1. 23 Nov, 2007 40 commits
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.98 · 61cb5dec
      Linus Torvalds authored
      I just released a fairly small patch to 97 to bring it up to 98.
      
      I've gotten a lot of patches in the mail for the last week, and I've been
      ignoring most of them for obvious reasons. They aren't in any in-queue,
      you can more-or-less consider them lost - but don't resend them all
      immediately, because if I get another huge batch of patches then I'll just
      have to ignore them again.
      
      We're going slow and easy, and the plan is to not only keep me sane in the
      midst of all the diapers, but I'll also at the same time take the
      opportunity to actually enforce the feature-freeze. You've known about it
      for a long time, _tough_.
      
      Anyway, 2.1.98 _should_ fix:
      
       - the IDE/SCSI lockups. The irq enable/disable code was broken, and could
         do some really bad things. This tended to lock up the machine if you
         accessed your IDE disks heavily, or in particular if you had a mixture
         of IDE and SCSI and used them at the same time. Tell me if you still
         have problems - I'm sure there are still bugs left, and I want to hear
         about them.
       - memory management especially on small-memory machines. I think I made a
         good change to the allocation logic, and I'm hoping it will fix the bad
         bahevaiour on those wimpy machines that all you losers out there are
         using that have less than half a Gig of RAM. It certainly still works
         fine on my machine, and I'm certainly still too lazy to test it out on
         anything smaller.
      
      There's a few other updates too: the asm constraints are fixed, so it
      should compile again with other compiler versions than the particular one
      I happen to be using. And some of the SCSI drivers have been updated a
      bit.
      
      There's been a lot of discussion and patches on capabilities, and I
      haven't applied them yet, I'll let them simmer a bit. Similarly, I've seen
      so many pathes to kmod that my head is spinning, and as I don't use
      modules myself I'd really like to get feedback from users about the
      different patches, so that maybe I'll get something that everybody can
      agree on as acceptable. Right now I don't know which patch I should even
      begin looking at.
      
                      Linus
      61cb5dec
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      2.1.97 - for brave people only. · 5d2e518d
      Linus Torvalds authored
      I made a 2.1.97 release, in order to synch up with some large patch-sets
      I've gotten (non-x86 architecture updates). But due to the new baby this
      really hasn't been through my usual exhaustive stress-test ("make bzImage"
      + "boot") so buyer beware.
      
                      Linus
      5d2e518d
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.96 · f38a2456
      Linus Torvalds authored
      f38a2456
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.96pre1 · 8e16a50d
      Linus Torvalds authored
      8e16a50d
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.95 · 6cfe08d0
      Linus Torvalds authored
      This is finally the kind of feature-freeze patch I like: it only contains
      fixes for outright bugs. The fixes are:
       - SMP-safe disk drivers (more on this below)
       - various PCI fixes: /proc/bus/pci works again, and it should compile and
         work on Alpha with TGA.
       - parport interrupt detection uses the standard probe routines, and
         doesn't leave bogus "probe" entries hanging around to confuse people
         (and make other device registration fail)
       - the ever-popular PCI ne netdriver fix
       - the getcwd() system call works again.
       - "mb()" does the right thing on x86 too. Few drivers use it, but more of
         them should. Right now there are drivers that depend on luck making
         sure that the memory accesses will be in the same order outside the CPU
         as inside it.
      
      The conceptually big one is the SMP-safe disk driver change: it's not a
      very big patch, but it's fairly subtle. And it still requires help from
      the disk drivers themselves, although all of them should be safe in UP,
      and I made sure the BusLogic and the NCR driver are safe on SMP.
      The change is really a change in locking defaults: we used to default to
      no locking, and depended on the disk driver getting the locking right.
      None of them did so on SMP, for understandable reasons (there really
      wasn't any support for getting it right).
      
      The new default is to do the locking for the driver, and the driver
      actually has to do some work if it wants to do anything outside the lock.
      This has the obvious advantage that it _defaults_ to being safe, and
      people who know what they are doing can choose to thread the driver if
      they want to.
      
