Please CC me at [EMAIL PROTECTED] as I'm not subscribed.
I'm using kernel 2.6.8.1 (from Mandrake 10.1 I usually like to build a
custom kernel for each machine we've got).
I've recently taken to using USB Flash "Disks" to carry stuff around on
and I've not had any problems except on one machine.wi
Andi Kleen wrote:
Stas Sergeev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Another way of saying the same thing: I absolutely hate seeing
patches that fix some theoretical issue that no Linux apps will ever
care about.
No, it is not theoretical, but it is mainly
about a DOS games and an MS linker, as for
Hi!
I have a machine with an Athlon64 with a Winchester core. It has a max
frequency of 2GHz, vid 0x6. The maximum vid allowed is 0x4. It has an
intermediate vid 0x8. RVO is 3.
When transitioning (phase1) from vid 0x8 to vid 0x6, it first increases
the vid to 6, and then proceeds increasing it th
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 06:53:11PM +0300, Michael Tokarev wrote:
> Vojtech Pavlik wrote:
> >On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 02:52:00PM +0300, Michael Tokarev wrote:
> >
> >
> >>After plugging in USB keyboard and loading uhci-hcd and
> >>usbhid, the keyboard un-freeze, but mouse still didn't
> >>work. So
Compile Statistics
--
Build Tree: mm
Compiler: gcc 3.4.1
Detailed results: http://developer.osdl.org/cherry/compile/
Summary - 2.6.11-mm2 to 2.6.11-mm3
--
Defconfig (bzImage): -2 warnings
Allnoconfig (bzImage): no change
Allyesconfig (bzImage): +54 w
On Mon, 2005-03-14 at 10:42 +0100, Rene Scharfe wrote:
> Albert Cahalan wrote:
> > This is a bad idea. Users should not be allowed to
> > make this decision. This is rightly a decision for
> > the admin to make.
>
> Why do you think users should not be allowed to chmod their processes'
> /proc di
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005 18:53:11 +0300, Michael Tokarev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Vojtech Pavlik wrote:
> > On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 02:52:00PM +0300, Michael Tokarev wrote:
> >
> >
> >>After plugging in USB keyboard and loading uhci-hcd and
> >>usbhid, the keyboard un-freeze, but mouse still didn't
Vojtech Pavlik wrote:
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 06:53:11PM +0300, Michael Tokarev wrote:
Vojtech Pavlik wrote:
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 02:52:00PM +0300, Michael Tokarev wrote:
After plugging in USB keyboard and loading uhci-hcd and
usbhid, the keyboard un-freeze, but mouse still didn't
work. So I t
Hi!
> >This is a bad idea. Users should not be allowed to
> >make this decision. This is rightly a decision for
> >the admin to make.
>
> Why do you think users should not be allowed to chmod their processes'
> /proc directories? Isn't it similar to being able to chmod their home
> directories
On Mar 09, 2005 10:53 -0800, Dan Stromberg wrote:
> The group I work in has been experimenting with GFS and Lustre, and I did
> some NBD/ENBD experimentation on my own, described at
> http://dcs.nac.uci.edu/~strombrg/nbd.html
>
> My question is, what is the current status of huge filesystems - IE
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 07:38:21PM +0300, Michael Tokarev wrote:
> >>>Can you try 'usb-handoff' on the kernel command line?
> >>
> >>The problem has nothing to do with USB per se, as far as I can see.
> >>PS2 keyboard and mouse does not work when the USB subsystem (incl.
> >>usbcore) is not loaded
With a Broadcom BC4852 and suitable Sata drives, it is easy to create
functional devices with well in excess of 2TB raw space. This presents a severe
problem to partitioning tools, such as fdisk/cfdisk and the like as the
kernel partition structure has a 32 bit integer max for sector counts
On Friday, March 11, 2005 11:28 PM Greg KH wrote:
>> +
>> +LIST_HEAD(evt_queue); /* Define Event Queue
List */
>
>Make this static?
Agree, will make this static. Good comment! Thanks.
>> +
>> +/**
>> + * evt_queue_pop - restore an event node from an event log list
>> + * @
Question: Initramfs is going to replace initrd, but I haven't seen
anyone explain how to copy modules that are built during the build
process moved into the initramfs archive. Has somebody done, this or is
this still a work in progress?
