- 08 May, 2003 4 commits
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David Brownell authored
This patch adds an "Ethernet Gadget" driver, implementing the CDC Ethernet model (drivers/usb/gadget/ether.c). It interops with the current CDC Ether drivers on Linux, both 2.4 (CDCEther, using Marcelo's latest) and 2.5 (cdc-ether with recent patches, or on 2.5.68 "usbnet") On a net2280, this has successfully streamed dozens of megabytes per second using "ttcp" (high speed, and using "usbnet" on the host side), for days at a time. And no problems using SSH/NFS/etc in lighter duty testing. It's possible this will need tweaking to cope with UDC bugs on Intel's pxa25x controllers, presenting itself as a non-CDC device. (I'm told altsettings are even more broken than originally specified to be.)
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David Brownell authored
This patch adds "Gadget Zero" (drivers/usb/gadget/zero.c). Gadget Zero is a simple gadget driver that's useful for testing controller drivers, and as an example to be used for clone/modify style development. This driver implements two configurations, and needs only two bulk endpoints (in addition to ep0) ... so pretty much any USB device controller should be usable with it in one configuration or another. It (optionally) supports high speed devices, and has passed the USB-IF "chapter 9" device model conformance tests. It's worth noticing the kinds of hardware differences that gadget drivers need to cope with. Endpoints differ, in ways that must be reflected various ways in descriptors. And sometimes chip errata cause interoperability problems; for example, an sa1100 can't change configurations after enumerating.
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David Brownell authored
This patch creates drivers/usb/gadget/net2280.[hc], providing a driver for NetChip's "Net2280 PCI USB 2.0 High Speed Peripheral Controller". It implements the API included in the first patch. The driver has behaved well with chiprev 0100 under stress tests with Gadget Zero and the ethernet model driver, and has passed sanity tests for chiprev 0110.
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David Brownell authored
This patch createss <linux/usb_gadget.h>, the gadget API and inlined implementation. There's additional kerneldoc, which I won't submit at this time, available.
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- 07 May, 2003 36 commits
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Grzegorz Jaskiewicz <gj@pointblue.com.pl> gcc-2.94 fails to compile this code, alleging an invalid lvalue. An equivalent transformation fixes it up.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil> This patch against 2.5.69 adds a security_inode_post_setxattr hook so that security modules can update the inode security structure after a successful setxattr, and it moves the existing security_inode_setxattr hook call after the taking the inode semaphore so that atomicity is provided for the security check and the update to the inode security structure.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil> This patch against 2.5.68 implements an xattr handler for ext2 to support the use of extended attributes by security modules for storing file security labels. As per the earlier discussion of extended attributes for security modules, this handler uses a "security." prefix and allows for per-module attribute names. Security checking on userspace access to these attributes can be performed by the security module using the LSM hooks in fs/xattr.c, and the security module is free to internally use the inode operations without restriction for managing its security labels. Unlike the trusted namespace, these labels are used internally for access control purposes by the security module, and controls over userspace access to them require finer granularity than capable() supports.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil> This patch against 2.5.68 implements an xattr handler for ext3 to support the use of extended attributes by security modules for storing file security labels. As per the earlier discussion of extended attributes for security modules, this handler uses a "security." prefix and allows for per-module attribute names. Security checking for userspace access to these attributes can be performed by the security module using the LSM hooks in fs/xattr.c, and the security module is free to internally use the inode operations without restriction for managing its security labels. Unlike the trusted namespace, these labels are used internally for access control purposes by the security modules, and controls over userspace access to them require finer granularity than capable() supports.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil> This patch moves the security_d_instantiate hook calls in d_instantiate and d_splice_alias after the inode has been attached to the dentry. This change is necessary so that security modules can internally call the getxattr inode operation (which takes a dentry parameter) from this hook to obtain the inode security label.