In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Steve VanDevender <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Ton Hospel writes:
> > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> > > I am afraid I have missed most earlier messages in this thread.
> > > However, let me remark that the problem of as
Ton Hospel writes:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> > I am afraid I have missed most earlier messages in this thread.
> > However, let me remark that the problem of assigning a
> > file descriptor is the one that is usually described by
> > "priority queue
#include
I got a "Tyan Thunder HE-SL"-Mainboard today, which has a "Severworks
ServerSet III HE"-Chipset. (2xPIII 933, 2x512MB PC133 ECC-Registered
SDRAM)
And i have one problem and one question.
First the question. I have an uptime of phenomenal 29minutes and "cat
/proc/interrupts" tells me
> "NB" == Neil Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
NB> On January 16, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
NB> Or in short "this cannot happen" :-)
NB> Is there any chance of a memory error?
NB> Has this happened more than once?
I have to confess that I was not running with the stock
2.4.1-pre7 driver
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
> I am afraid I have missed most earlier messages in this thread.
> However, let me remark that the problem of assigning a
> file descriptor is the one that is usually described by
> "priority queue". The version of Peter van Emd
Trond Myklebust wrote:
> I'll bet it's the lseek that's screwing things up again. IIRC IRIX has
> an export option to cause it to generate 32-bit readdir cookies. Could
> you please try enabling it?
Sorry, I forgot to mention this: This option was already enabled.
Mogens
--
Mogens Kjaer, Carls
www & ftp.namesys.com seem to be down (or at least I get "no route to host) so I
can't go look there.
I get the impression that with previous patches utilities like "mkreiserfs" were
in
linux/fs/reiserfs/utils, but now that ReiserFS is in the main kernel tree the
utilities aren't there.
I've sea
Hello Linux VM God :)
I think I started seeing this about 2.4.0-ac6...when I shutdown my
machine, I see tons of 'VM: Undead swap entry ###', where ### is
some memory address. I can also reproduce this 100% by (for
example) going into X, loading a lot of crap so that my 112mb ram is full
On Tue, 9 Jan 2001, David Ford wrote:
> Rik van Riel wrote:
> > On Sun, 7 Jan 2001, John O'Donnell wrote:
> >
> > > Only on my company's e-mail server. My company typically gets "zero"
> > > emails from outside the US. If I get a piece of spam (sorry they are
> > > typically from outside the US)
On Tue, 9 Jan 2001, Andrea Arcangeli wrote:
> BTW, I noticed what is left in blk-13B seems to be my work
Yeah yeah, we'll buy you beer at the next conference... ;)
Rik
--
Virtual memory is like a game you can't win;
However, without VM there's truly nothing to lose...
http://ww
Hi,
> Where do you do this? And how do you handle the case of aliases with kseg,
> the giant kernel mapping.
Aliases between user and kernel mappings of a page are handled by
flush_page_to_ram the old interface) or {copy,clear}_user_page,
flush_dcache_page and update_mmu_cache (new interface)
> Did you find any software that breaks due to the additional restriction
> on the virtual addresses of mappings?
Not yet. A good test of shared mmap coherency is a recent samba
(2.2 and above) that uses tdb. Tdb relies on shared mmaps heavily and
uncovered the bug when running on a dual ultras
On Tue, 9 Jan 2001, Boszormenyi Zoltan wrote:
> PF_RSSTRIM is not declared anywhere either in the linux-2.4.0
> sources or in the 2.4.0-vmbigpatch.
Humm, I seem to have forgotten a `cp $i $i.orig` ;)
Should be fixed in a newer patch.
