- 25 Feb, 2004 12 commits
-
-
Brian King authored
Device type 0x0C is RAID, so show it as such
-
Andi Kleen authored
For some unknown reasons Nvidia NForce3 doesn't use the standard Hammer AGP architecture, but requires set up of some shadow registers. This patch adds that to the K8 AGP driver. Based on an old 2.4 patch from someone at Nvidia. Also includes another bug fix for the K8 AGP handler, from Brad House. We should not assume that there is only one northbridge in a Uniprocessor system. Always flush all. Also some minor cleanup.
-
Andi Kleen authored
Give 32bit emulation ioctl handlers the same locking rules as normal ioctl handlers. This will avoid surprises in driver code. Most call sys_ioctl who would take it anyways.
-
Andi Kleen authored
This adds a new completely rewritten machine check handler for x86-64. The old one never worked on 2.6. The new handler has many improvements. It closely follows the Intel and AMD recommendations on MCE handlers now (the old one had many violations). It handles unrecoverable errors in user space better now - it will only kill the process now if possible instead of panicing. This one is CPU independent now - it should work on any CPU that supports the standard x86 MCA architecture. This new handler only logs fatal errors that lead to kernel panic to the console. Non fatal errors are logged race free into a new (non ring) buffer now and supplied to the user using a new character device. The old one could deadlock on console and printk locks. This also separates machine check errors from real kernel errors better. The new buffer has been also designed to be easily accessible from external debugging tools: it has a signature and could be even recovered after reboot. It is not organized as a ring buffer - this means the first errors are kept unless explicitely cleared. The new error formats can be parsed using ftp://ftp.suse.com/pub/people/ak/x86-64/mcelog.c The new character device for it can be created with mknod /dev/mcelog c 10 227 There is a new sysfs interface to configure the machine check handler. It has a "tolerant" parameter that defines the aggressiveness of the machine check: 0: always panic 1: panic if deadlock possible (e.g. MCE happened in the kernel) 2: try to avoid panic Default is 2 Despite of having more features the new handler is shorter.
-
Andi Kleen authored
Bring the x86-64 port up to date. Lots of smaller bug fixes that have accumulated. Also fixes another nasty bug introduced by the IA32e changes that causes BUGs at boot for some people. Only changes x86-64 specific files. There are some other changes that I'm sending separately. - Some cleanup in NMI watchdog code - Fix HyperThreading CPU setup race (Suresh B. Siddha) - Update defconfig - Add a comment on why iommu_fullflush is disabled. - Export sys_ioctl again - Fix build with IA32_EMULATION=y and SYSVIPC=n - Remove noisy boot printks in the mptable scan. - Implement automatic NMI watchdog switching for real now - Remove redundant 32bit ioctl handlers for autofs - Remove CONFIG ifdefs around rtc 32bit ioctl handlers - Remove useless nfsctl ifdef in syscall.c (Al Viro) - Increase padding for prefetchw alternative - Check for NX bit early before setting up memory maps (Suresh B. Siddha) - Change Intel IA32e config description and fix help texts (Jun Nakajima) - Fix microcode driver build really now (Dave Jones) - Add nohpet option to disable HPET timer - Fix double semicolon in aperture.c - Add cmpxchg16b cpuid entry - Fix return value of read_pci_config_16 (Paul Menage) - Fix __KERNEL_COMPAT32_CS (Zachary Amsden) - Disable the infamous 30 minutes check in CMOS time setting - Update URLs in Kconfig (Petri T. Koistinen) - Fix ACPI interrupt source parsing for Nforce3 (Maciej W. Rozycki) - Fix 32bit ipc version parsing. - Run local APIC NMI watchdog only once a second (or less often on idle boxes) - Merge ACPI APIC SCI functions from i386 - Add i8254 timer suspend code from i386 - Merge with 2.6.2-rc3 + minor changes from i386 - Fix empty_zero_page declaration (Greg Johnson) - Readd sysctls for exception/page fault trace and vsyscall32 - Fix WCHAN - Fix STACK_TOP usage. Stack for 64bit processes should be at the top of memory now again. Also set it correctly for LINUX32_3GB. - Add warning fixes for gcc 3.4 and -Wdeclaration-after-statement
-
bk://bk.linux1394.org/ieee1394-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
-
Ben Collins authored
-
Ben Collins authored
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruen@suse.de>, and me. Latest gcc cvs is able to detect mismatches between functions which are tagged asmlinkage and declarations which are missing asmlinkage. Or vice versa. Fix up the fallout from an x86 allyesconfig build.
