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* 2.6.6-mm5
@ 2004-05-22  8:36 Andrew Morton
  2004-05-22  9:09 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jeff Garzik
                   ` (9 more replies)
  0 siblings, 10 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2004-05-22  8:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel


http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/



- Some rearchitecting of the VFS's symlink walking code.  Reduces stack
  usage and apparently permits us to increase the maximum hop count from 5 to
  8, although the patch doesn't actually do that.


- Implementation of request barriers for IDE and SCSI.  The idea here is
  that a filesystem can tag an IO request as a barrier and the disk will not
  reorder writes across the barrier.  It provides additional integrity
  guarantees for the journalling filesystems.  The feature is enabled for
  reiserfs and ext3.

  On reiserfs do `mount /dev/hda /wherever -o barrier=flush' or
  `barrier=none'.

  On ext3 do `mount ... -o barrier=1' or `barrier=0'.

  ext3 also supports `mount -o remount,barrier=N'.  I didn't check whether
  reiserfs supports switching at remount time and nobody tells me these
  things.

  (Yes, we should give these mount options the same name).

  Although this feature has been around for a while it is new code, and the
  usual cautions apply.  If it munches all your files please tell Jens and
  he'll type them in again for you.

- The pagecache radix-tree spinlocks have gone back to rwlocks again.  It
  helps big SMP significantly and doesn't seem to make much difference to
  small SMP (1-2% at most IIRC).  It does need some more measuring.

- Added a new SATA RAID driver from 3ware.  From a quick peek it seem to
  need a little work yet.




 linus.patch
 bk-agpgart.patch
 bk-alsa.patch
 bk-arm.patch
 bk-cpufreq.patch
 bk-driver-core.patch
 bk-i2c.patch
 bk-input.patch
 bk-libata.patch
 bk-netdev.patch
 bk-ntfs.patch
 bk-pci.patch
 bk-pcmcia.patch
 bk-scsi.patch

 Latest versions of various development trees

-system-state-splitup.patch
-idedisk_reboot.patch
-fealnx-bogon-fix.patch
-blk_run_page-race-fix.patch
-put-module-license-in-swim3c.patch
-ppc32-get-full-register-set-on-bad-kernel-accesses.patch
-stack-reductions-nfsread.patch
-use-less-stack-in-ide_unregister.patch
-mark-config_mac_serial-drivers-macintosh-macserialc-as-broken.patch
-dpt_i2o-warning-fixes.patch
-invalid-notify_changesymlink-in-nfsd.patch
-nfs_writepage_sync-stack-reduction.patch
-nfs4-stack-reduction.patch
-raid-locking-fix.patch
-seeky-readahead-speedups.patch
-add-disable-param-to-capabilities-module.patch
-remove-hardcoded-offsets-from-i386-asm.patch
-madvise-len-check.patch
-dentry-size-tuning.patch
-vm-shrink-zone.patch
-vm-shrink-zone-fix.patch
-enable-runtime-cache-line-size-for-slab-on-i386.patch
-allow-arch-override-for-kmem_bufctl_t.patch
-add-kmem_cache_alloc_node.patch
-work-around-gcc-333-hammer-sched-miscompilation-on-x86-64.patch
-befs-maintainer-update.patch
-nfs-long-symlinks-fix.patch
-fix-for-266-makefiles-to-get-kbuild_output-working.patch
-kexec-reserve-syscall-slot.patch
-fore200e-warning-fixes.patch
-qlogicfas408-warning-fix.patch
-blk_run_queues-remnants.patch
-use-idr_get_new-to-allocate-a-bus-id-in-drivers-i2c-i2c-corec.patch
-use-idr_get_new-to-allocate-a-bus-id-in-drivers-i2c-i2c-corec-update-to-new-api.patch
-replace-mod_inc_use_count-in-cyber2000fb.patch
-dont-mention-mod_inc_use_count-mod_dec_use_count-in-docs.patch
-mark-plan-video-driver-broken.patch
-kbuild-subdirs=more-than-one.patch
-correct-ps2esdi-module-parm-name.patch
-fix-error-handling-in-selinuxfs.patch
-quota-fix-3-quota-file-corruption.patch
-submittingdrivers-completeness.patch
-edd-remove-unused-scsi-header-files.patch
-efivars-add-module_version-remove-unnecessary-check-in-exit.patch
-do_generic_mapping_read-cleanup.patch
-drivers-cdrom-aztcdc-warning-fix.patch
-init-mca_bus_type-even-if-mca_bus.patch
-split-backing_dev-memory-backed.patch
-ramdisk-fixes.patch
-ramdisk-memory-allocation-fixes.patch
-ramdisk-lock-io-pages.patch
-ramdisk-use-kmap_atomic.patch
-ramdisk-page-uptodate-fix.patch
-ramdisk-writepages.patch
-blockdev-split-backing_dev_info.patch
-ramdisk-split-backing_dev_info.patch
-knfsd-1-of-10-use-correct-_bh-locking-on-sv_lock.patch
-knfsd-2-of-10-make-sure-cache_negative-is-cleared-when-a-cache-entry-is-updates.patch
-knfsd-3-of-10-allow-larger-writes-to-sunrpc-svc-caches.patch
-knfsd-4-of-10-change-fh_compose-to-not-consume-a-reference-to-the-dentry.patch
-knfsd-5-of-10-protect-reference-to-exp-across-calls-to-nfsd_cross_mnt.patch
-knfsd-6-of-10-fix-race-conditions-in-idmapper.patch
-knfsd-7-of-10-improve-idmapper-behaviour-on-failure.patch
-knfsd-8-of-10-reduce-timeout-when-waiting-for-idmapper-userspace-daemon.patch
-knfsd-9-of-10-remove-check-on-number-of-threads-waiting-on-user-space.patch
-knfsd-10-of-10-add-a-warning-when-upcalls-fail.patch
-svc_recv-fix.patch
-debugging-option-to-put-data-symbols-in-kallsyms.patch
-sis900-add-new-isa-bridge-pci-id.patch
-sis900-small-cleanup-and-spelling-fixes.patch
-cache-sizing-fix.patch
-vga16fb-fix.patch
-fix-overzealous-use-of-online-cpu-iterators.patch