regards,
--
Rik
--
Virtual memory is like a game you can'
On 9 Jan 2001, Zlatko Calusic wrote:
> Rik van Riel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Now if 2.4 has worse _performance_ than 2.2 due to one
> > reason or another, that I'd like to hear about ;)
> >
>
> Oh, well, it seems that I was wrong. :)
>
> First test: hogmem 180 5 = allocate 180MB and dirty
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Ingo Molnar wrote:
> But even user-space code could use 'native files', via the following, safe
> mechanizm:
so here's an alternative to ingo's proposal which i think solves some of
the other objections raised. it's something i've proposed in the past
under the name "extend
On January 16, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at virtual address 0003
> c01ccf91
> *pde =
> Oops: 0002
> CPU:0
> EIP:0010:[]
> Using defaults from ksymoops -t elf32-i386 -a i386
> EFLAGS: 00010086
> eax: ebx: c1490400
On Wed, 17 Jan 2001, Stefan Ring wrote:
>Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 00:35:39 +0100 (MET)
>From: Stefan Ring <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
>Subject: 2.0.37 crashes immediately
>
>2.0.37+ kernels crash even before I can see the "Uncompressing lin
My apologies I see this was already encountered and a patch submitted.
2.4.0-pre8 builds OK for me.
Mike
--
Michael D. Crawford
GoingWare Inc. - Expert Software Development and Consulting
http://www.goingware.com/
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Tilting at Windmills for a Better Tomorrow.
-
To unsubscrib
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Rodney M. Jokerst wrote:
> Yes, I have the same motherboard / chipset. Thanks for your help!
>
> Rodney M. Jokerst
>
> On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Nathan Thompson wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 03:11:01PM -0600, Rodney M. Jokerst wrote:
> > > This action causes my screen t
Message from syslogd@zeus at Tue Jan 16 00:17:29 2001 ...
zeus kernel: 00 to4 0 0 0 0011001.
Message from syslogd@zeus at Tue Jan 16 00:26:38 2001 ...
zeus kernel: 0:0: 0:0:0: 0: 0:0: 0:0: 0:0: 0:0:0: 0:0:0: 0:0: 0:0: 0
ind.
Message from syslogd@zeus at Tue
I get the following errors trying to build 2.4.0-ac9 just now.
I'll send you my .config upon request, or post it on my website
gcc -D__KERNEL__ -I/home/mike/Kernel/linux/include -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -O2
-fomit-frame-pointer -fno-strict-aliasing -pipe -march=i686-c -o shmem.o
shmem.c
sh
Fair enough, but something in bugs.h changed from 2.4.0 to 2.4.1-preX and
broke my GCC, I shall recompile GCC with no PGCC patches however if this
happens still then there's a problem somewhere.
I dont know what FXSR is but there was no problem in 2.4.0 with this.
diff include/asm-i386/bugs.h
> "Shawn" == Shawn Starr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Shawn> Which compiler will compile the 2.4.1-preX series? Since 2.4.0,
Shawn> my GCC 2.95.2 patched with PGCC 2.95.3 (which creates
Shawn> pgcc-2.95.2) refuses to compile any versions after this. Which
Shawn> is the next stable and binary c
[Michael Meissner]
> Ummm, I just reread the 2.4 Changes file once again just to be sure,
> and it did not cover this issue. So how the *$@% are people supposed
> to "read some docs" to know about this, if the docs don't mention the
> information. I know people have been complaining about this
[Peter Samuelson]
> > What if you copy both 'filename' and 'filename:ext' onto the same
> > fs? Do they get combined into one file?
[Michael Rothwell]
> ON Ext2, you get two files. On NTFS, you get one file, and a stream
> on that file.
Yeah. I think that's broken. It gets worse when you s
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Urban Widmark wrote:
>Date: Tue, 16 Jan 2001 23:59:33 +0100 (CET)
>From: Urban Widmark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: richard.morgan9 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Cc: Mike A. Harris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Linux Kernel mailing list <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=
> What if you copy both 'filename' and 'filename:ext' onto the same fs?
> Do they get combined into one file?
ON Ext2, you get two files. On NTFS, you get one file, and a stream on that
file.
> Any semantics by which 'filename:stream' and 'filename' refer to the
> same file would be b0rken. If
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> On Mon, 15 Jan 2001, Randy.Dunlap wrote:
> >
> > A Linux-USB user (pem@ = Petr) reported that USB (OHCI) wasn't
> > working on his Intel STL2 system. This system uses a ServerWorks
> > chipset, hence the OHCI part.
>
> Does it work with "n
Which compiler will compile the 2.4.1-preX series? Since 2.4.0, my
GCC 2.95.2 patched with PGCC 2.95.3 (which creates pgcc-2.95.2) refuses
to compile any versions after this. Which is the next stable and binary
compatable compiler?
