- 09 Nov, 2003 9 commits
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David S. Miller authored
into nuts.ninka.net:/disk1/davem/BK/net-2.5
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Hideaki Yoshifuji authored
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Hideaki Yoshifuji authored
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Bart De Schuymer authored
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bk://bk.arm.linux.org.uk/linux-2.6-rmkLinus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Russell King authored
If we are unable to deliver a signal to the process (eg, due to stack pointer corruption) block the signal so other fatal signals can kill off the process.
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Andi Kleen authored
K8 has an erratum (#100) that essentially causes some compat mode processes to fault occassionally. The issue can be worked around in the OS. It only applies to x86-64, in 32bit it is fine. This adds a check to the page fault handler that checks for addresses >4GB from compat mode. If they happen just return; the CPU will reexecute the instruction and the condition that caused the problem is gone. More details in Opteron/Athlon64 specification update on the AMD website. Also I removed a left over debugging printk in the prefetch handling code.
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Vojtech Pavlik authored
default values after probing This sets the mouse to 100 samples/second, 200 dpi, 1:1 mapping, which is a standard setting, as close to 2.4 XFree86 behavior as possible, and a good performance setting, too. It also in the case of 'psmouse_noext' doesn't probe and set anything all, though it still issues the RESET command. This is as safe as one can get. The only real problem remaining is that the report rate and resolution cannot be set from XFree86 config and only is available as a kernel/module parameter. The fix is, howewer not 2.6.0 material.
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Andi Kleen authored
The K8 IOMMU code had some broken BUG_ON()s that hit with <4K aligned IO through the IOMMU. This patch fixes this. Without this database raw IO is often broken.
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- 08 Nov, 2003 8 commits
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David S. Miller authored
into hera.kernel.org:/home/davem/BK/net-2.5
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Krishna Kumar authored
While using PRIVACY extensions, I sometimes get a hang when I remove the interface. But I can reproduce this every time using the test script at the end of the mail (hang depends on the order of address deletion). The bug is in ipv6_del_addr() where if a temp address is being deleted, it does an __in6_ifa_put() of the main address from which it was derived (basically the autoconf prefix address). So if the main address was deleted first, it's ifp ref count would be 1 and it would 'wait' to be freed till it's temp address was freed first. When the temp address is deleted, the __put() routine drops the main address's ifp ref count to 0, but not free it. unregister_netdevice() hangs giving message that ref count is 1. Fix tested overnight. Also, the code at the top of the routine is unnecessary, the same is being done when the address is found a little later in that routine.
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Herbert Xu authored
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David S. Miller authored
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Ingo Molnar authored
The code that sends a signal needs to "kick" the target process if it runs on another CPU and wasn't woken up by the signal to let it know that it has a new event. Otherwise it might take a long time until the target actually notices and acts on the signal.
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Andi Kleen authored
Fix a nasty typo found by Albert Cahalan. This lead to an oops when a invalid syscall was called under strace in 2.6.
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Andi Kleen authored
The limit of the TSS segment was incorrectly set to a too big value on x86-64. This lead to the CPU reading random memory behind the main TSS when iopl was >0, but there was no ioperm bitmap set. This caused random failures in port accesses in this state. Set the correct limit.
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Linus Torvalds authored
The latter has buggy restart functionality and is a lot more complicated anyway.
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- 07 Nov, 2003 7 commits
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
When a kobject is associated with a kset, the kset MUST be set before the kobject is initialized (by either a call to kobject_register() or kobject_init()). This patch fixes the class code which improperly set the kset after the kobject was initialized, which would cause improper reference counts on the kset. Thanks to Mike Anderson for locating the source of this bug.
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Andi Kleen authored
The hammer branch based gcc 3.3 in SuSE 9.0 has a more aggressive optimizer. ip_send_check has this code: iph->check = 0; iph->check = ip_fast_csum((unsigned char *)iph, iph->ihl); The new gcc optimizes the first store away because it doesn't know that ip_fast_csum reads its input memory. This leads to occassionally packets with wrong IP header checksum getting sent; this happens especially with NFS. Fixing it in the constraints would have been ugly and probably not future proof, so this patch just adds a memory clobber to ip_fast_csum. For some reason the issue only hits in 2.6, we haven't seen it in 2.4. Problem occurs on both i386 and x86-64. Credit goes to Olaf Kirch for tracking this down.