 Merged

+nosysfs-sysfs_rename_dir-fix.patch

 Fix !CONFIG_SYSFS build

+vga16fb-warning-fix.patch

 Fix a warning

+gss_api-build-fix.patch
+gss_api-build-fix-tweak.patch

 Fix NFS build with gcc-2.95

+make-tree_lock-an-rwlock.patch

 Switch the pagecache lock back from a spinlock to an rwlock.  Better for big
 SMP and pretty much a wash for small SMP.

+radix_tree_tag_set-atomic.patch

 Make the radix-tree tagging operations atomic

+radix_tree_tag_set-only-needs-read_lock.patch

 Switch lots of pagecache write_locks to read_locks.

+ppc64-console-autodetection-for-pmac.patch

 PPC64 power mac fix/feature

-sched-ifdef-active-balancing.patch

 Dropped - was a bit messy.

-speed-up-sata.patch

 Dropped - was obsolete.

+reiserfs-block-allocator-should-not-inherit-packing-locality.patch

 Fix a bug in reiserfs-group-alloc-9.patch

-make-4k-stacks-permanent.patch

 Dropped - 8k stacks work better with kgdb.

-mlock_group-sysctl.patch

 Dropped - don't see a need for this.

+use-idr_get_new-to-allocate-a-bus-id-in-drivers-i2c-i2c-corec-update-to-new-api.patch

 Fix i2c build for lib/idr.c changes

-mqueue-rlimit-compile-fix-for-ppc-cris-m68k.patch

 Folded into rlim-add-rlimit-entry-for-posix-mqueue-allocation.patch

+hpet-rtc-dependency-fix.patch
+hpet-free_irq-deadlock-fix.patch

 HPET driver fixes

+ext3-retry-allocation-after-transaction-commit-v2-jbd-api.patch

 Clean up the interfaces in the ext3 -ENOSPC fix patch

+vmscan-handle-synchronous-writepage-fix.patch

 Fix vmscan-handle-synchronous-writepage.patch

+ramdisk-buffer-uptodate-fix.patch

 Fiddle with the ramdisk pagecache code a bit.

+ppc64-fault-deadlock-fix.patch
+ia32-fault-deadlock-fix.patch
+ia32-fault-deadlock-fix-cleanup.patch

 Avoid deadlocking the kernel when it takes an oops while holding the tasks's
 mmap_sem.

