- 21 Sep, 2003 13 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
From: James Cleverdon <jamesclv@us.ibm.com> Some very large systems overflow the array and corrupt memory. A BUG_ON will at least flag the problem until dynamic irq_vector allocation is added.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Oleg Drokin <green@namesys.com> Fix trucation-induced large file corruption in reiserfs.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jeremy Fitzhardinge <jeremy@goop.org> I'm resending my patch to fix this problem. To recap: every task_struct has its own copy of the thread group's pgrp. Only the thread group leader is allowed to change the tgrp's pgrp, but it only updates its own copy of pgrp, while all the other threads in the tgrp use the old value they inherited on creation. This patch simply updates all the other thread's pgrp when the tgrp leader changes pgrp. Ulrich has already expressed reservations about this patch since it is (1) incomplete (it doesn't cover the case of other ids which have similar problems), (2) racy (it doesn't synchronize with other threads looking at the task pgrp, so they could see an inconsistent view) and (3) slow (it takes linear time with respect to the number of threads in the tgrp). My reaction is that (1) it fixes the actual bug I'm encountering in a real program. (2) doesn't really matter for pgrp, since it is mostly an issue with respect to the terminal job-control code (which is even more broken without this patch. Regarding (3), I think there are very few programs which have a large number of threads which change process group id on a regular basis (a heavily multi-threaded job-control shell?). Ulrich also said he has a (proposed?) much better fix, which I've been looking forward to. I'm submitting this patch as a stop-gap fix for a real bug, and perhaps to prompt the improved patch. An alternative fix, at least for pgrp, is to change all references to ->pgrp to group_leader->pgrp. This may be sufficient on its own, but it would be a reasonably intrusive patch (I count 95 instances in 32 files in the 2.6.0-test3-mm3 tree).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Robert Love <rml@tech9.net> - Let real-time tasks dip further into the reserves than usual in __alloc_pages(). There are a lot of ways to special case this. This patch just cuts z->pages_low in half, before doing the incremental min thing, for real-time tasks. I do not do anything in the low memory slow path. We can be a _lot_ more aggressive if we want. Right now, we just give real-time tasks a little help. - Never ever call balance_dirty_pages() on a real-time task. Where and how exactly we handle this is up for debate. We could, for example, special case real-time tasks inside balance_dirty_pages(). This would allow us to perform some of the work (say, waking up pdflush) but not other work (say, the active throttling). As it stands now, we do the per-processor accounting in balance_dirty_pages_ratelimited() but we never call balance_dirty_pages(). Lots of approaches work. What we want to do is never engage the real-time task in forced writeback.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Nakajima, Jun" <jun.nakajima@intel.com> Split the increasingly messy compiler.h file into per-compiler files and also add support for non-gcc compilers. With the current implementation: include/linux/compiler.h defines the compiler-dependent abstractions which can be overwritten by per-compiler definitions. include/linux/compiler-gcc.h contains the common definitions for all gcc versions. include/linux/compiler-gcc[2,3,+].h contains gcc major version specific definitions. include/linux/compiler-intel.h contains intel compiler specific definitions."
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Andrew Morton authored
- declarations come first - fix bizarre coding style.
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bk://bk.arm.linux.org.uk/linux-2.6-pcmciaLinus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Russell King authored
The problem was that the semaphore which prevents ds interfering with the sleepy card initialisation (skt_sem in pccardd) is blocking insmod of the socket driver. However, the socket driver is being called with the PCI bus semaphore held by the driver model. pccardd in turn discovered a cardbus card (with skt_sem held), so it is trying to add the PCI devices to the PCI bus, and this requires the driver model to grab the PCI bus semaphore, but its already locked. We move the class device register into pccardd so we get a natural ordering between the ds socket initialisation and pccardd trying to detect inserted cards. We also fix a potential use-after-free caused by rmmod'ing the socket driver before ds has shut down.
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bk://bk.arm.linux.org.uk/linux-2.6-rmkLinus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Russell King authored
Don't issue a system call from kernel_thread(), but call do_fork() directly. This avoids all the unnecessary syscall overhead.
