- 19 Jan, 2004 40 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
- A couple of them are using alloca (via DECLARE_BITMAP) and this generates a cannot-inline warning with -Winline. - These functions are too big to inline anwyay.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andries.Brouwer@cwi.nl Remove obsolete CLONE_DETACHED
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org> Modify MAINTAINERS to reflect the reality in maintainership for kbuild. This is ack'ed with Michael Elizabeth Chastain and Kai Germaschewski. I removed the list and web-site since they are not actively used today.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: risto.sandvik@helsinki.fi Everything freezes when trying to play sounds using the alsa driver opl3sa2 (kernel supplied or 1.0.0rc2) on an Acer Extensa series laptop with the Ali M1533 PCI to ISA bridge. Problem exists both in the 2.6 and 2.4 series of kernels. Adding AL_M1533 to drivers/pci/quirks.c fixes the problem for both. This has been a known problem since 2.2.x (see http://www.mfn.unipmn.it/~sitta/linux503.html)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> Here's a patch to improve the AFS linux support. It: (1) Includes Pete's patch to skip the colon in the volume name, compile directly into the kernel, and not try to access non-existent caching routines. (2) Changes if (...) BUG() to BUG_ON() (3) Gets rid of typedefs. (4) Changes list_for_each() into list_for_each_entry(). (5) Adds more whitespace and wraps lines to please the CodingStyle sticklers.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> Here's a patch to fix some bugs in my RxRPC code, including the fix for the transport initialisation failure recovery spotted by Pete Zaitcev. It also inserts some extra spaces in a few places.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jes Sorensen <jes@trained-monkey.org> The included patch removes the usage of weak symbols from sgiioc4.c now that we have the Kconfig issue sorted as well as cleans up the error no handling (instead of return 1 on error) and adds a check for the return value on snia_pci_endian_set as suggested by Christoph.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: James Morris <jmorris@redhat.com> AFS has an unused strdup() implementation.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Xavier Bestel <xavier.bestel@free.fr> Within the body of this macro we are accessing rq->bio, but `bio' is an arg to the macro. If someone uses this macro with some variable which is not named `bio' it won't compile. So use a more-likely-to-be-unique identifier for the macro.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jeff Muizelaar <muizelaar@rogers.com> The attached patch lets the seq_file api take care of buffer allocation instead of doing it by hand.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> Experimenting with trying to use cond_syscall for a few arch-specific syscalls, I discovered that it can't actually be used outside the file in which sys_ni_syscall is declared because the assembler doesn't feel obliged to output the symbol in that case: weak.c: #define cond_syscall(x) asm(".weak\t" #x "\n\t.set\t" #x ",sys_ni_syscall"); cond_syscall(sys_foo); $ nm weak.o U sys_ni_syscall One arch (PPC) is apparently trying to use cond_syscall this way anyway, though it's probably never been actually tested as the above test was done on a PPC. After trying a bunch of tricks to get it to work nicely, I decided there are basically two alternatives: make weak versions of sys_ni_syscall wherever they're wanted or put the arch-specific cond_syscalls in kernel/sys.c where sys_ni_syscall is defined. The former approach is a bit crufty and doesn't actually do the right thing in practice as you'll get multiple copies of sys_ni_syscall in your final image. The latter introduces some slight arch-pollution in sys.c, but as arch-specific cond_syscalls aren't all that frequent, it should be pretty minor. So here's a patch to move the current offender to sys.c:
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jes Sorensen <jes@trained-monkey.org> The following patch removes a couple of null-ilizers of global variables. Not a big deal, but every byte helps in the .data segment ;-)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Roland McGrath <roland@redhat.com> Julie DeWandel noticed that in the error case where elf_map has failed, load_elf_interp will (at the out_close: label) return the `error' variable, but that will contain the result of a prior operation and not the error number from elf_map.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: David Sanders <linux@sandersweb.net> Patch adds support for another pnp modem in 2.6 kernel.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Korty <joe.korty@ccur.com> task_running(rq,p) is equivalent to (rq->curr == p) only for some architectures.