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bk://linuxusb.bkbits.net/gregkh-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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David Brownell authored
The dma hooks whereby EHCI can pass 64bit DMA support up the driver stack (to avoid buffer copies) turn out to broken on most architectures(*). This patch just disables them all, since it looks like those mechanisms won't get fixed before 2.6.0-final. For now it'd only matter on a few big Intel boxes anyway. Please merge. - Dave (*) On x86, mips, and arm dma_supported() doesn't even compare with the device's mask. On several other architectures (reported on ppc, alpha, and sparc64), asking that question for non-PCI devices will just BUG() -- even though all info needed to answer the question is right at hand.
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Matthew Dharm authored
This patch fixes a thread-exit problem when the usb-storage module is unloaded with a preemptable kernel. Please refer to the comments in the code for more detail.
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Michael Clark authored
I have a VIA cardbus 1394 controller which oops on insertion after an APM suspend/resume cycle (without card inserted): bounds: 0000 [#1] CPU: 0 EIP: 0060:[<c0300060>] Tainted: PF EFLAGS: 00010206 EIP is at quirk_via_bridge+0x4/0x1c eax: 0000ffff ebx: c02982e0 ecx: d1958000 edx: 000c0010 esi: d1958000 edi: 00000001 ebp: 00000000 esp: da401ee8 ds: 007b es: 007b ss: 0068 Process pccardd (pid: 1093, threadinfo=da400000 task=da4c8780) Stack: c019fb85 d1958000 00000001 d1958000 00000000 c019fbc2 d1958000 00000001 c02980a0 d1958000 dfdebf14 c019d828 00000001 d1958000 00000000 dec2802c dfdebf00 dfdebf14 00000000 e3dfe7c7 dfdebf00 00000000 dec2802c da401f48 Call Trace: [<c019fb85>] pci_do_fixups+0x52/0x54 [<c019fbc2>] pci_fixup_device+0x3b/0x49 [<c019d828>] pci_scan_slot+0x46/0x8f [<e3dfe7c7>] cb_alloc+0x29/0xf7 [pcmcia_core] [<e3dfb9aa>] socket_insert+0x90/0x102 [pcmcia_core] [<e3dfbc0d>] socket_detect_change+0x54/0x7e [pcmcia_core] [<e3dfbdbc>] pccardd+0x185/0x1f9 [pcmcia_core] quirk_via_bridge (which is marked device PCI_ANY_ID) triggers on my 1394 controller which vendor=VIA but is not a bridge. Making the quirk __devinit solves the problem.
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Alexander Viro authored
There's a few places that use incorrect exclusion for the cramfs raw data access buffers. The proper lock is "read_mutex" (and BKL does nothing). - fix mount-time read and block number initialization without the mutex held. - cramfs_readdir() needs to copy the name and inode information into a separate buffer since it can't hold the semaphore over the (potentially blocking) user mode access - cramfs_lookup() needs to hold the access lock over the whole function, not just the read itself - use generic_file_llseek on directories to get i_sem exclusion on readdir/lseek
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- 06 Nov, 2003 5 commits
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Krishna Kumar authored
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Patrick McHardy authored
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Jan Kara authored
From Herbert Xu
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Jens Axboe authored
There's a problem with bio segment accounting for pages that reside above the bounce limit of a queue. When submitted, they may be considered part of another segment. A condition that changes when the page gets bounced. This can cause us to send bio's that have too many segments to a driver. The best fix is to always consider pages above q->bounce_pfn as seperate segments. That's the conservative approach and the easy fix. Problem identified and fixed by Herbert Xu.
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Andrey Panin authored
This fixes visws subarch which was broken by asm-i386/hw_irq.h changes
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- 05 Nov, 2003 11 commits
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Linus Torvalds authored
From Ronald Lembcke.
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/davem/tg3-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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David S. Miller authored
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David S. Miller authored
- Missing spin_lock*() calls before tp->link_config twiddling. - Missing assignment to tp->link_config.autoneg
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David S. Miller authored
IRDA was restoring IRQ flags in a different function from which they were saved which explodes on certain platforms. It did not need to use _irq{save,restore}() anyways since the seqfile layer always invokes these routines from user context with interrupts enabled, so using plain spin_{lock,unlock}_irq() works just fine.
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Ville Nuorvala authored
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Ville Nuorvala authored
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Tim Shepard authored
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Jean Tourrilhes authored
- Prevent 'self' leak on error in irlmp_open. ASSERT is compiled in only with DEBUG option => risk = 0. Original patch from Chris Wright.
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Jean Tourrilhes authored
- Prevent sending status event to dead/kfree sockets - Disable PPP access before deregistration PPP deregistration might sleep -> race condition
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Jean Tourrilhes authored
- Do not do copy_from_user() under spinlock - Always access self->skb under spinlock Original patch from Martin Diehl.
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