fixes the behaviour of the pmac "macio" IDE driver when a DMA transfer happen to get less data out of the device than expected when setting up the DMA commands (the device underruns). This is very common with recent ATAPI stuffs and used to cause problem & disable DMA. This patch fixes the way we handle that condition, thus also fixing DVD burning on a bunch of recent pmacs.
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Benjamin Herrenschmidt authored
Some barriers between setting up the DMA regions and writing the descriptor addresses would be most useful. I had some in my 2.4 version but they got lost someway, probably me not properly merging with davem at this point. The 970 is definitely more agressive at re-ordering stores than previous CPUs... Here is a patch adding some (probably too much, but better safe than sorry).
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
into kroah.com:/home/greg/linux/BK/usb-2.6
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http://lia64.bkbits.net/to-linus-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Andries E. Brouwer authored
People ask how to write the CIS on a SmartMedia card using an sddr09 reader/writer. The patch below documents the required command (but does not add the code). Two years ago or so I used this to fix the CIS on a card that my camera no longer wanted to accept. A Linux utility to do this might be useful, but the problem always is that we do not really have a good mechanism. How does one tell a driver that it has to do something special? Add yet another ioctl?
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Alan Stern authored
The main item in this patch is the conversion of the UHCI driver from using the old usb.h logging macros to the new driver-model dev_xxx macros. There are a few other minor changes too: updated version number, author, copyright, and maintainer information, removed some unneeded error messages, added some line breaks, added a convenience macro for the device pointer.
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Alan Stern authored
On Fri, 20 Feb 2004, Gustavo Guillermo wrote: > Ok, I tested the patch, The camera works, just as in the old Kernel, > Thanks, I'm including as an atachment the /proc/bus/usb/devices from > kernel 2.4.x and 2.6.x, and the kernel log for 2.4.x, but ooops, I forgot > to biold 2.4.x with full debug, if someone need it I will do. > > Please include this FIX in the Next Release. Greg, I now feel confident that this patch should be applied.
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Alan Stern authored
On Thu, 19 Feb 2004, Agustin De Igartua wrote: > Initializing USB Mass Storage driver... > usb-storage: This device (04e6,0002,0100 S 06 P 50) has unneeded SubClass and Protocol entries in unusual_devs.h > Please send a copy of this message to <linux-usb-devel@lists.sourceforge.net>scsi0 : SCSI emulation for USB Mass Storage devices Thank you for sending this in. Greg, here's the patch.
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David Mosberger authored
There are no known failures due to this bug, but it's clearly a bug and given the right compiler, it could trigger and lead to bad stack traces etc.
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Pat Gefre authored
I incorporated (at least in spirit I hope) hch's suggestions on the fixup code put in some kfrees that I was missing and static for sn_alloc_pci_sysdata (thanks Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz). White space clean up.
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Martin Hicks authored
Cleanup the SN setup.c file. Add __init and static to functions where required.
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Martin Hicks authored
Here is a patch to clean up some of the Altix header files and includes. I've run the patch past the appropriate people at SGI and they seem happy with the changes.
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Pat Gefre authored
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Pat Gefre authored
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> Christian Bornträger noticed that the kernel can crash after <SysRq>-T. It appears that the show_task function gets called for all tasks, which does not work if one of the tasks is running in a system call on another CPU. In that case the result of thread_saved_pc and show_stack is undefined and likely to cause a crash. For tasks running in user space on other CPUs, show_task() is probably harmless, but I'm not sure if that's true on all architectures. The patch below is still racy for tasks that are about to sleep, but it demonstrates the problem.
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Andrew Morton authored
show_task() is preinting negative numbers for free stack due to arithmetic against the wrong pointer. Fix that up, and clean up a few related things. show_task still has bogus code which atempts to work out how much stack the task has ever used - it cannot work because we don't actually zero out the stack pages when allocating them. We should fix that, or take it out.
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Andrew Morton authored
I find this handy sometimes: it makes the oops output include info as to whether the user has selected CONFIG_PREEMPT, CONFIG_SMP or, particularly, CONFIG_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC. It can save one email round-trip.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Martin J. Bligh" <mbligh@aracnet.com> Make irqbalance into a config option - some people (jgarzik, arjan, etc) wanted to be able to disable it and do things from userspace instead. This patch allows each camp to do their own thing, which seems fair ;-)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Martin J. Bligh" <mbligh@aracnet.com> Disallow NUMA on the i386 PC subarch (it doesn't work, nor was it intended to).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Martin J. Bligh" <mbligh@aracnet.com> Makes sure pfn_to_nid is defined for all combinations of subarches, and that it's defined before it's used so we don't run into implicit declaration problems.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Martin J. Bligh" <mbligh@aracnet.com> Fix pfn_valid for architctures with discontiguous memory. This only changes the NUMA definition, and it leaves the NUMA-Q definition as was, because it's faster that way, it's in hotpaths, and our memory is always contiguous.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruen@suse.de> The fix for permission() that makes it compliant with POSIX.1-2001 apparently was lost. Here is the patch I sent before. (The relevant lines from the standard text are cited in http://www.ussg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0310.2/0286.html. The fix proposed in that posting did not handle directories without execute permissions correctly.) Make permission check conform to POSIX.1-2001 The access(2) function does not conform to POSIX.1-2001: For root and a file with no permissions, access(file, MAY_READ|MAY_EXEC) returns 0 (it should return -1).
