- 12 Mar, 2004 34 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Wim Van Sebroeck <wim@iguana.be> Convert last set of watchdog drivers to new moduleparam system.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruen@suse.de> Remove the arbitrary limit of 32 ACL entries on ext[23] when reading from disk. This change is backward compatible; we need to have this change in to be able to also allow writing big ACLs. The second patch that removes the ACL entry limit for writes is not included. I don't want to push that patch now, because large ACLs would cause 2.4 and current 2.6 kernels to fail. My plan is to remove the second limit later, in a half-year or year or so.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@suse.de> i810fb most likely is needed on x86-64 too because there are Intel chipsets for it now. So far it only linked on i386, fix this.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Arjan van de Ven <arjanv@redhat.com> If someone removes a /proc directory which still has subdirectories it will lead to very nasty things (dentries remaining on hash chains etc etc etc). The BUG_ON in the patch below will catch this nasty situation.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Manfred Spraul <manfred@colorfullife.com> sem_revalidate checks that a semaphore array didn't disappear while the code was running without the semaphore array spinlock. If the array disappeared, then it will return without holding a lock. find_undo calls sem_revalidate and then sem_unlock, even if sem_revalidate failed. The sem_unlock call must be removed. Mingming Cao reported a spinlock deadlock with sysv semaphores. A superflous unlock doesn't explain the deadlock, but it's obviously a bug.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org> From: Daniel Mack <daniel@zonque.org>, me modpost unconditionally searched for ".o" assuming this is always the suffix of the module. This fails in two cases: a) when building external modules where any directory include ".o" in the name. One example is a directory named: .../cvs.alsa.org/... b) when someone names a kernel directory so it contains ".o". One example is drivers/scsi/aic.ok/... case b) was triggered by renaming the directory for aic7xxx, and modifying Makefile and Kconfig. This caused make modules to fail.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Chris Mason <mason@suse.com> There's a race in loopback setup, it's easiest to trigger with one or more procs doing loopback mounts at the same time. The problem is that fs/block_dev.c:do_open() only calls bdev_set_size on the first open. Picture two procs: proc1: mount -o loop file1 mnt1 proc2: mount -o loop file2 mnt2 proc1 proc2 open /dev/loop0 # bd_openers now 1 do_open bd_set_size(bdev, 0) # loop unbound, so bdev size is 0 open /dev/loop0 # bd_openers now 2 loop_set_fd # disk capacity now correct, but # bdev not updated mount /dev/loop0 /mnt do_open Because bd_openers != 0 for the last do_open, bd_set_size is not called again and a size of 0 is used. This eventually leads to an oops when the loop device is unmounted, because fsync_bdev calls block_write_full_page who decides every page on the block device is outside i_size and unmaps them. When ext2 or reiserfs try to sync a metadata buffer, we get an oops on because the buffers are no longer mapped. The patch below changes loop_set_fd and loop_clr_fd to also manipulate the size of the block device, which fixes things for me.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Arjan van de Ven <arjanv@redhat.com> The patch below (written by Al Viro) solves a nasty chicken-and-egg issue for operating system installers (well at least anaconda but the problem domain is not exclusive to that) The basic problem is this: - The small first stage installer locates the image file of the second stage installer (which has X and all the graphical stuff); this image can be on the same CD, but it can come via NFS, http or ftp or ... as well. - The first stage installer loop-back mounts this image and gives control to the second stage installer by calling some binary there. - The graphical installer then asks the user all those questions and starts installing packages. Again the packages can come from the CD but also from NFS or http or ... Now in case of a CD install, once all requested packages from the first CD are installed, the installer wants to unmount and eject the CD and prompt the user to put CD 2 in....... EXCEPT that the unmount can't work since the installer is actually running from a loopback mount of this cd. The solution is a "LOOP_CHANGE_FD" ioctl, where basically the installer copies the image to the harddisk (which can only be done late since only late the target harddisk is mkfs'd) and then magically switches the backing store FD from underneath the loop device to the one on the target harddisk (and thus unbusying the CD mount). This is obviously only allowed if the size of the new image is identical and if the loop image is read-only in the first place. It's the responsibility of root to make sure the contents is the same (but that's of the give-root-enough-rope kind)
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org> Make the difference between 'make clean' and 'make distclean/mrproper' more explicit. make clean now removes all generated files except .config* and .version. The result is much easier to understand now. make clean deletes all generated files (except .config* and .version). make mrproper deletes configuration and all temporary files left by patch, editors and the like. Example output: > make mrproper CLEAN init CLEAN usr CLEAN scripts/kconfig CLEAN scripts CLEAN .tmp_versions include/config CLEAN include/asm-i386/asm_offsets.h include/linux/autoconf.h include/linux/version.h include/asm .tmp_versions CLEAN .version .config Form the list of files/directories deleted during make clean, removed all references that is no longer relevant for the current kernel.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: William Lee Irwin III <wli@holomorphy.com> Using PAGE_SIZE rather than 4096 so that mmap() granularity is honored by whatever non-i386 architectures use MMAP_PAGE_ZERO.