Linus Torvalds writes:
> There's another side to "drumming your own drum": it is often seen as
> actively offensive to some people who don't want to do the same thing.
I agree. What usually seems to end up happening is that someone
writes 95% and gets no credit, someone else does 5% and puts
That is a legacy bit from ATA-2 but it is one of those things you can not
get rid of :-( even thou things are obsoleted, they are not retired.
This means that you have to go back into the past to see how it was used,
silly! I hope you agree to that point.
This is the drive->ctrl register
> "Andrew" == Andrew Morton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Andrew> Tim Timmerman wrote:
>>
>> > "kees" == kees <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
kees> Hi,
>>
kees> I tried 2.4.5 but after a couple of hours I lost all network
kees> connectivety. The log shows:
>>
>> Can I just add a me
"This is almost always the result of flakiness in your hardware - either
RAM (most likely), or motherboard (less likely). "
I cannot understand this. There are many other
stuffs that I compiled with gcc without any problem. Again
hi
I am trying to compile the kernel2.4.5 source code.
Presently I have kernel2.2.14 and Redhat6.2. I have egcs1.2.2. Now when I
compile I will get the following error
gcc: Internel compiler error: program cc1 got fatal signal 11
make Error 1
Leaving directory ...
Steve Lord wrote:
>>Hi,
>>
>
>>So I only hope that the smart guys at SGI find a way to prepare the
>>patches the way Linus loves because now the file
>>"patch-2.4.5-xfs-1.0.1-core" (which contains the modifs to the kernel
>>and not the new files) is about 174090 bytes which is a lot.
>>
>>YA
I had a similiar problem once, and wrote a module that overwrote the
loopback net device. Since it's loopback, the kernel won't care about
headers.
Yeah, I know: Quick & Dirty.
I made the new loopback put its packets in a queue and then deliver them
after a (adjustable) delay.
If I can still
in "linux/drivers/net/Config.in"
line 30 used to be:
if [ "$CONFIG_NET_ETHERNET" = "y" ]; then
It seems to have been deleted. Putting it back, everything goes as it
should. :)
Thanks!!
Rob
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Andreas Schuldei wrote:
>
> to simulate a sattelite link, I need to add a latency to a
> network connection.
>
> What is the easiest and best way to do that?
>
> I wanted to do that using two tun devices.
> I had hoped to have a routing like this:
>
> <-> eth0 <-> tun0 <-> userspace, waiting
Am Freitag, 29. Juni 2001 03:59 schrieb Dieter Nützel:
> Hello Alan,
>
> you've missed the CONFIG_DRM_AGP thing.
> Some other config objects (Input -> joysticks , SMB file system) are
> broken, too.
Keith Owens patch fixed it of course.
>
> Linus Torvalds wrote:
> > Things like version strings etc sound useful, but the fact is that the
> > only _real_ problem it has ever solved for anybody is when somebody thinks
> > they install a new kernel, and forgets to run "lilo" or something. But
> > even that information you really get
I have installed a second hard drive in my system in the second
channel of my controller.But when I try to enable DMA I get:
hdc: DMA disabled
hdc: timeout waiting for DMA
ide_dmaproc: chipset supported ide_dma_timeout func only: 14
hdc: irq timeout: status=0x58 { DriveReady SeekComplete
ok.
i just do another test.maybe meaningful.
1)no matter i select -march=i686 or -march=i386 the result are the same.
2)the server 192.168.0.254 (netboot) ,client 192.168.0.3
there are /usr ,/usr/local/ ,/home, /lib, /bin ... on the server
on the client
A: mount -t nfs netboot:/usr /usr
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you wrote:
> We seem to have come full circle. My original question was about
> providing a better way for sockets applications to take advantage of
> SAN hardware. W2K Datacenter introduces "Winsock Direct," which will
> bypass the protocol stack when
Given that seeing as much as possible on a potentially small screen would be
good, maybe tighter would be nice. In example:
kswapd:v1.8
ptyDevices: 256 Unix98 ptys configured
serial:v5.05b (2001-05-03) with
Options: MANY_PORTS SHARE_IRQ SERIAL_PCI
Devices:
Hello Alan,
you've missed the CONFIG_DRM_AGP thing.
