On 13 Oct 00 at 15:31, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have a user buffer and i want to map it to kernel address space
> can anyone tell how to do this like in AIX we have xmattach
Look at mm/memory.c:map_user_kiobuf. It is used by drivers/char/raw.c,
or by drivers/media/video/bttv-driver.c, for
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 10:32:32AM +, Peter Samuelson wrote:
> > Is there anyway that we could make ECN enable/disable a flag on a route?
>
> Would it help? It seems to me that typically, your busiest, best-
If it is configurable per route (and not per interface), it may help,
as you
Hi!
has someone included detection support for P4 already (following P4
manuals on intel developer web site)?
If not I did, but as it is my first attempt in kernel hacking im not
sure if I did everything. Mainly it should not be a big deal... someone
has a few hints?? I edited processor.h and
> > More with their firewall. But try
> >
> > echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_ecn
[Mike Jagdis]
> Is there anyway that we could make ECN enable/disable a flag on a route?
Would it help? It seems to me that typically, your busiest, best-
connected routes are the ones where you could derive
Hi,
I have a user buffer and i want to map it to kernel address space
can anyone tell how to do this like in AIX we have xmattach
thanks
daljeet
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To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
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Please read the FAQ at
> " " == Hai-Pao Fan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Problem:
> A returned address from kmalloc() can be overwritten to a wrong
> place in rpcauth_lookup_credcache() routine.
Hi Alan,
The following patch fixes the bug in 2.2.18pre. As reported in the
2.4.0 patch on l-k,
> " " == Hai-Pao Fan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Problem:
> A returned address from kmalloc() can be overwritten to a wrong
> place in rpcauth_lookup_credcache() routine.
Ouch. This is a bug that's been with us since 2.1.x at least...
Linus, the problem is in fact
Hi,
I'm running 2.4.0-test9 on an Aladdin V based mother board. The IDE
interface locks up (i.e. reads/writes etc fail, drives cannot be
detected when booting) and only works again after power cycling. Same
problem occured with 2.4.0-test5 and up. The problem does not occur with
2.2.x
I'm definitely convice that in the actual kernel source 2.2.16 & 2.2.17 there is
a bug that generate this Oops:
Oct 12 16:32:57 giulia kernel: Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual
address 0900841f
Oct 12 16:32:57 giulia kernel: current->tss.cr3 = 1c364000, %%cr3 = 1c364000
Oct
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Andrew Morton wrote:
> "Maciej W. Rozycki" wrote:
> >
> > On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Andrew Morton wrote:
> >
> > > > Oct 9 17:29:02 fwintern kernel: eth0: Interrupt posted but not
> > > > delivered -- IRQ blocked by another device?
> > >
> > > This is the infamous APIC bug. I
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Andrew Morton wrote:
> "Dr. Michael Weller" wrote:
> >
> > Dear list,
> >
> > I run a Compaq Proliant 1500 (dual Pentium 75.200) with hardware raid
> > (Smart2) with two ethernet cards 3com905 (b or c, I can't tell you right
> > now) as a firewall and web/mail virus
Hi,
I was wondering why it is necessary for the usb_hub_thread() in
drivers/usb/hub.c to have the big kernel lock with lock_kernel() ?
What is it with lock_kernel() anyway ?
extern __inline__ void lock_kernel(void)
{
#if 1
if (!++current->lock_depth)
spin_lock(_flag);
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 08:06:46AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> * USB: fix setting urb->dev in plusb, wacom, mdc800) (Greg KH)
>{CRITICAL}
Attached is a patch against 2.4.0-test10-pre2 for the plusb.c driver to
fix this problem.
Could anyone who has this device, verify that
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 08:06:46AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> * USB: fix setting urb->dev in plusb, wacom, mdc800) (Greg KH)
>{CRITICAL}
Attached is a patch against 2.4.0-test10-pre2 for the wacom.c driver to
fix this problem.
