On Fri, Mar 09, 2001 at 08:25:43AM +0100, Daniela Engert wrote:
> >They're about the same - only Alan didn't like the PCI speed measurement
> >code that's new in the 4.x series, so I added all the other changes to
> >the 3.20 driver, and 3.21 was born.
>
> I do understand Alan's objections again
Hi
Sorry, these questions do not belog here but i could not find any
better place.
1. Is quicksort on doubly linked list is implemented anywhere? I need it
for sk_buff queues.
2. Is Weighted Round Robin implemented in linux anyehere?
thanks in advence.
Manoj
-
To unsubscribe from this li
Hi,
On Wed, 7 Mar 2001, Jauder Ho wrote:
> I am not sure what you intend this application for. If it is mission
> critical in any way shape or form, I would still recommend using something
> like Veritas (which unfortunately is not ported to Linux yet).
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001 19:51:07 +0100, Vojtech Pavlik wrote:
>They're about the same - only Alan didn't like the PCI speed measurement
>code that's new in the 4.x series, so I added all the other changes to
>the 3.20 driver, and 3.21 was born.
I do understand Alan's objections against this speed mea
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 11:35:42AM -0700, Harold Oga wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 09:17:06AM +0100, Vojtech Pavlik wrote:
> >On Wed, Mar 07, 2001 at 01:23:49PM +, John Heil wrote:
> >Make sure you use the latest 2.4.2-acxx drivers. Most other versions of
> >my drivers have little bugs in
Hi,
Matthias Urlichs:
> On Wed, Mar 07 2001, Stephen C. Tweedie wrote:
> > SCSI certainly lets us do both of these operations independently. IDE
> > has the sync/flush command afaik, but I'm not sure whether the IDE
> > tagged command stuff has the equivalent of SCSI's ordered tag bits.
> > Andr
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, J. Dow wrote:
> From: "Alan Cox" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> > > Please check out this article. Looks like microsoft know open source is the
> > > thing of the future. I would consider that it is a begining step for full
> > > blown GPL
> >
> > Oh sure
> >
> > Maybe 1200 peopl
Thank you,
But how do I get the physical address out of the page
structure? It is non-obvious to me. Is there some majic
macro? We are talking about 'struct page' in mm.h, correct?
Greg.
Quoth David S. Miller:
> In 2.4.x pte_page() gives a pointer to a page struct, not an address
> as in 2.2.x.
In 2.4.x pte_page() gives a pointer to a page struct, not an address
as in 2.2.x.
Later,
David S. Miller
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majord
On Fri, 9 Mar 2001, Alan Cox wrote:
> Date: Fri, 9 Mar 2001 01:14:04 + (GMT)
> From: Alan Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Miles Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: 2.4.2-ac15 -- Build fails in serial.c if CONFIG_SERIAL_CONSOLE is
>enabled.
>
> > In serial.c, in fun
Hi Kernel-dudes,
I have used this snippet of code previously in a 2.2 kernel
to get the physical address of the user virtual address 'addr'.
It worked fine under 2.2, but gives me crap under 2.4. I have
looked at bits of code in the 2.4 memory manager that do
similar stuff, and it looks much the
From: "Alan Cox" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Please check out this article. Looks like microsoft know open source is the
> > thing of the future. I would consider that it is a begining step for full
> > blown GPL
>
> Oh sure
>
> Maybe 1200 people
>
> "Users are prohibited from amending"
>
> S
Andreas Dilger wrote:
> Jeffrey Hundstad writes:
> > After about 27 days of uptime one of our Linux machines that is being
> > used as a Samba, Netatalk, and FTP server; the main data mount went into
> > a read-only state.
> [snip]
> > We are mounting that 656GB disk as an EXT2 mount on /data.
>
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Ken Hill wrote:
> serial.c:5497: `ASYNC_NO_FLOW' undeclared (first use in this function)
> serial.c:5666: `ASYNC_NO_FLOW' undeclared (first use in this function)
On quick inspection, just looks like a renamed declaration.
