Robin Humble wrote:
On Fri, Sep 14, 2007 at 03:07:46PM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
It is my hope that you will put your skills towards a distributed
filesystem :) Of the current solutions, GFS (currently in kernel)
scales poorly, and NFS v4.1 is amazingly bloated and overly complex.
I've been
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 04:11:45PM +0200, Stefan Richter wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 03:20:06PM +0200, Stefan Richter wrote:
It still doesn't entirely clarify whether users need sd, sr, st, and
whether thy need sd for the disk with root filesystem.
If you want to
Em Sáb, 2007-09-15 às 16:33 +0200, Markus Rechberger escreveu:
I'm off for the weekend now so have a nice one :-)
Enjoy your weekend. I really hope that you have some time to reflect and
review your positions during the weekend.
--
Cheers,
Mauro
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Jon == Jon Ivar Rykkelid [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Jon Prakash Punnoor wrote:
I don't have exaclty the same hw, but the same chipset and I don't have any
problems - even with the swncq patch applied. Do you have an hpet? If not,
try booting with acpi_use_time_override. My system won't work
Johannes Stezenbach wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007, Markus Rechberger wrote:
The main discussion in this thread was about drivers in userspace
are bad because the API will allow binary drivers. The guy
who works for Hauppauge (again I also have good contacts
at Hauppauge Europe) writes it's bad
On 9/14/07, Heikki Orsila [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Consider a simple embedded system:
void interrupt_handler(void)
int main(void)
I would like to emulate this system with a workstation to make
development faster. I would create two threads, one executing the
main() function, and the other
* Benjamin Herrenschmidt ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
On Thu, 2007-09-13 at 15:17 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
Like this?
--- a/include/asm-powerpc/bitops.h~powerpc-lock-bitops-fix
+++ a/include/asm-powerpc/bitops.h
@@ -226,7 +226,7 @@ static __inline__ void set_bits(unsigned
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 02:52:08AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
Could you both please test 2.6.22 (or 2.6.23, soon) and if the bug is still
present, raise a report against acpi at bugzilla.kernel.org?
We'd be particularly internested in knowing if any earlier 2.6 kernel
worked OK and if so,
On Sat, 2007-09-15 at 18:32 +0530, Satyam Sharma wrote:
Hi,
On 9/15/07, Gilboa Davara [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello all,
In a small exchange in fedora-kernel-list [1] Eric Sandeen has pointed
out a possible stack overflow... when CONFIG_DEBUG_STACKOVERFLOW is
enabled. (Though not
On 09/15/2007 10:47 AM, Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 01:30:21AM +0200, Rene Herman wrote:
On 09/15/2007 01:13 AM, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
Rene Herman wrote:
I have a single file foo.c that I want to generate two (ALSA) modules
from, snd-foo2000.ko and snd-foo2001.ko, by
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 04:11:45PM +0200, Stefan Richter wrote:
Perfect is in the eye of the beholder. You would consequently have to
add such options into all menus which contain scsi low-level providers.
Kconfig is a user interface, so perfect is what is best for the
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Christian Volkmann wrote:
Does the machine otherwise work OK?
Yes, the USB is working fine for the easy things I do with it.
Hmm, so I expect this 2.6.22 message:
6usb 1-1: USB disconnect, address 2
became this 2.6.23rc6 message:
3usb 1-1: device not accepting
Hi Eric,
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 16:27:30 +0200
Eric Valette [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Eric Valette wrote:
I can probably take a picture of the backtrace if you want.
Just saw that just above my message in the LKML web interface, someone
posted a backtrace. Mine is different but at least, we
Stefan Richter wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 04:11:45PM +0200, Stefan Richter wrote:
Perfect is in the eye of the beholder. You would consequently have to
add such options into all menus which contain scsi low-level providers.
Kconfig is a user interface, so perfect is
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 02:14:42PM +0200, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
I keep coming back to the fact that movable objects should be moved
out of the way for unmovable ones. Anything else just allows
That's incidentally exactly what the slab does, no need to reinvent
the wheel for that, it's an
I take the liberty to modify the CC list.
Paul Rolland wrote:
Stefan Richter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I assert that a Kconfig prompt (a visible Kconfig variable) _without_
help text is a bug.