Could anyone who has this device, verify that
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 08:06:46AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> * USB: fix setting urb->dev in plusb, wacom, mdc800) (Greg KH)
>{CRITICAL}
Attached is a patch against 2.4.0-test10-pre2 for the mdc800.c driver to
fix this problem.
Could anyone who has this device, verify
Long-running processes are not always important. If I'm running an RC5
cracker or similar program, I want that killed right after the fork
bomb. While it's generally bad to interrupt simulations etc., it is
perfectly fine to do so if they are properly designed so they save their
state as
Hi,
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 02:19:27PM +0100, Tigran Aivazian wrote:
> Having done a few more reboots I got more info -- one of the eepro100
> interfaces is dead only in 4 out 5 cases. So, sometimes, doing ifdown eth0
> ; ifup eth0 does help.
Tigran, please check if you have any driver's
On Thu, 12 Oct 2000, James Simmons wrote:
>
> > > every CPU to avoid slowdowns. So that if you set that eth0's
> > > IRQ will be handled by CPU1, the MTRRs of CPU1 will be set
> > > accordingly, and the other CPUs will not care about eth0,
> > > so they do not need eth0's MTRR settings.
> >
>
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 12:26:02AM +0100, Alan Cox wrote:
> egcs-1.1.2 builds 2.2.18pre. I know this because thats the compiler I use
> to build it. Its also the recommended compiler.
What do you mean by _the_ recommended compiler? Is 2.7.2.3 recommended no
more? Is there some benefit using
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 12:26:02AM +0100, Alan Cox wrote:
egcs-1.1.2 builds 2.2.18pre. I know this because thats the compiler I use
to build it. Its also the recommended compiler.
What do you mean by _the_ recommended compiler? Is 2.7.2.3 recommended no
more? Is there some benefit using
On Thu, 12 Oct 2000, James Simmons wrote:
every CPU to avoid slowdowns. So that if you set that eth0's
IRQ will be handled by CPU1, the MTRRs of CPU1 will be set
accordingly, and the other CPUs will not care about eth0,
so they do not need eth0's MTRR settings.
A little
Hi,
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 02:19:27PM +0100, Tigran Aivazian wrote:
Having done a few more reboots I got more info -- one of the eepro100
interfaces is dead only in 4 out 5 cases. So, sometimes, doing ifdown eth0
; ifup eth0 does help.
Tigran, please check if you have any driver's messages,
Long-running processes are not always important. If I'm running an RC5
cracker or similar program, I want that killed right after the fork
bomb. While it's generally bad to interrupt simulations etc., it is
perfectly fine to do so if they are properly designed so they save their
state as
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 08:06:46AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* USB: fix setting urb-dev in plusb, wacom, mdc800) (Greg KH)
{CRITICAL}
Attached is a patch against 2.4.0-test10-pre2 for the mdc800.c driver to
fix this problem.
Could anyone who has this device, verify that
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 08:06:46AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* USB: fix setting urb-dev in plusb, wacom, mdc800) (Greg KH)
{CRITICAL}
Attached is a patch against 2.4.0-test10-pre2 for the wacom.c driver to
fix this problem.
Could anyone who has this device, verify that
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 08:06:46AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* USB: fix setting urb-dev in plusb, wacom, mdc800) (Greg KH)
{CRITICAL}
Attached is a patch against 2.4.0-test10-pre2 for the plusb.c driver to
fix this problem.
Could anyone who has this device, verify that
Hi,
I was wondering why it is necessary for the usb_hub_thread() in
drivers/usb/hub.c to have the big kernel lock with lock_kernel() ?
What is it with lock_kernel() anyway ?
extern __inline__ void lock_kernel(void)
{
#if 1
if (!++current-lock_depth)
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Andrew Morton wrote:
"Maciej W. Rozycki" wrote:
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Andrew Morton wrote:
Oct 9 17:29:02 fwintern kernel: eth0: Interrupt posted but not
delivered -- IRQ blocked by another device?