--
Jim Gifford
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
To unsubscribe fro
Monday, March 14, 2005 3:01 AM David Vrabel wrote:
>> This patch includes PCIEAER-HOWTO.txt, which describes how the PCI
>> Express Advanced Error Reporting Root driver works.
>>
>> --- linux-2.6.11-rc5/Documentation/PCIEAER-HOWTO.txt
>>
>Could this be placed in a sub-system subdirectory (creating
On Monday, March 14, 2005 12:37 am, Pavel Machek wrote:
> Perhaps we could have a rule like
>
> "non-experimental driver may only print out one line per actual
> device?"
>
> (and perhaps: dmesg output for boot going okay should fit on one screen).
>
> Or perhaps we should have warnings-like regres
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005, Evgeniy wrote:
Here is a simple program.
#include
#include
main(){
int err;
err=read(0,NULL,6);
printf("%d %d\n",err,errno);
}
I think that it should be an error : Null pointer assignment, like in windows.
But in practise it is not so.
It is an error. It will wait until y
Nguyen, Tom L wrote:
Monday, March 14, 2005 3:01 AM David Vrabel wrote:
This patch includes PCIEAER-HOWTO.txt, which describes how the PCI
Express Advanced Error Reporting Root driver works.
--- linux-2.6.11-rc5/Documentation/PCIEAER-HOWTO.txt
Could this be placed in a sub-system subdirectory (cre
Hi!
> > "non-experimental driver may only print out one line per actual
> > device?"
> >
> > (and perhaps: dmesg output for boot going okay should fit on one screen).
> >
> > Or perhaps we should have warnings-like regression testing.
> >
> > "New kernel 2.8.17 came: 3 errors, 135 warnings, 1890 l
I am running the DSFS file system as a 7 TB file system on 2.6.9. There
are a host
of problems with the current VFS, ad I have gotten around most of them
by **NOT** using the linux page cache interface. The VFS I am using
creates a virtual represeation of the files and it's own cache. You need
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005, Jesse Barnes wrote:
>
> We already have the 'quiet' option, but even so, I think the kernel is *way*
> too verbose. Someone needs to make a personal crusade out of removing
> unneeded and unjustified printks from the kernel before it really gets better
> though...
The t
Hi!
Paul, can you comment on this one? I know that pn-k8 logic is quite
tricky... And BIOS tables are often wrong.
Pavel
> I have a machine with an Athlon64 with a Winchester core. It has a max
> frequency of 2GHz, vid 0x6. The maxim
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 08:55:18AM -0800, Jesse Barnes wrote:
> On Monday, March 14, 2005 12:37 am, Pavel Machek wrote:
> > Perhaps we could have a rule like
> >
> > "non-experimental driver may only print out one line per actual
> > device?"
> >
> > (and perhaps: dmesg output for boot going
On Fri, 11 Mar 2005, Greg KH wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 11, 2005 at 11:19:28AM -0800, Chris Wright wrote:
> > * Matt Mackall ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > > Or do you want to do it the same way you do for every other branch? I
> > > don't want to special-case it in my code and I don't think users want
Colleagues,
Over the past few years I've been heavily involved in two projects that
deal with PCI HotPlug. While doing this work, one area of code always
seems to require printk's to debug through -- the allocation & freeing
of IO & MEM resources.
I've discovered many bugs surrounding Hotplug
On Saturday, March 12, 2005 2:27 PM Adrian Bunk wrote:
> This patch contains the following possible cleanups:
> - pci-acpi.c: make OSC_UUID static
> - remove the following unused functions:
> - pci-acpi.c: acpi_query_osc
> - pci-acpi.c: pci_osc_support_set
> - remove the following unneeded EXPORT
On Monday, March 14, 2005 9:18 am, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> In fact, even the ones that have no "information" end up often being a big
> clue about where the hang happened.
Yeah, I use the startup output all the time for stuff like that, no question
it's useful.
> And those occasional people are
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005, Jakob Eriksson wrote:
Andi Kleen wrote:
Stas Sergeev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Another way of saying the same thing: I absolutely hate seeing
patches that fix some theoretical issue that no Linux apps will ever
care about.
No, it is not theoretical, but it is mainly
about a D
Hi!
