1. 23 Nov, 2007 40 commits
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.129pre5 · ee537af3
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.129pre4 · d3c10203
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Linux 2.1.129-pre3 · 5f99a99e
      Linus Torvalds authored
      I don't know how I made an old pre-patch available: I've made a pre-3 that
      has the proper proc thing so that it compiles (it is otherwise identical
      to pre-2, so if you got pre-2 to compile by patching by hand, then there's
      no reason to get pre-3).
      
                      Linus
      5f99a99e
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.129pre2 · 73f97101
      Linus Torvalds authored
      73f97101
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      Import 2.1.129pre1 · ef6a1333
      Linus Torvalds authored
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    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.128 · d9c0ffee
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.128pre1 · c2ef85f5
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Linux 2.1.127 · 2470b27d
      Linus Torvalds authored
      Ok,
       after two fairly hectic weeks for me, 2.1.127 is finally out there.
      
      This kernel does:
       - various small but important networking fixes from Davem (thanks). One
         of them is the "anti-nagle" bit to allow programs that know what they
         are doing to avoid nagling by telling the kernel so. This is mainly
         things like Web servers and ftp-servers that can use this option
         together with "sendfile()".
       - scheduling timeout interface change: the new interface is much more
         logical than the old one, and allows us to get the jiffies wrap-around
         case right. Thanks to Andrea Arcangeli.
       - Various driver updates: specialix, sonycd,
       - Memory management fixups. Handle out-of-memory conditions correctly,
         and handle high memory load much more gracefully.
       - sparc and PowerPC architecture updates
       - 3c509 SMP fix, tlan PCI probe update.
       - scsi driver updates: ncr53c8xx, aic7xxx, dc390
       - filesystem updates: autofs, hfs, umsdos
      
      Go, test, be happy,
      
                      Linus
      2470b27d
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.127pre7 · 852a91e8
      Linus Torvalds authored
      852a91e8
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      >> Btw, I've been looking at why Andrea thinks he's patches are needed, · c8cff325
      Linus Torvalds authored
      >> because I looked very deep and the patches really shouldn't have made any
      >> real difference..
      >> The reason - tadaam - is so silly that it's embarrassing. The thing is,
      >> that the things that should use GFP_USER don't. They use GFP_KERNEL
      >> instead, and that is sufficient to explain all the problems that Andrea
      >> saw. Becuase GFP_KERNEL will continue to allow allocations even after the
      >> freeing up of another page has failed.
      >> After fixing that in mm/memory.c and mm/filemap.c, the problem seems to be
      >> properly fixed.
      
      > I thought to change that but I was not sure (and infact some email ago I
      > asked that to you too). I have not changed that myself because I was
      > worryed that userspace allocation could be too much light. It would be
      > nice to know if using GFP_USER and disabling kswapd (at the end of
      > vmscan.c) causes process to segfaults (so that we can know if a real time
      > process can alloc/swapout memory safely).
      
      I wonder why it wasn't GFP_USER - that's exactly what the thing is there
      for, and I don't know when it was changed. Probably with the new page
      cache or something. I just looked at the memory allocator, and it looked
      like it was doing the right thing, and it _was_ - but because it was
      called with GFP_KERNEL it tried harder than it should have to return a
      good page even when it ran out of memory.
      Anyway, I made a pre-patch-2.1.127-6 and put it on ftp.kernel.org (pre-4
      and pre-5 have been my internal pre-patches and don't show up there). This
      has the timeout code basic fixes and the mm fixes, and doesn't fall over
      for me with Andreas memory load case.
      
      	Linus
      c8cff325
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.127pre3 · 8e1e477e
      Linus Torvalds authored
      8e1e477e
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.127pre2 · a93be803
      Linus Torvalds authored
      I just found a case that could certainly result in endless page faults,
      and an endless stream of __get_free_page() calls. It's been there forever,
      and I bascially thought it could never happen, but thinking about it some
      more it can happen a lot more easily than I thought.
      