This is the infamous APIC bug. I have about ten
I'm definitely convice that in the actual kernel source 2.2.16 2.2.17 there is
a bug that generate this Oops:
Oct 12 16:32:57 giulia kernel: Unable to handle kernel paging request at virtual
address 0900841f
Oct 12 16:32:57 giulia kernel: current-tss.cr3 = 1c364000, %%cr3 = 1c364000
Oct 12
Hi,
I'm running 2.4.0-test9 on an Aladdin V based mother board. The IDE
interface locks up (i.e. reads/writes etc fail, drives cannot be
detected when booting) and only works again after power cycling. Same
problem occured with 2.4.0-test5 and up. The problem does not occur with
2.2.x
" " == Hai-Pao Fan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Problem:
A returned address from kmalloc() can be overwritten to a wrong
place in rpcauth_lookup_credcache() routine.
Ouch. This is a bug that's been with us since 2.1.x at least...
Linus, the problem is in fact twofold.
1)
" " == Hai-Pao Fan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Problem:
A returned address from kmalloc() can be overwritten to a wrong
place in rpcauth_lookup_credcache() routine.
Hi Alan,
The following patch fixes the bug in 2.2.18pre. As reported in the
2.4.0 patch on l-k, the problem
Hi,
I have a user buffer and i want to map it to kernel address space
can anyone tell how to do this like in AIX we have xmattach
thanks
daljeet
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To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Please read the FAQ at
More with their firewall. But try
echo 0 /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_ecn
[Mike Jagdis]
Is there anyway that we could make ECN enable/disable a flag on a route?
Would it help? It seems to me that typically, your busiest, best-
connected routes are the ones where you could derive the most
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 10:32:32AM +, Peter Samuelson wrote:
Is there anyway that we could make ECN enable/disable a flag on a route?
Would it help? It seems to me that typically, your busiest, best-
If it is configurable per route (and not per interface), it may help,
as you could
On 13 Oct 00 at 15:31, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a user buffer and i want to map it to kernel address space
can anyone tell how to do this like in AIX we have xmattach
Look at mm/memory.c:map_user_kiobuf. It is used by drivers/char/raw.c,
or by drivers/media/video/bttv-driver.c, for
Greg KH wrote:
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 08:06:46AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* USB: fix setting urb-dev in plusb, wacom, mdc800) (Greg KH)
{CRITICAL}
Attached is a patch against 2.4.0-test10-pre2 for the mdc800.c driver to
fix this problem.
Could anyone who has this
[Craig Schlenter [EMAIL PROTECTED]]
but you could add a host route for say linuxtoday with the NO_ECN
flag (also pointing at the default route), right?
[Jan Niehusmann [EMAIL PROTECTED]]
If it is configurable per route (and not per interface), it may help,
as you could add additional routes
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I have a user buffer and i want to map it to kernel address space
can anyone tell how to do this like in AIX we have xmattach
In 2.2, you're better off providing a fake character device driver
which allocates the memory in kernel space and lets the user mmap it.
In
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 10:13:11AM +0900, Tom Holroyd wrote:
Mine works OK, except for that invalidate on last close thing
(how do I go back to the old behavior? Why was it changed?).
You go back to the old behaviour by commenting out the
invalidate_buffers call in
if
I have to be wicked crazy - but:
Linux version 2.2.18pre15 (root@juce) (gcc version 2.97 20001010
(experimental)) #7 Tue Oct 10 20:18:58 CEST 2000
It seems to "work", but it hasn't been put under stress, yet.
The reason I tried the kernel with 2.97 was the -march=athlon option.
--
Andre Tomt
"J . A . Magallon" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I have a little problem when compiling new kernels. I run Mandrake 7.1
with many many updates (its almost 7.2beta).
install the last egcs package from 7.2b and compile with kgcc (will be
autodetect by the kernel).