> Can you tell me how the invisible high-word (invisible in VM-86, and
> in real mode) could possibly harm something running in VM-86 or
> read-mode ??? I don't even think it's a BUG. If the transition
You can have protected-mode application running in dosemu with 16-bit
stack segment.
Hi!
> > We already have the 'quiet' option, but even so, I think the kernel is
> > *way*
> > too verbose. Someone needs to make a personal crusade out of removing
> > unneeded and unjustified printks from the kernel before it really gets
> > better
> > though...
>
> The thing is, this comes
Hello.
Andi Kleen wrote:
The particular game I want to get working,
is "Master of Orion 2" for DOS.
How about you just run it in dosbox instead of dosemu ?
Way too slow, and there are other reasons
too, like the better networking support on
dosemu side (not for Orion, but for other
games is importa
Domen Puncer wrote:
Just some nitpicking...
Hi Domen, all,
Thanks for your comments. I did some minor changes for patch1 based on
Domen's comment.
Thanks,
wendy
diff -Nuar linux-2.6.11.org/drivers/serial/jsm/jsm_driver.c
linux-2.6.11.new/drivers/serial/jsm/jsm_driver.c
--- linux-2.6.11.org/d
On Mer, 2005-03-09 at 20:36, Alan Cox wrote:
> On Mer, 2005-03-09 at 19:09, Andries Brouwer wrote:
> > The moment you report that the follow-up patch is fine, we can
> > remove the #if 0 and insert the initcalls instead.
> >
> > So, all is well today, and we are waiting for your report.
>
> Ok wo
Andrew, Greg,
Please apply the following two patches which adds SquashFS to the
kernel. SquashFS is self contained compressed filesystem, and it
has been used by a large amount of projects over the last few years
without problems.
A number of people have started to ask me to submit it to the kerne
On Llu, 2005-03-14 at 06:55, Paul wrote:
> # cat driver
> > ide-cdrom version 4.61
> # echo ide-scsi > driver
> # cat driver
This has always been unsafe. Its something I suggested was removed a
long time ago because the locking for it is unfixable.
Alan
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the
On Sunday, March 6, 2005 2:36 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Any comments would be, as always, appreciated.
I don't have a problem with this change, but the maintainer probably should
have been Cc'd. Greg, does this change look ok to you? Note that it's
already been committed to the upstream t
diff --new-file -urp linux-2.6.11.3/fs/Kconfig
linux-2.6.11.3-squashfs/fs/Kconfig
--- linux-2.6.11.3/fs/Kconfig 2005-03-13 06:44:28.0 +
+++ linux-2.6.11.3-squashfs/fs/Kconfig 2005-03-14 00:53:28.011572040 +
@@ -1170,6 +1170,45 @@ config CRAMFS
If unsure, say N.
+c
On Llu, 2005-03-14 at 00:13, Peter Chubb wrote:
> Greg> see mmap(2)
>
> mmap maps a file's contents into your own virtual memory.
> usr_pci_map maps part of your own virtual memory into pci bus space
> for a particular device (using the IOMMU if your machine has one), and
> returns a scatterlist o
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 12:10:19PM -0500, Bill Davidsen wrote:
> I didn't like the initial decision to go incremental, and I even less like
> changing now, but it's the right thing to do. It's not like we have a big
> investment in scripts or anything, and you're doing the work.
And it's already d
Releasing resources with children
What does it mean to release a resource with children? Should the
children become children of the released resource's parent? Should they
be released too? Should we fail the release?
I bet we have no callers who expect this right now, but with
insert_resource(
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2004 at 12:58:47PM +0300, Vladislav Bolkhovitin wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2004 at 11:11:51AM +0300, Vladislav Bolkhovitin wrote:
Moore, Eric Dean wrote:
We need to hold off on this change. Yes, there are
customers of LSI Logic using mptstm.c, as
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 09:45:44AM -0800, Jesse Barnes wrote:
> On Sunday, March 6, 2005 2:36 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > Any comments would be, as always, appreciated.
>
> I don't have a problem with this change, but the maintainer probably should
> have been Cc'd. Greg, does this change l
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2004 at 12:58:47PM +0300, Vladislav Bolkhovitin wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Wed, Nov 10, 2004 at 11:11:51AM +0300, Vladislav Bolkhovitin wrote:
Moore, Eric Dean wrote:
We need to hold off on this change. Yes, there are
customers of LSI Logic using mptstm.c, as
Hi Pavel,
This is similar to the Sempron patch I put out a while ago -
that was a similar problem. Let Mark and I think about it for
a couple of days. I think there is a better way to fix this.