Some other config objects (Input -> joysticks , SMB file system) are
broken, too.
Regards,
Dieter
can't read "CONFIG_DRM_AGP": no such variable
while executing
"list $CONFIG_DRM_AGP"
(procedure "writeconfig" line 2352)
> 2.4.5-ac21
> o Fix pnpbios compile failure and add docking (me)
> station hotplug (/sbin/hotplug dock)
gcc -D__KERNEL__ -I/usr/src/linux/include -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -Wno-trigraphs -O2
-fomit-frame-pointer -fno-strict-aliasing -fno-common -pipe
-mpreferred-stack-boundary=2
I once solved this problem using the QoS qdisc facilites:
http://edge.mcs.drexel.edu/GICL/people/udmcwher/dnt/DNT.html
It works on 2.2 kernels as well.
-david
Andreas Schuldei writes:
> to simulate a sattelite link, I need to add a latency to a
> network connection.
>
> What is the
Hi,
I am fighting with a little problem here.
I have reserved a chunk of physical memory for my personnal
use and out of the kernel scope (linux mem=1024M).
I have now to handle this reserved memory by myself with
a simple scheme (I need BIG contiguous memory chunks (over
64Megs, and only few of
Output ver_linux:
Gnu C 2.96
Gnu make 3.79.1
binutils 2.11.90.0.8
util-linux 2.11e
mount 2.11e
modutils 2.4.6
e2fsprogs 1.21
reiserfsprogs 3.x.0j
PPP2.4.1
Linux C
Output ver_linux:
Gnu C 2.96
Gnu make 3.79.1
binutils 2.11.90.0.8
util-linux 2.11e
mount 2.11e
modutils 2.4.6
e2fsprogs 1.21
reiserfsprogs 3.x.0j
PPP2.4.1
Linux C
Linus Torvalds hath spoken:
> I don't _have_ any instances of my name being printed out to annoy the
> user, so that's a very theoretical argument.
There is, of course, only one way to be fair about this.
And that is to apply this patch to init/main.c:
518a519
> printk("Linux is a
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/alan/2.4/
Intermediate diffs are available from
http://www.bzimage.org
This is the initial merge with 2.4.6pre - treat this one with care, it may
not be the most reliable 2.4.5ac release ever made
Alright, since my last e-mail generated no interest, I thought
I'd refine my queries:
1. wake_up_interruptible()
I am reading
http://www.citi.umich.edu/projects/linux-scalability/reports/accept.html
and the my question is what solution to the "thundering herd" problem
was eventually chosen and
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, f5ibh wrote:
> make[4]: Entre dans le répertoire
> `/usr/src/kernel-sources-2.4.5-ac20/drivers/pnp'
> gcc -D__KERNEL__ -I/usr/src/kernel-sources-2.4.5-ac20/include -Wall
> -Wstrict-prototypes -Wno-trigraphs -O2 -fomit-frame-pointer
> -fno-strict-aliasing -fno-common -pipe
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, james rich wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Jun 2001, Luigi Genoni wrote:
>
> > On Fri, 29 Jun 2001, Yaacov Akiba Slama wrote:
> >
> > > So it seems that even if JFS is less complete than XFS (no ACL, quotas
> > > for instance), and even if it is less robust (I don't know if it is, I
>
"Khachaturov, Vassilii" wrote:
>
> On Wed, 27 Jun 2001, Jeff Garzik wrote:
>
> > However, I think the driver (only going by your
> description) would be
> > more correct to use a pointer to struct pci_dev. We have a
> token in the
> > kernel that is guaranteed 100% unique to any given PCI
On Fri, 29 Jun 2001, Luigi Genoni wrote:
> On Fri, 29 Jun 2001, Yaacov Akiba Slama wrote:
>
> > So it seems that even if JFS is less complete than XFS (no ACL, quotas
> > for instance), and even if it is less robust (I don't know if it is, I
> It is not less complete nor less robust, it's a
On Wed, 27 Jun 2001, Jeff Garzik wrote:
> However, I think the driver (only going by your
description) would be
> more correct to use a pointer to struct pci_dev. We have a
token in the
> kernel that is guaranteed 100% unique to any given PCI device: the
> pointer to its struct pci_dev.