--
MandrakeSoft Inc
hi,
I am mapping user space buffer to kernel space by using kiobufs.
as
..
..
struct kiobuf *iobuf,
alloc_kiovec(1, *iobuf);
map_user_kiobuf() /*for user buffer*/
lock_kiovec();
but to start dma transfers, i must know physical address of mapped pages..
is there any way out???
Anil Kumar
I had a similar problem with the USB driver assigned to IRQ19 but not receiving any
interrupts.
Perhaps someone more knowledgable can explain why linux fails under MPS1.4.
Linux is fine with MPS1.4. There are two possible causes I see
1. Some clown built a USB controller with only 4
For dma transfers to/from user space buffer, one need to lock that user
space buffer so that it won't be swaped out. and also
its bus address is obtained by call virt_to_bus and then this bus address
is written to dma controller.
Thats what the kiovecs deal with yes
but do we explicitly
lotus domino server dies with
deleting all semaphores, shared memory ...
with ipcrm/ipcs does not help, only a reboot does.
any idea what could be wrong ?
i have no idea if this is a bug in linux or domino,
but under linux usualy you don't need a to reboot a server.
are there known issues with
What do you mean by _the_ recommended compiler? Is 2.7.2.3 recommended no
more? Is there some benefit using egcs-1.1.2 instead of 2.7.2.3?
Should Changes be changed?
Umm looks like it
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Hello,
I will use 2.95.2, so that egcs seems to not being able to build 18-preX.
egcs-1.1.2 builds 2.2.18pre. I know this because thats the compiler I use
to build it. Its also the recommended compiler. 2.95 is still 'probably works'.
In truth I think 2.95 is now at the point where if
has someone included detection support for P4 already (following P4
manuals on intel developer web site)?
The CPU identification is in 2.2.18pre
Alan
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Please read the FAQ
I have to be wicked crazy - but:
Linux version 2.2.18pre15 (root@juce) (gcc version 2.97 20001010
(experimental)) #7 Tue Oct 10 20:18:58 CEST 2000
It seems to "work", but it hasn't been put under stress, yet.
The reason I tried the kernel with 2.97 was the -march=athlon option.
Let me
Hello,
On 13 Oct 00 at 15:31, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a user buffer and i want to map it to kernel address space
can anyone tell how to do this like in AIX we have xmattach
Look at mm/memory.c:map_user_kiobuf. It is used by drivers/char/raw.c,
or by
When I copy a file from my linux partition to my windows partition
and the filename is not in 8.3 format I get an error when I check my
disk for errors saying that the long filename is no longer associated
with a file. After fixing this the filename is in 8.3 format. Files
already wine 8.3
Hello,
What's the best way to get proprietary notifications from networking device
drivers? I need to get notification data through ioct-interface but I need
some way to signal that data is ready. The only way I can think of is to put
pending request from user-mode to kernel-mode and release it
The CPU identification is in 2.2.18pre
Thanks, what about 2.4 ?
DaveJ just posted a forward port fo the bits today.
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Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
In truth I think 2.95 is now at the point where if anything kernel side is
broken it must be fairly obscure or a little used driver
I've been using 2.95.2 to build PPC kernels and it seems to work
OK, but I _know_ that 2.91.66 works with both 2.2 and 2.4 kernels so it should
probably be
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Guest section DW wrote:
the command openflop:
#include fcntl.h
main(){
int fd = open("/dev/fd0", O_RDONLY);
pause();
}
sh -c 'kill -SIGSTOP $$' /dev/fd0
each time after inserting a floppy, and to kill it
before
[Mike Jagdis]
Is there anyway that we could make ECN enable/disable a flag on a route?
Would it help? It seems to me that typically, your busiest, best-
connected routes are the ones where you could derive the most benefit
from ECN -- and those same routes are where you are likely to find
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 02:09:42AM +0200, Sasi Peter wrote:
Hi!