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Christoph Hellwig <hch@infradead.org> Originally by David Mosberger, testing by Roger Luethi. From the ia64 tree. Basically, it avoids going to memory all the time. What this does is make life a lot easier for gcc, so it can actually do a decent amount of optimization. The restructuring clearly is less important for out-of-order CPUs, but even there it gives some benefits. More specifically, the loop is now structured to operate one "unsigned long" at a time, rather than one bit at a time. Of course, you still need to process all the bits, but most of the relevant state in the inner loop can be kept in registers. Roger Luethi measured the routine on a bunch of different machines (mostly x86, IIRC: P5, P6, Crusoe, Athlons) and performance improved there, too (and it should definitely improve performance on any RISC-like architecture). Roger's benchmarking results (vs number of fd's): File TCP Numbfer of fd's: 10 250 500 10 250 500 UP, Pentium MMX 233MHz original 8.2 108.5 212.8 11.0 180.0 356.5 UP, Pentium MMX 233MHz w/patch 7.4 87.6 171.1 10.4 163.6 323.4 MP, Pentium MMX 233MHz original 15.7 283.8 562.8 18.9 354.4 705.5 MP, Pentium MMX 233MHz w/patch 14.6 255.6 506.5 17.8 332.8 664.1 UP, Athlon 1394 MHz original 1.3 13.4 26.1 1.9 24.7 48.6 UP, Athlon 1394 MHz w/patch 1.2 11.0 21.5 1.6 22.3 43.8 MP, Athlon 1394 MHz original 1.6 22.4 44.6 1.9 30.9 60.5 MP, Athlon 1394 MHz w/patch 1.5 21.2 41.7 1.9 30.2 59.6
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Andrew Morton authored
Ed Tomlinson has a machine on which some other device grabs IRQ12 first, and the 8042 doesn't work. Enabling shared iRQs in the 8042 driver fixes it up. Alan has confirmed that this is OK.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Dipankar Sarma <dipankar@in.ibm.com> fget() shows up on profiles, especially on SMP. Dipankar's patch special-cases the situation wherein there are no sharers of current->files. In this situation we know that no other process can close this file, so it is not necessary to increment the file's refcount. It's ugly as sin, but makes a substantial difference. The test is dd if=/dev/zero of=foo bs=1 count=1M On 4CPU P3 xeon with 1MB L2 cache and 512MB ram: kernel sys time std-dev ------------ -------- ------- UP - vanilla 2.104 0.028 UP - file 1.867 0.019 SMP - vanilla 2.976 0.023 SMP - file 2.719 0.026
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Manfred Spraul <manfred@colorfullife.com> below is the promised patch for better slab debugging, against 2.5.68-mm4: Changes: - enable redzoning and last user accounting even for large objects, if that doesn't waste too much memory - document why FORCED_DEBUG doesn't enable redzoning&last user accounting for some caches. - check the validity of the bufctl chains in a slab in __free_blocks. This detects double-free error for the caches without redzoning.
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Andrew Morton authored
try_to_free_pages() currently fails to notice that it successfully freed slab pages via shrink_slab(). So it can keep looping and eventually call out_of_memory(), even though there's a lot of memory now free. And even if it doesn't do that, it can free too much memory. The patch changes try_to_free_pages() so that it will notice freed slab pages and will return when enough memory has been freed via shrink_slab(). Many options were considered, but must of them were unacceptably inaccurate, intrusive or sleazy. I ended up putting the accounting into a stack-local structure which is pointed to by current->reclaim_state. One reason for this is that we can cleanly resurrect the current->local_pages pool by putting it into struct reclaim_state. (current->local_pages was removed because the per-cpu page pools in the page allocator largely duplicate its function. But it is still possible for interrupt-time allocations to steal just-freed pages, so we might want to put it back some time.)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Dave Hansen <haveblue@us.ibm.com>, Bill Irwin With PAE on, there are only 4 PGD entries. The kernel ones never change, so there is no need to copy them when a vmalloc fault occurs. This was this was causing problems with the split pmd patches, but it is still correct for mainline. Tested with and without PAE. I ran it in a loop turning on and off 10 swap partitions, which is what excited the original bug. http://bugme.osdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=640
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Andrew Morton authored
If a swapfile is ftruncated while in use, subsequent swapout will scribble on the filesystem. This is a case of root-shoot-foot, but wrecking the fs is a fairly rude response. And it's easy to fix: hold i_sem across the life of the swapon.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Manfred Spraul <manfred@colorfullife.com> Real 80386 cpus ignore the write protected bit in the page tables when running in supervisory mode. Thus the write protected bit must be checked by software. The current implementation does that check during access_ok(). This can result in data corruptions, if kswapd starts a swap-out between the access_ok and the actual write operation. To fix this, the patch moves the check from access_ok() into __copy_to_user_ll(), and redirects all user space writes into __copy_to_user_ll(). The patch only affects kernels build for 80386 cpus. Additionally, the patch removes the dead prototypes for __put_user_{1,2,4,8}. Due to the uninlining of access_ok, the .text segment is now ~ 8 kB shorter.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Monchi Abbad <kernel@axion.demon.nl> I found a mistake in the dvbdev.c file when creating the dvb /devfs files, it created /dev/dvb/adapter0device0 instead of /dev/dvb/adapter0/device0. But here is a simple fix.