- 14 May, 2004 40 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
Sync this up with Andrea's patches.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: William Lee Irwin III <wli@holomorphy.com> This patch implements wake-one semantics for buffer_head wakeups in a single step. The buffer_head being waited on is passed to the waiter's wakeup function by the waker, and the wakeup function compares that to the a pointer stored in its on-stack structure and checking the readiness of the bit there also. Wake-one semantics are achieved by using WQ_FLAG_EXCLUSIVE in the codepaths waiting to acquire the bit for mutual exclusion.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: William Lee Irwin III <wli@holomorphy.com> This patch implements wake-one semantics for page wakeups in a single step. Discrimination between distinct pages is achieved by passing the page to the wakeup function, which compares it to a pointer in its own on-stack structure containing the waitqueue element and the page. Bit discrimination is achieved by storing the bit number in that same structure and testing the bit in the wakeup function. Wake-one semantics are achieved by using WQ_FLAG_EXCLUSIVE in the codepaths waiting to acquire the bit for mutual exclusion.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: William Lee Irwin III <wli@holomorphy.com> This patch provides an additional argument to __wake_up_common() so that the information wakefunc.patch made waiters ready to receive may be passed to them by wakers. This is provided as a separate patch so that the overhead of the additional argument to __wake_up_common() can be measured in isolation. No change in performance was observable here.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: William Lee Irwin III <wli@holomorphy.com> This patch series is solving the "thundering herd" problem that occurs in the mainline implementation of hashed waitqueues. There are two sources of spurious wakeups in such arrangements: (a) Hash collisions that place waiters on different objects on the same waitqueue, which wakes threads falsely when any of the objects hashed to the same queue receives a wakeup. i.e. loss of information about which object a wakeup event is related to. (b) Loss of information about which object a given waiter is waiting on. This precludes wake-one semantics for mutual exclusion scenarios. For instance, a lock bit may be slept on. If there are any waiters on the object, a lock bit release event must wake at least one of them so as to prevent deadlock. But without information as to which waiter is waiting on which object, we must resort to waking all waiters who could possibly be waiting on it. Now, as the lock bit provides mutual exclusion, only one of the waiters woken can proceed, and the remainder will go back to sleep and wait for another event, creating unnecessary system load. Once wake-one semantics are established, only one of the waiters waiting to acquire a lock bit need to be woken, which measurably reduces system load and improves efficiency (i.e. it's the subject of the benchmarking I've been sending to you). Even beyond the measurable efficiency gains, there are reasons of robustness and responsiveness to motivate addressing the issue of thundering herds. In a real-life scenario I've been personally involved in resolving, the thundering herd issue caused powerful modern SMP machines with fast IO systems to be unresponsive to user input for a minute at a time or more. Analogues of these patches for the distro kernels involved fully resolved the issue to the customer's satisfaction and obviated workarounds to limit the pagecache's size. The latest spin of these patches basically shoves more pieces of the logic into the wakeup functions, with some efficiency gains from sharing the hot codepath with the rest of the kernel, and a slightly larger diff than the patches with the newly-introduced entrypoint. Writing these was motivated by the push to insulate sched.c from more of the details of wakeup semantics by putting more of the logic into the wakeup functions. In order to accomplish this while still solving (b), the wakeup functions grew a new argument for communication about what object a wakeup event is related to to be passed by the waker. ========= This patch provides an additional argument to wakeup functions so that information may be passed from the waker to the waiter. This is provided as a separate patch so that the overhead of the additional argument can be measured in isolation. No change in performance was observable here.
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Andrew Morton authored
gcc-3.4.0 sez: init/do_mounts_rd.c:309: warning: conflicting types for built-in function 'malloc'
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Hugh Dickins <hugh@veritas.com> Stas Sergeev <stsp@aknet.ru> wrote: mprotect() fails to merge VMAs because one VMA can end up with VM_ACCOUNT flag set, and another without that flag. That makes several apps of mine to malfuncate. Great find! Someone has got their test the wrong way round. Since that VM_MAYACCT macro is being used in one place only, and just hiding what it's actually about, fold it into its callsite.