Here is an example from 2.6.34-rc6 :
.config - Linux Kernel v2.6.23-rc6 Configuration
In sys_faccessat you temporarily allocate a cred object which is
discarded in the end. With a few more macro definitions you could
create a dup_cred variant which initialized an automatic variable of
type struct cred. This way the kmalloc/kfree pair would fall away.
access is actually used
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 05:17:08PM +0200, Rene Herman wrote:
On 09/15/2007 10:47 AM, Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 01:30:21AM +0200, Rene Herman wrote:
On 09/15/2007 01:13 AM, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
Rene Herman wrote:
I have a single file foo.c that I want to generate two (ALSA)
On Saturday 15 September 2007 16:17, Rene Herman wrote:
On 09/15/2007 10:47 AM, Adrian Bunk wrote:
The stub source file is usually considered a good way to do this.
Mmm. If I'll have to live with it, I can, but thought I'd ask if there was
some nice build trickery available instead.
Evgeniy Polyakov wrote:
On Thu, Sep 13, 2007 at 02:16:17PM -0500, Steve Wise ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
iw_cxgb3: Support iwarp-only interfaces to avoid 4-tuple conflicts.
Version 2:
- added a per-device mutex for the address and listening endpoints lists.
- wait for all replies if sending
On 09/15/2007 05:53 PM, Denys Vlasenko wrote:
Can you give a bit more info what the dirrefences between devices are
in this particular cases?
It's ISA. Thanks, but never mind guys, I only wanted to know something about
kbuild.
Rene.
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Hi David,
Interesting work, but I think we could still enhance it. The interesting
things you bring is the trace control though debugfs files, which is
clear and simple. (I did it on top of netlink in LTTng, but I don't
really care about the mechanism, as long as we have the same
flexibility).
*
- So, which criteria influence whether HPET_EMULATE_RTC should be
enabled on x86_64 or not?
If there is one it needs to be a runtime switch anyways.
- In case that there is no compelling reason to disable it if its
dependencies are satisfied, shouldn't it rather be invisible and
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 10:35:16AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
Robin Humble wrote:
On Fri, Sep 14, 2007 at 03:07:46PM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
I've been waiting for years for a smart person to come along and write a
POSIX-only distributed filesystem.
it's called Lustre.
works well, scales well, is
On 9/15/07, ポール・ロラン Paul Rolland [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
Each time I add the support for this piece of hardware, I have a crash during
the boot process.
Serial console gives the attached boot message...
...
WARNING: at lib/kref.c:33 kref_get()
Call Trace:
[8121fa41]
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 11:44:59AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
Stefan Richter wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 04:11:45PM +0200, Stefan Richter wrote:
Perfect is in the eye of the beholder. You would consequently have to
add such options into all menus which contain scsi
On 9/15/07, Eric Valette [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Eric Valette wrote:
I can probably take a picture of the backtrace if you want.
Just saw that just above my message in the LKML web interface, someone
posted a backtrace. Mine is different but at least, we are at least two
to have the
Extend the memparse() routine to allow a caller to use NULL as the
second parameter value if he has no interest in that returned value.
---
there appear to be quite a number of calls to memparse which have
no use for the value returned in the second parameter (the current
pointer after the
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 05:27:24PM +0200, Stefan Richter wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 04:11:45PM +0200, Stefan Richter wrote:
Perfect is in the eye of the beholder. You would consequently have to
add such options into all menus which contain scsi low-level providers.
On Saturday 15 September 2007, Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 11:44:59AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
Stefan Richter wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 04:11:45PM +0200, Stefan Richter wrote:
Perfect is in the eye of the beholder. You would consequently have to
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 03:48:19 -0700, Andrew Morton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have an error message with 2.6.23-rc6.
This did not happen with 2.6.22.
Another one for Michal's dirt file.
No, I think it's the module ordering again.
2.6.23-rc6 boot.msg extract ( hub/usb )
I wish users
Dmitry Torokhov wrote:
On Saturday 15 September 2007 04:05, Andrew Morton wrote:
On Mon, 10 Sep 2007 09:24:04 -0400 Dmitry Torokhov [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 9/10/07, Greg KH [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Sep 10, 2007 at 01:28:47AM -0400, Dmitry Torokhov wrote:
On Sunday 09 September
Pete Zaitcev wrote:
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 03:48:19 -0700, Andrew Morton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have an error message with 2.6.23-rc6.
This did not happen with 2.6.22.
Another one for Michal's dirt file.
No, I think it's the module ordering again.
2.6.23-rc6 boot.msg extract ( hub/usb
I don't know exactly what this option does...