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Andrew Morton authored
drivers/net/bonding/bond_alb.c: In function `bond_alb_xmit': drivers/net/bonding/bond_alb.c:1188: error: invalid lvalue in assignment
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Andrew Morton authored
gcc-3.4 incorretly inlines rest_init() into start_kernel(), causing things to crash when the .text.init section gets unloaded. Use noinline to prevent that.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@muc.de> This patch adds the `noinline' function attribute. It can be used to explicitly tell the compiler to not inline functions. We need this due to what is, IMO, a bug present in gcc-3.4 and current gcc-3.5 CVS: the compiler is inlining init/main.c:rest_init() inside init/main.c:start_kernel(), despite the fact that thay are declared to be placed in different text sections.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@muc.de> The upcomming gcc 3.4 has a new compilation mode called unit-at-a-time. What it does is to first load the whole file into memory and then generate the output. This allows it to use a better inlining strategy, drop unused static functions and use -mregparm automatically for static functions. It does not seem to compile significantly slower. This is also available in some of the 3.3 based "hammer branch" compilers used in distributions (at least in SuSE and Mandrake) Some tests show impressive .text shrinkage from unit-at-a-time. e.g. here is the same kernel compiled with -fno-unit-at-a-time and -funit-at-a-time with a gcc 3.4 snapshot. The gains are really impressive: text data bss dec hex filename 4129346 708629 207240 5045215 4cfbdf vmlinux-nounitatatime 3999250 674853 207208 4881311 4a7b9f vmlinux-unitatatime .text shrinks by over 130KB!. And .data shrinks too. At first look the numbers look nearly too good to be true, but they have been verified with several configurations and seem to be real. It looks like we have a lot of stupid inlines or dead functions. I'm really not sure why it is that much better. But it's hard to argue with hard numbers. [A bloat-o-meter comparision between the two vmlinuxes can be found in http://www.firstfloor.org/~andi/unit-vs-no-unit.gz . It doesn't show any obvious candidates unfortunately, just lots of small changes] With the gcc 3.3-hammer from SuSE 9.0 the gains are a bit smaller, but still noticeable (>100KB on .text) This patch enables -funit-at-a-time on ia32 if the compiler is gcc-3.4 or later. We had several reports of gcc-3.3 producing very early lockups.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@muc.de>, me. Using -mregparm=3 shrinks the kernel further: (compiled with gcc 3.4, without -funit-at-a-time, using the later and together with -Os shrinks .text even more, making over 700KB difference) 4129346 708629 207240 5045215 4cfbdf vmlinux 3892905 708629 207240 4808774 496046 vmlinux-regparm This one helps even more, >236KB .text difference. Clearly worth the effort. This patch adds an option to use -mregparm=3 while compiling the kernel. I did an LTP run and it showed no additional failures over an non regparm kernel. According to some gcc developers it should be safe to use in all gccs that are still supports (2.95 and up) I didn't make it the default because it will break all binary only modules (although they can be fixed by adding a wrapper that calls them with "asmlinkage"). Actually it may be a good idea to make this default with 2.7.1 or somesuch. We add new kbuild infrastructure: the command scripts/gcc-version.sh $(CC) will print out the version of gcc in a canonical 4-digit form suitable for performing numerical tests against. DESC arch/i386/Makefile,scripts/gcc-version.sh,Makefile small fixes EDESC From: Serge Belyshev <33554432@mtu-net.ru> arch/i386/Makefile: * omitted $(KBUILD_SRC)/ in script call. scripts/gcc-version.sh: * GNU tail no longer supports 'tail -1' syntax. We should consider adding -fweb option: vanilla: $ size vmlinux text data bss dec hex filename 3056270 526780 386056 3969106 3c9052 vmlinux with -fweb: $ size vmlinux text data bss dec hex filename 3049523 526780 386056 3962359 3c75f7 vmlinux Also note 0.1 ... 1.0% speedup in various benchmarks. This option is not enabled by default at -O2 because it (like -fomit-frame-pointer) makes debugging impossible.
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Andrew Morton authored
Remove page validity test. I had a warning in there for a few weeks, no reports of it happening.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Manfred Spraul <manfred@colorfullife.com> The patch is designed improve the diagnostics which are presented when the slab memory poison detector triggers. check_poison_obj checks for write accesses after kfree by comparing the object contents with the poison value. The current implementation contains several flaws: - it accepts both POISON_BEFORE and POISON_AFTER. check_poison_obj is only called with POISON_AFTER poison bytes. Fix: only accept POISON_AFTER. - the output is unreadable. Fix: use hexdump. - if a large objects is corrupted, then the relevant lines can scroll of the screen/dmesg buffer. Fix: line limit. - it can access addresses behind the end of the object, which can oops with CONFIG_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC. Fix: bounds checks. Additionally, the patch contains the following changes: - rename POISON_BEFORE and POISON_AFTER to POISON_FREE and POISON_INUSE. The old names are ambiguous. - use the new hexdump object function in ptrinfo. - store_stackinfo was called with wrong parameters: it should store caller, i.e. __builtin_return_address(0), not POISON_AFTER in the object. - dump both the object before and after the corrupted one, not just the one after. Example output: <<< Slab corruption: start=194e708c, len=2048 Redzone: 0x5a2cf071/0x5a2cf071. Last user: [<02399d7c>](dummy_init_module+0x1c/0xb0) 010: 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 7b 030: 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 63 Prev obj: start=194e6880, len=2048 Redzone: 0x5a2cf071/0x5a2cf071. Last user: [<00000000>](0x0) 000: 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 010: 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b 6b <<<
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