+ext3-htree-rename-fix.patch

 Fix an htree bug

+out-of-bounds-access-in-hiddev_cleanup.patch

 Fix some USB oops

+sis900-xcvr-fix.patch

 sis900 transceiver handling fix

+advansys-basic-highmem-dma-support.patch

 Add highmem support to the Advansys scsi driver

+fbdev-mode-switching-fix.patch

 fbdev fix

+ipr-gcc-attribute-fixes.patch

 scsi driver fix

+ipr-ppc64-depends.patch

 Make ipr.c depend on PPC

+SL0-core-RC6-bk5.patch
+SL1-ext2-RC6-bk5.patch
+SL2-trivial-RC6-bk5.patch
+SL3-page-RC6-bk5.patch
+SL4-smb-RC6-bk5.patch
+SL5-xfs-RC6-bk5.patch
+SL6-shm-RC6-bk5.patch
+SL7-befs-RC6-bk5.patch
+SL8-jffs2-RC6-bk5.patch

 symlink rework

+scsi-qla1280c-warning-fix.patch

 Fix a warning

+trivial-use-page_to_phys-in-dma_map_page.patch

 cleanup

+trivial-fix-duplicated-includes.patch

 Remove lots of duplicated includes

+fix-knfsd-scary-message.patch

 Prevent a rude boot-time message coming out of the kernel NFS server.

+mangled-printk-oops-output-fix.patch
+mangled-printk-oops-output-fix-tweaks.patch

 Should fix the mess which comes out on the serial console when an SMP box
 oopses.

+crypto-scatterwalk-fixes.patch

 Fix a few things in the crypto scatter/gather code

+sanitise-unneeded-syscall-stubs.patch
+sanitise-unneeded-syscall-stubs-fixes.patch

 Clean up the selection of which architectures want which syscall stubs.

+ep_send_events-simplification.patch

 Stack reduction in eventpoll

+blk-completion-clear-stack-pointer-on-return.patch

 Prevent possible crashes which haven't happened yet.

+disk-barrier-core.patch
+disk-barrier-core-tweaks.patch
+disk-barrier-ide.patch
+disk-barrier-ide-symbol-expoprt.patch
+disk-barrier-ide-warning-fix.patch
+disk-barrier-scsi.patch

 Support for IDE and SCSI barriers

+disk-barrier-dm.patch
+disk-barrier-md.patch

 Via device mapper and raid as well.

+reiserfs-v3-barrier-support.patch

 Implement it on reiserfs

+ext3-barrier-support.patch
+#ext3-barrier-support-default-on.patch
+sync_dirty_buffer-retval.patch
+jbd-barrier-fallback-on-failure.patch

 And on ext3

+x86-stack-dump-fixes.patch

 Tidy a few things up

+add-futex_cmp_requeue-futex-op.patch

 New futex mode

+swsusp-kill-unneccessary-debugging.patch

 Cleanup

+race-condition-with-current-group_info.patch
+race-condition-with-current-group_info-tweaks.patch

 Fix a race in the new group-handling code

+swsusp-fix-devfs-breakage-introduced-in-266.patch

 swsusp fix

+check-return-status-of-register-calls-in-i82365.patch

 Missing error return checks

+26-isdn-eicon-driver-fix-__devexit-in-prototype.patch

 ISDN fix

+cpuid-cache-info-update.patch

 Intel P4E's were missing cache-size info.

+3ware-9000-sata-raid-driver-for-266-mm5.patch

 New SATA RAID driver from 3ware.

+autofs4-printk-cleanup.patch
+autofs4-maintainer.patch

 autofs changes.





All 264 patches


linus.patch

nosysfs-sysfs_rename_dir-fix.patch
  Fix !CONFIG_SYSFS build

vga16fb-warning-fix.patch
  vga16fb warning fix

gss_api-build-fix.patch
  gss_api build fix

gss_api-build-fix-tweak.patch
  gss_api-build-fix-tweak

bk-agpgart.patch

bk-alsa.patch

bk-arm.patch

bk-cpufreq.patch

bk-driver-core.patch

bk-i2c.patch

bk-input.patch

bk-libata.patch

bk-netdev.patch

bk-ntfs.patch

bk-pci.patch

bk-pcmcia.patch

bk-scsi.patch

mm.patch
  add -mmN to EXTRAVERSION

revert-i8042-interrupt-handling.patch
  revert i8042 input interrupt handling changes