Is
> 4002b000-4002c000 rw-s ec681000 03:01 181386 /dev/mem
> 4002c000-4002d000 rw-s 4000 03:01 185562 /dev/nvidia0
I'd suggest you talk to your proprietary driver and application provider. Who
knows what their driver does
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> Here I have to disagree with you Alan. When you pass "-march=i686" to
> gcc, you are _not_ saying "generate code for a CPUID family 6 CPU".
> "-march=i686" actually means "target an Intel P6 family chip, given
> what we currently know about them". The gcc info pages don't talk
Which is fine.
On Fri, 29 Jun 2001, Yaacov Akiba Slama wrote:
> Hi,
> From what I understand from Linus's mail to lkml, there is a difference
> between JFS and XFS:
> JFS doesn't require any modifications to existing code, its only an
> addition.
> XFS on the contrary is far more intrusive.
> So it seems
On Thursday 28 June 2001 20:16, Ho Chak Hung wrote:
> Hi,
> I am trying to develop a module that makes use of the page cache(by
> allocating a LOT of pages use page_cache_alloc and then add_to_page_cache).
> However, I got some unresolved symbols error during insmod.(because the
> symbols related
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001 20:42:09 +0100 (BST), Alan Cox wrote:
>> > Intel specifically state that you cannot use CMOV without checking
>> > for it. Its actually a gcc/binutils tool bug. The CPU is right.
>>
>> How is that a gcc bug? You tell the compiler to generate cmov, you run
>> it on a CPU
It there a way to limit how much memory is allocatable by the AGPGART code?
The reason I am asking is I am seeing some odd behaviour that I suspect is
related to that code.
When I boot the machine, it says something like "200 megs maximum available
for AGP memory. X seems to grab 3/4 of that
[...]
> immediate: RAM, on-chip cache, etc.
> fast: Flash reads, ROMs, etc.
> medium:Hard drives, CD-ROMs, 100Mb ethernet, etc.
> slow: Flash writes, floppy disks, CD-WR burners
> packeted: Reads/write should be in as large a packet as possible
>
to simulate a sattelite link, I need to add a latency to a
network connection.
What is the easiest and best way to do that?
I wanted to do that using two tun devices.
I had hoped to have a routing like this:
<-> eth0 <-> tun0 <-> userspace, waiting queue <-> tun1 <-> eth1
I need to do it
> 1 After a 'shutdown -h now', I get a kernel bug at page_alloc.c:81
> 2 After being in X (only happens after being in X), I get out of X, and as root
>I do a 'shutdown -h now'. It goes through the shutdown process normally, and then
>after it prints "Syncing hardware clock to system
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 28.06.01 in
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > > Linux NET4.0 for Linux 2.4
> > > Based upon Swansea University Computer Society NET3.039
> >
> > The later line is not something of interest to most people, and if it
> > happens to be they can research it rather than being
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Linus Torvalds) wrote on 28.06.01 in
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, David Woodhouse wrote:
> >
> > I agree the messages can be ugly. But they don't do any harm either, and
> > sometimes they're useful.
>
> I consider them harmful when I start getting annoying
1 After a 'shutdown -h now', I get a kernel bug at page_alloc.c:81
2 After being in X (only happens after being in X), I get out of X, and as root
I do a 'shutdown -h now'. It goes through the shutdown process normally, and then
after it prints "Syncing hardware clock to system
"Ryan W. Maple" wrote:
>
> I remember hearing something about Red Hat disabling UDMA on VIA chips
> across the board. Maybe that has something to do with it?