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> This is a pretty huge patch, but splitting it doesn't make a lot of sense.. (USB may still need work)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> partition_name() is a variant of __bdevname() that caches results and returns a pointrer to kmalloc()ed data instead of printing into a buffer. Due to it's caching it gets utterly confused when the name for a dev_t changes (can happen easily now with device mapper and probably in the future with dynamic dev_t users). It's only used by the raid code and most calls are through a wrapper, bdev_partition_name() which takes a struct block_device * that maybe be NULL. The patch below changes the bdev_partition_name() to call bdevname() if possible and the other calls where we really have nothing more than a dev_t to __bdevname. Btw, it would be nice if someone who knows the md code a bit better than me could remove bdev_partition_name() in favour of direct calls to bdevname() where possible - that would also get rid of the returns pointer to string on stack issue that this patch can't fix yet.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Some people may already have noticed that I've been revamping the devfs API recently. The worst offender still left is devfs_register, it's prototype is: devfs_handle_t devfs_register(devfs_handle_t dir, const char *name, unsigned int flags, unsigned int major, unsigned int minor, umode_t mode, void *ops, void *info) Of these: - dir and flags are always zero - the return value is never used - info is only used in one driver which doesn't even need it for operation - umode_t always describes a character device - name very often comes from a stack buffer we sprintf'ed into so obviously we really want a much simpler API instead. My first draft for this was: int devfs_mk_cdev(dev_t dev, umode_t mode, struct file_operations *fops, void *info, const char *fmt, ...) this removes the unused argumens, switches to a proper dev_t for the device number and allows to directly use a printf-like expression as name, getting rid of the temporary buffers. Now Al has reappeared and put the first steps of his CIDR for charater device on public ftp and we'll soon have a similar lookup object + fops mechanism in generic code as we already habe for blockdevices, i.e. the devfs code to assign fops from an entry will become superflous as generic code already does it. That means the fops and info arguments are obsolete before they were introduced, so I'd like to propose the following API instead: int devfs_mk_cdev(dev_t dev, umode_t mode, const char *fmt, ...) which is much nicer anyway. The educated reader will notice that this is exactly the same prototype devfs_mk_bdev has so I'll probably get suggestions to merge those two into some kind of devfs_mk_node soon. Personally I don't like that as character and blockdevices are two really separate entinities and I'll like to keep them as separate as possible. Example patch that introduces the API and converts drivers/input attached. Every driver which calls devfs_mk_cdev (about 50) needs conversion. Note that the transition can happen in pieces - devfs_register continues to work after this patch, it's just the plan to get rid of it in the end.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> disk_name() (and hence bdevname()) are now returning devfs-style device names when devfs is enabled. This is nice, but these names are very long, and they overflow the 32-char buffers which these functions use. The choices are: a) Use a bigger buffer (increase BDEVNAME_SIZE). This might be practical. But how big? b) return the name in kmalloced memory, make caller free it up. Yuk. c) Add a print_bdevname() thing and intersperse that amongst the printk's. This would work. d) Just print the non-devfs device name. That's what this patch does.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Chris Heath <chris@heathens.co.nz> This patch fixes the PrintScreen key when CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ is enabled. It allows you to use that key normally when Alt is not being pressed. Patch is against kernel 2.5.68.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Zwane Mwaikambo <zwane@linuxpower.ca> update pcmcia drivers for new IRQ API
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stewart Smith <stewartsmith@mac.com> Remove the UPDATE_ATIME() macro, use update_atime() directly.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Change sysrq sync/remount from a magic bdflush hook to proper pdflush operations. The sync operation reuses most of the regular sys_sync path now instead of implementing it's own superblock walking and (broken) local disk detection, the remount implementation has been moved to super.c, cleaned up and updated for the last two years locking changes. It also shares some code with the regular remount path now.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Manfred Spraul <manfred@colorfullife.com> attached is the promised cleanup/bugfix patch for the slab bootstrap: - kmem_cache_init & kmem_cache_sizes_init merged into one function, called after mem_init(). It's impossible to bring slab to an operational state without working gfp, thus the early partial initialization is not necessary. - g_cpucache_up set to FULL at the end of kmem_cache_init instead of the module init call. This is a bugfix: slab was completely initialized, just the update of the state was missing. - some documentation for the bootstrap added. The minimal fix for the bug is a two-liner: move g_cpucache_up=FULL from cpucache_init to kmem_cache_sizes_init, but I want to get rid of kmem_cache_sizes_init, too.