Anyone have any suggestions? I dont wish to use the development
G
What is the format of /proc/PID/stat for 2.2.x?
In particular I'm interested in knowing start time of a process.
Thanks
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the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Aaron Lehmann wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 08:55:58PM +0100, Andr? Dahlqvist wrote:
> > I was very surprised when I checked my local kernel.org mirror this
> > morning, and noticed that the latest 2.4.1 pre-patch had grown to
> > ~180 kb in size. I was even more surprise
On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 08:55:58PM +0100, Andr? Dahlqvist wrote:
> I was very surprised when I checked my local kernel.org mirror this
> morning, and noticed that the latest 2.4.1 pre-patch had grown to
> ~180 kb in size. I was even more surprised when I realized that the
> inclusion of reiserfs w
On Wed, Jan 17, 2001 at 12:32:05AM +0100, J . A . Magallon wrote:
> If that is your idea of the average user... You're a system administrator,
> you can have tons of scsi cards in your system if you want.
>
> You want to make things SOOO easy for a 'dummy' user, and that user will never
> use t
> D'oh, looks like if power management is disabled, pmdev is NULL (I get
> that message when I load the module), but we try to derefence it anyways.
> The fix is obvious:
duh, yeah, I'll send out a proper patch that handles the pm_register
failure too.
thanks.
--
zach
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To unsubscribe from th
[Michael Rothwell]
> It seems that if you move a file with a colon -- "file:colon" -- in
> the name from Ext2 to "StreamFS," you would end up with a file named
> "file" with a stream named "colon". When copying back, you would get
> "file:colon" back.
What if you copy both 'filename' and 'filena
Can someone tell me what happened to the merge_segments() function in
mm/mmap.c? I was using it in my Wine accelerator module, but it's no longer
present.
Cheers,
David
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Please
On Wed, 17 Jan 2001, Stefan Ring wrote:
> 2.0.37+ kernels crash even before I can see the "Uncompressing linux..."
> message. I use the same configuration for 2.0.36 and 2.0.37 (basically
> it's the default configuration without anything interesting changed), and
> the latter just won't work. It
On Wed, 17 Jan 2001, J . A . Magallon wrote:
> You want to make things SOOO easy for a 'dummy' user, and that user will never
> use them. The average user you are targetting says: 'daddy, buy me a PC to
> run Quake and do my school jobs' or 'please, dear vendor, I want a PC to
> do my housekeepi
Some time ago a intel i810 framebuffer driver was written. It only worked
for 2.2.X. With 2.4.X a spinlock is used in the upper layers of the
console system. Sooner or later we are going to run into the situtation
where we will have graphics hardware which has no vga core and wih be
purely DMA/ir
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Ingo Molnar wrote:
>
> On Mon, 15 Jan 2001, dean gaudet wrote:
>
> > > just for kicks i've implemented sendpath() support.
> > >
> > > _syscall4 (int, sendpath, int, out_fd, char *, path, off_t *, off, size_t, size)
> >
> > hey so how do you implement transmit timeouts with s
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Michael Meissner wrote:
> > you're forgetting that in /etc/lilo.conf there is a directive called
> > 'append='... all the user has to do is merely add
> > 'append="scsihosts=whatever,whatever"' into their config file and rerun
> > lilo. problem solved
>
> That's assuming you
Thanks to all who pointed out the pcnet32.c driver! (And quickly, too.
Perhaps one day I'll learn to do a "grep -i 79C973 drivers/net/*"
first. *sigh*)
Now to see if I can get it to work on an ARM-based system...gotta
love lack of cache-coherance. ;) (dma_cache_inv, etc.) I'm open to
su
2.0.37+ kernels crash even before I can see the "Uncompressing linux..."
message. I use the same configuration for 2.0.36 and 2.0.37 (basically
it's the default configuration without anything interesting changed), and
the latter just won't work. It also doesn't matter if I use zImage or
bzImage. K
On 2001.01.16 Michael Meissner wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 12:01:12PM -0800, Dr. Kelsey Hudson wrote:
> > On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Venkatesh Ramamurthy wrote:
..
