- 15 Mar, 2003 3 commits
-
-
-
Russell King authored
Register the tty devclass with sysfs before tty drivers initialise - sysfs requires structures to be registered before use. This is required for the previous serial csets, as well as any drivers which are initialising using __initcall() or module_init().
-
http://ppc.bkbits.net/for-linus-ppc64Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
-
- 16 Mar, 2003 5 commits
-
-
bk://ppc.bkbits.net/for-linus-ppc64Anton Blanchard authored
into samba.org:/home/anton/ppc64/for-linus-ppc64
-
Anton Blanchard authored
into samba.org:/scratch/anton/linux-2.5_ppc64
-
bk://ppc.bkbits.net/for-linus-ppc64Anton Blanchard authored
into samba.org:/home/anton/ppc64/for-linus-ppc64
-
Anton Blanchard authored
-
Anton Blanchard authored
into samba.org:/scratch/anton/sfr
-
- 15 Mar, 2003 3 commits
-
-
bk://linux-dj.bkbits.net/cpufreqLinus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
-
Anton Blanchard authored
-
Linus Torvalds authored
-
- 16 Mar, 2003 6 commits
-
-
Paul Mackerras authored
-
Paul Mackerras authored
-
Paul Mackerras authored
-
Paul Mackerras authored
-
bk://stop.crashing.org/linux-2.5-miscPaul Mackerras authored
into samba.org:/home/paulus/kernel/for-linus-ppc
-
Paul Mackerras authored
into samba.org:/home/paulus/kernel/for-linus-ppc
-
- 15 Mar, 2003 1 commit
-
-
Paul Mackerras authored
into samba.org:/home/paulus/kernel/for-linus-ppc
-
- 14 Mar, 2003 22 commits
-
-
Anton Blanchard authored
into samba.org:/scratch/anton/sfr
-
Linus Torvalds authored
-
Christoph Hellwig authored
-
Christoph Hellwig authored
There was one place where we missed an unlock, in addition some more code cleanups.
-
Christoph Hellwig authored
I had to rewrite the code from scratch to understand what it does, but at least it doesn't OOPS anymore on boot..
-
bk://kernel.bkbits.net/jgarzik/random-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
-
bk://thebsh.namesys.com/bk/reiser3-linux-2.5-relocation-fixLinus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
-
Oleg Drokin authored
Also added \n to some error messages.
-
Jean Tourrilhes authored
-
Neil Brown authored
Now that we have working up-calls to userspace, CROSSMNT makes sense. If CROSSMNT is set for an export, and we too a LOOKUP which crosses a mountpoint, we initiate an upcall to find out if and how that filesystem is exported.
-
Neil Brown authored
becase nohide is the user-space visible name for the flag, and we are about to define a real CROSSMNT.
-
Neil Brown authored
1/ call cache_fresh when replacing a cache entry (instead of only when updating) so that up-calls waiting on the replaced entry continue. 2/ in svcauth_unix_accept, don't put the verifier until all tests have succeeded. 3/ calculate size of request-being-deferred correctly.
-
Neil Brown authored
nlmsvc_lock calls nlmsvc_create_block with file->f_sema held. nlmsvc_create_block calls nlmclnt_lookup_host which might call nlm_gc_hosts which might, eventually, try to claim file->f_sema for the same file -> deadlock. nlmsvc_create_block does not need any protection under any lock as lockd is single-threaded and _create_block only plays with internal data structures. So we release the f_sema before calling in, and make sure it gets claimed again afterwards.
-
Neil Brown authored
From: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@fys.uio.no> knfsd needs to disable soft interrupts when calling csum_partial_copy_to_xdr(). At the moment there's a nasty conflict between the RPC server and client. The problem arises when you get to xdr_partial_copy_from_skb() (and the kmap_atomic()); the RPC client can end up calling the same function from a ->data_ready() soft interrupt, and corrupt any data the knfsd process may have copied.
-
Neil Brown authored
-
Neil Brown authored
Superblock format '1' resolves a number of issues with superblock format '0'. It is more dense and can support many more sub-devices. It does not contains un-needed redundancy. It adds a few new useful fields
-
Neil Brown authored
The code to understand a specific superblock format is already highly localised in md. This patch defines a user-space interface for selecting which superblock format to use, and obeys that selection. Md currently has a concept of 3 version numbers: A major version number A minor version number A patch version number There historically seems to be some confusion about whether these refer to a version of the superblock layout, or a version of the software. We will now define that: the "major_version" defines the superblock handler. '0' is the current superblock format. All new formats will need new numbers. the "minor_version" can specify minor variations in the superblock, such as different location on the device the "patch_version" will be used to indicate new extenstions to the software.. patch_version=1 will mean multiple superblock support. A superblock version number is selected by specifing major_version in SET_ARRAY_INFO ioctl. This patch: Updates Documentation/md.txt with details of new interface. Generalises desc_nr handling and makes sure that an array never has two devices with the same desc_nr. makes sure mddev->major_version is always valid and is 0 by default. uses mddev->major_version to select superblock handlers. Modifies set_array_info to just record version number if raid_disks==0 Makes sure max_disks is always set correctly. Determines device size when reading superblock, or a hot-add/add-new.
-
Neil Brown authored
Normally the data stored on a component of a RAID array is stored from the start of the device. This patch allows a per-device data_offset so the data can start elsewhere. This will allow RAID arrays where the metadata is at the head of the device rather than the tail.
-
Neil Brown authored
Md devices (raid1/raid5) can resync or recover. There are similar but importantly different. resync happens after an unclean shutdown recovery happens when a failed drive is being replaced by a hot spare. The sync-checkpoint code confused the two somewhat and this causes problems. This patch makes sure "recovery_cp" only relates to resync, not recovery. It also fixes a small problem with recording spares in the superblock.
-
Neil Brown authored
From: Angus Sawyer <angus.sawyer@dsl.pipex.com> If there are no writes for 20 milliseconds, write out superblock to mark array as clean. Write out superblock with dirty flag before allowing any further write to succeed. If an md thread gets signaled with SIGKILL, reduce the delay to 0. Also tidy up some printk's and make sure writing the superblock isn't noisy.
-
Neil Brown authored
The md_recoveryd thread is responsible for initiating and cleaning up resync threads. This job can be equally well done by the per-array threads for those arrays which might need it. So the mdrecoveryd thread is gone and the core code that it ran is now run by raid5d, raid1d or multipathd. We add an MD_RECOVERY_NEEDED flag so those daemon don't have to bother trying to lock the md array unless it is likely that something needs to be done. Also modify the names of all threads to have the number of md device.
-
Neil Brown authored
It is needed for kernel_fpu_*
-