Andi says it should be automatic rather than exposed as a prompt.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter [EMAIL PROTECTED]
---
--- linux.orig/arch/x86_64/Kconfig
+++ linux/arch/x86_64/Kconfig
@@ -469,8 +469,9 @@ config HPET_TIMER
On Sep 15, 2007 16:29 +0400, Evgeniy Polyakov wrote:
Yes, block device itself is not able to scale well, but it is the place
for redundancy, since filesystem will just fail if underlying device
does not work correctly and FS actually does not know about where it
should place redundancy bits -
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 11:04:42AM -0300, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote:
With respect to your kernel-userspace API for xc3028, you made something
that seemed to be a dream: there's a consensus: not a single developer
believed that this is the better way; nobody seems that this is the
better
Zachary Amsden wrote:
On Fri, 2007-09-14 at 16:44 -0500, Anthony Liguori wrote:
So then each module creates a hypercall page using this magic MSR and
the hypervisor has to keep track of it so that it can appropriately
change the page on migration. The page can only contain a single
Hi Rob,
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 12:28:36 -0400
Rob Hussey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 9/15/07, Eric Valette [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Eric Valette wrote:
I can probably take a picture of the backtrace if you want.
Just saw that just above my message in the LKML web interface, someone
On Sep 15 2007 14:47, Denys Vlasenko wrote:
Try size -A instead.
thanks, didn't know that.
$ size -A busybox
busybox :
section sizeaddr
.init 28 134512788
addr in decimal?! wow...
Try size -x instead.
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Hi Andrew.
Trivial -- be explicit about printing hex.
Rene
diff --git a/lib/iomap.c b/lib/iomap.c
index a57d262..5dfcbde 100644
--- a/lib/iomap.c
+++ b/lib/iomap.c
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ static void bad_io_access(unsigned long port, const char
*access)
static int count = 10;
if
On Sep 15, 2007 12:20 -0400, Robin Humble wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 10:35:16AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
Lustre is tilted far too much towards high-priced storage,
many (most?) Lustre deployments are with SATA and md raid5 and GigE -
can't get much cheaper than that.
I have to agree -
This patch refactors the current hypercall infrastructure to better support live
migration and SMP. It eliminates the hypercall page by trapping the UD
exception that would occur if you used the wrong hypercall instruction for the
underlying architecture and replacing it with the right one
menuconfig currently represents options implied by another option ('select'
directive in Kconfig) by prefixing them with '---'. Unfortunately the same
notation is used for comments.
This patch changes notation of selected-by-another items by introducing 2 new
representations for implied options:
Hello all, Satyam,
This is my second stab at solving the stack over flow due to
dump_strace when close to stack-overflow is detected by do_IRQ problem.
(Hopefully) this patch is creates less noise then the previous one.
[snip]
I'll try and create an option 2 (static allocation, minimal locking)
On Saturday, 15 September 2007 04:29, Michal Piotrowski wrote:
Hi all,
Here is a list of some known regressions in 2.6.23-rc6.
Feel free to add new regressions/remove fixed etc.
http://kernelnewbies.org/known_regressions
List of Aces
NameRegressions fixed since
On Saturday 15 of September 2007 20:04:10 Matej Laitl wrote:
menuconfig currently represents options implied by another option ('select'
directive in Kconfig) by prefixing them with '---'. Unfortunately the same
notation is used for comments.
(...)
Oh please reply to my address [EMAIL
Nakajima, Jun wrote:
Jeremy Fitzhardinge wrote:
Nakajima, Jun wrote:
The hypervisor detection machanism is generic, and the signature
returned is implentation specific. Having a list of all hypervisor
signatures sounds fine to me as we are detecting vendor-specific
processor(s) in the
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Paul Rolland wrote:
On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 17:15:22 +0200
Adrian Bunk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, Sep 14, 2007 at 04:54:07PM +0200, Stefan Richter wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sun, Sep 09, 2007 at 05:11:44PM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
Let's step back a moment and
Rob Hussey wrote:
On 9/15/07, Eric Valette [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Eric Valette wrote:
I can probably take a picture of the backtrace if you want.
Just saw that just above my message in the LKML web interface, someone
posted a backtrace. Mine is different but at least, we are at least two
On Saturday, 15 September 2007 09:39, Andrew Morton wrote:
On 06 Sep 2007 13:31:50 +0200 Andi Kleen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Chuck Ebbert [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Some systems lock up without the noapic option.
Please find patterns: cpu type, chipsets, mainboard vendors etc.
Andi, anything comes to mind?
No, unfortunately not. There weren't any changes to entry.S recently
that could corrupt the error code as far as I remember. Also cannot think of
something else.
A version where it started happening would be useful.