kgdb-ga.patch
  kgdb stub for ia32 (George Anzinger's one)
  kgdbL warning fix
  kgdb buffer overflow fix
  kgdbL warning fix
  kgdb: CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO fix
  x86_64 fixes
  correct kgdb.txt Documentation link (against  2.6.1-rc1-mm2)
  kgdb: fix for recent gcc
  kgdb warning fixes
  THREAD_SIZE fixes for kgdb

kgdb-in-sched_functions.patch

kgdboe-netpoll.patch
  kgdb-over-ethernet via netpoll
  kgdboe: fix configuration of MAC address

kgdb-x86_64-support.patch
  kgdb-x86_64-support.patch for 2.6.2-rc1-mm3
  kgdb-x86_64-warning-fixes

kgdb-in-sched_functions-x86_64.patch

kgdb-ia64-support.patch
  IA64 kgdb support

swapper_space-tree_lock-fix.patch
  Make swapper_space tree_lock irq-safe

__add_to_swap_cache-simplification.patch
  __add_to_swap_cache and add_to_pagecache() simplification

revert-swapcache-changes.patch
  revert recent swapcache handling changes

vmscan-revert-may_enter_fs-changes.patch
  vmscan-revert-may_enter_fs-changes

sync_page-use-swapper-space.patch
  Make sync_page use swapper_space again

__set_page_dirty_nobuffers-race-fix.patch
  __set_page_dirty_nobuffers race fix

rmap-7-object-based-rmap.patch
  rmap 7 object-based rmap
  rmap-7-object-based-rmap-sync_page-fix

ia64-rmap-build-fix.patch
  ia64 rmap build fix

rmap-8-unmap-nonlinear.patch
  rmap 8 unmap nonlinear
  try_to_unmap_cluster-comment

slab-panic.patch
  slab: consolidate panic code

rmap-9-remove-pte_chains.patch
  rmap 9 remove pte_chains
  page_add_anon_rmap BUG fix

rmap-10-add-anonmm-rmap.patch
  rmap 10 add anonmm rmap

rmap-anonhd-locking-fix.patch
  rmap anonhd locking fix

rmap-11-mremap-moves.patch
  rmap 11 mremap moves

rmap-12-pgtable-remove-rmap.patch
  rmap 12 pgtable remove rmap

rmap-13-include-asm-deletions.patch
  rmap 13 include/asm deletions

i_mmap_lock.patch
  Convert i_shared_sem back to a spinlock
  i_mmap_lock fix 1
  i_mmap_lock fix 2
  i_mmap_lock mremap fix

rmap-14-i_shared_lock-fixes.patch
  rmap 14: i_shared_lock fixes

numa-api-x86_64.patch
  numa api: -64 support
  numa api: Bitmap bugfix

numa-api-i386.patch
  numa api: Add i386 support

numa-api-ia64.patch
  numa api: Add IA64 support

numa-api-core.patch
  numa api: Core NUMA API code
  numa api: docs and policy_vma() locking fix
  numa-api-core-tweaks
  Some fixes for NUMA API
  From: Matthew Dobson <colpatch@us.ibm.com>
  Subject: [PATCH] include/linux/gfp.h cleanup for NUMA API
  numa-api-core bitmap_clear fixes

mpol-in-copy_vma.patch
  mpol in copy_vma

numa-api-core-slab-panic.patch
  numa-api-core-slab-panic

numa-api-statistics-2.patch
  Re-add NUMA API statistics

numa-api-vma-policy-hooks.patch
  numa api: Add VMA hooks for policy
  numa-api-vma-policy-hooks fix

numa-api-shared-memory-support.patch
  numa api: Add shared memory support
  numa-api-shared-memory-support-tweaks

small-numa-api-fixups.patch
  small numa api fixups
  small-numa-api-fixups-fix

small-numa-api-fixups-fix.patch
  small-numa-api-fixups-fix

numa-api-statistics.patch
  numa api: Add statistics

numa-api-anon-memory-policy.patch
  numa api: Add policy support to anonymous  memory

numa-api-fix-end-of-memory-handling-in-mbind.patch
  numa api: fix end of memory handling in mbind

rmap-15-vma_adjust.patch
  rmap 15: vma_adjust

rmap-16-pretend-prio_tree.patch
  rmap 16: pretend prio_tree

rmap-17-real-prio_tree.patch
  rmap 17: real prio_tree

rmap-18-i_mmap_nonlinear.patch
  rmap 18: i_mmap_nonlinear

unmap_mapping_range-comment.patch
  unmap_mapping_range-comment

rmap-19-arch-prio_tree.patch
  rmap 19: arch prio_tree
  rmap-19-arch-prio_tree-parisc