There are some new fields in the status register in newer
parts to give things like maxvid, and we are
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 10:49:16AM -0700, Matthew Wilcox wrote:
> What does it mean to release a resource with children? Should the
> children become children of the released resource's parent? Should they
> be released too? Should we fail the release?
I've been running kernels with:
+ i
On Monday, March 14, 2005 9:54 am, Nishanth Aravamudan wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 09:45:44AM -0800, Jesse Barnes wrote:
> > On Sunday, March 6, 2005 2:36 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > > Any comments would be, as always, appreciated.
> >
> > I don't have a problem with this change, but the
Hi,
I'm looking for a way to connect multiple linux systems into one big
machine (server-farm) and I can't find any way of enabling it in kernel.
Is this feature supported? If not, how can I build cluster from, let's
say, 5 machines (I'm interestied in sharing of processes, memory, disk
space
On Sat, 2005-03-12 at 16:52 +1100, Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote:
> On Fri, 2005-03-11 at 17:25 -0800, john stultz wrote:
> > All,
> > This patch implements the minimal architecture specific hooks to enable
> > the new time of day subsystem code for i386, x86-64, ia64, ppc32 and
> > ppc64. It ap
Hello,
This oom_kill fix is to do mmput(mm) a bit earlier and returning 0 or 1
to indicate success or failure instead of returning mm_struct pointer.
Coywolf
Signed-off-by: Coywolf Qi Hunt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
oom_kill.c | 23 +--
1 files changed, 9 insertions(+)
On Friday, March 11, 2005 11:25 PM Greg KH wrote:
>> +static ssize_t aer_sysfs_consume_show(struct device_driver *dev,
char >>*buf)
>> +{
>> +return aer_fsprint_record(buf);
>> +}
>> +
>> +static ssize_t aer_sysfs_status_show(struct device_driver *dev, char
>>*buf)
>> +{
>>
On Sun, Mar 13, 2005 at 11:43:51PM +0100, Stefan Roas wrote:
> Hi there!
>
> The attachted patch fixes a compiler warning in drivers/scsi/dpt_i2o.c.
>
> If you reply to this post, please CC me as I'm not suscribed to the
> list.
This patch looks suspiciously like it is sweeping the problem
`unde
Hi,
Jakob Eriksson wrote:
A long term goal of wine is to support DOS apps to. Of course
it's not a priority, but it's there.
Yes, that's exactly what I was hoping
for, thanks!
Even if no Windows apps do such a thing
(which wasn't confirmed yet), Wine may
still need that fix for the DOS support
in t
On Friday, March 11, 2005 11:21 PM Greg KH wrote:
>>
>> -Report the errors to user.
>>
>This is done through the syslog, right? Is that acceptable?
Reporting the errors to user can be written automatically to
/var/log/messages or be manually consumed through the syslog. I am not
sure whether
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005, Wiktor wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm looking for a way to connect multiple linux systems into one big
> machine (server-farm) and I can't find any way of enabling it in kernel.
> Is this feature supported?
Parallel Processing is not currently part of the mainstream linux kernel.
I h
Hi -
This update only affects Unisys' ES7000 machines. The patch reflects a change
needed to determine which generation of ES7000 is currently running. The next
generation of ES7000s will have conventional legacy support so the patch
accommodates for this. This patch has been tested and verified
Hi Jan,
Please see comments inline.
> Although "sync" doesnt seem to make any difference to fsck output,
> "blockdev --flushbufs" fixes the issue.
>
> Still wondering why the flushing of buffer behavior is different on a
> system with normal harddisk (Redhat 7.2 with 2.4.26 kern
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005, Jesse Barnes wrote:
> On Sunday, March 6, 2005 2:36 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > Any comments would be, as always, appreciated.