      The problem is that the page fault handling code will give up if it cannot
      allocate a page table entry. We have code in place to handle the final
      page allocation failure, but the "mid-way" failures just failed, and
      caused the page fault to be done over and over again.
      
      More importantly, this could happen from kernel mode when a system call
      was trying to fill in a user page, in which case it wouldn't even be
      interruptible.
      
      It's really unlikely to happen (because the page tables tend to be set up
      already), but I suspect it can be triggered by execve'ing a new process
      which is not going to have any existing page tables. Even then we're
      likely to have old pages available (the ones we free'd from the previous
      process), but at least it doesn't sound impossible that this could be a
      problem.
      
      I've not seen this behaviour myself, but it could have caused Andrea's
      problems, especially the harder to find ones. Andrea, can you check this
      patch (against clean 2.1.126) out and see if it makes any difference to
      your testing?
      
      (Right now it does the wrong error code: it will cause a SIGSEGV instead
      of a SIGBUS when we run out of memory, but that's a small detail).
      Essentially, instead of trying to call "oom()" and sending a signal (which
      doesn't work for kernel level accesses anyway), the code returns the
      proper return value from handle_mm_fault(), which allows the caller to do
      the right thing (which can include following the exception tables). That
      way we can handle the case of running out of memory from a kernel mode
      access too..
      
      (This is also why the fault gets the wrong signal - I didn't bother to fix
      up the x86 fault handler all that much ;)
      Btw, the reason I'm sending out these patches in emails instead of just
      putting them on ftp.kernel.org is that the machine has had disk problems
      for the last week, and finally gave up completely last Friday or so. So
      ftp.kernel.org is down until we have a new raid array or the old one
      magically recovers.  Sorry about the spamming.
      
                      Linus
      a93be803
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.127pre1 · d7cc008e
      Linus Torvalds authored
      I have an alternate patch for low memory circumstances that I'd like you
      to test out.
      The problem with the old kswapd setup was at least partly that kswapd was
      woken up too late - by the time kswapd was woken up, it really had to work
      fairly hard. Also, kswapd really shouldn't be real-time at all: normally
      it should just be a fairly low-priority process, and the priority should
      grow as there is more urgent need for memory.
      This alternate approach seems to work for me, and is designed to avoid the
      "spikes" of heavy real-time kswapd activity during which the machine is
      fairly unusable in the old scheme.
      
                      Linus
      d7cc008e
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux-2.1.126 · 76df47b0
      Linus Torvalds authored
       - architecture updates for alpha and MIPS (and some minor PPC updates
         too)
       - joystick updates
       - MCA stuff from Alan. The guy has too much free time on his hands.
       - stallion driver cosmetic update
       - nasty SMP race with "task queues" (not the scheduling kind), where we
         were mixing atomic metaphores, resulting in a mess. Usually a benign
         one, but occasionally you could force oopses.
       - some floppy and ide updates
       - PS/2 mouse driver integrated into the PC keyboard controller. That got
         rid of a lot of really nasty problems (it's the same controller,
         accessing it from two different drivers was always messy)
       - various driver updates: floppy, ide, network drivers, sound, video..
       - various small FS fixes - finally _really_ getting the ENOENT vs ENOTDIR
         stuff right, nfsd updates, remounting fixes, filesize limits on NFS
         and smbfs, ntfs and ufs updates...
       - shm updates from Alan
       - cleanup of some MM stuff, I hope Andrea will re-do the patches and I'll
         look at the other parts.
       - unix fd garbage collection fix, getting rid of circular dependencies..
      
      And probably various other small fixes that I have thankfully forgotten
      about.
      76df47b0
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.126pre2 · 350e3226
      Linus Torvalds authored
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    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.126pre1 · 79e1fe75
      Linus Torvalds authored
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    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux-2.1.125 ... pre-2.2 imminent · c968c37a
      Linus Torvalds authored
      It seems that I've finally found the mysterious bug that caused some SMP
      machines to lock up at bootup if they had no keyboard enabled. It turns
      out that the keyboard was a complete red herring, and that it just changed
      timings of bottom half handling in particular. The real culprit was some
      misguided locking attempts by the console driver at a really bad time.
      
