- 26 Sep, 2002 13 commits
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Yuri Per authored
This is a simple, obvious patch for the abort handler. I don't know how we missed it before. Fix abort problem: us->srb was used after it was erased.
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Roger Crettol authored
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Tim Schmielau authored
on rechecking the current stable kernel code, I found some places where jiffies were compared in a way that seems to break when they wrap. For these, I made up patches to use the macros "time_before()" or "time_after()" that are supposed to handle wraparound correctly.
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Brian Hall authored
Attached is a patch against the 2.4.19 linux kernel. It adds an entry for another version of the JMTek USBDrive (driverless), and also updates my email address.
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Jean Tourrilhes authored
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http://gkernel.bkbits.net/misc-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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http://gkernel.bkbits.net/net-drivers-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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http://gkernel.bkbits.net/irda-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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http://gkernel.bkbits.net/i2c-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Jens Axboe authored
Some various small cleanups, optimizations, and fixes. o Make fifo_batch=32 as default, from testing this appears a good default value. We still get good throughput, and latency is good. o Reintroduce the merge_cleanup logic. We need it for deadline for rehashing requests when they have been merged. o Cleanup last_merge logic. Move it to the new elv_merged_request(), this is where it really belongs. Doing it inside the io scheduler core can causes false positives, when the queue merge functions reject an otherwise good merge o Have deadline_move_requests() account from last entry on the dispatch queue, if it is non-empty. It doesn't really matter what the last extracted sector was, if we are not right behind it. o Clean/optimize deadline_move_requests() o Account size of a request just a little bit. Streaming transfer isn't for free, it's just a lot cheaper than a seek. o Make deadline_check_fifo() more readable.
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Ingo Molnar authored
From Andrew Morton. There are a couple of places where we would enable interrupts while write-holding the tasklist_lock ... nasty.
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- 25 Sep, 2002 27 commits
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Jeff Garzik authored
into mandrakesoft.com:/home/jgarzik/repo/misc-2.5
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Jeff Garzik authored
into mandrakesoft.com:/home/jgarzik/repo/irda-2.5
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Jeff Garzik authored
into mandrakesoft.com:/home/jgarzik/repo/net-drivers-2.5
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Albert Cranford authored
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bk://ldm.bkbits.net/linux-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.transmeta.com:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Andrew Morton authored
Had a weird oops from Bill Irwin - the pdflush_list was corrupt. The only thing I can think of is that something sprayed out a wakeup when it shouldn't. So tighten things up against that, and add some printks to catch it if it happens again.
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Andrew Morton authored
Well it's a one-liner. sys_sync() only syncs one queue at a time, and can be slow if you have a lot of disks. So poke pdflush, which knows how to write all the queues in parallel.
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Andrew Morton authored
[This has four scalps already. Thomas Molina has agreed to track things as they are identified ] Infrastructure to detect sleep-inside-spinlock bugs. Really only useful if compiled with CONFIG_PREEMPT=y. It prints out a whiny message and a stack backtrace if someone calls a function which might sleep from within an atomic region. This patch generates a storm of output at boot, due to drivers/ide/ide-probe.c:init_irq() calling lots of things which it shouldn't under ide_lock. It'll find other bugs too.
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Andrew Morton authored
A patch from Ed Tomlinson which improves the way in which the kernel reclaims slab objects. The theory is: a cached object's usefulness is measured in terms of the number of disk seeks which it saves. Furthermore, we assume that one dentry or inode saves as many seeks as one pagecache page. So we reap slab objects at the same rate as we reclaim pages. For each 1% of reclaimed pagecache we reclaim 1% of slab. (Actually, we _scan_ 1% of slab for each 1% of scanned pages). Furthermore we assume that one swapout costs twice as many seeks as one pagecache page, and twice as many seeks as one slab object. So we double the pressure on slab when anonymous pages are being considered for eviction. The code works nicely, and smoothly. Possibly it does not shrink slab hard enough, but that is now very easy to tune up and down. It is just: ratio *= 3; in shrink_caches(). Slab caches no longer hold onto completely empty pages. Instead, pages are freed as soon as they have zero objects. This is possibly a performance hit for slabs which have constructors, but it's doubtful. Most allocations after a batch of frees are satisfied from inside internally-fragmented pages and by the time slab gets back onto using the wholly-empty pages they'll be cache-cold. slab would be better off going and requesting a new, cache-warm page and reconstructing the objects therein. (Once we have the per-cpu hot-page allocator in place. It's happening). As a consequence of the above, kmem_cache_shrink() is now unused. No great loss there - the serialising effect of kmem_cache_shrink and its semaphore in front of page reclaim was measurably bad. Still todo: - batch up the shrinking so we don't call into prune_dcache and friends at high frequency asking for a tiny number of objects. - Maybe expose the shrink ratio via a tunable. - clean up slab.c - highmem page reclaim in prune_icache: highmem pages can pin inodes.
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Andrew Morton authored
This uses the new wakeup machinery in some hot parts of the VFS and block layers. wait_on_buffer(), wait_on_page(), lock_page(), blk_congestion_wait(). Also in get_request_wait(), although the benefit for exclusive wakeups will be lower.