-Andi
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On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 02:32:58AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
On Tue, 11 Sep 2007 23:14:22 +0200 Adrian Bunk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
People do not expect code under arch/i386/ to be used by code under
arch/x86_64/ and vice versa.
[OT: it drives me batshit that we ended up including
On Sep 15 2007 20:04, Matej Laitl wrote:
This patch changes notation of selected-by-another items by introducing 2 new
representations for implied options:
{*} or {M} for options selected by another modularized one, thus builtin or
module capable,
-*- or -M- for options that cannot be at the
Hi Rob,
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 12:21:39 -0400
Rob Hussey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 9/15/07, ポール・ロラン Paul Rolland [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I had this problem as well. It has to do with mac80211, cfg80211 and
the rate control algorithm not initializing early enough in the boot
Andi Kleen wrote:
Andi, anything comes to mind?
No, unfortunately not. There weren't any changes to entry.S recently
that could corrupt the error code as far as I remember. Also cannot think of
something else.
A version where it started happening would be useful.
I'll begin testing older
TASKSTATS_CMD_ATTR_TGID used to return only the delay accounting stats, not
the basic and extended accounting. With this patch,
TASKSTATS_CMD_ATTR_TGID also aggregates the accounting info for all threads
of a thread group. This makes TASKSTATS_CMD_ATTR_TGID usable in a similar
fashion to
On Saturday 15 of September 2007 20:38:14 you wrote:
On Sep 15 2007 20:04, Matej Laitl wrote:
This patch changes notation of selected-by-another items by introducing 2
new representations for implied options:
{*} or {M} for options selected by another modularized one, thus builtin
or module
On Thu, 06 Sep 2007 18:23:22 -0400 Chuck Ebbert [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
# ls -li
total 0
4026532007 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Sep 6 18:18 nvram
4026532067 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Sep 6 18:18 rtc
4026532067 -r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Sep 6 18:18 rtc
4026532056 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root
Hi Eric,
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 20:30:14 +0200
Eric Valette [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rob Hussey wrote:
On 9/15/07, Eric Valette [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Eric Valette wrote:
Thanks for your help: it does indeed fix the problem.
Nice it works for you too !
Now I have two side questions:
Le Thu, 13 Sep 2007 16:41:41 +0400,
Oleg Nesterov [EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
(sorry, have no time to read the patch carefully, just a couple of
minor random unless I misread this patch nits)
Thank you Oleg, hopefully I addressed all your comments in v4.
+ do
+ if
Paul Rolland (ポール・ロラン) wrote:
Hi Eric,
Now I have two side questions:
- the code is no more symetric subsys_initcall - module_exit.
Do not know if it is normal but I love symmetry in code :-). Did not test
it still works as a module...
Symmetry is not broken, as we have :
#define
[This is a fix on top of
hibernation-enter-platform-hibernation-state-in-a-consistent-way-rev-4.patch]
---
From: Rafael J. Wysocki [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If hibernation_platform_enter() fails, consoles should be resumed so that
diagnostic information related to the failure is available to the user.
Hello,
is it expected that application sending 8900bytes datagram through 10Gbps NIC
utilizes CPU to 100% and similarly the receiver also utilizes CPU to 100%.
Is it something wrong or this is quite OK?
(The box is dual single core Opteron 2.4GHz with Myricom 10GE NIC.)
--
Lukáš Hejtmánek
-
To
Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz wrote:
On Saturday 15 September 2007, Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 11:44:59AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
Stefan Richter wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 04:11:45PM +0200, Stefan Richter wrote:
Perfect is in the eye of the beholder.
John Stoffel wrote:
What happens when you just have ONE disk connected to the motherboard
controller, and the rest connected to PCI controllers? Does it crap
out then? You've just such a nice repeatable problem across
motherboards that it's a shame to waste this debugging time.
Sorry, I
The Maple bus is SEGA's proprietary serial bus for peripherals
(keyboard, mouse, controller etc). The bus is capable of some
(limited) hotplugging and operates at up to 2 M/bits.
Drivers of one sort or another existed/exist for 2.4 and a rudimentary
port, which didn't support the 2.6 device
This adds support for the maple bus (SEGA's proprietary serial bus on
the Dreamcast) to the kernel.
