With the advent of kdump, the assumption that the boot CPU when booting
an UP kernel is always the CPU with a hardware ID of 0 (usually referred
to as BSP on some architectures) is not valid anymore.
Signed-off-by: Fernando Luis Vazquez Cao <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---
diff -urNp linux-2.6.21-rc2/include/linux/smp.h
linux-2.6.21-rc2-hwcpuid/include/linux/smp.h
--- linux-2.6.21-rc2/include/linux/smp.h 2007-02-05 03:44:54.000000000
+0900
+++ linux-2.6.21-rc2-hwcpuid/include/linux/smp.h 2007-03-07
12:02:13.000000000 +0900
@@ -83,7 +83,6 @@ void smp_prepare_boot_cpu(void);
* These macros fold the SMP functionality into a single CPU system
*/
#define raw_smp_processor_id() 0
-#define hard_smp_processor_id() 0
static inline int up_smp_call_function(void)
{
return 0;
_______________________________________________
fastboot mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.osdl.org/mailman/listinfo/fastboot