Byron Stanoszek wrote:
On Tue, 30 Jan 2001, David D.W. Downey wrote:
I removed the ide and ata setting. System is running stably as in no
kernel crashes, but I am getting daemon and shell crashes. With this
current kernel I've had 1 kernel crash in about 3 hours as compared to 1
every
4 years old).
They have newer boards with 6 PCI (64 bit, 66 MHz) + 1 AGP slot. Their
boards are very high quality - though you'll pay for the reliability in
$$$.
--
Stephen Wille Padnos
Programmer, Engineer, Problem Solver
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Peter T. Breuer wrote:
[snip] um, shouldn't you be testing for res==-1, as well?
specifically that condition and errno==EINTR is how I'd expect
signals to effect the loop...
[snip]
I assumed that error is something like trying to watch for a
negative number or zero descriptors, or
Hello, all.
I am writing a pseudo-realtime control system, based on kernel 2.2.14.
The only RT-like task needs to hang off the timer IRQ. I am using
techniques like those in the book Linux Kernel Internals, by Beck, et
al..
The patches in that book won't apply (they are for 2.1.24 or lower),
Thanks.
Actually, the symbols in question aren't in modules. The kernel is module
enabled, but all drivers are being compiled in (this is for an embedded
system). My external module (which needs to grab the timer interrupt) is in a
separate source tree.
Thanks for the printk info - I guess
um. duh.
Thanks. I guess it helps to know the right FM to R. :)
Arthur had pointed out that modules.h should be included, then kernel.h. Is
there a place where I can find out more about header file order dependencies?
(damn - that sounds like a Microsoft help question)
Keith Owens wrote:
Well, my rebuild kernel / reboot / recompile module just finished.
Unfortunately, the printk warning was still there.
I replaced the unconditional #define MODVERSIONS with
#include linux/config.h
#ifdef CONFIG_MODVERSIONS
#define MODVERSIONS
#include linux/modversions.h
#endif
this is at the
Well,
I have an Acer AK73 Pro(A), with an Athlon 1.333 GHz (133 FSB). I have never
had anuy lockup or data corruption problems. I do run this system as a
dual-boot, usually under Win2K :(
The system is as follows:
Acer AK73 Pro(A)
Athlon (C) 1.333 GHz
IBM DTLA307060 60G IDE hard drive
- you can "disconnect" from
an IO operation to allow other IO's to be sent to other devices on the same
bus)
--
Stephen Wille Padnos
Programmer, Engineer, Problem Solver
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of
le pointer to a
structure with volatile parts). So, the programmer should have the
choice, if gcc is dealing with volatile correctly.
Of course, that doesn't mean that the authors have made the right choice
:)
--
Stephen Wille Padnos
Programmer, Engineer, Problem Solver
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
To unsubs
"Richard B. Johnson" wrote:
On Thu, 8 Feb 2001, Stephen Wille Padnos wrote:
"Richard B. Johnson" wrote:
[snip]
Another problem with 'volatile' has to do with pointers. When
it's possible for some object to be modified by some external
influence, we see:
Hello, all.
I am writing a pseudo-realtime control system, based on kernel 2.2.14.
The only RT-like task needs to hang off the timer IRQ. I am using
techniques like those in the book "Linux Kernel Internals", by Beck, et
al..
The patches in that book won't apply (they are for 2.1.24 or lower),
Thanks.
Actually, the symbols in question aren't in modules. The kernel is module
enabled, but all drivers are being compiled in (this is for an embedded
system). My external module (which needs to grab the timer interrupt) is in a
separate source tree.
Thanks for the printk info - I guess
um. duh.
Thanks. I guess it helps to know the right FM to R. :)
Arthur had pointed out that modules.h should be included, then kernel.h. Is
there a place where I can find out more about header file order dependencies?
(damn - that sounds like a Microsoft help question)
Keith Owens wrote:
>
Well, my rebuild kernel / reboot / recompile module just finished.
Unfortunately, the printk warning was still there.
I replaced the unconditional #define MODVERSIONS with
#include
#ifdef CONFIG_MODVERSIONS
#define MODVERSIONS
#include
#endif
this is at the top of my source file. (before
Byron Stanoszek wrote:
> On Tue, 30 Jan 2001, David D.W. Downey wrote:
>
> > I removed the ide and ata setting. System is running stably as in no
> > kernel crashes, but I am getting daemon and shell crashes. With this
> > current kernel I've had 1 kernel crash in about 3 hours as compared to 1
"Peter T. Breuer" wrote:
[snip]> um, shouldn't you be testing for res==-1, as well?
> > specifically that condition and errno==EINTR is how I'd expect
> > signals to effect the loop...
[snip]
> I assumed that "error" is something like trying to watch for a
> negative number or zero
CPUs and 1G RAM (EDO - it's 4 years old).
They have newer boards with 6 PCI (64 bit, 66 MHz) + 1 AGP slot. Their
boards are very high quality - though you'll pay for the reliability in
$$$.
--
Stephen Wille Padnos
Programmer, Engineer, Problem Solver
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
To unsubscribe from thi
Well,
I have an Acer AK73 Pro(A), with an Athlon 1.333 GHz (133 FSB). I have never
had anuy lockup or data corruption problems. I do run this system as a
dual-boot, usually under Win2K :(
The system is as follows:
Acer AK73 Pro(A)
Athlon (C) 1.333 GHz
IBM DTLA307060 60G IDE hard drive
eferred for high end systems - you can "disconnect" from
an IO operation to allow other IO's to be sent to other devices on the same
bus)
--
Stephen Wille Padnos
Programmer, Engineer, Problem Solver
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe
he
pointer volatile (the third case declares a volatile pointer to a
structure with volatile parts). So, the programmer should have the
choice, if gcc is dealing with volatile correctly.
Of course, that doesn't mean that the authors have made the right choice
:)
--
Stephen Wille Padno
"Richard B. Johnson" wrote:
>
> On Thu, 8 Feb 2001, Stephen Wille Padnos wrote:
>
> > "Richard B. Johnson" wrote:
> > [snip]
> > > Another problem with 'volatile' has to do with pointers. When
> > > it's possible for some obj
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