1. 03 Oct, 2002 8 commits
    • Andrew Morton's avatar
      [PATCH] add kswapd success accounting to /proc/vmstat · 7e96bae1
      Andrew Morton authored
      Tells us how many pages were reclaimed by kswapd.
      
      The `pgsteal' statistic tells us how many pages were reclaimed
      altogether.  So
      
      	kswapd_steal - pgsteal
      
      is the number of pages which were directly reclaimed by page allocating
      processes.
      
      
      Also, the `pgscan' data is currently counting the number of pages
      scanned in shrink_cache() plus the number of pages scanned in
      refill_inactive_zone().  These are rather separate concepts, so I
      created the new `pgrefill' counter for refill_inactive_zone().
      `pgscan' is now just the number of pages scanned in shrink_cache().
      7e96bae1
    • Andrew Morton's avatar
      [PATCH] add /proc/vmstat (start of /proc/stat cleanup) · 15e19695
      Andrew Morton authored
      Moves the VM accounting out of /proc/stat and into /proc/vmstat.
      
      The VM accounting is now per-cpu.
      
      It also moves kstat.pgpgin and kstat.pgpgout into /proc/vmstat.
      Which is a bit of a duplication of /proc/diskstats (SARD), but it's
      easy, super-cheap and makes life a lot easier for all the system
      monitoring applications which we just broke.
      
      We now require procps 2.0.9.
      
      Updated versions of top and vmstat are available at http://surriel.com
      and the Cygnus CVS is uptodate for these changes.  (Rik has the CVS
      info at the above site).
      
      This tidies up kernel_stat quite a lot - it now only contains CPU
      things (interrupts and CPU loads) and disk things.  So we now have:
      
      /proc/stat:	CPU things and disk things
      /proc/vmstat:	VM things	(plus pgpgin, pgpgout)
      
      The SARD patch removes the disk things from /proc/stat as well.
      15e19695
    • Andrew Morton's avatar
      [PATCH] truncate/invalidate_inode_pages rewrite · 735a2573
      Andrew Morton authored
      Rewrite these functions to use gang lookup.
      
      - This probably has similar performance to the old code in the common case.
      
      - It will be vastly quicker than current code for the worst case
        (single-page truncate).
      
      - invalidate_inode_pages() has been changed.  It used to use
        page_count(page) as the "is it mapped into pagetables" heuristic.  It
        now uses the (page->pte.direct != 0) heuristic.
      
      - Removes the worst cause of scheduling latency in the kernel.
      
      - It's a big code cleanup.
      
      - invalidate_inode_pages() has been changed to take an address_space
        *, not an inode *.
      
      - the maximum hold times for mapping->page_lock are enormously reduced,
        making it quite feasible to turn this into an irq-safe lock.  Which, it
        seems, is a requirement for sane AIO<->direct-io integration, as well
        as possibly other AIO things.
      
      (Thanks Hugh for fixing a bug in this one as well).
      
      (Christoph added some stuff too)
      735a2573
    • Andrew Morton's avatar
      [PATCH] radix tree gang lookup · 55b40732
      Andrew Morton authored
      Adds a gang lookup facility to radix trees.  It provides an efficient
      means of locating a bunch of pages starting at a particular offset.
      
      The implementation is a bit dumb, but is efficient enough.  And it is
      amenable to the `tagged lookup' extension which is proving tricky to
      write, but which will allow the dirty pages within a mapping to be
      located in pgoff_t order.
      
      Thanks are due to Huch Dickins for finding and fixing an unpleasant bug
      in here.
      55b40732
    • Andrew Morton's avatar
      [PATCH] remove bogus BUG in page_remove_rmap() · 803f57a8
      Andrew Morton authored
      Pages with no reverse mapping can be present in page tables as a result
      of a driver performing remap_page_range().  Don't go BUG over them.
      803f57a8
    • Andrew Morton's avatar
      [PATCH] mprotect bugfix · 9c96b76d
      Andrew Morton authored
      Patch from Hugh Dickins
      
      Our earlier fix for mprotect_fixup was broken - passing an
      already-freed VMA to change_protection().
      9c96b76d
    • Andrew Morton's avatar
      [PATCH] sys_ioperm atomicity fix · f9a4baef
      Andrew Morton authored
      sys_ioperm() is calling kmalloc(GFP_KERNEL) inside get_cpu().  That's
      wrong, because the memory allocation could schedule away and return on
      a different CPU.
      