Signed-off by: Adrian McMenamin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
diff --git a/arch/sh/Kconfig b/arch/sh/Kconfig
index 54878f0..077438f 100644
--- a/arch/sh/Kconfig
+++ b/arch/sh/Kconfig
@@ -702,6 +702,17 @@
This patch adds support for the keyboard on the SEGA Dreamcast
Signed-off by Adrian McMenamin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Acked-by: Arjan van de Ven [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Acked-by: Dmitry Torokhov [EMAIL PROTECTED]
diff --git a/drivers/input/keyboard/Kconfig b/drivers/input/keyboard/Kconfig
index
This patch handles instability on the Dreamcast G2 bus while PIO or
DMA is underway on the System - AICA channel.
Without the suspension of interrupts when PIO or DMA is underway the
G2 bus is prone to timeouts leading to seemingly random crashes. This
is particularly visible in cases such as
Apologies - these are the patches to add header files to the series
beginning here: http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/9/15/181
Add maplebus headers
Signed off by Adrian McMenamin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
diff --git a/include/linux/input.h b/include/linux/input.h
diff --git a/include/linux/maple.h
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Randy Dunlap wrote:
Had another on recent last night (probably not helpful):
At least the original crashme would write its random number seeds to a
logfile each time (and I made it fsync it in some versions), which meant
that once a crash happened, you could re-produce
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Christian Volkmann wrote:
Please see below for the logs with timestamp and usb-debug.
Alan Stern wrote:
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Christian Volkmann wrote:
Does the machine otherwise work OK?
Yes, the USB is working fine for the easy things I do with it.
Hmm, so
Linus Torvalds wrote:
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Randy Dunlap wrote:
Had another on recent last night (probably not helpful):
At least the original crashme would write its random number seeds to a
logfile each time (and I made it fsync it in some versions), which meant
that once a crash
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 10:40:26AM +0400, Serge Belyshev wrote:
Andi Kleen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
This can be fixed better by using gcc's __builtin_prefetch().
I changed it to just use that. Thanks.
It seems like gcc 3.1/3.2 already supported it and that's the earliest gcc
still
Andrea Arcangeli [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 02:14:42PM +0200, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
I keep coming back to the fact that movable objects should be moved
out of the way for unmovable ones. Anything else just allows
That's incidentally exactly what the slab does, no
CC drivers/char/tty_ioctl.o
drivers/char/tty_ioctl.c: In function 'n_tty_ioctl':
drivers/char/tty_ioctl.c:799: error: implicit declaration of function
'kernel_termios_to_user_termios_1'
drivers/char/tty_ioctl.c:806: error: implicit declaration of function
'user_termios_to_kernel_termios_1'
Thanks to Matt Domsch and Rezwanul Kabir at Dell, we know how to disable the
MMC controller on the multi-function Ricoh R5C832. The MMC controller needs
to be disabled or it will steal MMC cards from the SD controller where they
would otherwise be supported by the Linux SDHCI driver.
Yinghai Lu wrote:
On 9/14/07, Robert Hancock [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It's not impossible at all. In fact I'm quite sure (Jesse can confirm)
that in the case of the board he was using, it was an add-in graphics
card where he saw this problem.
The fact is that in the case of MMCONFIG overlap
On Saturday 15 September 2007, Jeff Garzik wrote:
Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz wrote:
On Saturday 15 September 2007, Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 11:44:59AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
Stefan Richter wrote:
Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 04:11:45PM +0200, Stefan
Andi Kleen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
...
to make kernel work with GCC 4.3 and above. (Also note that gcc 4.2 already
smart enough to break that code, but kernel is just lucky currently).
How would it break the code exactly? It more sounded like an optimization
to me. Would it generate
On 9/15/07, ポール・ロラン Paul Rolland [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Eric,
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 20:30:14 +0200
Eric Valette [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rob Hussey wrote:
On 9/15/07, Eric Valette [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Eric Valette wrote:
Thanks for your help: it does indeed fix the
Introduced a consistent style in vmlinux.lds and
it now matches the soon-to-be common style for
all arch's vmlinux.lds files.
In addition:
- Replaced hardcoded constant with PAGE_SIZE
- Fix page.h so PAGE_SIZE can be used from assembler and in lds files
- Move a few labels inside brackets so
I have tagged and tarballed Sparse 0.4, now available from
http://kernel.org/pub/software/devel/sparse/dist/sparse-0.4.tar.gz,
with sha1sum `a77a10174c8cdb5314eb5000c1e4f24458848b91`.
Highlights and visible changes in this release:
* The Sparse validation files have become an automated test
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 15:28:23 +0200 Thomas Gleixner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, 2007-09-15 at 03:18 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/tglx/linux-2.6-hrt.git;a=shortlog;h=for-2.6.23
That patch fixes the resume-from-ram and suspend-to-ram
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Linus Torvalds wrote:
Here's a really *stupid* patch (and untested too, btw) to see if it gets
easier to debug when you don't oops, just print the register state
instead.
