- 12 Feb, 2003 40 commits
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Art Haas authored
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Art Haas authored
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Art Haas authored
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Art Haas authored
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Art Haas authored
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Art Haas authored
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Art Haas authored
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David S. Miller authored
into nuts.ninka.net:/home/davem/src/BK/net-2.5
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Andrew Morton authored
My printf manpage says: z A following integer conversion corresponds to a size_t or ssize_t argument. (Linux libc5 has Z with this meaning. Don't use it.) And the opengroup spec says z Specifies that a following d , i , o , u , x , or X conversion specifier applies to a size_t or the corresponding signed integer type argument; or that a following n conversion specifier applies to a pointer to a signed integer type corresponding to a size_t argument. yet our vsnprintf implementation has /* 'z' support added 23/7/1999 S.H. */ /* 'z' changed to 'Z' --davidm 1/25/99 */ I guess the path of least surprise is to support both. gcc-3.2.1 doesn't seem to care.
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Andrew Morton authored
The return type of sizeof() is size_t. On many architectrues size_t is unsigned long, and may not be printed with %d. Use %Zu instead.
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Andrew Morton authored
Need to reenable interrupts around the call to scsi_register(), which blocks.
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Andrew Morton authored
An anonymous fixed mmap with CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE=y will dereference NULL. We recur into the pagefault handler with mmap_sem held and lock up.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Davide Libenzi <davidel@xmailserver.org> Changes : - Timeout overflow check - Ceil()ing of ms->jif conversion - Syscalls return type int->long
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from: Peter Waechtler <pwaechtler@mac.com> Addresses BUGME bug #331. "OSS CS4232 nasty spinlock printks on boot" The locking in some OSS modules is really lousy. Because save_flags/cli/restore_flags could be used recursivly - the programmers pushed the locking too far the lower level. Because on ISA cards the register sets are usually multiplexed you had to write to an address latch and then access the data port in an "atomic" manner. I suggest removing the locking from ad_read/ad_write + ad_{enter|leave}_MCE and clamping the locks wherever the functions are called. I hope the attached patch does that correctly. Yes, I don't like all the timeout loops while holding the locks: high chances that a cpu is spinning in interrupt context :(
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from: David Mosberger <davidm@napali.hpl.hp.com> Please remember to declare the return-type of syscall stubs as "long". On 64-bit platforms, it's generally necessary to ensure that the entire 64-bit return value is valid (and can be checked against negative values).
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from: Frank Davis <fdavis@si.rr.com> The following addresses bugzilla bug # 340.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from: Frank Davis <fdavis@si.rr.com> The following patch addresses bugzilla bug # 341.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from: john stultz <johnstul@us.ibm.com> This patch simply fixes the summit subarch to allow summit kernels to boot on normal systems.
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Andrew Morton authored
Someone typed `config' when they meant `conf'. Also fix a function-defined-but-not-used warning.
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Andrew Morton authored
This driver is calling down into scsi_register with local interrupts disabled. scsi_register performs blocking allocations, starts kernel threads, etc. slab debugging gets offended by someone performing blocking operations with local interrupts disabled.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Tim Schmielau <tim@physik3.uni-rostock.de> Converts many open-coded jiffy comparisons to use time_after/before/etc.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Dipankar Sarma <dipankar@in.ibm.com> All fs should be using dcache APIs to manipulate dcache hash lists. This is in line with the dcache cleanup patch (dcache_rcu-1) from Maneesh that Linus accepted. This seems like a reasonable cleanup. One change though, we don't need to grab dcache_lock while deleting dentries from the private list and __d_drop() should suffice here.
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Andrew Morton authored
make the adaptec driver compile
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Rik van Riel <riel@conectiva.com.br> the following patch, against today's BK tree, fixes a small SMP race in disassociate_ctty. This function gets called from do_exit, without the BKL held. However, it sets the *tty variable before grabbing the bkl, then makes decisions on what the variable was set to before the lock was grabbed, despite the fact that another process could modify its ->tty pointer in this same function.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Oleg Drokin <green@namesys.com>, Nikita Danilov <Nikita@Namesys.COM> There is no uniprocessor definition of _raw_write_trylock(), so write_trylock() doesn't work on UP.
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Andrew Morton authored
kdev_t.value is not an int. Code looks fishy.
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Andrew Morton authored
printk needs kernel.h
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Andrew Morton authored
Don't assume that dev_t is unsigned. Cast it.
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Andrew Morton authored
cast dev_t when printing
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Andrew Morton authored
Don't assume that dev_t is an unsigned. Cast it.
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Andrew Morton authored
Make the "duplicate const" warning go away. Arguably a compiler bug...
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Andrew Morton authored
I have a whole bunch of silly compile warning fixes here, arising from building the kernel for a 64-bit target. Some are trivial, some are genuine printk bugs. assuming dev_t is unsigned generates a warning on ppc64. Cast it.
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bk://linux-dj.bkbits.net/cpufreqLinus Torvalds authored
into penguin.transmeta.com:/home/penguin/torvalds/repositories/kernel/linux
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Dave Jones authored
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Dave Jones authored
More bits from Dominik. Most cpufreq drivers (in fact, all except one, longrun) or even most cpu frequency scaling algorithms only offer the CPU to be set to one frequency. In order to offer dynamic frequency scaling, the cpufreq core must be able to tell these drivers of a "target frequency". So these specific drivers will be transformed to offer a "->target" call instead of the existing "->setpolicy" call. For "longrun", all stays the same, though. How to decide what frequency within the CPUfreq policy should be used? That's done using "cpufreq governors". Two are already in this patch -- they're the already existing "powersave" and "performance" which set the frequency statically to the lowest or highest frequency, respectively. At least two more such governors will be ready for addition in the near future, but likely many more as there are various different theories and models about dynamic frequency scaling around. Using such a generic interface as cpufreq offers to scaling governors, these can be tested extensively, and the best one can be selected for each specific use. Basically, it's the following flow graph: CPU can be set to switch independetly | CPU can only be set within specific "limits" | to specific frequencies "CPUfreq policy" consists of frequency limits (policy->{min,max}) and CPUfreq governor to be used / \ / \ / the cpufreq governor decides / (dynamically or statically) / what target_freq to set within / the limits of policy->{min,max} / \ / \ Using the ->setpolicy call, Using the ->target call, the limits and the the frequency closest "policy" is set. to target_freq is set. It is assured that it is within policy->{min,max}
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Dave Jones authored
From Dominik Brodowski
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Pavel Machek authored
This fixes stack handling in acpi_wakeup.S, and makes stack smaller so that wakeup code actually fits inside memory allocated for it. Plus someone renamed .L1432 to something meaningful.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Ivan Kokshaysky authored
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Tomas Szepe authored
Export allow_signal(). It's needed by lockd, sunrpc and other modules.
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