      The only change needed to drivers is to make sure they get the lock on an
      interrupt, which usually involves just doing the following around the
      low/level interrupt handler (the same handler that you register using
      "request_irq()"):
      
              void handle_irq(int irq, void *dev, struct pt_regs *regs)
              {
      +               unsigned long flags;
      +               spin_lock_irqsave(&io_request_lock, flags);
                      ... call to the proper action routines ...
      +               spin_unlock_irqrestore(&io_request_lock, flags);
              }
      
      which guarantees that everything inside the driver is correctly locked
      from the outside world (with the exception of ioctl's etc things that the
      driver traps - they need to be protected too).
      
                      Linus
      6cfe08d0
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.95pre1 · 2dcb1dcf
      Linus Torvalds authored
      2dcb1dcf
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.94 · ad1b31ae
      Linus Torvalds authored
      ad1b31ae
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.93 · 3dd28001
      Linus Torvalds authored
      2.1.93 is out there. It is broken on other platforms than x86, because I
      had to move some initialization code around, but this shoul dbe very easy
      to fix (moving the device init code later makes a _lot_ of things easier:
      the system is essentially up and running, and "kmalloc()" etc actually
      works).
      
      Now the PCI init code actually has the full SMP knowledge, which it needs
      in order to get the interrupt mapping stuff right (for example - it might
      eventually need it for other reasons too).
      
      The PCI code has generally been cleaned up - thanks to Martin Mares (the
      PCI cleanup is what forced me to do the other changes - anything else
      would simply have been too ugly).
      
      2.1.93 should also fix the stupid things in 92 (modules don't load due to
      missing symbols, and NULL pointer dereferences in /proc under certain
      circumstances etc).
      
      The kernel should also be better at detecting the really low memory
      circumstances, and eventually return NULL instead of just looping forever
      trying to find a page that it won't ever find.
      
                              Linus
      
      [tytso on ext2fs changes:]
      These patches provide the following enhancements to ext2.
              * Fixed a bug where we weren't byte-swapping the feature set
                      flags before checking EXT2_FEATURE_RO_COMPAT_SPARSE_SUPER
              * Added Stephen Tweedie's patches to allow the number of file
                      blocks which will be preallocated to be tuned (instead
                      of being fixed at 8 blocks).
              * Added Stephen Tweedie's patches to allow directory blocks to
                      be preallocated.  This change is only activated if the
                      EXT2_FEATURE_COMPAT_DIR_PREALLOC is enabled.  (There
                      will soon be a new release of e2fsprogs that will
                      allow you to turn this on.)  The change is compatible
                      with older kernels (that's why it's a COMPAT feature),
                      but we need to flag it in the feature set because the
                      e2fsck needs a few changes to support this.
              * Added future support for B-trees in directories.  I have a
                      design in mind which is fully read/only compatible
                      with the existing ext2 directories, which will make
                      its debut in the 2.3 kernel series.  This patch will
                      allow 2.2 kernels to mount filesystems with B-tree
                      directories read-write; if a 2.2 kernel tries to
                      modify a B-tree directory, the B-tree valid bit will
                      be turned off, since the B-tree structures won't be
                      updated by 2.2 kernels.  2.0 kernels will be able to
                      mount filesystems with B-tree directories read-only.
                      This defines a new feature, EXT2_FEATURE_RO_COMPAT_BTREE_DIR.
              * Added Jakub Jelinek's support for large files on 64-bit
                      platforms.  On a 64-bit platform, the first time you
                      expand a file past the 32-bit boundary, the
                      EXT2_FEATURE_RO_COMPAT_LARGE_FILE is turned on.
                      2.0 machines will be able to mount such filesystems
                      read-only.  2.2 kernels on 32-bit platforms will be
                      able such filesystems read-write, but they will only
                      be able to see the first 2**32 bytes of the file, and
                      any attempt to open a large file for read/write access
                      will cause an EBIGF error.
              * Added support for storing the file type in the directory
                      entry.  This optimization was added to BSD 4.4 and
                      makes a very big difference for a number of
                      operations, since application programs can avoid doing
                      a stat in a number of situations.  Support for this is
                      in the GNU user-land utilities, and is in glibc
                      already.  Beyond this patch, we also need to implement
                      a new getdents system call that will return the
                      information all the way to libc.
                      The reason why it's important to get this change into
                      2.2 is that it requires "stealing" 8-bits from the
                      name_len field of the directory entry.  Ext2fs limits
                      you to 255 characters in a file name, so the high-byte
                      of name_len is always zero.  However, older kernels
                      look at both bytes of name_len, and will get confused
                      if we try to store something there.  So we can only
                      update the file type field if the feature
                      EXT2_FEATURE_INCOMPAT_FILETYPE is enabled.
                      I want to get this support into the 2.2 kernel, since
                      even if it isn't used much (because people will want
                      their filesystems to be compatible with 2.0 kernels),
                      we will be able to migrate smoothly to using this
                      feature by default in the future.
      3dd28001
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.92 - Feature Freeze · 581efda0
      Linus Torvalds authored
      Ok, there's a fairly large patch out there, but as of 2.1.92 I think we
      have a real feature-freeze, and we'll try to get a real code-freeze going
      soon. There are known problems with the sound drivers etc, which is why a
      code-freeze isn't the best suggestion right now, and there are probably
      still bugs with some of the new code, but I'll freeze new features for the
      upcoming 2.2 kernel.
      