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Andrew Morton authored
- It's using & where it meant to use &&. (Randy Dunlap) - It has two callsites - uninline it.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Adrian Bunk <bunk@fs.tum.de> four months ago, Rolf Eike Beer <eike-kernel@sf-tec.de> sent a patch against 2.6.0-test5-bk1 that converted several if ... BUG() to BUG_ON() This might in some cases result in slightly faster code because BUG_ON() uses unlikely().
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Andrew Morton authored
From: David Mosberger <davidm@napali.hpl.hp.com> With gcc-3.4 we need "attribute((used))" declarations to get "make modules_install" to work. Otherwise these sections get dropped from the final image (I assume).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: David Mosberger <davidm@napali.hpl.hp.com> There is some EFI-related code which is present in the ia64 build but is not needed: variable efi_enabled is always zero. The patch fiddles with the efi_enabled definition to arrange for `efi_enabled' to be constant zero or constant one in those situations where this can be guaranteed.
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Andrew Morton authored
The test for whether an inode is using journalled, ordered or writeback data is incorrect and can lead to ext3_set_aops() giving the inode the wrong set of address_space_operations. Fix. (Spotted by Jan Kara).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Currently xfs has a per-bdev (and XFS filesystem uses up to three underlying block devices) object that Al complained about loudly that it should be gone. But for that to happen without rewriting half of XFS (and changing layering in a way that we don't really want) we need an additional fs-private variable in struct block_device.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: mark@borgerding.net Access times of tmpfs dirs do not get updated on readdir. This can cause empty dirs to get tmpwatch'd too early, b/c atime never changes even though the dir is in use.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Anton Blanchard <anton@samba.org>, me. Two uses of the FIXADDR_USER_START/END things are problematic: a) ppc64 wants the FIXADDR area to be at a different location on 32bit and 64bit tasks. On 32bit we want it just below 4GB but that gets in the way on 64bit. By putting both right at -(some small amount) we can also use some ppc tricks to get there real quickly (single instruction branches). b) We assume that FIXADDR_USER_START and FIXADDR_USER_END are constants. This breaks the UML build. Fixes: - Call it all gate. We currently have half the stuff called fixmap and the other gate, lets be consistent. - Create in_gate_area(), get_gate_vma() and use it in both places - Provide defaults for in_gate_area/get_gate_vma, allowing an arch to override it. (I used CONFIG_* but am open to better suggestions here) - The /proc/pid/maps vma wasnt marked readable but the get_user vma was. That sounds suspicious to me, they are now both the same VMA and so have the same (read,exec) permissions
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ivan Kokshaysky <ink@jurassic.park.msu.ru> When CONFIG_SMP is not set, spinlock_t is an empty structure, so its address has arbitrary alignment. The prefetch instructions with unaligned address don't have visible side effects on alphas with SRM console (except performance degradation) - the PALcode handles unaligned traps caused by prefetch instructions internally. However, on old AlphaBIOS/MILO boxes unaligned prefetch leads to unhandled alignment trap and kernel panic.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz> This adds proper suspend/resume support for PIT. That means that clock are actually correct after suspend/resume.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Dominik Brodowski <linux@dominikbrodowski.de> Too many users use the p4-clockmod cpufreq driver instead of the more advanced speedstep-centrino, speedstep-ich or even acpi drivers. All of the latter (usually) provide voltage scaling, while the p4-clockmod driver only offers a variant of frequency scaling. So, warn users if they try out this driver instead. Also, instead of using a local copy, use the speedstep_lib infrastructure for detecting the processor speed. Adding the Pentium-M get_frequency function to that module only costs about 200 bytes in object size.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org> If the user decides to not write the config file out, menuconfig exits with a non-zero code. This causes make to allege that there was an error.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@fys.uio.no> The following reversion is what fixes my regression. That puts the sequential read numbers back to the 2.6.0 values of ~140MB/sec (from the current 2.6.1 values of 14MB/second)... We were triggering I/O of the `ahead' when we hit the last page in the `current' window. That's bad because it gives no pipelining at all. So go back to full pipelining. It's not at all clear why this change made a 10x difference in NFS throughput.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ram Pai <linuxram@us.ibm.com> Remove the up-front readahead code from the core pagecache read function: it's really bad for large reads.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Nikita Danilov <Nikita@Namesys.COM> This patch initializes zone->{prev,temp}_priority to DEF_PRIORITY. Otherwise they are left zeroed, and first run of VM scanner thinks that zones are under enormous stress.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jens Axboe <axboe@suse.de> Although it was an established part of the current bio api, it was never documented that bio_add_page() and merge_bvec_fn() must accept to add at least one page to an empty bio.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Adrian Bunk <bunk@fs.tum.de> The 2.6 Kconfig language allows to set the range for integer questions. The patch below adds a range line on all architectures that have a NR_CPUS question except ia64. The help text on ia64 didn't suggest any values. Could someone tell the correct values for ia64 (and if it's only a minimum value of 2)?
