- 21 Nov, 2003 9 commits
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David Stevens authored
It did not account for extension headers properly. If we get this length wrong, we do not determine if a multicast packet is MLDv1 vs. MLDv2 correctly.
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David S. Miller authored
into nuts.ninka.net:/disk1/davem/BK/net-2.5
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Linus Torvalds authored
This caused the system call code to test for the wrong number of system calls, with resulting exciting results.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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bk://linux-scsi.bkbits.net/scsi-bugfixes-2.6Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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http://lia64.bkbits.net/to-linus-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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David Mosberger authored
for 2.6.0. The proper fix is to replace ia64_ni_syscall with sys_ni_syscall, but that would make the patch quite large, so we defer that till 2.6.1.
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David Mosberger authored
restore_sigcontext(). Also update ia32 subsystem accordingly.
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David Mosberger authored
in practice, but it's clearly wrong and just waiting there to get triggered...
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- 20 Nov, 2003 5 commits
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David Stevens authored
RFC2710 says: 1) MLD messages are never sent for multicast addresses whose scope is 0 (reserved) or 1 (node-local). 2) MLD messages ARE sent for multicast addresses whose scope is 2 (link-local), including Solicited-Node multicast addersses [ADDR-ARCH], except for the link-scope, all-nodes address (FF02::1). The current MLDv1 code does not send reports for link-scope addresses and doesn't restrict scope 0. This may break switches that snoop reports for determining which ports should receive particular addresses. Patch below.
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David S. Miller authored
into nuts.ninka.net:/disk1/davem/BK/net-2.5
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Herbert Xu authored
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Amir Noam authored
Fix the creation of the /proc/net/bonding dir. Patch is against 2.6. Amir
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Amir Noam authored
This patch (against latest 2.6.0) is also waiting for almost a month. It's already in 2.4 but is still very much needed for 2.6. Old ifenslave versions (like the one in Red Hat 9) don't work with the bonding module in the latest 2.6 kernel without it. Amir
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- 19 Nov, 2003 5 commits
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David S. Miller authored
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Hideaki Yoshifuji authored
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David Stevens authored
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David Stevens authored
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Andrew Morton authored
Original report and bug fix from: Amit Patel <patelamitv@yahoo.com> The problem was a signed vs unsigned char problem when computing luns for scanning.
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- 18 Nov, 2003 21 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Adrian Bunk <bunk@fs.tum.de> Modular BINFMT_ELF doesn't build, and is pretty pathological anyway. So just make it a boolean rather than a tristate.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au> The recent patch produces a message with no terminating newline on the machine in question. This is because one of the four bytes that you're printing out is NUL. The following patch avoids that problem.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jeremy Higdon <jeremy@classic.engr.sgi.com> I believe there is a bug in kernel/resource.c. We (SGI sn2 I/O code) are using this for allocating dma map resources, and we tracked failures we were seeing to find_resource(). The problem is that when testing bounds in the forever loop, the end bound would be one higher than it should be if it gets set from another resource (it's set to the proper value when it gets set from the root), causing find_resource to return an invalid min/max when the requested size was one greater than would fit between two existing resources.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruen@suse.de> 64-bit pointer arithmetic bug in xattr code The int offset is not enought to hold the difference between arbitraty pointers on 64-bit machines. Compute the offset of here and last inside HDR(bh) instead.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: James Cleverdon <jamesclv@us.ibm.com> On summit-based machines the cpu_sibling_map data has been hosed for some time. I found out why in Intel's IA-32 Software Deveveopers' Manual Vol 2 under CPUID. Looks like the value that cpuid returns is the one latched at reset, and doesn't reflect any changes made by the BIOS later: * Local APIC ID (high byte of EBX)--this number is the 8-bit ID that is assigned to the local APIC on the processor during power up. This field was introduced in the Pentium 4 processor. Also, the code in init_intel was a bit overdesigned. Until Intel releases a chip with a non-power-of-2 sibling count on it, there's no point in all that bit bashing.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jun Sun <jsun@mvista.com> It is needed for all those "__attribute_used__" etc to be valid. Also, it seems that when compiling a file ending in ".S", gcc-2.95.3 does not expand __GNUC__ at all. This causes the compiler version check to fail when building vsyscall.S. So add __ASSEMBLY__ wrappers in there.