      Yes, some people will scream bloody murder, but others will be relieved
      that it finally happened. Thanks especially to David Miller who has been
      doing a great job of getting the TCP stack from its problems just a few
      weeks ago to really shining new heights. That was my main worry about 2.2
      not all that long ago, and was the main reason for having such a slushy
      period for a while.
      
      2.1.92 does:
       - ISDN updates
       - alpha update (yes, SMP finally works, although not really stable yet)
       - networking fixes
       - "getcwd()" system call (not very long, the dcache makes this so
         trivial it is scary)
       - the mm responsiveness updates (they were in 2.1.92-pre2, people seemed
         to have found them very effective)
       - some other (mainly driver updates)
      
      Please do test it all out. Feature-freeze doesn't mean that it is supposed
      to be bug-free yet, but it does mean that we should be moving into
      bugfixing mode in quick order.
      And no, this is not an April 1 thing. But this way I can use April 1 as an
      excuse if something doesn't actually compile.
      
                      Linus
      581efda0
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.92pre2 · 5e71242d
      Linus Torvalds authored
      5e71242d
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.92pre1 · 7df2e632
      Linus Torvalds authored
      7df2e632
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.91 · cad34273
      Linus Torvalds authored
      I just made a real 91 on ftp.kernel.org, let's hope that this has all the
      sillies gone. As usual, it is prefectly smooth on my machine, but this
      time we also have a better chance of it being smooth on machines with less
      memory too, as Rik has done some good work in testing the algorithms out.
      So throw some problems at it to see just how good it is..
      
                      Linus
      cad34273
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.91pre2 · b884a92a
      Linus Torvalds authored
      b884a92a
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.91pre1 · f26125cb
      Linus Torvalds authored
      f26125cb
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.90 · 53d0479d
      Linus Torvalds authored
      53d0479d
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      - Revert TCP delayed ACK fix, and fix correctly. · 1a92894a
      Linus Torvalds authored
        We should not send an ack if we don't have any pending
        (in which case the DACK timer will be set)     (Dave Miller)
      1a92894a
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      - Fix TCP delayed ACK stall (Andrea Arcangeli) · a054f123
      Linus Torvalds authored
      - the first cut of my spinlock changes wrt the task lists (Linus)
      a054f123
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      I just put a pre-90 on ftp.kernel.org, and I'm happy to report that Davem · 9d11a517
      Linus Torvalds authored
      seems to have found and fixed the TCP performance problem, which means
      that the code-freeze for 2.2 is going to go into effect shortly..
      