Unfortunatelly I couldn't apply it:
[root@iq src]# bzcat VM-global-2.2.18pre9-6.bz2 |patch -p0
Please check with `head -4 VM/Makefile` that it's 2.2.18pre15.
andrea@athlon:~/devel/kernel fork 2.2.18pre15 z; cd z; apply
I will use 2.95.2, so that egcs seems to not being able to build 18-preX.
egcs-1.1.2 builds 2.2.18pre. I know this because thats the compiler I use
to build it. Its also the recommended compiler. 2.95 is still 'probably works'.
In truth I think 2.95 is now at the point where if anything
Igmar Palsenberg wrote:
I will use 2.95.2, so that egcs seems to not being able to build 18-preX.
egcs-1.1.2 builds 2.2.18pre. I know this because thats the compiler I use
to build it. Its also the recommended compiler. 2.95 is still 'probably works'.
In truth I think 2.95 is now at
Rewritten to use lists. Applies cleanly to t9/10p1/t10p2. Tested.
--
Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--- linux-240t9/drivers/block/paride/Makefile Tue Oct 3 00:16:47 2000
+++ linux/drivers/block/paride/Makefile Sat Oct 7 19:22:15 2000
@@ -1,183 +1,34 @@
#
-# Makefile for
Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 12:47:39AM +0200, Krzysztof Sierota wrote:
Marcelo Tosati assembled a kernel for us that had Andrea Arcangeli patches
applied and some other stuff that we needed, and the machines are stable
I recommend using 2.2.18pre15aa1 (without using
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 03:08:59PM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Only problem is that the sound has a lot of hickups and I get these
messages in my syslog:
I didn't see that. I think I _do_ have CONFIG_USB_BANDWIDTH enabled. What
else do you have connected and
I had a similar problem with the USB driver assigned to
IRQ19 but not receiving any interrupts.
Perhaps someone more knowledgable can explain why linux
fails under MPS1.4.
Linux is fine with MPS1.4. There are two possible causes I see
1.Some clown built a USB controller with
I have the same problem.
As far as I remeber it appeared most likely beginning with 2.4.0-test7
(or maybe test6)
Andris
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To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
I apologize if this is a known issue.
I am running
Linux version 2.2.17 ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) (gcc version
egcs-2.91.66 19990314/Linux (egcs-1.1.2 release)) #2 SMP Sun Oct 8 02:37:43
EDT 2000
On a dual Pentium III with 256M of SDRAM, aix-7xxx, sblive, kingston tulip,
3c905, 3dfx Voodoo3 AGP.
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 04:23:51PM +0200, David Weinehall wrote:
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 04:14:32PM +0200, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 12:47:39AM +0200, Krzysztof Sierota wrote:
Marcelo Tosati assembled a kernel for us that had Andrea Arcangeli
patches applied and
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 10:54:50AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 12:47:39AM +0200, Krzysztof Sierota wrote:
Marcelo Tosati assembled a kernel for us that had Andrea Arcangeli patches
applied and some other stuff that we needed, and the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Do we have any [non-kernel] software that will read/analyze MPS
tables?
I believe there's a port of http://people.freebsd.org/~fsmp/SMP/mptable/
somewhere. It's probably quicker to port it again yourself than search for
it.
--
dwmw2
-
To unsubscribe from this
Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 10:54:50AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
I've tested 2.2.18pre15 (w/out 'aa1') against FreeBSD, Solaris, and
other Linux clients, and I'm very happy with the improvement over older
Linux NFS. All of my testing and real-life usage was done w/
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 11:20:14AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
No problem here, I always use 8192 r/w size :)
You would help me if you could try to do the same with 2.2.18pre15aa1 on both
client and server side nfsv3 using also files larger than 2G. Maybe the
problem with the bigger r/w size
I have the same problem.