Does this fix things ?
regards,
Dave.
diff -urN --e
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001 16:17:23 +0200,
Mircea Damian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I had two crashes with 2.4.2 and 2.4.2-pre2 on my local SMTP/POP3/SAMBA/WWW
>server (once under some load and the second one - with 2.4.2-pre2 - while
>it was almost idle).
>Should I use kdb or just remote logging would
serial.c: In function `wait_for_xmitr':
serial.c:5497: `ASYNC_NO_FLOW' undeclared (first use in this function)
serial.c:5497: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once
serial.c:5497: for each function it appears in.)
serial.c: In function `serial_console_setup':
serial.c:5666: `ASYNC_
Venkatesh Ramamurthy wrote:
> send a patch and they would put it in thier next version. Is this not the
> same way Linux Kernel is developed?. Only thing microsoft does not want to
> immediately go full open sourcing and get embarrased at the hands of linux
> people.
Is this linux-kernel or "The
Greetings, and thank you so much for your helpful reply! Was this on
an i386? I'm specifically looking for a way to do his on arm, alpha,
and sparc, and I don't believe they have the cr2 member of struct
sigcontext. Any info you might have, including where you found this
solution, would be appr
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001 21:00:25 -0500 (EST),
Rob Cermak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Included some info on things needed to compile 2.4.2-ac16. Feel free to
>further edit and comment. Patched against -ac16. [linux = ac16; my
>edited version is ac14].
>+o flex 2.5.4
Oops! This diff matches the config name to that which is defined
in Config.in.
regards,
Dave.
diff -urN --exclude-from=/home/davej/.exclude linux/arch/i386/Makefile
linux-dj/arch/i386/Makefile
--- linux/arch/i386/MakefileFri Mar 9 02:26:56 2001
+++ linux-dj/arch/i386/Makefile Fri Mar 9
Included some info on things needed to compile 2.4.2-ac16. Feel free to
further edit and comment. Patched against -ac16. [linux = ac16; my
edited version is ac14].
I have to keep up with the kernel as a small 3c509 ethernet problem has
appeared, just gotta hunt it down. 2.2.17-14 works from
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/alan/2.4/
2.4.2-ac16
o Uniprocessor APIC fixes for misdetect (Mikael Pettersso)
o Small ymf_pci fixes/updates (Pete Zaitcev)
o Fix break support on sx serial (Rogier Wolff)
o
On Thursday March 8, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Thu, 8 Mar 2001 08:55:28 +1100 (EST), Neil Brown wrote:
>
> >On Wednesday March 7, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >> I run a Dual prozessor SMP system on 2.4.2-ac12 for a while
> >> in degraded mode. Today I put in a new disk to switch to
> >> full r
> In serial.c, in function `wait_for_xmitr' at lines 5497 and 5666,
> `ASYNC_NO_FLOW' is undeclared.
Yep. Disable serial console for now. Jeff's serial merge broke serial console
support
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [EMA
In serial.c, in function `wait_for_xmitr' at lines 5497 and 5666,
`ASYNC_NO_FLOW' is undeclared.
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read
I am using VMware to test a linux install
and since I have upgraded to 2.4.2-ac14
the VM locks up right after:
calibrating APIC timer ...
. CPU clock speed is 1152.4771 MHz.
. host bus clock speed is 0. MHz.
cpu: 0, clocks: 0, slice: 0
The last line is where it locks up... Its
kind
> I am using VMware to test a linux install
> and since I have upgraded to 2.4.2-ac14
> the VM locks up right after:
Last time I looked at reports like this it seemed that vmware wasnt
good enough to emulate all the stuff the 2.4 kernel uses. You may find you
can get it to work with the nmi watch
Jeffrey Hundstad writes:
> After about 27 days of uptime one of our Linux machines that is being
> used as a Samba, Netatalk, and FTP server; the main data mount went into
> a read-only state.
[snip]
> We are mounting that 656GB disk as an EXT2 mount on /data.