      pre-90 does a few other minor things, like for example getting rid of
      kerneld because the new kmod thing is a lot simpler in many ways. Let's
      see what the reaction to that is, but I'm fairly certain that this was a
      major good thing: I've personally never liked kerneld, but kmod seems to
      be a much nicer and more controlled way of handling the same issues that
      kerneld tried to do. I'd actually almost be willing to use the thing
      myself, something that was never true of kerneld.
      
      This also moves the WD7000 SCSI driver to a working status again, thanks
      to Miroslav Zagorac.
      
      But the interesting and important part of the patches are the networking
      fixes from David and Bill Hawes..
      
                      Linus
      9d11a517
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.89 · 3b0db29e
      Linus Torvalds authored
      3b0db29e
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Date: 1 Mar 1998 05:08:07 GMT · de9c00e8
      Linus Torvalds authored
      Subject: Re: INN doesn't work on pre-2.1.89-4 (mmap problem ?)
      From: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@transmeta.com>
      
      I fixed _one_ silly bug wrt writeback to shared files in pre-5
      de9c00e8
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.89-4 · 17e3d4ce
      Linus Torvalds authored
      It should fix the problem another way that I'm happier with (fixing that
      problem also revealed a few other misuses of close_fp() due to historical
      reasons - the uses really needed to be "fput()"s instead).
      2.1.89-4 also uses "struct file" for mmap's, which means that the problem
      that somebody was complaining about with mmap (that the mapping would
      exist even after the last "release()" on that file, and thus the file
      would still be active) are gone. As of -4 the kernel will guarantee that
      it will call the file->f_op->release() onle after there really aren't any
      uses of that file pointer any more..
      
                      Linus
      17e3d4ce
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.89pre3 · b0532cc2
      Linus Torvalds authored
      b0532cc2
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.89pre2 · 2a342179
      Linus Torvalds authored
      [sct] a patch against ipc/shm.c was missing from my swap patches,
            and another fix for spurious warnings about shared dirty pages.
      
      [changelog pieced together by davej]
      2a342179
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Stephen Tweedie: · 717def95
      Linus Torvalds authored
      * 2.1.88, adds a bunch of new functionality to
        the swapper.  The main changes are:
      
      * All swapping goes through the swap cache (aka. page cache) now.
      
      * There is no longer a swap lock map.  Because we need to atomically
        test and create a new swap-cache page in order to do swap IO, it is
        sufficient just to lock the struct page itself.  Having only one
        layer of locking to deal with removes a number of races concerning
        swapping shared pages.
      
      * We can swap shared pages, and still keep them shared when they are
        swapped back in!!!  Currently, only private shared pages (as in pages
        shared after a fork()) benefit from this, but the basic mechanism will
        be appropriate for MAP_ANONYMOUS | MAP_SHARED pages too
        (implementation to follow).  Pages will remain shared after a swapoff.
      
      * The page cache is now quite happy dealing with swap-cache pages too.
        In particular, write-ahead and read-ahead of swap through the page
        cache will work fine (and in fact, write-ahead does get done already
        under certain circumstances with this patch --- that's essentially how
        the swapping of shared pages gets done).  Support code to perform
        asynchronous readahead of swap is included, but is not actually used
        anywhere yet.
      
        I've tested with a number of forked processes running with a shared
        working set larger than physical memory, and with SysV shared memory.
        I haven't found any problems with it so far.
      