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Andrew Morton authored
David Mosberger asked that this be backed out: "I do not believe that flushing the TLB before migration is be the right thing to do on ia64 machines which support global TLB purges (i.e., all but SGI's machines)." It was of huge benefit for the SGI machines, so work is ongoing.
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Andrew Morton authored
Switch all users of MSEC[S]_TO_JIFFIES and JIFFIES_TO_MSEC[S] over to use jiffies_to_msecs() and msecs_to_jiffies(). Withdraw MSECS_TO_JIFFIES() and JIFFIES_TO_MSECS() from the kernel API.
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Andrew Morton authored
Remove various private implementations of msecs_to_jiffies() and jiffies_to_msecs(). There are various uppercase versions which should be consolidated.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu> We have various different implementations of MSEC[S]_TO_JIFFIES and JIFFIES_TO_MSEC[S]. We recently had a compile-time clash in USB. Fix all that up. - The SCTP version was very inefficient. Hopefully this version is accurate enough. - Optimise for the HZ=100 and HZ=1000 cases - This version does round-up, so sleep(9 milliseconds) works OK on 100HZ. - We still have lots of jiffies_to_msec and msec_to_jiffies implementations. From: William Lee Irwin III <wli@holomorphy.com> Optimize the cases where HZ is a divisor of 1000 or vice-versa in JIFFIES_TO_MSECS() and MSECS_TO_JIFFIES() by allowing the nonvanishing(!) integral ratios to appear as a parenthesized expressions eligible for constant folding optimizations. From: me Use typesafe inlines for the jiffies-to-millisecond conversion functions. This means that milliseconds officially takes the type `unsigned int'. All current callers seem to be OK with that. Drivers need to be fixed up to use this instead of their private versions.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Nick Piggin <nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au> this_rq_lock does a local_irq_disable, and sched_yield() needs to undo that.
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Andrew Morton authored
This has been there for nearly two years. See bugzilla #1403 vmscan.c does, in two places: spin_lock(zone->lru_lock) page = lru_to_page(&zone->inactive_list); if (page_count(page) == 0) { /* erk, it's being freed by __page_cache_release() or * release_pages() */ put_it_back_on_the_lru(); } else { --> window 1 <-- page_cache_get(page); put_in_on_private_list(); } spin_unlock(zone->lru_lock) use_the_private_list(); page_cache_release(page); whereas __page_cache_release() and release_pages() do: if (put_page_testzero(page)) { --> window 2 <-- spin_lock(lru->lock); if (page_count(page) == 0) { remove_it_from_the_lru(); really_free_the_page() } spin_unlock(zone->lru_lock) } The race occurs if the vmscan.c path sees page_count()==1 and then the page_cache_release() path happens in that few-instruction "window 1" before vmscan's page_cache_get(). The page_cache_release() path does put_page_testzero(), which returns true. Then this CPU takes an interrupt... The vmscan.c path then does page_cache_get(), taking the refcount to one. Then it uses the page and does page_cache_release(), taking the refcount to zero and the page is really freed. Now, the CPU running page_cache_release() returns from the interrupt, takes the LRU lock, sees the page still has a refcount of zero and frees it again. Boom. The patch fixes this by closing "window 1". We provide a "get_page_testone()" which grabs a ref on the page and returns true if the refcount was previously zero. If that happens the vmscan.c code simply drops the page's refcount again and leaves the page on the LRU. All this happens under the zone->lru_lock, which is also taken by __page_cache_release() and release_pages(), so the vmscan code knows that the page has not been returned to the page allocator yet. In terms of implementation, the page counts are now offset by one: a free page has page->_count of -1. This is so that we can use atomic_add_negative() and atomic_inc_and_test() to provide put_page_testzero() and get_page_testone(). The macros hide all of this so the public interpretation of page_count() and set_page_count() remains unaltered. The compiler can usually constant-fold the offsetting of page->count. This patch increases an x86 SMP kernel's text by 32 bytes. The patch renames page->count to page->_count to break callers who aren't using the macros. This patch requires that the architecture implement atomic_add_negative(). It is currently present on arm arm26 i386 ia64 mips ppc s390 v850 x86_64 ppc implements this as #define atomic_add_negative(a, v) (atomic_add_return((a), (v)) < 0) and atomic_add_return() is implemented on alpha cris h8300 ia64 m68knommu mips parisc ppc ppc ppc64 s390 sh sparc v850 so we're looking pretty good.