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Martin J. Bligh" <mbligh@aracnet.com> Patches are a damned sight easier to read if people use the '-p' option to diff ... this generates output that looks like this: "@@ -323,6 +323,7 @@ void put_dirty_page(struct task_struct *" for each block. This patch simply adds that to the documentation file, in the hope of steering new users in the right direction.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Tom Rini <trini@kernel.crashing.org> Re-add support to the bootwrapper for talking with OF on PReP machines. This fixes memory detection of some machines.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ivan Kokshaysky <ink@jurassic.park.msu.ru> Larger modules fail to load with the message "Relocation overflow vs section 17", or some other section number. This failure happens with GPRELHIGH relocation, which is *signed* short, but relocation overflow check in module.c doesn't take into account the sign extension.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Bernardo Innocenti <bernie@develer.com> Identify a recent Radeon video card in radeonfb.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Matthew Dobson <colpatch@us.ibm.com> This patch does the following: 1) Rename ZONE_SHIFT to NODEZONE_SHIFT. This value is the number of bits to shift page->flags to get the node/zone part of the bitfield. 2) Add a macro called NODEZONE which takes a node number and zone number and returns a 'nodezone', a bitshifted composition of the two. 3) Create page_zonenum & page_nodenum, inline functions to return the node/zone a page belongs to with some simple bit twiddling, no pointer dereferences necessary. 4) Modify page_zone() and set_page_zone() to use the new NODEZONE_SHIFT. 5) Modify memmap_init_zone() & free_area_init_core() to use the new NODEZONE macros. 6) Fix up some comments to reflect the above changes.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Russell King, Tom Rini, Dave Jones As plugged in 2.4 recently. Fix some leakage of uninitialised memory to userspace via rtc reads.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Christophe Saout <christophe@saout.de> The intent of these are to clarify the meaning of the bio fields in the bi_end_io function (since we are already mostly there). After these small modifications bio->bi_idx and the corresponding bio_iovec(bio)->bv_offset point to the beginning of the completed data, together with the nr_bytes argument you know exactly what data was finished, e.g. when you can't track it otherwise (or it would be unnecessary expensive). Apart from that it's a nice-to-have. The first mini-patch moves the update of bio_iovec(bio)->bv_offset and ->bv_len after the call of bi_end_io where bi_idx gets updated so they get updated together. Ok with Jens. The second part of the patch modifies the multwrite hack in PIO non- taskfile ide disk code. It modifies the bi_idx field to walk the bios and doesn't reset it correctly before ending the request. The patch uses the segment counter in the request field to correctly restore the bi_idx field before ending the request. Can't possibly break anything since it's working on the local request copy ("scratchpad") anyway. Also does this in legacy/pdc4030.c (similar code). The code modified here is going to die anyway any trying to fix it would be too invasive. Ok with Bartlomiej.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Manfred Spraul <manfred@colorfullife.com> readdir on /proc has two problems: reading all entries is O(N^2), and entries are overlooked if tasks die in the middle of readdir: the readdir implementation remembers the offset into the task list, and if a task (actually: process) that was returned by previous readdir calls exits, then a random entry is dropped. The attached patch fixes the O(N^2) by using f_version to store the pid of the task that should be returned next. This speeds up reading /proc to O(N). Additionally, it mitigates the effects of dying tasks: Tasks are skipped only if the task whose pid is stored in f_version exits, all other task deaths have no effect. Unfortunately the code has a bad worst case behavior: if the targeted task exits and a new task with the same pid is created, then all entries in the task list between old and new position are dropped. This should be rare.
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