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Albert Cahalan authored
It's bad to make (CLONE_THREAD | CLONE_DETACHED) tasks be _completely_ hidden. Resource consumption is hard to track down if a user can hide a task from /bin/ps. This patch, supported by the procps-3.1.13 release, gives admins the ability to search for such tasks. The top-level /proc directory remains uncontaminated.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Matthew Wilcox authored
When I change the setting of CONFIG_EISA, everything rebuilds. This is because EISA_bus is declared in <asm/processor.h> which is implicitly included by just about everything. This is a silly place to declare it, so this patch moves it to include/linux/eisa.h. While I'm at it, I also move the variable definition to drivers/eisa/eisa-bus.c. The rest of this patch is fixing up the fallout from having to include <linux/eisa.h> if you use EISA_bus.
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- 20 Sep, 2003 27 commits
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Linus Torvalds authored
automatically as needed.
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Russell King authored
Remove duplicate includes, ensure that linux/config.h is included where necessary, and linux/config.h isn't included where it isn't needed.
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/gregkh/linux/linus-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/jgarzik/misc-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Jeff Garzik authored
* increase length of wait for analog-ready * fix printk prefix (cosmetic) * bail out for pure MMIO interfaces, instead of attempting to use it via PIO and hanging the system.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/jgarzik/net-drivers-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Stephen Hemminger authored
Small clean up, to use current APIs.
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Javier Achirica authored
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Javier Achirica authored
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Jochen Friedrich authored
this one fixes both drivers. They have been broken since the reorganization in June. Unfortunately, my major build platform (alpha) had some issues with later 2.5.X kernels (cache problems causing all kind of funny behaviour), so i waited until these problems had been resolved by the alpha gurus :-/... In the mean time i also upgraded pine. I hope the patch corruption issue is resolved by now.
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Stephen Hemminger authored
Update hamradio/scc for 2.6.0-test5 - use seq_file for /proc - get rid of dev_get() - use alloc_netdev Don't have hardware, but can load/unload the module fine.
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Amir Noam authored
This patch converts /proc/net/bondX/info into /proc/net/bonding/bondX using the seq_file interface. This is based on Stephen's recent patch, but slightly modified to work with the propagation patch set and with some locking changes to make it simpler. The patch applies both on 2.4 (after the sync set from earlier today) and on 2.6 (after the propagation set from 2003/11/9). Amir
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Adrian Bunk authored
sbni.c in 2.6.0-test5 fails to compile with gcc 3.3 with the following error: <-- snip --> ... CC drivers/net/wan/sbni.o ... drivers/net/wan/sbni.c: In function `calc_crc32': drivers/net/wan/sbni.c:1568: error: asm-specifier for variable `_crc' conflicts with asm clobber list make[3]: *** [drivers/net/wan/sbni.o] Error 1 <-- snip --> Below is the patch by Margit Schubert-White to fix this issue (it is already in 2.4). cu Adrian
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Andrew Morton authored
Rick Lindsley <ricklind@us.ibm.com> wrote: > > since it's been out for a while you probably already know, but the patch > for e1000_main.c has a bug in it. Looks like it will fail at line 1550 if > compiled with NETIF_F_TSO defined. > So it will. I blame the gcc developers. 25-akpm/drivers/net/e1000/e1000_main.c | 13 +++++++++---- 1 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
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Amir Noam authored
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Amir Noam authored
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Amir Noam authored
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Amir Noam authored
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Amir Noam authored
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Amir Noam authored
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Amir Noam authored
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Amir Noam authored
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Amir Noam authored
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Stephen Hemminger authored
Redo of earlier patch to get rid of MOD_INC/DEC and use alloc_netdev. This is against 2.6.0-test5 bk latest.
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Stephen Hemminger authored
Update sealevel driver to match current net_device interface: - dynamically allocate netdevice and private data. - get rid of MOD_INC/DEC - if_ptr not used - bugfix: not all of board structure was being zeroed. Note: this driver still doesn't probe() correctly since it just assumes that if loaded the hardware is there! Since I don't have one of these boards... tested it by #ifdef'ing out all the bits that touch actual hardware.
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Stephen Hemminger authored
Convert ali-ircc driver to: - use alloc_net_dev not dev_alloc - allocate private data at same time - cleanup error unwinds - call free_netdev. Builds and loads, but don't have real hardware.
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