> > besides, how many 'end-users' do you know of that will have multiple scsi
> > adapters in one system? how many end-users -period-
> : >Agreed -- the hard-coded Nagle algorithm makes no sense these days.
> :
> : The fact I dislike about the HP-UX implementation is that it is so
> : _obviously_ stupid.
> :
> : And I have to say that I absolutely despise the BSD people. They did
> : sendfile() after both Linux and HP-UX had do
On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 12:10:31PM -0800, Theodore Y. Ts'o wrote:
> Actually, looking at the fast path of down_trylock compared to huge mess
> of code that's currently there, I actually suspect that using
> down_trylock() would actually be faster, since in the fast path case
> there would only two
Mattew Wilcox writes:
> several new operations have been added to super_operations, presumably
> as part of the reiserfs merge. write_super_lockfs and unlockfs are
> never called. can we remove them?
These operations were added to co-ordinate filesystem backups/snapshots
for journalling filesys
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, richard.morgan9 wrote:
> I have the same problem as Urban with a recent DLink 530tx
> (rhine2). Pulling the power cable from my atx psu (while the
> computer was "off") fixed the card, until my next reboot from
> win98.
I'm not the one with a problem but maybe it has someth
> You seem to be full of things that "we" can implement. So I just have
> to wonder: do you by any chance have some prototype code somewhere to
> figure out, reliably, which SCSI cards have BIOS extensions enabled,
> and the order they hook in?
>
[Venkat] It would be a very bad idea for
[Venkatesh Ramamurthy]
> [Venkatesh Ramamurthy] I think there should be a better way to handle
> this , compiling is one of the options, but an end-user should not
> think of compiling. The end user needs to put an another card and
> connect drives and get his system up and running. He should not
> Quick question: has anyone used the lance.c driver for a 100BaseT
> network PCI device? If so, what successes/failures did you run into?
Never used lance.c for 100BaseT (can it do that?). I've used the pcnet32.c
driver, however.
> (I'm working with an Am79C973 chip.)
In my case, Am79C971. W
in part it is due to the major/minor split which only gives 4 bits for the
partition number.
if you use devfs or LVM this limit is removed.
David Lang
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Date: Tue, 16 Jan 2001 11:10:41 -0800
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subjec
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Eli Carter wrote:
> Quick question: has anyone used the lance.c driver for a 100BaseT
> network PCI device? If so, what successes/failures did you run into?
>
> (I'm working with an Am79C973 chip.)
Sure. It's the pcnet32.c file (not lance from which it came). It works
fine
} Quick question: has anyone used the lance.c driver for a 100BaseT
} network PCI device? If so, what successes/failures did you run into?
}
} (I'm working with an Am79C973 chip.)
I'd recommend the pcnet32.c driver for that chip, instead. I was running
it for a little over a year at 100Mbps w
Hi again,
It looks like some progress is being made, *wonderful*, as to some earlier
questions...
> I'll have a look tonight or so. It works for you on non-bigmem?
Yes. Absolutely no problems on non-bigmem.
> smb_rename suggests mv, but the process is ls ... er? What commands where
>
>> On Sun, 14 Jan 2001, Urban Widmark wrote:
>>
>> >> eth1: Transmit timed out, status , PHY status ,
>> >> resetting...
>> >[snip]
>> >> Keeps going nonstop until I ifdown eth1.
>> >>
>> >> Card worked fine 2 days ago...
>> >
>> >So what did you change?
>>
>> Nothing.
>>
>> >Has the machi
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Petr Vandrovec wrote:
> If there is new dentry, which is at fpos postion, and it is child of
> readdir-ed directory, we should return it anyway, no? There must not be
> two ncpfs dentries with same d_parent and d_fsdata if d_fsdata != 0,
> as each dentry can be in only one di
On 16 Jan 01 at 17:16, Chad Miller wrote:
(added [EMAIL PROTECTED], as he may be interested in one range behind bridge
overlapping both forwarding ranges...)