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Andrew Morton authored
The timer is being initialised too late (in ->open()). If modprobe fails we get an uninitialised timer warning.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Michael Buesch <fsdeveloper@yahoo.de> and Paul Schroeder. mwavedd.h needs <linux/wait.h> and smapi.h
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Andrew Morton authored
- ifdef fix in kmap_types.h (Oleg Drokin) - remove redundant ext3 inclusions (Burton Windle) - Fix misidentified warning printk in vmalloc.c - radeon_cp printk warning fix (Randy Dunlap) - Update minimum binutils version for the ".incbin" thing in vsyscall.S - update raw driver to recent module API. - update my email address
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Zwane Mwaikambo <zwane@linuxpower.ca> There was a 2.4 merge from Alan Cox, but a few #ifdef's got shuffled around in the process, resulting in a broken build for !CONFIG_PM
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@muc.de> This driver was bogusly relying on the dropping of the __exit section at link time. cpia_exit() is calling proc_cpia_destroy(), which doesn't even exist if !CONFIG_MODULE.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@muc.de> Some configs didn't link anymore because they got references from .altinstructions to __exit functions. Fixing it at the linker level is not easily possible. This patch just discards .text.exit at runtime instead of link time to avoid this. It will also fix a related problem with .eh_frame in modern gcc (so far only observed on x86-64, but could happen on i386 too)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@muc.de> This patch adds an generic x86 subarchitecture. It is intended to provide an dynamic interface for APIC drivers. There are already three subarchitectures (bigsmp, summit, default) that only differ in how they drive the local APIC. A fourth - Unisys ES7000 - is scheduled to be merged soon. The subarchitecture concept separated this nicely, but it has the big drawback that they are compile time options. A Linux vendor cannot ship own binary kernel rpms for all of these machines. Runtime probing is needed instead. This patch adds a new "generic" subarchitecture that just acts as a dynamic switching layer for APIC drivers. It only tries to virtualize the APICs, no attempt is made to cover further incompatiblities. This means machines like the Visual Workstation, pc9800 or Voyager are not covered; but these are unlikely to be supported by binary distributions anyways. The generic arch reuses the existing interface in mach_ipi / mach_mpparse.h / mach_apic.h and just pulls it using some macros into an "struct genapic" object. The main APIC code does not recognize it, it is all hidden in the mach-generic include files. Auto detection of APIC types is supported in the usual way used by existing ports like Summit - checking ACPI or mptables for specific signatures - or it can be specified by the user using a new "apic=" boot option. I also moved the DMI scan to before the generic subarchitecture probe, so DMI could be used in future too to probe specific machines. Some minor hacks were needed to avoid circular declaration of a few symbols, but overall it's fairly clean. The patch has been tested on a Summit machine, an generic 4 virtual CPUs Xeon and on an ES7000.
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Linus Torvalds authored
user-supplied source checker on all C files before compiling them. I'll release the actual checker once I've cleaned it up a bit more (yay, all the copyright paperwork completed!)
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
"defined()" rather than using it as a value.
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Linus Torvalds authored
properly checked with the rest of the kernel.
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