      Linus: I've also changed the way we consider us to need more memory in kswapd,
             but that was entirely orthogonal and did not impact these patches. ]
      
      [Changelog pieced together by davej]
      717def95
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.88 · 3c99713c
      Linus Torvalds authored
      3c99713c
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.87 · bb62d5cb
      Linus Torvalds authored
      Ok, 2.1.87 is out there on ftp.kernel.org now, and it has the clever
      PROT_NONE thing done. It seems to work for the little test-case I wrote,
      and I also verified that swapping still works, so it seems to be all ok.
      I'd still like people who have test programs or similar to actually check
      it out,
      
                      Linus
      bb62d5cb
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.87pre1 · a03099aa
      Linus Torvalds authored
      a03099aa
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.86 · 7393083b
      Linus Torvalds authored
      7393083b
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.85 · 275d3262
      Linus Torvalds authored
      275d3262
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.84 · 9ba95981
      Linus Torvalds authored
      - Update makefile version (forgot to in .83)
      - fixes a (very obscure, possibly never happens) autofs bug.
      - fix missing ; compile error in mm/filemap.c
      - MS_NODIRATIME support.
      
      [changelog summary by davej]
      9ba95981
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.83 · 3ebce212
      Linus Torvalds authored
      3ebce212
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.82 · 47c1864c
      Linus Torvalds authored
      47c1864c
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.81 · f0e2d949
      Linus Torvalds authored
      f0e2d949
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.81pre1 · 45f74d65
      Linus Torvalds authored
      I just made a pre-2.1.81 available on ftp.kernel.org.
      This fixes the known problems of 2.1.80, and also makes the interrupt
      routing by default look like it always used to look - everything goes
      through the traditional external 8259A-compatible logic.
      The code to handle IO-APIC interrupt routing is still there, but as no
      interrupts are actually marked as io-apic interrupts you don't see it in
      action yet. The advantage of this is that people who want to work on this
      have a base that contains all the logic, and that we only need to figure
      out how to reliably make all the IRQ routing decisions.
      
                      Linus
      45f74d65
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Linux 2.1.80 · 07e15ef7
      Linus Torvalds authored
      This release should fix a few networking problems, and the NFS client is
      hopefully fairly stable even under the kinds of loads we have here at
      Transmeta.
      
      The 2.1.80 release also contains some initial ARM support, and contains
      Ingo Molnar's better SMP interrupt handling.
      
      NOTE NOTE NOTE! The new SMP interrupt handling is currently not very good
      at autodetection. This can be a real problem, and _before_ booting the
      2.1.80 kernel as compiled for SMP you should probably try to figure out a
      possible IRQ override line by doing:
      
              echo -n pirq=; echo `scanpci -f | grep T_L | cut -c56-` | sed 's/ /,/g'
      which for me gives
              pirq=0x00,0x09,0x0b
      
      Then, after doing the above, boot into 2.1.80 and see if it finds your PCI
      interrupt lines correctly. If it does, everything is fine. If it doesn't,
      you need to boot with the pirq setting that you determined earlier, by
      giving the kernel the pirq data at the bootup command line or by using the
      LILO "append=" feature (or similar features in other bootloaders).
      We'll certainly have to make the autodetection work reliably, but in the
      meantime the command-line approach at least gives us a way to test the
      more fundamental impacts of better interrupt handling.
      
                      Linus
      07e15ef7
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.80pre4 · 4bbfc32d
      Linus Torvalds authored
      4bbfc32d
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.80pre3 · 472bbf0a
      Linus Torvalds authored
      472bbf0a
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.80pre2 · 8772d71c
      Linus Torvalds authored
      8772d71c
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Pre-2.1.80.. · 7a024f46
      Linus Torvalds authored
       I just put a pre-2.1.80 on ftp.kernel.org that should fix the fat-related
      problems. The reason I put it there is because I got several patches that
      fixed the FAT problems _and_ something else, and they all obviously
      clashed with each other so neither part got applied.
      
       So I'd ask people who sent me patches to maybe re-send the parts of the
      patches that are still relevant,
      
                      Linus
      7a024f46
    • Linus Torvalds's avatar
      Import 2.1.79 · ae04feb3
      Linus Torvalds authored
      ae04feb3