Dunno, if the kernel lies. There are four HDs on Promise and one HD and one
CDROM on VIA. This is from currently running 2.4.2-2:
On 20010628 Troy Benjegerdes wrote:
>> >
>> > > usb-uhci.c: v1.251 Georg Acher, Deti Fliegl, Thomas Sailer,
>> > Roman Weissgaerber
>> > > usb-uhci.c: USB Universal Host Controller Interface driver
>> >
>> > How about "usb-u
On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 05:35:14PM -0400, Ryan W. Maple wrote:
> Check out: http://bugs.debian.org/85478
>
> "When klogd's LogLine() function encounters a null byte in state
>PARSING_TEXT, it will loop infinitely. More precisely, copyin()
>will treat the null byte as a delimiter -
> > Interesting. They should be the same code for the VIA driver.
>
> I remember hearing something about Red Hat disabling UDMA on VIA chips
> across the board. Maybe that has something to do with it?
The RH 7.1 kernel disables VIA UDMA if the board has a DMI string indiciating
its a KT7 or
Pekka> If you used sockets, I believe the normal way to use SAN
Pekka> boards is to just make them look like network cards with a
Pekka> large MTU Sure it works, but it's not very efficient :) (I
Pekka> have to admit I've not played with that kind of toys at
Pekka> all,
Olaf Hering wrote:
> kde.o. 2.5?
Good idea! Graphics needs to be in the kernel to be fast. Windows
proved that.
--
Jeff Garzik | Andre the Giant has a posse.
Building 1024|
MandrakeSoft |
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On Thu, Jun 28, Jeff Garzik wrote:
> John R Lenton wrote:
> >
> > On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 05:25:33PM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
> > >
> > > KERN_BANNER
> >
> > cool, what about kbannerd ?
>
>
> I'm still pushing for a Perl interpreter in the kernel, let's not forget
> that too.
kde.o.
> Hi,
> So I only hope that the smart guys at SGI find a way to prepare the
> patches the way Linus loves because now the file
> "patch-2.4.5-xfs-1.0.1-core" (which contains the modifs to the kernel
> and not the new files) is about 174090 bytes which is a lot.
>
> YA
>
But that is not a
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, Alan Cox wrote:
> > Just tested RedHat's 2.4.3-12 and 2.4.5-ac19 on A7V133 mobo. RedHat's kernel
> > seems to work without lockups, but 2.4.5-ac19 doesn't (locks up at boot,
> > compiled w/o athlon optimization and ACPI), so no changes on that.
>
> Interesting. They should
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, Justin Guyett wrote:
> On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, Ralf Baechle wrote:
>
> > Some versions of the 3c59x driver emit a NUL character on bootup which makes
> > klogd suck CPU. This is fixed in 2.4.5, dunno about 2.4.4.
>
> sysklogd 1.4.1 changelog lists a no busyloop fix.
Check
John R Lenton wrote:
>
> On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 05:25:33PM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
> >
> > KERN_BANNER
>
> cool, what about kbannerd ?
I'm still pushing for a Perl interpreter in the kernel, let's not forget
that too.
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On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 05:25:33PM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
>
> KERN_BANNER
cool, what about kbannerd ?
--
John Lenton ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) -- Random fortune:
A longo prazo, estaremos todos mortos.
-- John Maynard Keynes
PGP signature
> Just tested RedHat's 2.4.3-12 and 2.4.5-ac19 on A7V133 mobo. RedHat's kernel
> seems to work without lockups, but 2.4.5-ac19 doesn't (locks up at boot,
> compiled w/o athlon optimization and ACPI), so no changes on that.
Interesting. They should be the same code for the VIA driver.
> 2.4.3-12
A little test report follows...
Just tested RedHat's 2.4.3-12 and 2.4.5-ac19 on A7V133 mobo. RedHat's kernel
seems to work without lockups, but 2.4.5-ac19 doesn't (locks up at boot,
compiled w/o athlon optimization and ACPI), so no changes on that.
2.4.3-12 also correctly detects cable
> JFS doesn't require any modifications to existing code, its only an
> addition.
It depends how clean the interface is. It is possible to avoid changing
core code by writing your own clone of it - that isnt good and doesnt make
people happy sometimes.