vm_area_struct-size-comment.patch
  vm_area_struct size comment

rmapc-comment-style-fixups.patch
  rmap.c comment/style fixups

rmap-20-i_mmap_shared-into-i_mmap.patch
  rmap 20 i_mmap_shared into i_mmap
  rmap-20-i_mmap_shared-into-i_mmap-parisc

rmap-21-try_to_unmap_one-mapcount.patch
  rmap 21 try_to_unmap_one mapcount

rmap-22-flush_dcache_mmap_lock.patch
  rmap 22 flush_dcache_mmap_lock
  rmap-22-flush_dcache_mmap_lock-parisc

rmap-23-empty-flush_dcache_mmap_lock.patch
  rmap 23 empty flush_dcache_mmap_lock

rmap-24-no-rmap-fastcalls.patch
  rmap 24 no rmap fastcalls

rmap-27-memset-0-vma.patch
  rmap 27 memset 0 vma

rmap-28-remove_vm_struct.patch
  rmap 28 remove_vm_struct

rmap-29-vm_reserved-safety.patch
  rmap 29 VM_RESERVED safety

rmap-30-fix-bad-mapcount.patch
  rmap 30 fix bad mapcount

rmap-31-unlikely-bad-memory.patch
  rmap 31 unlikely bad memory

rmap-32-zap_pmd_range-wrap.patch
  rmap 32 zap_pmd_range wrap

rmap-33-install_arg_page-vma.patch
  rmap 33 install_arg_page vma

rmap-34-vm_flags-page_table_lock.patch
  rmap 34 vm_flags page_table_lock

rmap-35-mmapc-cleanups.patch
  rmap 35 mmap.c cleanups

rmap-36-mprotect-use-vma_merge.patch
  rmap 36 mprotect use vma_merge

rmap-37-page_add_anon_rmap-vma.patch
  rmap 37 page_add_anon_rmap vma

rmap-38-remove-anonmm-rmap.patch
  rmap 38 remove anonmm rmap

rmap-39-add-anon_vma-rmap.patch
  rmap 39 add anon_vma rmap

rmap-40-better-anon_vma-sharing.patch
  rmap 40 better anon_vma sharing

partial-prefetch-for-vma_prio_tree_next.patch
  partial prefetch for vma_prio_tree_next

make-tree_lock-an-rwlock.patch
  make mapping->tree_lock an rwlock

radix_tree_tag_set-atomic.patch
  Make radix_tree_tag_set/clear atomic wrt the tag

radix_tree_tag_set-only-needs-read_lock.patch
  radix_tree_tag_set only needs read_lock()

must-fix.patch
  must fix lists update
  must fix list update
  mustfix update

must-fix-update-5.patch
  must-fix update

ppc64-console-autodetection-for-pmac.patch
  From: Olaf Hering <olh@suse.de>
  Subject: [PATCH] console autodetection for pmac

ppc64-reloc_hide.patch

invalidate_inodes-speedup.patch
  invalidate_inodes speedup
  more invalidate_inodes speedup fixes

config_spinline.patch
  uninline spinlocks for profiling accuracy.

allow-i386-to-reenable-interrupts-on-lock-contention.patch
  Allow i386 to reenable interrupts on lock contention

pdflush-diag.patch

get_user_pages-handle-VM_IO.patch
  fix get_user_pages() against mappings of /dev/mem

pci_set_power_state-might-sleep.patch

slab-leak-detector.patch
  slab leak detector
  mm/slab.c warning in cache_alloc_debugcheck_after

local_bh_enable-warning-fix.patch

schedstats.patch
  sched: scheduler statistics

cond_resched-might-sleep.patch
  cond_resched() might sleep

fa311-mac-address-fix.patch
  wrong mac address with netgear FA311 ethernet card

pid_max-fix.patch
  Bug when setting pid_max > 32k

non-readable-binaries.patch
  Handle non-readable binfmt_misc executables

binfmt_misc-credentials.patch
  binfmt_misc: improve calaulation of interpreter's credentials