>
> I don't have a problem with this change, but the maintainer probably should
> have been Cc'd. Greg, does this change look ok to you? Note
On Sat, 2005-03-12 at 16:49 -0800, Matt Mackall wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 11, 2005 at 05:24:15PM -0800, john stultz wrote:
> > +struct timesource_t timesource_jiffies = {
> > + .name = "jiffies",
> > + .priority = 0, /* lowest priority*/
> > + .type = TIMESOURCE_FUNCTION,
> > + .read_fnct = jiff
--On Saturday, March 12, 2005 10:10:36 +0100 Arjan van de Ven <[EMAIL
PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> > From a quick peek it seems that the patch makes negligible difference for a
>> kernel compilation when prefaulting 1-2 pages and slows the workload down
>> quite a lot when prefaulting up to 16 page
You'll can use OpenMosix
(http://sourceforge.net/project/openmosix) or Mosix
(http://www.mosix.org/).
Have a look at:
http://www.mini-itx.com/projects/cluster/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beowulf_%28computing%29
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/BeowulfProject2004 (German, it describes
howto setup
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005, Jesse Barnes wrote:
> On Monday, March 14, 2005 9:54 am, Nishanth Aravamudan wrote:
> > On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 09:45:44AM -0800, Jesse Barnes wrote:
> > > On Sunday, March 6, 2005 2:36 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > > > Any comments would be, as always, appreciated.
> > >
El Mon, 14 Mar 2005 08:55:18 -0800,
Jesse Barnes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:
> We already have the 'quiet' option, but even so, I think the kernel is *way*
> too verbose. Someone needs to make a personal crusade out of removing
> unneeded and unjustified printks from the kernel before it real
Reduce noise in 'make buildcheck' that is caused by CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO=y.
Signed-off-by: Randy Dunlap <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
diffstat:=
scripts/reference_discarded.pl |3 +++
scripts/reference_init.pl |1 +
2 files changed, 4 insertions(+)
diff -Naurp ./scripts/reference_discarded.pl~
Hi Ingo,
I've found something that is very interesting and I can't explain it.
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005, Steven Rostedt wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, 14 Mar 2005, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> >
> > On Mon, 14 Mar 2005, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> > >
> > > I just downloaded -40 and applied my patch, compiled it with
Vojtech Pavlik wrote:
[]
In 2.6.9 (it works just fine too, problem happens with 2.6.10 and up
only), there's no such parameter in drivers/pci/quirks.c. Hmm.
Any chance the order of module loading changed between the two versions?
I see you have 'psmouse' as a module. If i8042 (and psmouse) are loa
[trimming cc list in case this starts a flame war)
On Mon, 2005-03-14 at 19:12 +0100, Diego Calleja wrote:
> Why should people look at all that "horrid" debug info everytime
> they boot, except when they have a problem?
I'm really not trolling, but I suspect if we made the boot process less
verbo
Mel wrote:
> I have not read up on cpuset before so I am assuming you are talking about
> http://www.bullopensource.org/cpuset/ so correct me if I am wrong.
Yes - that. See also the kernel doc file:
Documentation/cpusets.txt
> I agree that if cpuset is not
> widely used, it should not b
Ok, I think I finally solved this problem.
A note for Jeff: I forgot to send this email and complained to you because you
didn't answer... Sorry Jeff.
However, I explained what I say here to him in chat and we agreed on the fix.
I'm sending this anyway... and I'm attaching the correct fix we di
>From The Desk Of Baba Usman
Reply-To:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
For Your Attention,
The Managing Director/Owner
My name is BABA USMAN, and this is an urgent contract invitation from Iraq. My
benefactor at the new American controlled Iraq ministry has mandated me to seek
for your cooperation in a multi-
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 10:06:37PM +0300, Michael Tokarev wrote:
> >>So is this a bios/mobo problem,
> >
> >Yes.
>
> Never had any single problem with this hardware so far. But.. uh-oh.
> Well.. it's only 2.6 kernel that encounters problem with it for now,
> so it must be the kernel... ;)
2.4 l
Hi Andrew,
Here is the 2.6.11-mm3 version of patch for adding "nobh"
support for ext3 writeback mode.
Can you include it in -mm ?
Thanks,
Badari
diff -Narup -X dontdiff linux-2.6.11-mm3-org/fs/ext3/inode.c linux-2.6.11/fs/ext3/inode.c
--- linux-2.6.11-mm3-org/fs/ext3/inode.c 2005-03-14 10:52:1
linux-os wrote:
On Mon, 14 Mar 2005, Jakob Eriksson wrote:
Andi Kleen wrote:
Stas Sergeev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Another way of saying the same thing: I absolutely hate seeing
patches that fix some theoretical issue that no Linux apps will ever
care about.