> XFS on the contrary is far more
Tom Gall wrote:
> Gérard Roudier wrote:
> > The driver checks against PCI bus+dev+func in 2 situations:
> >
> > 1) To apply the boot order that user can set up in the controller NVRAMs.
> > 2) To detect buggy double reporting of the same device by the kernel PCI
> >code (this made lot of
Gerd Knorr wrote:
>
> On Mon, Jun 25, 2001 at 12:56:03PM +0200, Udo A. Steinberg wrote:
> >
> > Hello,
> >
> > Attached is the trace of an oops which seems to be caused by the
> > tvmixer code. Tvmixer is compiled monolithically into the kernel,
> > the rest of bttv is compiled as modules.
>
>
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, Ralf Baechle wrote:
> Some versions of the 3c59x driver emit a NUL character on bootup which makes
> klogd suck CPU. This is fixed in 2.4.5, dunno about 2.4.4.
sysklogd 1.4.1 changelog lists a no busyloop fix.
justin
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Kai Henningsen wrote:
> No. GEM, I believe, originally came from CP/M. Most popular as the
> windowing system of the Atari ST; given that someone did a quick-hack MS-
> DOS clone to support it on the 68K, it seems fairly obvious that by that
> time, it had already been ported to MS-DOS. (GEM-DOS
Gérard Roudier wrote:
>
> On Wed, 27 Jun 2001, Jeff Garzik wrote:
>
> > Tom Gall wrote:
> > > Well you have device drivers like the symbios scsi driver for instance that
> > > tries to determine if it's seen a card before. It does this by looking at the
> > > bus,dev etc numbers... It's quite
Hi,
From what I understand from Linus's mail to lkml, there is a difference
between JFS and XFS:
JFS doesn't require any modifications to existing code, its only an
addition.
XFS on the contrary is far more intrusive.
So it seems that even if JFS is less complete than XFS (no ACL, quotas
for
Gérard Roudier wrote:
> The driver checks against PCI bus+dev+func in 2 situations:
>
> 1) To apply the boot order that user can set up in the controller NVRAMs.
> 2) To detect buggy double reporting of the same device by the kernel PCI
>code (this made lot of troubles at some time).
Cool.
On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 06:49:46PM -, james bond wrote:
> 1-systeme hangs when i try ton compile anything
>
> i've compiled the kernel 2.4.4 , once i finish and boot the first time on
> 2.4.4 everything goses ok ,
> only too problemes
> 1st- klogd takes 100% CPU time
Some versions of
On Wed, 27 Jun 2001, Jeff Garzik wrote:
> Tom Gall wrote:
> > Well you have device drivers like the symbios scsi driver for instance that
> > tries to determine if it's seen a card before. It does this by looking at the
> > bus,dev etc numbers... It's quite reasonable for two different scsi
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Well considering the other night the power supply went dead, I think that is part of
>the problem. It is brand new, and I am being sent another one (free of course).
>
> I also had my mb loaded at the time (scsi cd-rw, cdrom, internal zip, floppy, 1 hd,
>Sound
Hi Alan and others,
I'm trying to build 2.4.5-ac20, I get the following error when entering the
submenu "Ethernet (10 or 100Mbit) --->" of "[*] Network device support"
Menuconfig has encountered a possible error in one of the kernel's
configuration files and is unable to continue. Here is
>Print all copyright, config, etc. as KERN_DEBUG.
How about a new level, say "KERN_CONFIG", with a "show-config"
parameter to enable displaying KERN_CONFIG messages?
Craig Milo Rogers
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Jamie wrote:
> Daniel R. Kegel wrote:
> > Christopher Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > Jamie Lokier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > Btw, this functionality is already available using sigaction(). Just
> > > > search for a signal whose handler is SIG_DFL. If you then block that
> > > >
Richard, should there be (is there?) linux-networking-faq, or can this
be put into the linux-kernel faq ?
On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 10:33:46AM -0400, Michael J Clark wrote:
> hey guys,
>
> I have been reading through TCP/IP Illustrated Vol 2 and the linux
> source.
That book describes
> Some ASUS boards (mostly P3B-F) would either freeze or self reboot when using
> PhotoShop 5. Everything else would run perfectly.