poll-select-longer-timeouts.patch
  poll()/select(): support longer timeouts

poll-select-range-check-fix.patch
  poll()/select() range checking fix

poll-select-handle-large-timeouts.patch
  poll()/select(): handle long timeouts

add-a-slab-for-ethernet.patch
  Add a kmalloc slab for ethernet packets

siimage-update.patch
  ide: update for siimage driver

shm-do_munmap-check.patch

stack-overflow-test-fix.patch
  Fix stack overflow test for non-8k stacks

jbd-remove-livelock-avoidance.patch
  JBD: remove livelock avoidance code in journal_dirty_data()

logitech-keyboard-fix.patch
  2.6.5-rc2 keyboard breakage

journal_add_journal_head-debug.patch
  journal_add_journal_head-debug

list_del-debug.patch
  list_del debug check

oops-dump-preceding-code.patch
  i386 oops output: dump preceding code

lockmeter.patch
  lockmeter
  ia64 CONFIG_LOCKMETER fix

sk98lin-buggy-vpd-workaround.patch
  net/sk98lin: correct buggy VPD in ASUS MB

unplug-can-sleep.patch
  unplug functions can sleep

firestream-warnings.patch
  firestream warnings

ext3_rsv_cleanup.patch
  ext3 block reservation patch set -- ext3 preallocation cleanup

ext3_rsv_base.patch
  ext3 block reservation patch set -- ext3 block reservation
  ext3 reservations: fix performance regression
  ext3 block reservation patch set -- mount and ioctl feature
  ext3 block reservation patch set -- dynamically increase reservation window

ext3-reservation-default-on.patch
  ext3 reservation: default to on

ext3-reservation-ifdef-cleanup-patch.patch
  ext3 reservation ifdef cleanup patch

ext3-reservation-max-window-size-check-patch.patch
  ext3 reservation max window size check patch

ext3-reservation-file-ioctl-fix.patch
  ext3 reservation file ioctl fix

ext3-lazy-discard-reservation-window-patch.patch
  ext3 lazy discard reservation window patch
  ext3 discard reservation in last iput fix patch
  Fix lazy reservation discard

ext3-reservation-bad-inode-fix.patch
  ext3 reservations: bad_inode fix

ext3_reservation_discard_race_fix.patch
  ext3 reservation discard race fix

clean-up-asm-pgalloch-include.patch
  Clean up asm/pgalloc.h include

clean-up-asm-pgalloch-include-2.patch
  Clean up asm/pgalloc.h include

clean-up-asm-pgalloch-include-3.patch
  Clean up asm/pgalloc.h include 3

ppc64-uninline-__pte_free_tlb.patch
  ppc64: uninline __pte_free_tlb()

input-tsdev-fixes.patch
  tsdev.c fixes

fix-scancode-keycode-scancode-conversion-for-265.patch
  Fix scancode->keycode->scancode conversion

fealnx-mac-address-and-other-issues.patch
  Fealnx. Mac address and other issues

reiserfs-group-alloc-9.patch
  reiserfs: block allocator optimizations

reiserfs-block-allocator-should-not-inherit-packing-locality.patch
  reiserfs: block allocator should not inherit "packing locality 1"

reiserfs-remove-debugging-warning-from-block-allocator.patch
  reiserfs: remove debugging warning from block allocator

reiserfs-group-alloc-9-build-fix.patch
  reiserfs-group-alloc-9 build fix

reiserfs-search_reada-5.patch
  reiserfs: btree readahead

reiserfs-data-logging-support.patch
  reiserfs data logging support

problems-with-atkbd_command--atkbd_interrupt-interaction.patch
  Problems with atkbd_command & atkbd_interrupt interaction

sis-agp-updates.patch
  fbdev: SIS AGP updates

clear_backing_dev_congested.patch
  clear_baking_dev_congested

force-config_regparm-to-y.patch
  Force CONFIG_REGPARM to `y'

hugetlb_shm_group-sysctl-gid-0-fix.patch
  hugetlb_shm_group sysctl-gid-0-fix

idr-overflow-fixes.patch
  Fixes for idr code

idr-remove-counter.patch
  idr: remove counter bits from id's

idr-fixups.patch
  IDR fixups

use-idr_get_new-to-allocate-a-bus-id-in-drivers-i2c-i2c-corec-update-to-new-api.patch
  use-idr_get_new-to-allocate-a-bus-id-in-drivers-i2c-i2c-corec-update-to-new-api