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: "Randy.Dunlap" <rddunlap@osdl.org> Add syscalls.h, which contains prototypes for the kernel's system calls. Replace open-coded declarations all over the place. This patch found a couple of prior bugs. It appears to be more important with -mregparm=3 as we discover more asmlinkage mismatches. Some syscalls have arch-dependent arguments, so their prototypes are in the arch-specific unistd.h. Maybe it should have been asm/syscalls.h, but there were already arch-specific syscall prototypes in asm/unistd.h... Tested on x86, ia64, x86_64, ppc64, s390 and sparc64. May cause trivial-to-fix build breakage on other architectures.
-
bk://linux-acpi.bkbits.net/linux-acpi-release-2.6.4Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
-
bk://kernel.bkbits.net/davem/net-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
-
- 24 Feb, 2004 28 commits
-
-
Len Brown authored
into intel.com:/home/lenb/src/linux-acpi-test-2.6.4
-
Andrew Morton authored
drivers/acpi/sleep/proc.c:359: warning: initialization from incompatible pointer type drivers/acpi/sleep/proc.c:367: warning: initialization from incompatible pointer type
-
Andrew Morton authored
drivers/acpi/utils.c: In function `acpi_evaluate_reference': drivers/acpi/utils.c:353: warning: unsigned int format, different type arg (arg 5)
-
David Stevens authored
-
Chas Williams authored
-
Chas Williams authored
-
David S. Miller authored
-
Michal Ludvig authored
-
Michal Ludvig authored
-
Alexander Viro authored
-
Patrick McHardy authored
-
Len Brown authored
into intel.com:/home/lenb/src/linux-acpi-test-2.6.4
-
bk://bk.phunnypharm.org/sparc-2.6David S. Miller authored
into nuts.davemloft.net:/disk1/BK/sparc-2.6
-
Ben Collins authored
-
Ben Collins authored
-
Len Brown authored
into intel.com:/home/lenb/src/linux-acpi-test-2.6.4
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: Pavel Machek <pavel@suse.cz> swsusp/s3 assembly parts, and parts called from assembly are not properly marked asmlinkage; that leads to double fault on resume when someone compiles kernel with regparm. Thanks go to Stefan Seyfried for discovering this.
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: James Morris <jmorris@redhat.com> ENOTSUPP is the wrong value, and should not be returned to userspace.
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: Armin <armin@melware.de> Pointers to __devexit functions must be wrapped with the __devexit_p() macro.
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: Ian Wienand <ianw@gelato.unsw.edu.au> - Fix inline function declarations - Use #ifdef for CONFIG_*, not #if
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: David Woodhouse <dwmw2@infradead.org> Don't jump between contexts. (don't write comprehensible changelogs, either).
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: Albert Cahalan <albert@users.sourceforge.net> Now that /dev/pts is using the 12:20 dev_t, a new procps is required.
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: Martine Silbermann <Martine.Silbermann@hp.com> Having spent a non trivial amount of time trying to pull in the code to enable MSI, I would suggest that a clear indication in Kconfig that MSI requires CONFIG_PCI_USE_VECTOR would be very helpful. Also since the MSI code was integrated into 2.6.1 I've updated the comment that called for installing the MSI patch.
-
Andrew Morton authored
That check I just added to sys_sysctl() is not needed: do_sysctl() checks as well.
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: Arjan van de Ven <arjanv@redhat.com> One of my machines prints the following in dmesg during boot; CPU: Trace cache: 4K uops<6>CPU: L2 cache: 256K cause is a missing \n being printed; fix below.
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: Arjan van de Ven <arjanv@redhat.com> some more hardcoded THREAD_SIZE cleanups.
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@SteelEye.com> The alder has an intel Extended Express System Support Controller which presents apparently spurious BARs. When the pci resource code tries to reassign these BARs, the second IO-APIC gets disabled (with disastrous consequences). The first BAR is the actual IO-APIC, the remaining five bars seem to be spurious resources, so we forcibly insert the first one into the resource tree and clear all the others.
-
Andrew Morton authored
From: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@SteelEye.com> This is a necessary precursor patch for getting the Intel Alder motherboard working (it has a PCI device corresponding to the IO-APIC which has to be forcibly inserted into the machine's reserved memory region). Eric Biederman was going to come up with a more comprehensive fix, but in the meantime, this is the minimum necessary to get insert_resource to work when the covering region is larger than the resource being inserted.
-