>
> Disabling MMX optimizations in this software would "solve" the problem. Another
> solution found on the web (sorry, I don't have the URL at hand) is to add two
> > Intel specifically state that you cannot use CMOV without checking
> > for it. Its actually a gcc/binutils tool bug. The CPU is right.
>
> How is that a gcc bug? You tell the compiler to generate cmov, you run
> it on a CPU that doesn't have it, you get what you deserve. There's
> really
It seems to be ok with 2.4.5-ac19, so I guess I'll just wait for
2.4.6 and hope that resolves it for good.
Nick
On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 08:27:17AM -0400, John Cavan wrote:
> Envelope-to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Delivery-date: Thu, 28 Jun 2001 08:26:20 -0400
> Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2001
Linus Torvalds wrote:
> Especially as "dmesg" will output even the debugging messages
> that do not actually end up being printed on the screen unless explicitly
> asked for.
Nifty, I did not know that. Makes all kinds of sense, though. Silly
me...
> I'd also like to acknowledge the fact
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, Alan Cox wrote:
> > i've compiled the kernel 2.4.4 , once i finish and boot the first time on
> > 2.4.4 everything goses ok ,
> > only too problemes
> > 1st- klogd takes 100% CPU time
>
> Old old versions of klogd had bugs where they would do that. If there is
> a
Gerhard Mack wrote:
>
> On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, Jeff Garzik wrote:
>
> > Linus Torvalds wrote:
> > > Things like version strings etc sound useful, but the fact is that the
> > > only _real_ problem it has ever solved for anybody is when somebody thinks
> > > they install a new kernel, and forgets
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, Jeff Garzik wrote:
>
> As Alan said, driver versions are incredibly useful. People use update
> their drivers over top of kernel drivers all the time. Vendors do it
> too. "Run dmesg and e-mail me the output" is 1000 times more simple for
> end users.
Fair enough.
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, Jeff Garzik wrote:
> Linus Torvalds wrote:
> > Things like version strings etc sound useful, but the fact is that the
> > only _real_ problem it has ever solved for anybody is when somebody thinks
> > they install a new kernel, and forgets to run "lilo" or something. But
> >
Hi!
...it will loop forever. I have fix that allows up-to 0x0
bzImages, but it is *ugly*. This seems better; please apply.
Pavel
Index: build.c
===
RCS file:
On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 07:28:20PM +0200, Bogdan Costescu wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jun 2001, Pekka Pietikainen wrote:
>
> I'm sorry, but I don't understand your reference to MPI here. MPI is a
> high-level API; MPI can run on top of whatever communication features
> exists: TCP/IP, shared memory, VI,
Sorry for replying a couple of weeks late - I don't check linux-kernel
that often.
On Wed, 13 Jun 2001, Stelian Pop wrote:
> > I got just the YUV code from Gatos, and a few months ago it took less than
> > an hour to merge just that part (and most of that was compiling and
> > testing).
>
>
Ok, my two cents.
Print all copyright, config, etc. as KERN_DEBUG. Then use a 'verbose' or
similar parameter to lilo/kernel to enable console printing of KERN_DEBUG,
to be used when the system fails to boot, etc.
Dan.
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> i've compiled the kernel 2.4.4 , once i finish and boot the first time on
> 2.4.4 everything goses ok ,
> only too problemes
> 1st- klogd takes 100% CPU time
Old old versions of klogd had bugs where they would do that. If there is
a continuous problem it may also do so - does 'dmesg' show
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001, Martin Wilck wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have recently experienced a number of kernel OOPSes
> in "top" under heavy load. Kernel is 2.4.5 (IA64, but
> this has nothing to do the IA64 patch).
>
> The OOPS happens in the call tree
>
> open () system call
> [...]
> real_lookup ()
>
Martin Wilck wrote:
>I have recently experienced a number of kernel OOPSes
>in "top" under heavy load. Kernel is 2.4.5 (IA64, but
>this has nothing to do the IA64 patch).
Same here; I just debugged these on S/390 ...