      So change it to perform the memory allocation outside the atomic region.
      f9a4baef
    • Andrew Morton's avatar
      [PATCH] misc (mainly documentation) · 3a9ed298
      Andrew Morton authored
      - hugetlb Documentation update
      
      - Add /proc/buddyinfo documentation
      
      - nano-cleanup in __remove_from_page_cache.
      3a9ed298
  2. 30 Sep, 2002 13 commits
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux v2.5.40 · 7570df54
      Linus Torvalds authored
      7570df54
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Merge http://linux-scsi.bkbits.net/scsi-for-linus-2.5 · 2b9fa51a
      Linus Torvalds authored
      into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
      2b9fa51a
    • James Bottomley's avatar
      Merge mulgrave.(none):/home/jejb/BK/linux-2.5 · fd0a1c61
      James Bottomley authored
      into mulgrave.(none):/home/jejb/BK/scsi-for-linus-2.5
      fd0a1c61
    • Mike Anderson's avatar
      Error handler general clean up · 9b46c836
      Mike Anderson authored
      9b46c836
    • Rolf Fokkens's avatar
      [PATCH] sg.c and USER_HZ, kernel 2.5.37 · 8885e375
      Rolf Fokkens authored
      Hi!
      
      Since the introduction of USER_HZ the SG_[GS]ET_TIMEOUT ioctls may have
      a serious BUG as userspace uses a different HZ from the HZ in kernelspace.
      
      In x86 HZ=1000 and USER_HZ=100, resulting in confusing timouts as the
      kernel measures time 10 times as fast as userspace.
      
      This patch is an attempt to fix this by transforming USER_HZ based timing to
      HZ based timing before storing it in timeout. To make sure that SG_GET_TIMEOUT
      and SG_SET_TIMEOUT behave consistently a field timeout_user is added which
      stores the exact value that's passed by SG_SET_TIMEOUT and it's returned on
      SG_GET_TIMEOUT.
      
      Rolf Fokkens
      fokkensr@fokkensr.vertis.nl
      
      P.S. this is the second post of this patch
      8885e375
    • James Bottomley's avatar
      dfa944ae
    • Andrew Morton's avatar
      scsi_initialise_merge_fn() will only set highio if ->type == TYPE_DISK. · 2b562242
      Andrew Morton authored
      But it's called from scsi_add_lun()->scsi_alloc_sdev() before the type
      is known.  The type is -1 all the time in scsi_initialise_merge_fn()
      and scsi always bounces.
      
      This patch makes it do the right thing - just enable block-highmem for
      all scsi devices.
      
      Jens had this to say:
      
      "I guess that block-highmem has been around long enough, that I can
       use the term 'historically' at least in the kernel sense :-)
      
       This extra check was added for IDE because each device type driver
       (ide-disk, ide-cd, etc) needed to be updated to not assume virtual
       mappings of request data was valid.  I only did that for ide-disk,
       since this is the only one where bounce buffering really hurt
       performance wise.  So while ide-cd and ide-tape etc could have been
       updated, I deemed it uninteresting and not worthwhile.
      
       Now, this was just carried straight into the scsi counter parts,
       conveniently, because of laziness.  A quick glance at sr shows that it
       too can aviod bouncing easily (no changes needed).  st may need some
       changes, though.  So again, for scsi it was a matter of not impacting
       existing code in 2.4 too much.
      