As an aside, other than this proble
At 21:10 08/03/2001, Rik van Riel wrote:
>+ * There is also a hash table mapping (inode,offset) to the page
>+ * in memory if present. The lists for this hash table use the fields
>+ * page->next_hash and page->pprev_hash.
Shouldn't (inode,offset) be (inode,index), or possibly (mapping,index)?
>
I have seen the same sort of problem in the past.
My conclusion was that there was a problem with dynamic
registering and unregistering of ide interfaces.
Thomas Hood
jdthood_AT_yahoo.co.uk
> I've experienced some disk corruption on my laptop.
>
> Scenario:
> I'm cross-compiling tons of sourc
> Greetings! Shouldn't a SIGSEGV fill in th si_addr member of the
> siginfo_t structure passed to a signal handler? Here is what I see
Our group ran into this problem last summer while we were developing the
Oasis+ DSM system. We worked around it by utilizing the following code
fragment:
voi
Tom Sightler wrote:
>
> Hi All,
>
> I'm seeking information in regards to a large Linux implementation we are
> planning. We have been evaluating many storage options and I've come up
> with some questions that I have been unable to answer as far as Linux
> capabilities in regards to storage.
>
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 02:01:03PM -0600, Erik DeBill wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 07, 2001 at 05:36:40PM -0800, Greg KH wrote:
> > I'll try to run with everything compiled into the kernel later tonight.
> > Does -ac14 with all of USB as modules, using usb-uhci work for you?
>
> Hmm... I was compiling us
Andreas Dilger wrote:
>
> > [< c0109557>] kernel BUG at printk.c:327!
>
> It may be that if the tasklist is too long, and it runs with interrupts
> disabled, that this will trigger the NMI watchdog timer. Since I don't
> know anything about the console, I can't help.
Yes, this is being a pest.
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 05:21:32PM +0100, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
> On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Steven Cole wrote:
> > It appears that use of CONFIG_NCR885E was removed in 2.4.2-ac2,
> > in Config.in and the Makefile in drivers/net.
> >
> > If it really is the case that CONFIG_NCR885E is history, then
When I put the HD on ide2 and do the appropriate changes (ide=reverse)
The systemn is more stable. I am getting the following message when
moving data around. There seems to be a little corruption of the
directory stucture, Specifically in /usr/src/linux which I just used to
compile the ke
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 04:40:44PM -0700, Jeff V. Merkey wrote:
> I am continually amazed at how secure an "open source" OS is in
> comparison to W2K. Relative to the W2K open source arguments, one
> good fallout would be that folks would be able to identify
> holes like this one quickly.
Hmmm
In the interests of finishing off this thread:
Thanks to all who replied to my question on how to get a notebook
disk to spin down. The clear consensus is:
- the problem was probably caused by the cron daemon (I have some doubts
about this, but never mind)
- the problem is fixed by adding t
I am still having problems with this driver.
When loading the driver I get:
es1371: version v0.27 time 00:47:56 Mar 7 2001
es1371: found chip, vendor id 0x1274 device id 0x1371 revision 0x08
PCI: Found IRQ 10 for device 00:0b.0
es1371: found es1371 rev 8 at io 0xa400 irq 10
es1371: features: j
Alan et al,
This patch (against 2.4.2-ac14) fixes a buglet in the UP-APIC support.
As a side-effect of hpa's CPU detection rewrite in 2.4.0-test, the
X86_FEATURE constants where changed from bit masks to bit numbers.
Unfortunately one spot in apic.c:detect_init_APIC() wasn't updated,
with the eff
> > It seems to me this might be an opportunity...
>
> Or a trap. I'm not about to go anywhere near this and won't even look at
> the licience but I bet the M$ argument will go something like:
>
>You've looked at the code.
>You now know things that are propriatary to M$.
>You are not
Hi,
Here is a link to some memory usage related test programs:
http://carpanta.dc.fi.udc.es/~quintela/memtest/
They have proven their value many times...
