- 30 Dec, 2003 40 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Nikita Danilov <Nikita@Namesys.COM> Patch to teach fs/reiserfs/super.c:reiserfs_fill_super() to respect @silent parameter and to not issue any output if @silent is set. Also remove some trailing white spaces, while we are here.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Muli Ben-Yehuda <mulix@mulix.org> It's messy, and needs describing.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: BlaisorBlade <blaisorblade_spam@yahoo.it> This fixes a "typo" for Kconfig-language docs.
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Andrew Morton authored
wli points out that shrink_slab inverts the sense of shrinker->seeks: those caches which require more seeks to reestablish an object are shrunk harder. That's wrong - they should be shrunk less. So fix that up, but scaling the result so that the patch is actually a no-op at this time, because all caches use DEFAULT_SEEKS (2).
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Andrew Morton authored
log_buf_len_setup() is called on the start_kernel->parse_args() path. It must not enable interrupts.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Harald Welte <laforge@gnumonks.org> [disclaimer: This was posted on the linuxppc list before, BenH asked me=20 to re-post it to lkml] The prism54 (http://prism54.org) driver for my cardbus adapter works with 2.4.x, but not 2.6.x on a Titanium G4 Powerbook IV. On 2.6.x the error message was PCI:0001:02:00.0 Resource 0 [00000000-00001fff] is unassigned After investigating differences in the PCI code of 2.4.x and 2.6.x, i noticed that 2.4.x/arc/ppc/kernel/pci.c:pcibios_update_resource() contained a couple of lines that unset the IORESOURCE_UNSET bitflag. In 2.6.x, this is handled by the generic PCI core in drivers/pci/setup-res.c:pci_update_resource() code. However, the code is missing the 'res->flags &=3D ~IORESOURCE_UNSET' part. The below fix re-adds that section from 2.4.x.=20 I'm not sure wether this belongs into the arch-independent PCI api. Anyway, on PPC it seems to be needed for certain cardbus devices. Any comments welcome.
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Andrew Morton authored
qlogic's 16k maximum I/O size bites again. Neil says: The problems we fixed were all to do with normal IO. This one is resync IO. The problem here is that raid1 always does resync in RESYNC_BLOCK_SIZE (=64k) IOs and if the device doesn't cope - tough. The simple fix is to #define RESYNC_BLOCK_SIZE to PAGE_SIZE in md/raid1.c The better fix is to rewrite the raid1 resync code to use bio_add_page. This means we have to build the read request and the write requests at the same time, and then when a bio_add_page fails, we back-out the last page from the bios that have one too many, and then do the read followed by the writes. I have some code the nearly does this, but I haven't got it actually working yet and I am on leave until mid January. I would recommend doing fs/drivers/md/raid1.c: -#define RESYNC_BLOCK_SIZE (64*1024) +#define RESYNC_BLOCK_SIZE PAGE_SIZE for now.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jon Burgess <mplayer@jburgess.uklinux.net> The iso9660 filesystem code checks that the "sbsector" option is positioned within the first 660Mb of the disk. Today the iso9660 filesystem is used on DVD's which are much bigger than 660Mb and this check prevents the sbsector option being used to specify the location of the superblock of multisession DVD's. With this check removed I can mount the second session on a DVD-R by specifying the sbsector, even though the firmware on that drive returns bogus data for the TOC. If an invalid large sector number is entered then a "request beyond end of device" error is reported elsewhere in the block code, but appears to do no damage.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Alan Cox <alan@redhat.com> Change by Clear Zhang of ALI
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Bernardo Innocenti <bernie@develer.com> It needs init.h
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Steven Cole <elenstev@mesatop.com>
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Seth, Rohit" <rohit.seth@intel.com> We recently covered a bug in mm/mmap.c on IA-64. While unmapping a address space, unmap_region calls free_pgtables to possibly free the pages that are used for page tables. Currently no distinction is made between freeing a region that is mapped by normal pages vs the pages that are mapped by hugepages. Architecture specific code needs to handle cases where PTEs corresponding to a region that is mapped by hugepages is properly getting unmapped. Attached please find a patch that makes the required changes in generic part of kernel. We will need to send a separate IA-64 patch to use this new semantics. Currently, so not to disturb the PPC (as that is the only arch that had ARCH_HAS_HUGEPAGE_ONLY_RANGE defined) we are mapping back the definition of new function hugetlb_free_pgtables to free_pgtables.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Korty <joe.korty@ccur.com> We need to check whether preemption is needed after reenabling preemption in kunmap_atomic().