As far as I remeber it appeared most likely beginning with 2.4.0-test7
(or maybe test6)
I missed original problem, but what about this one? Fixes extension
in MSDOS namespace when filename is longer than 12 chars... Someone
familiar with VFAT should look whether
Only problem is that the sound has a lot of hickups and I
get these
messages in my syslog:
I didn't see that. I think I _do_ have CONFIG_USB_BANDWIDTH
enabled. What
else do you have connected and what else were you using at
the time? Does
the kernel whinge?
Just
Hi, dear community,
The problem: under heavy network load
(2000 frame/sec and more, traffic produced with Fluke)
reading from the packet socket (SOCK_PACKET)
fully loads the processor every ~30 sec (PII-650).
The higher is the traffic level, the longer is the
"heavy system load" interval.
I have
Hi list,
There seem to be two common methods for ix86-based boards to enable the
A20 line: The traditional method that uses the keyboard controller (this
is what Linux supports) and a method (sometimes referred to as "fast
A20 Gate") that uses a special port address (0x92).
Some boards
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 10:01:56AM -0400, Chris Swiedler wrote:
Why is modprobe kept as a separate executable, when nothing else in the
kernel is (seems to be)? What is the advantage to keeping modprobe separate,
modprobe is a userspace tool. It resolves dependencies based on a textfile
called
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 01:18:53PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
See the arch/x86/mm/fault.c changes to see what arch-specific changes this
can entail.
This patch works for me...
Ivan.
--- linux/include/asm-alpha/bitops.h.orig Wed Oct 4 17:06:59 2000
+++
Ok, I should have thought of that ;-). I've never used modprobe directly
myself, and had forgotten that was possible. Thanks to everyone who replied.
chris
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On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 11:59:51PM +0200, J . A . Magallon wrote:
Hi, everybody.
Kernel 2.2.18-pre15 compiles fine under gcc-2.95.2. It is just plain
2.2.17 with Alan's patch to 18-pre15.
I downloaded the gcc-2.96 rpms from rufus, and the compilation process
there is no such thing as
On Thu, 12 Oct 2000, Richard Guenther wrote:
I reported this BUG on a few days ago but got no response - happens
on UP with only 32M ram, too. (see below). Also note the second
BUG at vmscan.c:538 which I believe never saw reported again.
Oct 11 16:05:26 hilbert36 kernel: kernel BUG at
This is a bit off-topic, but is there a way to compile a shared library with
a gcc 2.9x.xx compiler that will work with an executable compiled with gcc
2.7.2.3?
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Please read the
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Rik van Riel wrote:
On Thu, 12 Oct 2000, Richard Guenther wrote:
I reported this BUG on a few days ago but got no response - happens
on UP with only 32M ram, too. (see below). Also note the second
BUG at vmscan.c:538 which I believe never saw reported again.
Some boards (especially in the embedded PC area) implement only the
latter method (some don't even _have_ a keyboard controller).
With these boards, Linux fails to boot.
Try the current 2.2.18pre. This has fast A20 too and I suspect will boot
on your box. Its had no problems on 2.2.18pre
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Robert Kaiser wrote:
+
+# enable the "fast" A20 gate
+
+ in al,#0x92
+ or al,#2
+ and al,#0xfe
+ out #0x92,al
+
this is not a valid ATT assembler but looks like some ancient Intel
syntax. Linux kernel
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 10:13:11AM +0900, Tom Holroyd wrote:
On Thu, 12 Oct 2000, Thorsten Kranzkowski wrote:
Huh - your floppy is working?
gcc version 2.96 2925 (experimental)
Mine works OK, except for that invalidate on last close thing (how do I go
back to the old behavior?
I'm trying to figure out why swapping from one NIC to another is taking
so long (on the order of a few seconds), and I was hoping one of you
could help me out.