/RogerL
On Thursday 08 March 2001 21:57, Paul Larson wrote:
> Alan Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on 03/08/2001 02:06:06 PM
>
> To: Paul Lars
I am continually amazed at how secure an "open source" OS is in
comparison to W2K. Relative to the W2K open source arguments, one
good fallout would be that folks would be able to identify
holes like this one quickly.
Jeff
- Forwarded message from The SANS Institute <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 12:09:51PM +, Alan Cox wrote:
> To quote the linux on palmax page
>
>For startup my /etc/rc.d/rc.local contains the following lines.
> mount -o remount,rw,noatime /
> /sbin/hdparm -S 15 /dev/hda
Or else place "noatime" in /etc/fstab, which is probably the better
p
\>Is there something generally wrong with how linux determines total cpu
>usage (via procmeter3 and top) when dealing with applications that are
>threaded? I routinely get 0% cpu usage when playing mpegs and mp3s and
>some avi's even (Divx when using no software enhancement) ... Somehow i
>doubt
Greetings! Shouldn't a SIGSEGV fill in th si_addr member of the
siginfo_t structure passed to a signal handler? Here is what I see
(on several archs):
=
q.c
===
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
> Patches (for both 2.4.3-pre3 and 2.4.2-ac14) can be downloaded from:
>
> http://home.tvd.be/cr26864/Linux/fbdev/logo.html
>
> This page also shows the old and new logos, and includes a tool to extract
> logos in PNM format from the kernel source
Hello,
Vital info:
Linux-2.2.18
LVM version 0.9 by Heinz Mauelshagen (13/11/2000)
gcc version 2.95.2
GDT7563RN Firmware 2.27.04-R03F
After about 27 days of uptime one of our Linux machines that is being
used as a Samba, Netatalk, and FTP server; the main data mount went into
a
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> On a uniprocessor system, a simple fallback is to just use a semaphore
> instead of a spinlock, since you can guarantee that there's no point
> in scheduling the current task until the holder of the "lock" releases
> it.
Yeah, that works. But I'm not all that intereste
> 1. How much of the kernel is getting hit on a run of any given test? Even
> an approximate percentage is fine as long as I can prove it.
I've not measured it by percentage. You could use the profiling code in
the kernel to generate a profile and from that measure coverage at least
for non inte
Is there something generally wrong with how linux determines total cpu
usage (via procmeter3 and top) when dealing with applications that are
threaded? I routinely get 0% cpu usage when playing mpegs and mp3s and
some avi's even (Divx when using no software enhancement) ... Somehow i
doubt that
On 8 Mar 01 at 22:14, BERECZ Szabolcs wrote:
> How can I check the memsize of a matrox g400?
> I have a card with 16Mb memory, and the lspci show this:
> Subsystem: Matrox Graphics, Inc. Millennium G400 16Mb SDRAM
> Flags: bus master, medium devsel, latency 64, IRQ 11
> Me
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, God wrote:
> > *users* have no business changing the system configuration. End of story.
> > Again, if somebody doesn't read manpages before doing stuff under root -
> > no point trying to protect him. He will find a way to fsck up, no matter
> > how many "safety" checks you
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
> - There are still some politically-incorrect (PI) logos of a penguin holding
> a glass of beer or wine (or perhaps even worse? :-).
Heh. Those are cool. Don't remove them. The Windoze people always look
jealous at the beer tux... :-)
Simo
Venkatesh Ramamurthy wrote:
> Enterprise customers are beginning to see the value of having
> source available, and MS is doing this as a half-baked
> solution to give decition makers one less reason for switching
> to Open Source.
>
>
> Microsoft such attempts can be vi
Hi,
I've changed the documentation of mm.h according to the feedback
I got about it yesterday and today and have added documentation
for swap.h
Tomorrow (or maybe even this evening) I will try to write some more
documentation, for other header files with MM structures...
regards,
Rik
--
Linux
Hi!
How can I check the memsize of a matrox g400?
I have a card with 16Mb memory, and the lspci show this:
Subsystem: Matrox Graphics, Inc. Millennium G400 16Mb SDRAM
Flags: bus master, medium devsel, latency 64, IRQ 11
Memory at e600 (32-bit, prefetchable) [size=32M]
I suspect this is actually in response to the reported breakings and
external access to the M$ code base.