       So TYPE_DISK check can be killed in 2.5 if someone does the work of
       checking that it is safe.  I'm not so sure it will make eg your SCSI
       CD-ROM that much faster :-)"
      
      2b562242
    • David Gibson's avatar
      [PATCH] Squash warning in fs/devfs/base.c · 5dd17103
      David Gibson authored
      This removes an unused label in fs/devfs/base.c
      5dd17103
    • Greg Kroah-Hartman's avatar
      Merge kroah.com:/home/greg/linux/BK/bleeding_edge-2.5 · 1a008d0e
      Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
      into kroah.com:/home/greg/linux/BK/gregkh-2.5
      1a008d0e
    • Randy Dunlap's avatar
      [PATCH] hc_sl811 build and memory leak · 5c1c6931
      Randy Dunlap authored
      It needs s/malloc.h/slab.h/ .
      It also forgets to free some memory on an error exit patch.
      Patch for 2.5.39 follows.
      5c1c6931
    • David Brownell's avatar
      [PATCH] usb_sg_{init,wait,cancel}() · 1e4fece8
      David Brownell authored
      Here are the scatterlist primitives there's been mail about before.
      Now the code has passed basic sanity testing, and is ready to merge
      into Linus' tree to start getting wider use.  Greg, please merge!
      
      To recap, the routines are a utility layer packaging several usb
      core facilities to improve system performance.  It's synchronous.
      The code uses functionality that drivers could use already, but
      generally haven't:
      
          - Request queueing.  This is a big performance win.  It lets
            device drivers help the hcds avoid wasted i/o bandwidth, by
            eliminating irq and scheduling latencies between requests.  It
            can make a huge difference at high speed, when the latencies
            often exceed the time to handle each i/o request!
      
          - The new usb_map_sg() primitives, leveraging IOMMU hardware
            if it's there (better than entry-at-a-time mapping).
      
          - URB_NO_INTERRUPT transfer flag, a hint to hcds that they
            can avoid a 'success irq' for this urb.  Only the urb for
            the last scatterlist entry really needs an IRQ, the others
            can be eliminated or delayed.  (OHCI uses this today, and
            any HCD can safely ignore it.)
      
      The particular functionality in these APIs seemed to meet Matt's
      requirements for usb-storage, so I'd hope the 2.5 usb-storage
      code will start to use these routines in a while.  (And maybe
      those two scanner drivers: hpusbscsi, microtek.)
      
      Brief summary of testing:  this code seems correct for normal
      reads and writes, but the fault paths (including cancelation)
      haven't been tested yet.  Both EHCI and OHCI seem to be mostly
      OK with these more aggressive queued loads, but may need small
      updates (like the two I sent yesterday).  Unfortunately I have
      to report that UHCI and urb queueing will sometimes lock up my
      hardware (PIIX4), so while we're lots better than 2.4 this is
      still a bit of a trouble spot for now.
      
      I'll be making some testing software available shortly, which
      will help track down remaining HCD level problems by giving the
      queuing APIs (and some others!) a more strenuous workout than
      most drivers will, in their day-to-day usage.
      
      - Dave
      1e4fece8
    • Matthew Dharm's avatar
      [PATCH] USB-storage: problem clearing halts · 2eea1938
      Matthew Dharm authored
      Greg, attached is a patch designed for diagnostic purposes.  Please apply
      to the 2.5 tree -- yes, we'll be removing this at some point in the future.
      
      It appears that we have a problem clearing halts.  This patch causes a very
      clear message to be printed whenever a usb_stor_clear_halt() manages to
      work.  So far, I haven't seen such a thing happen.  And I've seen _lots_ of
      STALL conditions.
      
      This problem has likely been around for a while... however, it hasn't been
      noticed before because usb-storage was difficult to use because of other
      bugs.  Heck, the most recent 'bk pull' is the first one for me in _months_
      which let me boot all the way into X11.
      
      I'm going to hold my patch queue until this is resolved.  On my test setup,
      it's easy to see this failing.  I've tried with 4 different devices, with
      both UHCI and EHCI drivers.  I don't want to confuse this problem with
      other patches...
      
      'result' in this function always seems to be -32.  Which is odd, because
      control endpoints shouldn't do that.
      
      I'm open to suggestions as to where to look for this bug, but my instincts
      are telling me that this is a core or HCD issue, not a usb-storage issue.
      
      On a positive note, this means that the error-recovery system gets a good
      workout.
      2eea1938
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Merge bk://bk.arm.linux.org.uk · 2fbc109c
      Linus Torvalds authored
      into penguin.transmeta.com:/home/penguin/torvalds/repositories/kernel/linux
      2fbc109c
  3. 01 Oct, 2002 4 commits
  4. 30 Sep, 2002 15 commits