      Anyway, that means that the last of my personal show-stopper bugs in 2.1.x
      seems to be finally history. I still expect to sync up with Alan Cox's
      patches in particular, but I'm mentally getting ready for a real 2.2.
      
      I still haven't decided on whether I'll make the same kind of "pre-2.2"
      that I did before the 2.0 release, but there are strong psychological
      reasons to do so to get people to more actively test it out with a "this
      really should be stable" mindset.
      
      In the meantime, there's now 2.1.125. Most of 2.1.125 is driver updates
      for various things, most notably perhaps joystick and the new 5.10 version
      of the Adaptec aic7xxx driver by Doug Ledford (but there are various other
      driver updates). The fix for the mysterious lock-up is a few embarrassing
      lines removed, but makes me feel a lot better ;)
      
      Go forth, multiply, and fill the earth
      c968c37a
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      Import 2.1.125pre2 · a972c494
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.125pre1 · 9d50b265
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Linux-2.1.124... · 830e4ab4
      Linus Torvalds authored
      .. is out there now, and includes:
      
       - subtle fix for lazy FP save and restore on x86. The bug has been there
         for a long time, but was apparently triggered by the re-write of the
         low-level scheduling function. It could result in corrupted i387 state
         under certain (admittedly fairly unlikely) circumstances.
       - various networking updates. Some of the bugs fixed could result in
         kernel Oopses. None of them were common, though.
       - fixes for both filesystem accounting and quota handling.
       - the much-ado-about-little video driver merge.
       - PPC and Sparc updates
       - i386/SMP interrupt handling falls back on the safe mode.. Please tell
         me whether there are still machines with problems.
       - some new network drivers and updates
       - final (we hope) IP masquerade update
      
      I still have a problem with certain machines that apparently don't want to
      boot with the keyboard not plugged in even though they should. Kill me
      now. If you have problems with i386/SMP on a machine without a keyboard,
      plug one in and send me a report..
      830e4ab4
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.124pre2 · b03770e4
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.124pre1 · a172a8a2
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.123 · add4b624
      Linus Torvalds authored
      add4b624
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.123pre3 · d13a7654
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.123pre2 · 36800b1c
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.123pre1 · 20fca9a1
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.122 · f85f3898
      Linus Torvalds authored
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    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.122pre3 · 28c24777
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.122pre2 · 5f61db3c
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      2.1.122pre1 · 90b9165f
      Linus Torvalds authored
      This may or may not fix the APM problems, and the INITRD ones.  The
      INITRD one in particular was a case of a fairly inexplicable test that
      shouldn't have been there in the first place breaking when something
      completely unrelated was cleaned up..
      
      The APM breakage was simply due to it being in the wrong place.  The
      patch looks bigger than it really is - it really only moves the file to
      the proper directory, and makes sure that it should compile with the
      standard assembler..
      
                      Linus
      90b9165f
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      Import 2.1.121 · b1173ae3
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.121pre1 · 716454f0
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.120 · 519cb0c6
      Linus Torvalds authored
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    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      - Add QNX4 file system. · 1540068e
      Linus Torvalds authored
      1540068e
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.120pre2 · 07e73e00
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.120pre1 · ed651326
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.119 · 8b109aa9
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.119pre1 · 00b90961
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Import 2.1.118 · 792ee2cd
      Linus Torvalds authored
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      Linux 2.1.117 · 10fa36ae
      Linus Torvalds authored
      I made a 117 to fix the silly things left in 116 in my excitement over it
      passing all my crashtests. This should fix the things with the kernel
      thinking it was out of memory much sooner than it actually was etc.
      
      Alan still reports some funnies with unix domain sockets, but he's
      reportedly fixed the behaviour of NFS over TCP. He didn't make it sound as
      if you really want to use it yet, though ;)
      
                      Linus
      10fa36ae