There have been a number of concerns about backdoors, trojan horses or
other things being maliciously added to the code base and the
resulting extreme security risk.
By 'increasing' the num
Hi,
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, God wrote:
> Look at some of the confirmation requests in windows, some ask you twice
> if you whish to perform an action. Even Red Hat (that I know of, others
> may as well), has an alias for "rm" that by
> default turns on confirmation. Why? Because not ALL users wil
So, after finally getting 2.4.2-ac14 to compile and installed, the system
crashed twice within an hour of each other. Once because of a kernel BUG in
printk.c, which was coupled with an NMI Watchdog trigger according to
Andreas Dilger. The other because of the same apparant reason the system
has
Manfred Spraul writes:
> > memcpy(buf, maddr + (addr & ~PAGE_MASK), len);
> > flush_page_to_ram(page);
> ^^
> Is this flush required?
>
> The memcpy read from the mapping, it didn't write.
You have to kick it out of the
Alan Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on 03/08/2001 02:06:06 PM
To: Paul Larson/Austin/IBM@ibmus
cc:
Subject: Re: Kernel stress testing coverage
>One thing I've been using for coverage (at least some coverage) is the
posix
>test suite
--
Are you talking about the same posi
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Boris Dragovic wrote:
> > Of course. Now we just need the code to determine when a task
> > is holding some kernel-side lock ;)
>
> couldn't it just be indicated on actual locking the resource?
It could, but I doubt we would want this overhead on the locking...
Rik
--
Linux
I got some NMI messages I have never seen before. In fact i've never seen
a NMI message before.
This is kernel 2.4.1-ac13. Got them while running X (4.0.2) and KDE (2.1).
After 15 mins the system froze hard.
PR440FX mobo, dual ppro 200s, 256MB RAM, aic7xxx, no power management at
all.
I've never
On Wed, 7 Mar 2001, Ben Greear wrote:
> For the power/insane user, there could be a --really-do-stupid-thing-i-told-you-to
> option, and it should be that hard to type!!
There is, though historically it's undocumented. It's called "root
password".
Pause. Reflect.
--
"Love the dolphins," she a
- Received message begins Here -
>
>
> > Not a chance. First your company must have at least 1500 licences and
> > you can't modify any code... which implies that you can't rebuild either...
>
> You can modify your compiler, so that it accepts patches (with no context)
>
[22 new messages! Most recent from God]
You know how much this bothers me to turn around and see these in my
mailbox? I am not ready to answer for all of the things
past/present/future, so please change your name because you are not "god"!
Andre Hedrick
Linux ATA Development
On Wed, Mar 07, 2001 at 04:40:52PM -0800, Greg KH wrote:
> > o Fix the non build problem with do_BUG (Andrew Morton)
> i386_ksyms.c:170: `do_BUG' undeclared here (not in a function)
> # CONFIG_DEBUG_BUGVERBOSE is not set
this patch makes it _compile_ both with and without BUGVERBOS
This patch (linux-2.4.2-csa.patch) applies against the 2.4.2 kernel
with the PAGG linux-2.4.2-pagg.patch and linux-2.4.2-pagg-job.patch
patches applied first. This CSA patch supports i386 and
ia64 platforms.
The patch provides the infrastructure to do CSA job accounting.
A new configuration var
On Wed, 7 Mar 2001, Rik van Riel wrote:
> I've taken today to write some documentation for
> include/linux/mm.h, as used in 2.4.x
Mostly good.