> #00:01.0 PCI bridge: VIA Technologies, Inc. VT8371 [KX133 AGP] (prog-if \
> #00 [Normal decode])
> # Flags: bus master, 66Mhz, mediu
Quick question: has anyone used the lance.c driver for a 100BaseT
network PCI device? If so, what successes/failures did you run into?
(I'm working with an Am79C973 chip.)
TIA,
Eli
. "To the systems programmer, users and applications
Eli Carter | serve only to pr
"Albert D. Cahalan" wrote:
>
> Pierre Rousselet writes:
>
> > 1) top (procps-2.0.7) gives me the messages :
> > 'bad data in /proc/uptime'
> > 'bad data in /proc/loadavg'
> > cat /proc/uptime
> > 1435.30 904.74
> > cat /proc/loadavg
> > 0.01 0.21 0.29 1/17 19444
> > What is wrong ?
>
> Which 2.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> Like the ext2 labels? (man e2label)
> [Venkatesh Ramamurthy] This re-ordering of the scsi drives should be
> done by SCSI ML , so is incorporating ext2 fs data structure knowledge
> on the SCSI ML a good idea?.
You'd better not care what the drives ae called -
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> [Venkatesh Ramamurthy] If we can truly go for label based mouting
> and lilo'ing this would solve the problem. Anybody doing this?
Red hat Linux 7.0.
--
Cheers
John Summerfield
http://www2.ami.com.au/ for OS/2 & linux information.
Configuration, networking, c
On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 10:40:51PM +, Petr Vandrovec wrote:
> [X] Output under 2.2.x is correct: '/25' for 32MB range. I have no idea
> why X complains about region D600-D7FF - can you look at
> '... regions behind bridge' when you boot 2.2.x (they are on 0:01.0
> device, AFAIK) ? Unde
several new operations have been added to super_operations, presumably
as part of the reiserfs merge. write_super_lockfs and unlockfs are
never called. can we remove them?
--
Revolutions do not require corporate support.
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Yes, I have the same motherboard / chipset. Thanks for your help!
Rodney M. Jokerst
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Nathan Thompson wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 03:11:01PM -0600, Rodney M. Jokerst wrote:
> > This action causes my screen to go blank in X and remain blank
> > unless I move the mouse or
John Fremlin wrote:
>
> "Albert D. Cahalan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > > 1) top (procps-2.0.7) gives me the messages :
> > > 'bad data in /proc/uptime'
> > > 'bad data in /proc/loadavg'
> > > cat /proc/uptime
> > > 1435.30 904.74
> > > cat /proc/loadavg
> > > 0.01 0.21 0.29 1/17 19444
>
On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 03:11:01PM -0600, Rodney M. Jokerst wrote:
> This action causes my screen to go blank in X and remain blank
> unless I move the mouse or type on the keyboard. The second I stop doing
> one of these activities, it goes blank again. While it is blank, it seems
> to be flash
On 16 Jan 01 at 15:55, Chad Miller wrote:
> (CC'd to lkml)
>
> On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 07:31:33PM +, Petr Vandrovec wrote:
> > There is something wrong with your hardware. First region for G400 should
> > be 32MB, not 16MB (even if you have 16MB G400, which I doubt).
>
> Ooo! Here's an edit
On 16 Jan 01 at 21:17, Urban Widmark wrote:
> The smbfs dircache needs to find/kmap all of its cache pages since the
> entries in it are variable length and the way it is called. It would be
> nice to change that.
>
> I haven't looked at all your detailed comments yet. They may not matter if
> th
On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 10:01:25PM +0100, Andi Kleen wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 03:37:57PM -0500, Michael Meissner wrote:
> > don't assume that the way your system gets booted is the way everybody's does,
> > particularly those on platforms other than the x86.
> >
> > I must say, as a 5 yea
Kelsey Hudson writes:
> however, this brings up an interesting question: what happens if two disks
> (presumably from two different machines) have the same disk label? what
> happens then? for instance, i have several linux machines both at my
> workplace and my home. if for some reason one of the
You write:
> If we install a SCSI hard disk drive, with ID3, an nothing on ID1 or ID2,
> will be sda. If we install a new disk on ID1, the drive that before was
> sda now change the name to sdb.
>
> Why the name of hard disk drive of SCSI Controller are not fixed?