Side note - while thinking about this, I'm wondering whether maybe that
stupid patch might not
Today I got a CD. MacOS does not mount it and Linux does not
mount it without an explicit filesystemtype option.
That is,
# mount /dev/hdc /dir -t iso9660
works fine, but
# mount /dev/hdc /dir
mount: you didn't specify a filesystem type for /dev/hdc
I will
git-describe says this is v2.6.23-rc6-168-g53a3f30
I'm getting:
drivers/char/tty_ioctl.c: In function 'n_tty_ioctl':
drivers/char/tty_ioctl.c:799: error: implicit declaration of function
'kernel_termios_to_user_termios_1'
This is a macro at the very end of include/asm-foo/termios.h for
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 10:14:44PM +0200, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
How does that help? Will slabs move objects around to combine two
1. It helps providing a few guarantees: when you run /usr/bin/free
you won't get a random number, but a strong _guarantee_. That ram will
be available no matter
From: Horst H. von Brand [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sat, 15 Sep 2007 17:37:55 -0400
git-describe says this is v2.6.23-rc6-168-g53a3f30
I'm getting:
drivers/char/tty_ioctl.c: In function 'n_tty_ioctl':
drivers/char/tty_ioctl.c:799: error: implicit declaration of function
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Linus Torvalds wrote:
So regardless of whether we want to trust user_mode(regs) more than
error_code PF_USER, it would definitely be very interesting if you can
give a good this is where it started happening.
Also, can you point to good crashme sources, and give the
Hello,
is it expected that application sending 8900bytes datagram
through 10Gbps NIC
utilizes CPU to 100% and similarly the receiver also utilizes CPU to 100%.
Is it something wrong or this is quite OK?
(The box is dual single core Opteron 2.4GHz with Myricom 10GE NIC.)
It's extremely
Linus Torvalds wrote:
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Linus Torvalds wrote:
So regardless of whether we want to trust user_mode(regs) more than
error_code PF_USER, it would definitely be very interesting if you can
give a good this is where it started happening.
Also, can you point to good crashme
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Randy Dunlap wrote:
Command: ./crashme +2000 666 1000 1:00:00 1
Ok, that's close to what I was testing (one of the examples from the
crashme docs).
The original gjc crashme doesn't even do a mprotect(PROT_EXEC) by default
(nor does it even compile on a modern unix),
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 20:04:10 +0200 Matej Laitl wrote:
menuconfig currently represents options implied by another option ('select'
directive in Kconfig) by prefixing them with '---'. Unfortunately the same
notation is used for comments.
This patch changes notation of selected-by-another
From 157dfddae50708a716c2a42a314eccb9621d8793 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Alex Landau [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sun, 5 Aug 2007 15:58:03 +0800
Subject: [PATCH] Blackfin Ethernet MAC driver: add function to change the MAC
address
Alex Landau writes in the forums:
Previously, changing the MAC
Signed-off-by: Bryan Wu [EMAIL PROTECTED]
---
drivers/net/bfin_mac.c | 23 +++
1 files changed, 19 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/net/bfin_mac.c b/drivers/net/bfin_mac.c
index 8d61ca9..3015385 100644
--- a/drivers/net/bfin_mac.c
+++
- add MDIO functions and register mdio bus
- add phy abstraction layer (PAL) functions and use PAL API
- test on STAMP537 board
Signed-off-by: Bryan Wu [EMAIL PROTECTED]
---
drivers/net/bfin_mac.c | 311 +---
drivers/net/bfin_mac.h | 53
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 03:47:19PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007, Linus Torvalds wrote:
So regardless of whether we want to trust user_mode(regs) more than
error_code PF_USER, it would definitely be very interesting if you can
give a good this is where it
On Thu, Sep 13, 2007 at 10:20:56AM -0700, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
Yinghai Lu wrote:
BIOS guys also said that fam 10h need mmconfig via eax accessing, may
need OS do sth, so it is safe to stay with MCFG entry for SB like
mcp55...
but latest kernel already have that workaround to make
On Sat, Sep 15, 2007 at 04:29:39PM -0700, David Schwartz wrote:
Hello,
is it expected that application sending 8900bytes datagram
through 10Gbps NIC
utilizes CPU to 100% and similarly the receiver also utilizes CPU to 100%.
Is it something wrong or this is quite OK?
(The box is
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