> + pgprot_t vm_page_prot; /* Access permissions of this VMA. */
But a lot of the comments are trivial = deadweight. Comments are best use
In file included from /usr/src/linux/include/linux/highmem.h:5,
from /usr/src/linux/include/linux/vmalloc.h:7,
from /usr/src/linux/include/asm/io.h:110,
from /usr/src/linux/include/asm/pci.h:26,
from /usr/src/linux/include/linux/p
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Alexander Viro wrote:
> Date: Thu, 8 Mar 2001 01:21:31 -0500 (EST)
> From: Alexander Viro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Ben Greear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: Alan Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Linux Kernel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: 2.4.2 ext2 filesystem corruption ? (was
This patch (linux-2.4.2-csa_module.patch) applies against the
2.4.2 kernel with the PAGG linux-2.4.2-pagg.patch,
linux-2.4.2-pagg-job.patch, and linux-2.4.2-csa.patch
patches applied first. This CSA patch supports i386 and
ia64 platforms.
This patch provides job accounting code which can be com
Summary:
Sometimes files are missing when listing a directory.
The following runs on linux-2.4.2 on with glibc-2.2.2 (x86)
The relevant directory is NFS mounted (nfsvers=2)
--- junk.c
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
int
main(int argc, char **argv)
{
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> I've heard of tools like gcov for doing this with applications, but
> the kernel itself seems like it might require something more.
Have a look at user-mode Linux (http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net). It
runs the kernel in userspace, so gprof and gcov can be used
>
> Of course. Now we just need the code to determine when a task
> is holding some kernel-side lock ;)
couldn't it just be indicated on actual locking the resource?
lynx
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
M
This patch fixes some issues with the frame buffer device penguin logo code.
Bug list:
- The colors for the 16 color logo are wrong. We used a hack to give the logo
its own color palette, but this no longer works as a side effect of a
console color map bug being fixed a while ago. The
On Wed, Mar 07, 2001 at 05:36:40PM -0800, Greg KH wrote:
> I'll try to run with everything compiled into the kernel later tonight.
> Does -ac14 with all of USB as modules, using usb-uhci work for you?
Hmm... I was compiling usb-uhci and uhci directly into the kernel,
then visor.o as a module.
In
On Wed, 7 Mar 2001, Ben Greear wrote:
> Date: Wed, 07 Mar 2001 23:32:11 -0700
> From: Ben Greear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Alexander Viro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: Alan Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Linux Kernel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: 2.4.2 ext2 filesystem corruption ? (was 2.4.2: W
This is noise guys, skip it
I will have appreciate that you apology to me, not to Alan.
For you concern, I love black humor, I do make nonsense most
of the time (but I hope to learn from my mistakes) and yes
I work for SUN.
Regarding the 2.5 kernel being available, I don't honestly
know bu
Rik van Riel wrote:
>
> On Wed, 7 Mar 2001, Manfred Spraul wrote:
>
> > Is kswapd now running without lock_kernel()?
>
> Indeed ...
>
> > Then there is a race between swapout and ptrace:
> > access_process_vm() accesses the page table entries, only protected with
> > the mmap_sem semaphore and
I'm looking for some advice from all of you that know and understand the
Linux kernel so well. I'm not a kernel developer, but I want to do some
verification work on it, namely stress testing to begin with. I'm working
on putting together a suite of tests to test the linux kernels under stress
l
Hi guys,
I have a ide raid setup and was using the Reiserfs code known to cause
filesystem corruption. The questions is: How do we recover from this
corruption? I have the latest reiserfs utils and the latest code from the
website and the latest kernel. When I mount /dev/md0, I still get pr
>From linux/kernel/ptrace.c, access_one_page():
>flush_cache_page(vma, addr);
>
> if (write) {
> maddr = kmap(page);
> memcpy(maddr + (addr & ~PAGE_MASK), buf, len);
> flush_page_to_ram(page);
> flush_icache_page(vma
> " " == Alan Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Irix at least used to have an export option to do mappings to
> keep clients that had 32/64bit inode problems happy. Do those
> help ?
No. The problem here is a Linux one: NFS uses 32/64-bit unsigned
cookies, whereas glibc expect
Venkatesh Ramamurthy wrote:
> Please check out this article. Looks like microsoft know open source is the
> thing of the future. I would consider that it is a begining step for full
> blown GPL
>
> http://www.zdnet.com/enterprise/stories/main/0,10228,2692987,00.html
I'm not so sure about th
Following is an upated patch that supports the building of the
lanstreamer tokenring driver in-kernel or as a module. Support
for module_init() and module_exit() was added instead of the
outdated method used in Space.c.