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ville Nuorvala <vnuorval@tcs.hut.fi> There are a few kernel-only things in compiler.h which should have been placed inside __KERNEL__.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Chen, Kenneth W" <kenneth.w.chen@intel.com> The only path to get to del_timer call in __generic_unplug_device() is when blk_remove_plug() returns 1, and in that case it already removed the unplug_timer. Patch to remove this redundant call.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> The attached patch is NUMA-aware zonelist builder patch, which sorts zonelist in the order that near-node first, far-node last. In lse-tech and linux-ia64, where most of NUMA people resides, no objections are raised so far. The patch adds NUMA-specific version of build_zonelists which calls find_next_best_node to select the next-nearest node to add to zonelist. The patch has no effect on flat NUMA platform.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org> The EXTRA_CFLAGS assignments in the following files are a left-over from the early 2.5 days where the source was not compiled from the root of the source tree. Removing these wrong assignments fixes http://bugme.osdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2210 A script named 'kernel' in the .. directory no longer halt compilation.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ben Fennema <bfennema@falcon.csc.calpoly.edu> - added udf 2.5 #defines - fixed prealloc discard race - fixed several bugs in inode_getblk - added S_IFSOCK support - fix unicode encoding bug - change partition allocation from kmalloc to vmalloc for large allocations
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Andrew Morton authored
From: James Morris <jmorris@redhat.com> selinux is currently inspecting the filesystem name ("nfs" vs "coda" vs watever) to work out whether it needs to hanbdle binary mount data. Eliminate all that by adding a flag to file_system_type.fs_flags.
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Andrew Morton authored
dm-stripe.c: The stripe width must be at least the page size.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Thornber <thornber@redhat.com> List targets ioctl. [Patrick Caulfield]
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Thornber <thornber@redhat.com> Fill in missing queue limitations when table is complete instead of enforcing the "default" limits on every dm device. Problem noticed by Mike Christie. [Christophe Saout]
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Thornber <thornber@redhat.com> Audit for list_for_each_*entry*
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Joe Thornber <thornber@redhat.com> Add an endio method to targets. This method is allowed to request another shot at failed ios (think multipath). Context can be passed between the map method and the endio method.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au> By allowing X86_MCE_NONFATAL to be a module, it can be included in distribution kernels without upsetting those with strange hardware.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "H. Peter Anvin" <hpa@zytor.com> This patch cleans up the very early memory setup on the i386 platform. In particular, it removes the hard-coded 8 MB limit completely by dynamically creating the early-boot pagetables rather than having them hard coded. While I was at it, I changed head.S so that it always sets up a local GDT; this means among other things that SMP and VISWS are no longer special cases, and is conceptually cleaner to boot. The VISWS people have confirmed it works on VISWS. It also uses a separate entrypoint for non-boot processors since this is completely kernel-internal anyway. This eliminates the need to set %bx on boot. (If you think this is a bad idea I can eliminate this change; it just seemed cleaner to me to do it this way.) Additionally, zero bss with rep;stosl rather that rep;stosb.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Randy.Dunlap" <rddunlap@osdl.org> From: Luiz Fernando Capitulino <lcapitulino@prefeitura.sp.gov.br> remove ifdef/endif in rtc_generic_init(). use returned error code;
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Brian Gerst <bgerst@didntduck.org> Drivers should all be converted to use ioremap() or isa_*() by now.
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Andrew Morton authored
If there's nothing available and the file is O_NONBLOCK, return -EAGAIN. This is a bit grubby - really we should push the file* down into do_syslog() and handle it inside the spinlock.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: john stultz <johnstul@us.ibm.com> In developing the ia64-cyclone patch, which implements a cyclone based time interpolator, I found the following bug which could cause time inconsistencies. In update_wall_time_one_tick(), which is called each timer interrupt, we call time_interpolator_update(delta_nsec) where delta_nsec is approximately NSEC_PER_SEC/HZ. This directly correlates with the changes to xtime which occurs in update_wall_time_one_tick(). However in update_wall_time(), on a second overflow, we again call time_interpolator_update(NSEC_PER_SEC). However while the components of xtime are being changed, the overall value of xtime does not (nsec is decremented NSEC_PER_SEC and sec is incremented). Thus this call to time_interpolator_update is incorrect. This patch removes the incorrect call to time_interpolator_update and was found to resolve the time inconsistencies I had seen while developing the ia64-cyclone patch.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: James Simmons <jsimmons@infradead.org> This patch fixes fb_console_init from being called twice. I still need to fix set_con2fb but this helps but this is still important to get in.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Niraj Kumar <niraj17@iitbombay.org> This patch adds read-only support for ufs2 (used in FreeBSD 5.x) variant of ufs filesystem. For filesystem specific tools, see http://ufs-linux.sourceforge.com .