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Andrew Morton authored
This is worth a whopping 2% on spwecweb on an 8-way. Which is faintly surprising because __wake_up and other wait/wakeup functions are not apparent in the specweb profiles which I've seen. The main objective of this is to reduce the CPU cost of the wait/wakeup operation. When a task is woken up, its waitqueue is removed from the waitqueue_head by the waker (ie: immediately), rather than by the woken process. This means that a subsequent wakeup does not need to revisit the just-woken task. It also means that the just-woken task does not need to take the waitqueue_head's lock, which may well reside in another CPU's cache. I have no decent measurements on the effect of this change - possibly a 20-30% drop in __wake_up cost in Badari's 40-dds-to-40-disks test (it was the most expensive function), but it's inconclusive. And no quantitative testing of which I am aware has been performed by networking people. The API is very simple to use (Linus thought it up): my_func(waitqueue_head_t *wqh) { DEFINE_WAIT(wait); prepare_to_wait(wqh, &wait, TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE); if (!some_test) schedule(); finish_wait(wqh, &wait); } or: DEFINE_WAIT(wait); while (!some_test_1) { prepare_to_wait(wqh, &wait, TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE); if (!some_test_2) schedule(); ... } finish_wait(wqh, &wait); You need to bear in mind that once prepare_to_wait has been performed, your task could be removed from the waitqueue_head and placed into TASK_RUNNING at any time. You don't know whether or not you're still on the waitqueue_head. Running prepare_to_wait() when you're already on the waitqueue_head is fine - it will do the right thing. Running finish_wait() when you're actually not on the waitqueue_head is fine. Running finish_wait() when you've _never_ been on the waitqueue_head is fine, as ling as the DEFINE_WAIT() macro was used to initialise the waitqueue. You don't need to fiddle with current->state. prepare_to_wait() and finish_wait() will do that. finish_wait() will always return in state TASK_RUNNING. There are plenty of usage examples in vm-wakeups.patch and tcp-wakeups.patch.
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Andrew Morton authored
From David M-T. When this function successfully merges the new range into an existing VMA, it forgets to extend the new protection mode into the just-merged pages.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Rohit Seth It fixes the problem which Andrea noted in his initial review of the hugetlb code: "In short doing "addr = vma->vm_end" and then checking if vm_end + len is below vm_next->vm_start is broken, because there's no guarantee that "addr" will be a largepage aligned address. the LPAGE_ALIGN in found_addr should be dropped becaue moving the addr ahead without checking that addr+len doesn't then fall into a vma, will generate do_munmaps and in turn userspace mem corruption."
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Martin J. Bligh authored
- Remove the const that someone incorrectly stuck in there, it type conflicts. Alan has a better plan for fixing this long term, but this fixes the compile warning for now. - Move the printk of the xquad_portio setup *after* we put something in the variable so it actually prints something useful, not 0 ;-) - To derive the size of the xquad_portio area, multiply the number of nodes by the size of each nodes, not the size of two nodes (and remove define). Doh!
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Linus Torvalds authored
and does the wrong thing for higher HZ values anyway.
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bk://ldm@bkbits.net/linux-2.5Patrick Mochel authored
into osdl.org:/home/mochel/src/kernel/devel/linux-2.5
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Patrick Mochel authored
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bk://linus.bkbits.net/linux-2.5Patrick Mochel authored
into hostme.bitkeeper.com:/ua/repos/l/ldm/linux-2.5
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Ingo Molnar authored
This fixes a number of bugs in the thread-release code: - notify parents only if the group leader is a zombie, and if it's not a detached thread. - do not reparent children to zombie tasks. - introduce the TASK_DEAD state for tasks, to serialize the task-release path. (to some it might be confusing that tasks are zombies first, then dead :-) - simplify tasklist_lock usage in release_task(). the effect of the above bugs ranged from unkillable hung zombies to kernel crashes. None of those happens with the patch applied.
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Jens Axboe authored
Patch killing off elevator_linus for good. Sniffle.
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Jens Axboe authored
This introduces the deadline-ioscheduler, making it the default. 2nd patch coming that deletes elevator_linus in a minute. This one has read_expire at 500ms, and writes_starved at 2.
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Thomas Hood authored
Sanity checkthe ESCD size. From 2.4.
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Ivan Kokshaysky authored
These two chipsets are most common on alpha. - cy82c693: allow the generic IDE setup code to work correctly with broken PCI registers layout of this chip. This fixes quite a few problems with secondary channel, plus some hacks in arch code can go away. - ALi M5229: enable DMA.
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Adam Radford authored
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Ingo Molnar authored
This removes the cmpxchg from the PID allocator and replaces it with a spinlock. This spinlock is hit only a couple of times per bootup, so it's not a performance issue.
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Ingo Molnar authored
Ulrich found another small detail wrt. POSIX requirements for threads - this time it's the recursion features (read-held lock being write-locked means an upgrade if the same 'process' is the owner, means a deadlock if a different 'process'). this requirement even makes some sense - the group of threads who own a lock really own all rights to the lock as well. These changes fix this, all testcases pass now. (inter-process testcases as well, which are not affected by this patch.) (SIGURG and SIGIO semantics should also continue to work - there's some more stuff we can optimize with the new pidhash in this area, but that's for later.)
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
The loop device driver was broken in 2.5.38 when it was converted over to use gendisk. I discovered this while doing final regression testing on the ext3 htree code. The problem is that figure_loop_size() is setting the capacity of the loop device in kilobytes (because that's what compute_loop_size() returns), but set_capacity() expects the size in 512 byte sectors. I've enclosed a patch which fixes the problem, as well as simplifying the code by eliminating compute_loop_size(), since it is a static function is only used once by figure_loop_size().
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