--- linux/drivers/net/tokenring/lanstreamer.c.orig Wed Mar 7 19:41:27
Enterprise customers are beginning to see the value of having
source available, and MS is doing this as a half-baked
solution to give decition makers one less reason for switching
to Open Source.
Microsoft such attempts can be viewed as either
1. Trying to make it
Terry Barnaby wrote:
> Hi,
>
> We are doing work with FPGA's and have a Linux driver for a particular
> board that has these
> devices. For performance reasons the driver has the ability to DMA
> directly to process (user)
> memory. We have made use of the kiobuf routines such as
> "map_user_kiob
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 12:21:12PM -0500, Stuart MacDonald wrote:
> "As such, clients will not be allowed to alter the code in any form and
> may not give any other party access to any aspect of that code."
>
> Does this preclude one reading the source and then using
> the knowledge gained to wri
Vibol writes:
> While testing to see if SYSRQ-T would print the entire tasklist, a kernel
> bug popped up. All I have is the tasklist up to the point where the bug
> showed up.
Actually, if you look closely, there is an OOPS report in there at the
end as well. Unfortunately, since the tasklist
While testing to see if SYSRQ-T would print the entire tasklist, a kernel
bug popped up. All I have is the tasklist up to the point where the bug
showed up.
-Vibol
-- snip --
01e03b1>] []
[] [] [] []
httpd S 7FFF 0 2442380(NOTLB)2446 2437
Call Trace: [] [] [
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 10:01:57AM -0500, Venkatesh Ramamurthy wrote:
> Please check out this article. Looks like microsoft know open source is the
> thing of the future. I would consider that it is a begining step for full
> blown GPL
>
> http://www.zdnet.com/enterprise/stories/main/0,10228,
>The bigger problem with that driver for pedants is that it contains globals
>with names like 'hard_error' which are asking for clashes . Bizarrely all
>the static functions are carefully named ahc_* and the globals are called
>things like 'restart_squencer'
Such is the evolutionary nature of mos
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 09:30:23AM -0800, Wayne Whitney wrote:
> In mailing-lists.linux-kernel, you wrote:
>
> > Make sure you use the latest 2.4.2-acxx drivers. Most other versions of
> > my drivers have little bugs in the 686b support. Harmless but somewhat
> > annoying.
>
> Does this mean th
On Thu, Mar 08, 2001 at 09:17:06AM +0100, Vojtech Pavlik wrote:
>On Wed, Mar 07, 2001 at 01:23:49PM +, John Heil wrote:
>Make sure you use the latest 2.4.2-acxx drivers. Most other versions of
>my drivers have little bugs in the 686b support. Harmless but somewhat
>annoying.
Hi,
Hmm, last I
> Not a chance. First your company must have at least 1500 licences and
> you can't modify any code... which implies that you can't rebuild either...
You can modify your compiler, so that it accepts patches (with no context)
and completely rewrite anything that needs modified.
The modified s
>From Mohammad A. Haque on Thursday, 08 March, 2001:
[snip]
>Also notice that you're now paying MS so you can find their bugs. Very
>nice.
Indeed. They've been very successful so far in getting people to
pony up (pay) for beta software (see W2K: The Beta, Whistler/XP: The
Beta, and (I am pre
On Thu, 8 Mar 2001, Andrew Morton wrote:
> "J . A . Magallon" wrote:
> > Try this:
> This is the better fix.
I'm interested in the thinking here (because I tend the other way).
With J.A.M.'s patch blessed by Andrew, #ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_BUGVERBOSE
goes around do_BUG() in fault.c, around its exter
With the current rd.c code, we can get into a situation where there is
a buffer-only page for data which is also in a page cache page with
page->buffers != NULL. The current vmscan.c code never frees the page
cache page in this scenario, effectively doubling ramdisk memory
requirements.
Linus, I
1 - 100 of 196 matches
Mail list logo