>I have seen 2.4.6-pre6 contains changes to this subroutine as well,
>but
Linus Torvalds wrote:
> Things like version strings etc sound useful, but the fact is that the
> only _real_ problem it has ever solved for anybody is when somebody thinks
> they install a new kernel, and forgets to run "lilo" or something. But
> even that information you really get from a simple
Yes, I agree... pci.txt says it should end in a zero..
I will include that change in my future updates as well...
-Original Message-
From: Marcus Meissner [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2001 10:34 AM
Miquel van Smoorenburg wrote:
>
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Tommy Reynolds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Linus Torvalds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> was pleased to say:
> >
> >> If they are shut off, then where's the drumming? Because if people start
> >> making copyright printk's normal, I will
1-systeme hangs when i try ton compile anything
i've compiled the kernel 2.4.4 , once i finish and boot the first time on
2.4.4 everything goses ok ,
only too problemes
1st- klogd takes 100% CPU time
2nd- cat /proc/cpuinf --guives me too CPU'S without putin any info about
the CPU 1
like
Hi Alan.
The enclosed patch was originally developed for the ELKS kernel, but
will apply equally well against any Linux kernel as it only adds new
scripts to the scripts subdirectory. The new scripts are as follows:
1. renvar Renames configuration variables in all files
On Wed, 27 Jun 2001, Alan Cox wrote:
> > The problem is that VIA Cyrix III announces itself (via CPUID)
> > as a "family 6" processor, i.e. i686 compatible. This is not
> > completely accurate, since it doesn't implement the conditional
> > move instruction. [Yeah, I know there's a CPUID feature
I am getting an Oops/kernel panic with kernel 2.4.5.
Here is what the panic notice says in part:
The panic notice said:
Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual address 846ea4e6
*pde = 0
Oops: 0 0 0 0
cpu: 0
EIP: 0010:[]
EFLAGS: 00010286
Process ax25ipd (pid:270,stackpage=c54a700)
call
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Tommy Reynolds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Linus Torvalds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> was pleased to say:
>
>> If they are shut off, then where's the drumming? Because if people start
>> making copyright printk's normal, I will make "quiet" the default.
>
>Amen. This is
Hi,
I have recently experienced a number of kernel OOPSes
in "top" under heavy load. Kernel is 2.4.5 (IA64, but
this has nothing to do the IA64 patch).
The OOPS happens in the call tree
open () system call
[...]
real_lookup ()
proc_base_lookup ()
proc_pid_make_inode ()
iput ()
On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 06:18:24PM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
>
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> > Things like version strings etc sound useful, but the fact is that the
> > only _real_ problem it has ever solved for anybody is when somebody
> > thinks they install a new kernel, and forgets to
Sean Hunter writes:
> On Wed, Jun 27, 2001 at 04:55:56PM -0400, Albert D. Cahalan wrote:
>> ln /dev/zero /tmp/zero
>> ln /dev/hda ~/hda
>> ln /dev/mem /var/tmp/README
>
> None of these (of course) work if you use mount options to
> restrict device nodes on those filesystems.
In which case, you
> Also, in printk's, you waste run-time memory, and you bloat up the need
> for the log size. Both of which are _technical_ reasons not to do it.
>
> Small is beuatiful.
I totally agree. If you want to use Linux for a small and low cost
embedded system, you can't afford loads of RAM and FLASH
Linus Torvalds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> was pleased to say:
> If they are shut off, then where's the drumming? Because if people start
> making copyright printk's normal, I will make "quiet" the default.
Amen. This is like editing a program to remove the "harmless" compiler warning
messages. If I
Hi,
I am trying to develop a module that makes use of the page cache(by allocating a LOT
of pages use page_cache_alloc and then add_to_page_cache). However, I got some
unresolved symbols error during insmod.(because the symbols related to
lru_cache_add etc are not exported?) .
I am just
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> I consider them harmful when I start getting annoying patches that
> start adding more and more of them.
> Which is how this whole thread started.
Sort of. The point of the patch which started this thread was as a wake-up
call to a company who had taken the code,
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