rlim-add-rlimit-entry-for-controlling-queued-signals.patch
  RLIM: add rlimit entry for controlling queued signals

rlim-add-sigpending-field-to-user_struct.patch
  RLIM: add sigpending field to user_struct

rlim-pass-task_struct-in-send_signal.patch
  RLIM: pass task_struct in send_signal()

rlim-add-simple-get_uid-helper.patch
  RLIM: add simple get_uid() helper

rlim-enforce-rlimits-on-queued-signals.patch
  RLIM: enforce rlimits on queued signals

rlim-remove-unused-queued_signals-global-accounting.patch
  RLIM: remove unused queued_signals global accounting

rlim-add-rlimit-entry-for-posix-mqueue-allocation.patch
  RLIM: add rlimit entry for POSIX mqueue allocation

rlim-add-mq_bytes-to-user_struct.patch
  RLIM: add mq_bytes to user_struct

rlim-add-mq_attr_ok-helper.patch
  RLIM: add mq_attr_ok() helper

rlim-enforce-rlimits-for-posix-mqueue-allocation.patch
  RLIM: enforce rlimits for POSIX mqueue allocation

rlim-adjust-default-mqueue-sizes.patch
  RLIM: adjust default mqueue sizes

call-might_sleep-in-tasklet_kill.patch
  Call might_sleep() in tasklet_kill

add-qsort-library-function.patch
  add qsort library function

have-xfs-use-kernel-provided-qsort.patch
  Have XFS use kernel-provided qsort

have-xfs-use-kernel-provided-qsort-fix.patch
  have-xfs-use-kernel-provided-qsort-fix

slabify-iocontext-request_queue-SLAB_PANIC.patch
  slabify-iocontext-request_queue: use SLAB_PANIC

really-ptrace-single-step-2.patch
  ptrace single-stepping fix

fix-crash-on-modprobe-ohci1394.patch
  fix crash on `modprobe ohci1394; modprobe -r ohci1394'

abs-cleanup.patch
  abs() cleanup

add-i386-readq.patch
  add i386 readq()/writeq()

hpet-driver.patch
  HPET driver

hpet-driver-updates.patch
  HPET driver updates

hpet-driver-updates-move-readq.patch
  hpet-driver-updates-move-readq

hpet-kconfig-loop-fix.patch
  HPET: Fix Kconfig dependency loop

hpet-rtc-dependency-fix.patch
  HPET RTC dependency fix

hpet-free_irq-deadlock-fix.patch
  hpet-free_irq-deadlock-fix

checkstack-target.patch
  Add `make checkstack' target

kill-off-pc9800.patch
  Remove PC9800 support

more-pc9800-removal.patch
  more PC9800 removal

pc9800-merge-std_resourcesc-back-into-setupc.patch
  pc9800: merge std_resources.c back into setup.c

266-mm2-r8169-ethtool-set_settings.patch
  r8169: ethtool .set_settings

266-mm2-r8169-ethtool-get_settings.patch
  r8169: ethtool .get_settings

266-mm2-r8169-link-handling-rework-1-2.patch
  r8169: link handling rework (1/2)

266-mm2-r8169-link-handling-rework-2-2.patch
  r8169: link handling rework (2/2)

hfsplus-dir-rename-fix.patch
  hfsplus directory renaming fix

ftruncate-vs-block_write_full_page.patch
  ftruncate-vs-block_write_full_page

fix-userspace-include-of-linux-fsh.patch
  Fix userspace include of linux/fs.h

ext3-retry-allocation-after-transaction-commit-v2.patch
  Ext3: Retry allocation after transaction commit (v2)

ext3-retry-allocation-after-transaction-commit-v2-jbd-api.patch
  ext3-retry-allocation-after-transaction-commit-v2: implement JBD API

sysfs-leaves-mount.patch
  sysfs backing store: add sysfs_dirent

sysfs-leaves-dir.patch
  sysfs backing store: add sysfs_dirent

sysfs-leaves-file.patch
  sysfs backing store: sysfs_create() changes

sysfs-leaves-bin.patch
  sysfs backing store: bin attribute changes

sysfs-leaves-symlink.patch
  sysfs backing store: sysfs_create_link changes

sysfs-leaves-misc.patch
  sysfs backing store: attribute groups and misc routines

pty-allocation-first-fit.patch
  pty-allocation-first-fit-fix

sync_inodes_sb-debug.patch
  sync_inodes_sb-debug

vmscan-handle-synchronous-writepage.patch
  vmscan: handle synchronous writepage()

vmscan-handle-synchronous-writepage-fix.patch
  vmscan-handle-synchronous-writepage-fix

ramdisk-buffer-uptodate-fix.patch
  ramdisk: buffer_uptodate fix

2-3-small-tweaks-to-standard-resource-stuff.patch
  small tweaks to standard resource stuff

