- 15 Mar, 2004 40 commits
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Chris Mason <mason@suse.com> reiserfs can safely use the generic fs aio functions.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Chris Mason <mason@suse.com> reiserfs_file_write() can use stale metadata after a schedule. Two reiserfs_file_write bugs, where items can change during a schedule.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Chris Mason <mason@suse.com> Make sure reiserfs uses a reasonable number when restarting long unbounded transactions (creating holes or deleting files). Without this patch, the number of blocks requested grows with each transaction restart, until it hits MAX_BATCH_COUNT and starts forcing commits with every new transaction. Oleg Drokin tracked this bug down
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Chris Mason <mason@suse.com> Fix a bug in reiserfs search_by_key call, where it might not properly detect a change in tree height during a schedule. Originally from vs@namesys.com
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Chris Mason <mason@suse.com> Add conditional schedules to reiserfs to help lower latencies. Bits of this orginated long ago in code akpm sent me.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Chris Mason <mason@suse.com> From: Jeff Mahoney <jeffm@suse.de> fsstress manages to setup a sequence of events that allow an attempt to perform direct-io on a tail. bh_result->b_page == NULL, which causes the PageLocked and PageWriteback checks to perform a NULL deref, causing the oops.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Michael Still <mikal@stillhq.com> This is needed to get any of the SGML documentation to build with 2.6.4.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: James Simmons <jsimmons@infradead.org> This patch merges two of the drawing functions. The patch uses aligned transfers when possible even on displays where the characters are not byte align. Tested on my my laptop for 12 bit width fonts and 8 bit wide fonts. It works very nicely.
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Andrew Morton authored
There's no point in calling mark_page_accessed() here. The page is never on the LRU so all mark_page_accessed() will do is to set PG_referenced, which we immediately clear again.
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Andrew Morton authored
Add a debug check for workqueues nested more than three deep via the direct-run-workqueue() path.
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Andrew Morton authored
Because keventd is a resource which is shared between unrelated parts of the kernel it is possible for one person's workqueue handler to accidentally call another person's flush_scheduled_work(). thockin managed it by calling mntput() from a workqueue handler. It deadlocks. It's simple enough to fix: teach flush_scheduled_work() to go direct when it discovers that the calling thread is the one which should be running the work. Note that this can cause recursion. The depth of that recursion is equal to the number of currently-queued works which themselves want to call flush_scheduled_work(). If this ever exceeds three I'll eat my hat.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil> This patch fixes a bug in the SELinux compute_av code; the current code yields the right access computation but can cause unnecessary (but harmless) processing to occur when transition permission wasn't granted in the first place by the TE configuration. Thanks to Chad Hanson of TCS for reporting the bug.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org> modpost or to be more specific sumversion.c was not behaving correct when used with O= and MODULE_VERSION was used. Previously it failed to use local .h when calculation the md-sum in case of a O= build. The following patch introduces the following: - A generic get_next_line() - Check that the topmost part of the directory matches - Using strrch when checking for file with suffix .o - Use NOFAIL for allocations in sumversion - Avoid memory leak in new_module The generic get_next_line will pay off when Andreas implmentation of storing symbol addresses in a seperate file is introduced.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> The recent "fbdev: monitor detection fixes" patch broke modular frame buffer drivers.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: "Randy.Dunlap" <rddunlap@osdl.org> Moves PCI BIOS Access Mode help text to its top level instead of under PCI_GOBIOS (which is only 1 of 4 possible choices).
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Andrew Morton authored
From: <viro@parcelfarce.linux.theplanet.co.uk> check_region() fixes.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: maximilian attems <janitor@sternwelten.at> Print something friendlier than: /bin/sh: fig2dev: command not found make[1]: *** [Documentation/DocBook/parport-share.eps] Error 127 make: *** [pdfdocs] Error 2
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: a.othieno@bluewin.ch (Arthur Othieno) add_gendisk() was replaced with add_disk(), but the comment suggests otherwise. Breaks `make *docs'.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: andersen@codepoet.org I've moved... This patch updates my contact info.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: Steve Youngs <sryoungs@bigpond.net.au> Add module aliases for 21285, amba, anakin, clps711x, mux, and sa1100 serial drivers.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: Thomas Molina <tmolina@cablespeed.com> ver_linux hasn't displayed binutils version right for some time. This patch corrects that and preserves the old behaviour as well, as suggested by Rusty.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> Fix a problem with kallsyms being unable to look up symbols which are in modules. add_kallsyms should be above module_finalize, which means you can just use the mod->symtab and mod->strtab members.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: Carl Spalletta <ioanamitu@yahoo.com>
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz> There's acpi_disable somewhere in the acpi interpreter (it disables interrupts, iirc). Thus blacklisting function needs better name.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: Omkhar Arasaratnam <omkhar@rogers.com>
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz> I was sending this to users that had problems with swsusp, then lost it. It would be nice to have it directly in the tree.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz> acpi_sleep option should be documented.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Trivial Patch Monkey <trivial@rustcorp.com.au> From: Omkhar Arasaratnam <omkhar@rogers.com> check_region() fix
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Willem Riede <wrlk@riede.org> The patch revises the error handling in ide-scsi, fixing the scheduling while locked issues, and make it work properly, at least for me... Specific changes in this patch: - introduce idescsi_expiry, a timeout routine for the ide subsystem, which simply flags the fact that the command timed out, but postpones any other action until either the command still finishes on its own (unlikely?) or the scsi error handler kicks in; - introduce idescsi_atapi_error and idescsi_atapi_abort, error routines for the ide subsystem, which are modeled after those of ide-cd, but take only minimal effort to recover, leaving the heavy lifting for the scsi error handler; - rewrite (and rename for clarity) idescsi_eh_abort and idescsi_eh_error, the abort/error routines to be called by the scsi error handler -- this redesign should not have the scheduling while atomic problems of the old implementation. - move ide_cdrom_dump_status() from ide-cd.c to ide-lib.c as ide_dump_atapi_status() and both ide-cd and ide-scsi call it. - replaces BUG() by WARN_ON()/printk in the error handling code. - sets TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE before schedule_timeout() and moves the host unlock/lock around the while loop inside the loop in idescsi_eh_reset().