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Suparna Bhattacharya <suparna@in.ibm.com> From: Ram Pai <linuxram@us.ibm.com> Pipelined readahead behaviour is suitable for sequential reads, but not for large random reads (typical of database workloads), where lazy readahead provides a big performance boost. One option (suggested by Andrew Morton) would be to have the application pass hints to turn off readahead by setting the readahead window to zero using posix_fadvise64(POSIX_FADV_RANDOM), and to special-case that in do_generic_mapping_read to completely bypass the readahead logic and instead read in all the pages needed directly. This was the idea I started with. But then I thought, we can do a still better job ? How about adapting the readahead algorithm to lazy-read or non-lazy-read based on the past i/o patterns ? The overall idea is to keep track of average number of contiguous pages accessed in a file. If the average at any given time is above ra->pages the pattern is sequential. If not the pattern is random. If pattern is sequential do non-lazy-readahead( read as soon as the first page in the active window is touched) else do lazy-readahead. I have studied the behaviour of this patch using my user-level simulator. It adapts pretty well. Note from Suparna: This appears to bring streaming AIO read performance for large (64KB) random AIO reads back to sane values (since the lazy readahead backout in the mainline).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: <viro@parcelfarce.linux.theplanet.co.uk> cramfs and freevxfs explicitly mark themselves readonly (as other r/o fs do). afs marked noatime (ACKed by maintainer) filesystems that do not do update_atime() in their ->readdir() had been explicitly marked nodiratime. NOTE: cifs, coda and ncpfs almost certainly need full noatime as we currently have in nfs and afs. update_atime() call shifted to callers of ->readdir() and out of ->readdir() instances. Bugs caught: dcache_readdir() updated atime only if it reached EOF. bfs_readdir() - ditto. qnx4_readdir() - ditto.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Brian Gerst <bgerst@didntduck.org> Remove stubs for sys_ioperm for non-x86 arches, using sys_ni_syscall instead where applicable. Support for sys_ioperm is unconditionally no for non-x86 arches.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Anton Blanchard <anton@samba.org> We were hitting problems on machines with cpu_possible != cpu_online when NUMA was enabled. The debug checks would trip during scheduler init because we iterate through all possible cpus whereas we only set up NUMA information for online cpus. Longer term we should have a cpu_up hook which sets up its NUMA information but for now we initalise all possible cpus and memory to node 0.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Arjan van de Ven <arjanv@redhat.com> Unfortunatly a large portion of the oops reports lack the basic information about what kernel version the oops is for; it's trivial to just print this in the oops as well to improve the usefulness of bugreports...
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- 11 Mar, 2004 5 commits
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Benjamin Herrenschmidt authored
Fix a typo in the code that prevents lockup on config space access to sleeping devices on ppc32/G5. Please apply.
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Anton Blanchard authored
Thanks to some great debugging work by Olaf Hering and Marcus Meissner it has been noticed that the current ppc64 syscall code is corrupting 4 bytes past errno. Why we even bothered to set errno beats me, its unusable in the kernel. Since we had to reinstate the inline syscall code we can go back to using it for those few syscalls that we call. Especially now with Randy's syscall prototype cleanup we should be calling them directly but we can do that sometime later.
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Jens Axboe authored
This small patch builds on top of the blk_rq_map_user() patch just sent, and enables us to easily support DMA for CDROMREADAUDIO cdda extraction. It's quite amazing how much cool stuff you can with the new block layer :-) Patch has intelligent fall back from multi frame dma to single frame dma, and further to old-style pio ripping in case of hardware problems.
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Jens Axboe authored
This patch allows you to map a request with user data for io, similarly to what you can do with bio_map_user() already to a bio. However, this goes one step further and populates the request so the user only has to fill in the cdb (almost) and put it on the queue for execution. Patch converts sg_io() to use it, next patch I'll send adapts cdrom layer to use it for zero copy cdda dma extraction.
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Stephen Rothwell authored
While playing with udev, I discovered that the virtual console devices on iSeries had there minor numbers off by one i.e. /dev/tty1 was minor 2! This fixes it.
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- 10 Mar, 2004 1 commit
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Andi Kleen authored
From Takashi Iwai kobj_lookup had a 64bit bug, which caused the request of a unknown character device to burn CPU instead of failing quickly.
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