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Andrew Morton authored
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Andrew Morton authored
From: David Mosberger <davidm@napali.hpl.hp.com>
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Ivan Kokshaysky <ink@jurassic.park.msu.ru> It seems atomic_inc_and_test() is missing on alpha.
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Andrew Morton authored
It's easy to do when the arch provides atomic_inc_return().
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Andrew Morton authored
Lots of architectures have atomic_add_return() and no atomic_add_negative(). We can implement the latter in terms of the former.
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Andrew Morton authored
I'm about to change the meaning (and name) of page->count. Go through and fix up all those places which are open-coding references to it.
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Jeff Garzik authored
into redhat.com:/spare/repo/net-drivers-2.6
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/gregkh/linux/i2c-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.6/linux
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/gregkh/linux/driver-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.6/linux
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bk://kernel.bkbits.net/gregkh/linux/usb-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.6/linux
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
into kroah.com:/home/greg/linux/BK/driver-2.6
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
into kroah.com:/home/greg/linux/BK/i2c-2.6
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Deepak Saxena authored
Forgot to include this with my original patch a few weeks ago...
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Bjørn Mork authored
Jean Delvare <khali@linux-fr.org> writes: > So I'd suggest that you simply use the standard exit sequence in the > it87 driver (the second one in your current patch). A patch for the 2.4 > driver would be appreciated as well. OK. I've attached a new version of the patch against linux-2.6.6. I'll send a patch against current lm_sensors CVS removing the extra exit command in a separate mail. Greg KH <greg@kroah.com> writes: > On Wed, May 12, 2004 at 04:38:03PM +0200, Bj?rn Mork wrote: >> + if (!it87_find(&addr)) { >> + printk("it87.o: new ISA address: 0x%04x\n", addr); > > That printk is wrong (no KERN_ level, or dev_printk() style use). > Please fix it in your next revision of this patch. Errh, I just added it to document my sloppyness. It was never meant to be in the patch I sent you. Sorry. Removed in the attached patch. The style of these drivers seem to be "just working, making no noise" so I assume informational printk's are unwanted.
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Jason D. Gaston authored
This patch adds DID support for ICH6 and 6300ESB to i2c-i801.c(SMBus). In order to add this support I needed to patch pci_ids.h with the SMBus DID's. To keep things orginized I renumbered the ICH6 and ESB entries in pci_ids.h. I then patched the piix IDE and i810 audio drivers to reflect the updated #define's. I also removed an error from irq.c; there was a reference to a 6300ESB DID that does not exist.
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
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bk://linux-acpi.bkbits.net/linux-acpi-release-2.6.6Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.6/linux
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David Brownell authored
I needed this to get an APM + UHCI config to behave on resume. Applies against your BK of last night ... OHCI and EHCI do some of this manually, they could be simplified later.
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Maneesh Soni authored
o The following patch cleans up sysfs_rename_dir(). It now checks the return code of kobject_set_name() and propagates the error code to its callers. Because of this there are changes in the following two APIs. Both return int instead of void. int sysfs_rename_dir(struct kobject * kobj, const char *new_name) int kobject_rename(struct kobject * kobj, char *new_name)
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Max Asbock authored
[note, I changed this a bit to be nicer on the system log, greg k-h]
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David Brownell authored
Prakash K. Cheemplavam wrote: > David Brownell wrote: > >>> There appear lines like > >>> usb usb2: string descriptor 0 read error: -108 >>> bug or feature? They weren't there with 2.6.6-mm1. I have no usb2.0 >>> stuff to actually test. My usb1 stuff seems to work though. >> >> Bug; minor, since the only real symptom seems to be messages like >> that. Ignore them for now, I'll make a patch soonish. > > Ok, good. Thanks for the explanation of what is going on, though I don't > can make too much out of it. ;-) The short version is: it's missing this patch.
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Duncan Sands authored
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
It also could hide real bugs, and that's not good. And the name implies that a reference is grabbed, and that's not true at all.
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
If this is hiding real problems, we need to find them.
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Greg Kroah-Hartman authored
Pretty useless stuff. If this was hiding anything real, we need to find out.
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