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Mark Haverkamp <markh@osdl.org> This fixes a problem similar to the patch I submitted on 11/20 http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=linux-kernel&m=106936439707962&w=2 In this case, though, the result is an: "Incorrect number of segments after building list" message. The macro __BVEC_START assumes a bi_idx of zero when the dm code can submit a bio with a non-zero bi_idx. The code has been tested on an 8 way / 8gb OSDL STP machine with a 197G lvm volume running dbt2 test.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Juergen Quade <quade@hsnr.de> I just hit a copy-paste typo in floppy.c.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jim Radford <radford@indigita.com> I finally took the time to figure our why my parallel port wasn't working... here's the patch.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Michael Hunold <hunold@convergence.de> the Linux-on-a-CD system Knoppix has nearly all framebuffer drivers for 2.4.23 compiled in. Additionally, it surpresses most kernel messages by lowering the kernel log level. Two framebuffer drivers (clgenfb.c and hgafb.c), however, use KERN_ERR to say that their particular card has *not* been found which is very annoying. Especially the clgenfb.c driver simply says on bootup: > Couldn't find PCI device which can really confuse newbie users. I've already send a patch that fixes this for 2.4 -- Marcelo and Geert Uytterhoeven have already ack'ed it. The same change should be done for 2.6, too IMHO. The appended patch replaces two KERN_ERR with KERN_INFO and additionally makes the cirrusfb.c message more descriptive.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Randy.Dunlap" <rddunlap@osdl.org> Add Intel SpeedStep zero-page memory usage doc.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Yoshinori Sato <ysato@users.sourceforge.jp> * using generic_ffs * optimized code
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Andrew Morton authored
From: IWAMOTO Toshihiro <iwamoto@valinux.co.jp> I found linux-2.6.0-test11 leaks memory when execve fails. I've also checked the bitkeeper tree and the problem seems to be unchanged. The attached patch is a partial backout of bitkeeper rev. 1.87 of fs/exec.c. I guess the original change was a simple mistake. (free_arg_pages() is a NOP when CONFIG_MMU is defined).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "H. Peter Anvin" <hpa@zytor.com> This patch fixes the "non-terminating inflate" problem that Russell King complained about on LKML earlier today. I chose to use "goto" much like zlib does, in order to not require setjmp/longjmp inside the kernel. It's a bit ugly, but it also lets each function chose how it needs to be terminated on error, which is a good thing.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> - uses just printk() instead of unneeded fat_fs_panic() - removes the debug printk - less verbose on error path - uses correct a error number on error path
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> If path length became zero by fat_striptail_len(), this returns the -ENOENT as empty path.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> fatfs misc cleanups/fixes.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> This adds the check of count of clusters. And if it's too big, fat driver can't handle it. So doesn't recognize this as fatfs.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> The -1 was documented as "there is no hint", so this patch uses -1 instead of 0 for FAT32 fsinfo.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> include/linux/msdos_fs.h cleanup
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> Fix printk format
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> For atomicity write, adds readv/writev support to FAT.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> Michal Rokos <m.rokos@sh.cvut.cz> The problem is: even if vfat_striptail_len() counts len of name without trailing dots and sets len to the correct value, utf8_mbstowcs() doesn't care about len and takes whole name. So dirs and files with dots can be created on vfat fs.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> Yokota Hiroshi <yokota@netlab.is.tsukuba.ac.jp> This patch is required for my 640MB Optical disk. Because MS windows 95/ME based FAT filesystem disk formatter generetes wrong super bloacks.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> - remove unused "rows" and "cols" - change the 2 variable to static
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> Suppress a buffer_error() warning which occurs when a page which previously had an I/O error gets its buffers stripped.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: David Mosberger <davidm@napali.hpl.hp.com> This patch makes /proc/PID/maps report the range from FIXADDR_USER_START to FIXADDR_USER_END as a final pseudo-vma. This is consistent with the notion that reading /proc/PID/maps tells you about every page containing data that the process can in fact access, and with things such as ptrace allowing access to this memory. Without this, userland tools that want to look at all of a process's accessible pages need special-case knowledge about things such as the vsyscall DSO page. With this change, existing code that iterates over the /proc/PID/maps lines will cover those pages like any other. For example, this lets gdb's "gcore" command synthesize a core file from a live process that contains the vsyscall DSO page as a real core dump would, using its existing generic iterator code and no new special cases.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Josef 'Jeff' Sipek" <jeffpc@optonline.net> Simple clean up patch to remove double logical operators.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Martin J. Bligh" <mbligh@aracnet.com>
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Chris Bajumpaa <cbajumpa@or8.net> This patch fixes a problem with the TSC failing on via686a/KX133 motherboards either reverting to using the pit or deadlocking the machine alltogether under heavy load. (Specifically Abit KA7/KA7-100). Message from the log: Dec 18 18:20:37 grinder kernel: Losing too many ticks! Dec 18 18:20:37 grinder kernel: TSC cannot be used as a timesource. (Are you running with SpeedStep?) Dec 18 18:20:37 grinder kernel: Falling back to a sane timesource. The snippet of code that was missing from timer_tsc.c comes from timer_pit.c.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Maciej Soltysiak" <solt@dns.toxicfilms.tv> make gconfig causes this: scripts/kconfig/gconf.c: In function `on_treeview1_button_press_event': scripts/kconfig/gconf.c:1175: warning: passing arg 1 of `gtk_widget_grab_focus' from incompatible pointer type
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Andrew Morton authored
From: OGAWA Hirofumi <hirofumi@mail.parknet.co.jp> The fatfs was ignoring the I/O error on two points. If I/O error happen while checking a free block entries, this checks the all entries, and reports an I/O error on each entry. This problem became cause of the disk full by syslogd.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: YOSHIFUJI Hideaki <yoshfuji@linux-ipv6.org>
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