> ID0=sda
> ID1=sdb
> ID2=sdc
T
David Woodhouse writes:
> There are patches available for the 2.2 kernel which provide the facility
> to mount by UUID or volume label. It seems that nobody is actively
> maintaining those at the moment. If you want to update those to the current
> 2.2 and 2.4 kernels, well volunteered.
I'm qu
With all of the late 2.3 kernels, 2.4 test kernels, and the latest
official 2.4.0 kernel that I have tried, I get disturbing behavior during
and after heavy disk access, such as uploading a 500MB file from the local
network. This action causes my screen to go blank in X and remain blank
unless I
** Reply to message from "Christopher Friesen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on
Tue, 16 Jan 2001 14:54:23 -0500
> > The Mac never enumerates its devices like the PC does (no C: D: etc, no
> > /dev/sda, /dev/sdb, or anything like that). It also remembers the boot device
> > in its EEPROM (the Startup Disk
Hi again.
The following patch should correct the request_irq mistake. (The zero return
on failure seems to be required by scsi/scsi.c and is what everybody else
does.)
Other comments? :)
--- linux-ac9/drivers/scsi/atari_scsi.c.org Sun Jan 14 19:41:56 2001
+++ linux-ac9/drivers/scsi/atari_s
On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 03:37:57PM -0500, Michael Meissner wrote:
> don't assume that the way your system gets booted is the way everybody's does,
> particularly those on platforms other than the x86.
>
> I must say, as a 5 year Linux user (and 23 year UNIX user/administrator), I do
> get tired o
(CC'd to lkml)
On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 07:31:33PM +, Petr Vandrovec wrote:
> There is something wrong with your hardware. First region for G400 should
> be 32MB, not 16MB (even if you have 16MB G400, which I doubt).
Ooo! Here's an edited diff of 'lspci -v' under 2.2.18 versus 2.4.0:
36,41c
Hi Paul,
> 2) Other block I/O output (eg dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdi bs=4M) also
> run very slowly
What do you notice when running "top" and doing the above?
Does the "buff" value grow high (+700MB), with high CPU usage?
If so, I think this might be down to nr_free_buffer_pages().
This fu
> Of course that would be better. The only complaint I have with such a
> system is that of backwards compatibility...as long as the legacy device
> names are still supported i would have no problem with it at all.
>
> however, this brings up an interesting question: what happens if two disks
>
On Tue, Jan 16, 2001 at 12:01:12PM -0800, Dr. Kelsey Hudson wrote:
> On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Venkatesh Ramamurthy wrote:
>
> > > This is due to the fixed ordering of the scsi drivers. You can change the
> > > order of the scsi hosts with the "scsihosts" kernel parameter. See
> > > linux/drivers/scsi
Hi,
on 2.2.17 & 2.2.18 we have this kernel panic:
it begins with:
no vm86_info: BAD
ksymoops 2.3.7 on i686 2.2.18RAID. Options used
-V (default)
-k /proc/ksyms (default)
-l /proc/modules (default)
-o /lib/modules/2.2.18RAID/ (default)
-m /usr/src/linux/System.map (defaul
Hi!
> >Is there a safe way to add debug information like simple string prints in
> >arch/i386/boot/compressed/head.s and in arch/i386/kernel/head.S
> >so that I can see at the console where the boot process hangs?
>
> Time for another version of my VIDEO_CHAR patch.]
What abourt early_printk? W
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Venkatesh Ramamurthy wrote:
> [Venkatesh Ramamurthy] Dont you think that mounting and booting
> based on disk label names is better, then relying on device nodes which can
> change when a new card is added?. The existing patch for 2.2.xx is quite
> small and it does no
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
=?us-ascii?Q?Andr=E9?= Dahlqvist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Don't get me wrong, I am personally really excited that reiserfs was
>included. I just thought that you basically wanted 2.4.1 to be "boring".
Reiserfs inclusion in 2.4.1 was basically the plan for the
I previously reported a problem trying to disable hardware flow-control
of serial ports in the Linux kernel 2.4.0. This problem did not
exist in Linux version 2.2.18.