I'm running a bit of an odd setup, so bear with me for a minute while I
explain. Machine A has two NICs each set to a different IP
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Richard Guenther wrote:
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Rik van Riel wrote:
On Thu, 12 Oct 2000, Richard Guenther wrote:
I reported this BUG on a few days ago but got no response - happens
on UP with only 32M ram, too. (see below). Also note the second
BUG at vmscan.c:538
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 08:15:46PM +0400, Ivan Kokshaysky wrote:
On Thu, Oct 12, 2000 at 01:18:53PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
See the arch/x86/mm/fault.c changes to see what arch-specific changes this
can entail.
This patch works for me...
You shouldn't have needed any changes at all
On Fre, 13 Okt 2000 you wrote:
Some boards (especially in the embedded PC area) implement only the
latter method (some don't even _have_ a keyboard controller).
With these boards, Linux fails to boot.
Try the current 2.2.18pre. This has fast A20 too and I suspect will boot
on your box.
On Fri, Oct 13, 2000 at 04:40:45PM +, Thorsten Kranzkowski wrote:
Since I received a success report for 2.4.0pre8 for the very same board
but compiled with 2.96.2 I tend to think that it's indeed the compiler.
^^
2.95.2 of course - friday 13th :-)
--
| Thorsten
I don't know about the sound hickups you are hearing. Tom Sailer
suggested just a day or two ago something about changing the
latency for the USB controller by using setpci.
I tried:
setpci -s 00:07.2 latency_timer=20
setpci -s 00:07.2 latency_timer=40
setpci -s 00:07.2
Andi Kleen wrote:
snip
2.4 has already broken backwards compatibility to 2.2 (IV changed
from disk absolute to relative). When you change it now (before 2.4.0)
it is relatively painless. I think the change is a good idea.
snip
You're wrong. All kernels from int-2.2.10.4 onwards can be
On Friday 13 October 2000 19:55, Petr Vandrovec wrote:
I missed original problem, but what about this one? Fixes extension
in MSDOS namespace when filename is longer than 12 chars... Someone
familiar with VFAT should look whether VFAT multibyte code cannot be
cleaned up a bit... When I was
On Fri, 13 Oct 2000, Chris Swiedler wrote:
Why is it that a user process can't intentionally switch segments?
Dereferencing a 32-bit address causes the address to be calculated
using the "current" segment descriptor, right? It seems to me that a
process could set a new segment selector, in
Where can I found patch for UDMA 66 (BP6 board) based on hpt366 chip ,
and for kernel 2.2.17
Adam
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Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
Fwiw:
- vmlist_modify_lock/unlock are turned into spin_lock/unlock;
- ditto for vmlist_access/unaccess;
- atomic_t rss (gross).
Excuse the incorrect In-Reply-To field (my mail archive for the day is
currently unavailable).
diff -u --recursive linux-2.4.0-test10-pre2.orig/fs/binfmt_aout.c
** Reply to message from Ingo Molnar [EMAIL PROTECTED] on Fri, 13 Oct 2000
20:44:19 +0200 (CEST)
processes are not limited to a single segment, eg. Wine uses nonstandard
segments. But as i said, using multiple segments does not let you out of
32 bits of virtual memory.
Sure it does, just
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a user buffer and i want to map it to kernel address space
can anyone tell how to do this like in AIX we have xmattach
Note that it is usually MUCH better to do this the other way around:
having a kernel-side buffer, and mapping
- the cast on the return value of ioremap can be avoided;
- we want to print pci_resource_start(pdev, 0) instead of ioaddr when
ioaddr is NULL (tail of the patch).
diff -u --recursive linux-2.4.0-test10-pre2.orig/drivers/net/starfire.c
linux-2.4.0-test10-pre2/drivers/net/starfire.c
---
On Thu, 12 Oct 2000, jamal wrote:
I am attaching the debug output on bootup after defining DEBUG in pci.c
and the i386 pci header file with test10-pre2
Note: this is a Dell Lattitude docking station. The devices which are
having resource problems are on the docking station. Works fine
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