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Andrew Morton authored
Fix a couple of problems which were introduced by a recent race fix in the ext2 block allocator: - if the allocation attempt raced, and lost the race then a new attempt is made. But the earlier reservation must be put back first. Add a call to group_release_blocks() to fix this. - if the filesystem is genuinely corrupted then the code as-is can get stuck in an infinite loop, thinking that a blockgroup has free blocks and then discovering that its bitmap is full. Fix this by baling out after having scanned all blockgroups twice. (Thanks Muli Ben-Yehuda <mulix@mulix.org> for spotting this).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Alex Tomas <alex@clusterfs.com> If the ext3 inode allocator tries to claim an inode and fails because another CPU got in there first it will then advance onto the next blockgroup and try again. Change it to advance onto the next inode within the same blockgroup instead.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Jens Axboe <axboe@suse.de> Print a runtime warning if ide-scsi is used on a cd device. Modify the ide-scsi menuconfig help to reflect that ide-scsi should not be used for cd burning.
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Andrew Morton authored
If both ext2 and ext3 are built as modules there is nothing to pull percpu_counter_mod() into the kernel build and the ext2 and ext3 modules do not load. So move percpu_counter_mod() out of lib.a.
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Andrew Morton authored
It now has no callers.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Mingming Cao <cmm@us.ibm.com> I found several bugs/issues in the ext2_new_inode() code: 1) The for loop variable "i" is used to save the inode offset. In the case of failure, the loop variable could be crapped. So it is possible to quit searching before looking at every block groups. 2) The number of free inodes in the selected group is possibly being miscalculated. The counter is only decreased in the find_group_xx() functions for the initial selected group. If the initial try failed, and succeed in finding a free inode in other group, the counter for that group will not to be decreased. 3) In case of the concurrent case, going back to find_group_xx() functions are unnecessary, it will only get the same group as before. The following patch fixed those issues. Ideas are stolen from ext3_new_inode().
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Zwane Mwaikambo <zwane@arm.linux.org.uk> If the CPU doesn't support PSE we cannot use hugetlb pages.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Oleg Drokin <green@linuxhacker.ru> reiserfs shouldn't be holding a ref against a buffer when running set_blocksize(): it means that truncate_inode_pages() cannot free that page. Which is not fatal - the page will drift aimlessly down the LRU until the VM nails it. But it's better this way.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Thomas Schlicter sched_clock() will try to use the TSC even if the system is not using the TSC as a time source. It causes bad scheduling decisions and poor interactivity. The problem was exhibited by the patch which uses ACPI PM as a time source, but could also happen if the system is using the PIT.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Hemminger <shemminger@osdl.org> The original problem all this is solving is that when NTP is slowing the clock there existed real cases where time appeared to go backwards. Assuming NTP was slowing the clock, then it would update the xtime by 999us at the next timer interrupt. If a program read time three times: A: xtime = t0 B: A+1000 xtime = t0 + 1000 C: B+1 xtime = t0 + 999 To behave correctly C > B > A; but we were returning C < B The code does have bug if we are losing clock interrupts. The test for lost interrupts needs to be after the interval clamp.
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Andrew Morton authored
There's a window in this function where a wakeup can get lost.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Zwane Mwaikambo <zwane@arm.linux.org.uk> gcc-3.2.2-5 miscompiles constant_test_bit(). Tweak it so the compiler gets it right. It cleans it up too!
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Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Linus Torvalds authored
into home.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Andrew Morton authored
We need to make the scan data unsigned, since we do length = ((data[0] << 24) | (data[1] << 16) | (data[2] << 8) | (data[3] << 0)); and if data[3] is 0xff, this expression will always evaluate to 0xffffffff. etcetera.
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