No, it is not theoretical, but it is
On Mon, 2005-03-14 at 11:18 -0800, Badari Pulavarty wrote:
> Hi Andrew,
>
> Here is the 2.6.11-mm3 version of patch for adding "nobh"
> support for ext3 writeback mode.
can you explain why this is an option ? It's not like the on disk layout
changes or something... is there a reason to ever not w
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 10:42:45AM -0800, john stultz wrote:
>
> > > +static inline cycle_t read_timesource(struct timesource_t* ts)
> > > +{
> > > + switch (ts->type) {
> > > + case TIMESOURCE_MMIO_32:
> > > + return (cycle_t)readl(ts->mmio_ptr);
> > > + case TIMESOURCE_MMIO_64:
> > > +
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 01:06:36AM +0300, Stas Sergeev wrote:
> Alan, can you please apply that to an -ac
> tree?
Ask Andrew Morton as it belongs in the -mm tree
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo i
The sal_console and sal_console_uart structures have a circular relationship
since they both initialize member fields to pointers of one another. The
current code forward declares sal_console_uart as extern so that sal_console
can take its address, but gcc4 complains about this since the real d
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 11:02:09AM -0800, Randy.Dunlap wrote:
>
> Reduce noise in 'make buildcheck' that is caused by CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO=y.
Applied to my kbuild tree.
Sam
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED
On Sun, 2005-03-13 at 04:01 +0100, Adrian Bunk wrote:
> The patch below contains the following possible cleanups:
> - make needlessly global code static
> - remove the following unused global functions:
> - avc.c: avc_ss_grant
> - avc.c: avc_ss_try_revoke
> - avc.c: avc_ss_revoke
> - avc.c:
On Sun, 13 Mar 2005, Oleg Nesterov wrote:
> I suspect that del_timer_sync() in its current form is racy.
>
> CPU 0 CPU 1
>
> __run_timers() sets timer->base = NULL
>
> del_timer_sync() starts, calls
> del_timer
I'm having some intermittent build problems on 2.6.11-bk10. First of
all, doing a 'make -j8 O=... install' errors out not being able to find
a vmlinux:
$ make O=../mhp-build/i386-plain/ -j8 install
make[3]: *** No rule to make target `vmlinux', needed by
`arch/i386/boot/compressed/vmlinux.bin'.
On Mon, 2005-03-14 at 11:29 -0800, Matt Mackall wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 10:42:45AM -0800, john stultz wrote:
> >
> > > > +static inline cycle_t read_timesource(struct timesource_t* ts)
> > > > +{
> > > > + switch (ts->type) {
> > > > + case TIMESOURCE_MMIO_32:
> > > > +
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 11:39:37AM -0800, Dave Hansen wrote:
> I'm having some intermittent build problems on 2.6.11-bk10. First of
> all, doing a 'make -j8 O=... install' errors out not being able to find
> a vmlinux:
>
> $ make O=../mhp-build/i386-plain/ -j8 install
> make[3]: *** No rule to ma
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 11:43:21AM -0800, john stultz wrote:
> On Mon, 2005-03-14 at 11:29 -0800, Matt Mackall wrote:
> > On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 10:42:45AM -0800, john stultz wrote:
> > >
> > > > > +static inline cycle_t read_timesource(struct timesource_t* ts)
> > > > > +{
> > > > > + switch
On Mon, 2005-03-14 at 20:49 +0100, Sam Ravnborg wrote:
> On popular request 'make install' no longer try to update vmlinux.
> This is to avoid errornous recompilation when installing the kernel
> as root especially when fetching kernel via nfs where path may have
> changed.
That makes sense, but i
On Mon, 2005-03-14 at 11:29, Arjan van de Ven wrote:
> On Mon, 2005-03-14 at 11:18 -0800, Badari Pulavarty wrote:
> > Hi Andrew,
> >
> > Here is the 2.6.11-mm3 version of patch for adding "nobh"
> > support for ext3 writeback mode.
>
> can you explain why this is an option ? It's not like the on
Hi!
Alan Cox wrote:
Alan, can you please apply that to an -ac
tree?