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil> This patch extends the SELinux policy engine to support conditional policy logic based on a set of policy booleans, allowing well-formed changes to the policy to be defined within and mediated by the policy itself. The conditional policy extensions were implemented and contributed by Tresys Technology. Userland packages that support these extensions are already available from nsa.gov/selinux, and backward compatibility is provided for the prior policy version. The patch also includes a small change to enable detection of the optional MLS policy model on a SELinux system and fixes to the conditional policy extensions to allow the MLS policy to work correctly with them that were implemented and contributed by Trusted Computer Solutions.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Gerald Schaefer <gerald.schaefer@gmx.net> Update s390 to track the new fields in struct page_state.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Tom Rini <trini@kernel.crashing.org> The problem is that on PPC32 (and probably sparc64) 'asmlinkage' is a useless keyword, and should just be removed from include/asm-ppc/unistd.h.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Andi Kleen <ak@suse.de> This patch saves 2MB of memory on a 1GB x86-64 machine, 20MB on a 10GB machine. It does this by eliminating 8 bytes of useless padding in struct page. This resurrects an older patch in a hopefully cleaner form.
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Andrew Morton authored
From: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org> Ingo said: Starting at around 2.6.4-rc2-mm1, I keep seeing 'scripts/fixdep: Text file busy' messages when doing a -j10 bzImage build - which seems to suggest that by the time fixdep is used by the build system it's not built yet. Sam said: I was pretty sure it was something I had caused, so I gave it a spin. What actually happened was that we tried to build the target 'silentoldconfig' in parrallel with 'scripts'. Since 'silentoldconfig' started a new make and then the config target needed 'scripts' we saw two parallel runs. The way I decided to fix it was to split scripts/ in two parts. The first part is now the very basic stuff - moved to scripts/basic/. The second part is dependent on kernel config etc. and kept in scripts/ In the 2.7 timeframe i will redo this initial stuff - it's becoming too messy for anyone to understand today. Description: Fix dependencies in early phases of kernel build. This solves a few problems nively: modpost is no longer rebuild twicewhen reaching the 'target' state 'make -j10' now works nicely again The patch is rather large due to the following file moves: mkdir scripts/basic mv scripts/fixdep.c scripts/basic mv scripts/split-include.c scripts/basic mv scripts/docproc.c scripts/basic
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http://lia64.bkbits.net/to-linus-2.5Linus Torvalds authored
into ppc970.osdl.org:/home/torvalds/v2.5/linux
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Benjamin Herrenschmidt authored
The g5 iommu code would fill the "iommu_table" member of whatever device node was pointed to by pcidev->sysdata during boot. However, the ppc64 kernel fills that with a pointer to the PHB node which is later replaced "lazily" with a pointer to the real node when calling pci_device_to_OF_node(). In this case, we were thus "losign" the iommu_table pointer. Typical symptom: loss of the SATA when looking at it's /proc entry. This fixes it by forcing the update to the final sysdata pointer when filling up the iommu_table pointers. The "lazy" thing is useless on pmac anyway.
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David Mosberger authored
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Keith Owens authored
SN2 platforms provide oemdata in salinfo records. The decode of that oemdata is done via prom routines. This patch provides the interface from user space through the kernel into the prom to do the oem decode.
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David Mosberger authored
Apparently GCC sometimes fails to insert a stop-bit when re-using p14 after the spinlock directives, even though the register is clearly marked as "clobbered".
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Christoph Hellwig authored
Use the proper (and cleaner) probing API instead of the old scsi_module.c hack, don't use the typedefs I plan to kill in 2.7 and mark everything static
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