- 17 Mar, 2002 2 commits
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David Woodhouse authored
Remove remnants of zlib_fs.
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David Woodhouse authored
Remove FS_REQUIRES_DEV from JFFS2. We never really used the block device anyway.
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- 16 Mar, 2002 6 commits
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http://linux-isdn.bkbits.net/linux-2.5.miscLinus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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http://linux-isdn.bkbits.net/linux-2.5.makeLinus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Kai Germaschewski authored
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Kai Germaschewski authored
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Kai Germaschewski authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
make driverfs initialize early, so that ACPI can come alive in a world where you can register devices.
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- 15 Mar, 2002 32 commits
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Kai Germaschewski authored
into tp1.ruhr-uni-bochum.de:/home/kai/kernel/v2.5/linux-2.5.config_sound.x
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
For some reason the ACPI people continue to make the mistake of thinking that they are the root of the system. Disabuse them of that notion.
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Bob Miller authored
Clean up BSD accounting locking code..
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Christoph Rohland authored
The appended patch brings the fixes applied in 2.4 to shmem.c to 2.5. In Detail: - Add needed checks for shmem_file_write and shmem_symlink - Add Documentation/filesystems/tmpfs.txt and adjust Config.help - Add uid and gid mount options - Make the error messages more user friendly
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David Mosberger authored
Pick up binfmt_elf.c SET_PERSONALITY() fix from 2.4.18.
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Linus Torvalds authored
That preempt_count really is supposed to be unconditional, architectures please take note and add to your thread info.
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bk://lia64.bkbits.net/to-linus-2.5/Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Andy Grover authored
If you could only review one of the 9 patches, this would be the one. - removes acpitable.c vestiges - adds ACPI IRQ routing support to PCI (disableable via pci=noacpi option) - adds code to get a <1MB page for sleep, and ACPI boot to setup.c - allocates another page in the fixmap for ACPI - changes driverfs a little to work better with ACPI.
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Andy Grover authored
This patch removes arch/i386/kernel/acpitable.c. As mentioned previously, the new ACPI code integrates this, so it's no longer needed.
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Andy Grover authored
This updates the Configure.help, both in arch/i386, and in drivers/acpi.
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Andy Grover authored
This removes the old OSPM code. It lived under drivers/acpi/ospm/*, but the new code just lives in drivers/acpi, and removes some unnecessary abstraction that this old code had.
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Andy Grover authored
This is the update to the core interpreter code.
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Andy Grover authored
This is the config.in and makefile changes for the latest code. The most (only) interesting thing probably is ACPI is no longer flagged experimental.
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Andy Grover authored
This patch updates the acpi IA32 arch-specific files. Part of this is taking what was acpitable.c and implementing it with better integration with the rest of the ACPI code.
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Andy Grover authored
This patch adds in the new drivers. - Support for driverfs - File/code layout more in the Linux style - improvements to battery, processor, and thermal support
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Andy Grover authored
This is the first of 9 patches. We did a complete rewrite of the Linux-specific code, so we wait for things to stabilize before submitting. There will be more updates, but *much* smaller. #1 - this updates the header file.
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Mikael Pettersson authored
The patch below eliminates a case of boot_cpu_data corruption on SMP x86 machines. This was first observed on SMP Athlons, but it also affects SMP Intel boxes in a less serious way. When the secondary processors boot and execute head.S:checkCPUtype, the code performs a 32-bit write of a small constant to the byte-sized variable boot_cpu_data.x86 (X86 in head.S). Since the write is 32-bit, it also writes zeros to the following 3 bytes, which clobbers the x86_vendor, x86_model, and x86_mask fields previously set up by check_bugs()'s call to identify_cpu(). Thus, after smp_init(), boot_cpu_data will _always_ identify the CPU as an Intel (X86_VENDOR_INTEL == 0 in processor.h) with model 0 and stepping 0. The effect in standard kernels is not catastrophic, since: (a) most SMP x86 boxes are Intel (b) most uses of x86_vendor occur before smp_init() or reference the SMP cpu_data[] array (c) most post-boot references to boot_cpu_data occur in the cpu_has_XXX macros which only read the x86_capability[] array However, third-party extensions (like my x86 performance-monitoring conters driver) can get seriously confused by this mis-identification.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Brian Gerst authored
Don't print out FAT superblock warnings if the IO failed.
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Brian Gerst authored
Seperates qnx4_sb_info from struct super_block.
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Brian Gerst authored
Seperates smb_sb_info from struct super_block.
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Brian Gerst authored
Seperates msdos_sb_info from struct super_block for msdos and vfat. Umsdos is terminally broken and is not included.
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Brian Gerst authored
NR_IRQS should be 16 when the IO apic is not configured, as the 8259 PIC cannot generate any more interrupts. It also fixes a bug where the IDT gets populated with random addresses, since only 16 entry stubs are created.
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Brian Gerst authored
This changes the F00F bug workaround code to use the fixmap facilities instead of touching the page tables directly. It also removes the assumption that only 686's don't have the bug. I have confirmation that the patch works on buggy pentiums.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Alexander Viro authored
It needs the following patch
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Alexander Viro authored
In case if proc_pid_make_inode() steps on exiting task we do iput() and return NULL. Unfortunately, in that case inode->i_ino doesn't look like inumber of a per-process inode and we take the wrong path in proc_delete_inode(). I.e. do dput(PDE(inode)). Which is left uninitialized... We used to get out with that almost by accident - that code worked only because we had zeroed out one field of union and that guaranteed that another field would be NULL. It worked, but broke at the first occasion.
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Alexander Viro authored
* introduces a new filesystem - nfsd. No, it's not a typo. It's a small tree with fixed topology defined by nfsd and IO on its files does what we used to do by hand in nfsctl.c. * turns sys_nfsservctl() into a sequence of open()/write()/read()/close() It works as it used to - we don't need nfsd to be mounted anywhere, etc. * nfsd_linkage ugliness is gone. * getfs and getfh demonstrate (rather trivial) example of "descriptor as transaction descriptor" behaviour. * we are fairly close to the situation when driver-defined filesystems can be done with practically zero code overhead. We are still not there, but it's a matter of adding a couple of helpers for populating the tree. One thing we get immediately is a cleanup of sys_nfsservctl() - it got _much_ better. Moreover, we get an alternative interface that uses normal file IO and can be used without magic syscalls.
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