This problem occurs when the initial console has been redirected out
to a serial port as is the case with one of our embedded sys
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Petr Vandrovec wrote:
> smb_get_dircache looks suspicious to me, as it can try to map unlimited
> number of pages with kmap. And kmaps are not unlimited resource...
> You have 512 kmaps, but one SMBFS cache page can contain about 504
> pages... So two smbfs cached directories
> you're forgetting that in /etc/lilo.conf there is a directive called
> 'append='... all the user has to do is merely add
> 'append="scsihosts=whatever,whatever"' into their config file and rerun
> lilo. problem solved
>
> besides, how many 'end-users' do you know of that will have multiple scsi
Using the 2.4.0 kernel and a kernel compiled with support for 4GB of
memory, mounting of the initial ramdisk fails when 1GB or more
of memory is installe dint he system.
There is no OOPS, it simply says, unable to mount root vfs, I ma
thinking the INITRD system cant handle the offset's involved in
Date: Tue, 16 Jan 2001 20:33:34 +0100
From: Andrea Arcangeli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Of course, this is utterly unsafe on an SMP machines, since access to
> the "block" variable isn't protected at all. So the first question is
Wrong, it's obviously protected by the inode_lock. And
Hello,
When I discovered the nice "smp affinity" feature, I gave it a try on our
old SMP testbed (quad P100 with 2 Adaptec AIC-7870 SCSI adapters). And by
chance, I discovered that the following command causes an oops (after a
couple of seconds), even without any kind of smp affinity :
[root@pi
Hi,
When we install a IDE hard disk drive, and configure as Master and connect
on Primary IDE Interface, this disk WILL BE ALWAYS hda. We can install
other hard disks (e.g. hdb, hdc...) but the disk that it is connected as
hda, will not change.
If we install a SCSI hard disk drive, with ID3, an
Timur Tabi wrote:
> And this is a problem that has plagues all PC operating systems, but has never
> been a problem on the Macintosh. Why? Because the Mac was designed to handle
> this problem, but the PC never was.
>
> The Mac never enumerates its devices like the PC does (no C: D: etc, no
>
Kai Germaschewski wrote:
> On Mon, 15 Jan 2001, Ronny Buchmann wrote:
>
>
>> i have the following problem with kernel 2.4.0 (also with -ac6):
>>
>> kernel BUG at slab.c:1095!
>> invalid operand:
>> CPU: 0
>
>
> I could reproduce the problem, the appended patch fixes it here. Linus,
>
On Tue, 16 Jan 2001, Venkatesh Ramamurthy wrote:
> > This is due to the fixed ordering of the scsi drivers. You can change the
> > order of the scsi hosts with the "scsihosts" kernel parameter. See
> > linux/drivers/scsi/scsi.c
> [Venkatesh Ramamurthy] I think it would be a nice idea if we
Hi Linus
I was very surprised when I checked my local kernel.org mirror this
morning, and noticed that the latest 2.4.1 pre-patch had grown to
~180 kb in size. I was even more surprised when I realized that the
inclusion of reiserfs was the reason for this. While I am certainly
happy for the reis
Hi all,
I've a system comprosed of two PIII machines, equipped with Znyx 346Q 4port
ethernet cards (tulip driver) which I'd like to connect together in a bonded
configuration. For various reasons, we require 2.4.0 kernels on our
machines - currently we are using 2.4.0-test9.
The setup is simp
This patch for the RoadRunner HIPPI driver includes:
* Fix crash on null dereference in rr_interrupt due to firmware bug
* Fix crash on null dereference in rr_interrupt with better link ON/OFF
handling
* Fix crash due to NIC continuing to DMA after HALT (requires firmware
>= 2.0.67)
Plus num
PROBLEM: 2.4.1-pre7 hard freeze
[1.] One line summary of the problem:
Hard freeze
[2.] Full description of the problem/report:
Hard freeze while working on the console.
2.2.18 runs without any problem on this computer.
[3.] Keywords (i.e., modules, networking, kernel):
kernel
[4.] Kernel v
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Does anyone remember the reason why SCSI drives were limited to
> 15 partitions?
Because of the limitations of having 8-bit major/minor device numbers.
--
Brian Gerst
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