Ask Andrew Morton as it belongs in the -mm tree
Actually I tried that already. Andrew
had nothing against that patch personally,
as well as Linus, but after all that didn't
work:
http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/1/3/260
So it can't be app
On Saturday, March 12, 2005 1:38 AM Andi Kleen wrote:
>I haven't read your code in detail, just a high level remark.
>
>> +6. Enabling AER Aware Support in PCI Express Device Driver
>> +
>> +To enable AER aware support requires a software driver to configure
>> +the AER capability structure within
On Mon, 2005-03-14 at 11:51 -0800, Matt Mackall wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 11:43:21AM -0800, john stultz wrote:
> > On Mon, 2005-03-14 at 11:29 -0800, Matt Mackall wrote:
> > > On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 10:42:45AM -0800, john stultz wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > > +static inline cycle_t read_timeso
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Mon Mar 14, 2005 at 18:24:44, Ben Dooks wrote:
> This patch looks suspiciously like it is sweeping the problem
> `under the carpet`. Does bus_to_virt() return an `void __iomem *`?
>
> reply should really be an `void __iomem *`
bus_to_virt return
Almost entirely the 2.6.11.3 update this time. Nice and simple because the
2.6.11.x is working out wonderfully.
Alan
2.6.11-ac3
o Merge in 2.6.11.3
o Make SATA AHCI error recovery work (Brett Russ)
o Watchdog link order (Dave Jones)
o
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 02:22:10PM -0500, Stephen Smalley wrote:
>...
> Looks fine to me (although your diffstat output is stale). Re-diff
>...
Sorry, I forgot updating it when I updated the patch.
cu
Adrian
--
"Is there not promise of rain?" Ling Tan asked suddenly out
of the
On Wed, Mar 09, 2005 at 09:01:08PM -0500, John Kacur wrote:
> Exuberant ctags can tag file names too. I find this extremely useful
> when browsing kernel source, and so would like to share it with
> everyone. (You can now type ":tag oprof.c" for example, and jump to the
> file with that name.)
>
>
On Friday, March 11, 2005 2:49 PM Paul Mackerras wrote:
>> The standard PCI Specification calls out SERR and PERR. I am not sure
>> about the recent discussion of PCI error of recovery. It is perhaps
>> regarding the possibility of recovering from a PERR or SERR. However,
>> PCI Express error occur
> I'm looking for a way to connect multiple linux systems
> into one big machine (server-farm) and I can't find any
> way of enabling it in kernel.
It seems that you have to analyse your problem a bit more.
There are 5 main types of clusters (or server-farms as you call it):
- parallel computing
-
On Fri, Mar 11, 2005 at 12:10:52PM +, Andrew Walrond wrote:
> On Friday 11 March 2005 09:28, Ingo Molnar wrote:
> > i have released the -V0.7.40-00 Real-Time Preemption patch, which can be
> > downloaded from the usual place:
> >
>
> I've lost the thread a little; Is this still x86 only?
The
On 14/03/05 12:35 -0500, Wen Xiong wrote:
> Domen Puncer wrote:
>
> >Just some nitpicking...
> >
> >
> >
> Hi Domen, all,
>
> Thanks for your comments. I did some minor changes for patch1 based on
> Domen's comment.
>
And i missed, what is probably a bug:
> +module_param(jsm_debug, int, 0)
Hi Jeff,
This is version 18 of the Wireless Extensions. The main change
is that it adds all the necessary APIs for WPA and WPA2 support. This
work was entirely done by Jouni Malinen, so let's thank him for both
his hard work and deep expertise on the subject ;-)
This APIs o
Allocate tx bounce buffers one at a time as needed, rather than in
a single allocation. This limits usage of the GFP_DMA memory pool.
Acked-by: Pekka Pietikäinen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---
The b44 hardware has a DMA mask that only covers 1GB. On x
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 02:23:41PM +1100, Paul Mackerras wrote:
> This patch is from Amos Waterland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
>
> It is really useful when debugging early boot on simulator to have debug
> symbols in the 32-bit code that uncompresses the kernel proper.
>
> Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras
On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 12:04:07PM -0800, john stultz wrote:
> > > > > > > +static inline cycle_t read_timesource(struct timesource_t* ts)
> > > > > > > +{
> > > > > > > + switch (ts->type) {
> > > > > > > + case TIMESOURCE_MMIO_32:
> > > > > > > + return (cycle_t)readl(ts->mmio_ptr);
> > >
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