3-3-same-small-tweaks-x86_64-version.patch
  same small resource tweaks, x86_64 version

sis900-maintainer.patch
  Sis900: maintainer update

sis900-fix-phy-transceiver-detection.patch
  sis900: Fix PHY transceiver detection

getgroups16-fix.patch
  getgroups16() fix

fixing-sendfile-on-64bit-architectures.patch
  fix sendfile on 64bit architectures

ppc64-fault-deadlock-fix.patch
  ppc64: fix deadlocks due to fault-inside-mmap_sem

ia32-fault-deadlock-fix.patch
  ia32: fix deadlocks due to fault-inside-mmap_sem

ia32-fault-deadlock-fix-cleanup.patch
  ia32-fault-deadlock-fix cleanup

ext3-htree-rename-fix.patch
  ext3: htree rename fix

out-of-bounds-access-in-hiddev_cleanup.patch
  out of bounds access in hiddev_cleanup

sis900-xcvr-fix.patch
  sis900 transceiver fix

advansys-basic-highmem-dma-support.patch
  advansys: add basic highmem/DMA support

fbdev-mode-switching-fix.patch
  fbdev: mode switching fix.

ipr-gcc-attribute-fixes.patch
  Fix drivers/scsi/ipr.c on ia32

SL0-core-RC6-bk5.patch
  symlinks: infrastructure

SL1-ext2-RC6-bk5.patch
  symlinks: ext2 conversion

SL2-trivial-RC6-bk5.patch
  symlinks: trivial cases

SL3-page-RC6-bk5.patch
  symlinks: reuse new helpers

SL4-smb-RC6-bk5.patch
  symlinks: smbfs

SL5-xfs-RC6-bk5.patch
  symlinks: XFS

SL6-shm-RC6-bk5.patch
  symlinks: tmpfs

SL7-befs-RC6-bk5.patch
  symlinks: befs

SL8-jffs2-RC6-bk5.patch
  symlinks: jffs2

ipr-ppc64-depends.patch
  Make ipr.c require ppc

scsi-qla1280c-warning-fix.patch
  scsi/qla1280.c warning fix.

trivial-use-page_to_phys-in-dma_map_page.patch
  trivial: use page_to_phys in dma_map_page()

trivial-fix-duplicated-includes.patch
  trivial: remove duplicated #includes
  trivial: drivers/media/video_saa7134_saa7134-input.c: kill duplicate include
  Subject: [TRIVIAL] [TRIVIAL 2.6] drivers_net_wireless_orinoco_plx.c: kill 	duplicate

fix-knfsd-scary-message.patch
  Prevent scary warnings from knfsd

mangled-printk-oops-output-fix.patch
  Fix the mangled-oops-output-on-SMP problem

mangled-printk-oops-output-fix-tweaks.patch
  mangled-printk-oops-output-fix tweaks

crypto-scatterwalk-fixes.patch
  crypto scatterwalking fixes

sanitise-unneeded-syscall-stubs.patch
  Sanitise handling of unneeded syscall stubs

sanitise-unneeded-syscall-stubs-fixes.patch
  sanitise-unneeded-syscall-stubs-fixes

ep_send_events-simplification.patch
  ep_send_events-simplification

blk-completion-clear-stack-pointer-on-return.patch
  blk: clear completion stack pointer on return

disk-barrier-core.patch
  disk barriers: core

disk-barrier-core-tweaks.patch
  disk-barrier-core-tweaks

disk-barrier-ide.patch
  disk barriers: IDE

disk-barrier-ide-symbol-expoprt.patch
  disk-barrier-ide-symbol-expoprt

disk-barrier-ide-warning-fix.patch
  disk-barrier ide warning fix

disk-barrier-scsi.patch
  disk barriers: scsi

disk-barrier-dm.patch
  disk barriers: devicemapper

disk-barrier-md.patch
  disk barriers: MD

reiserfs-v3-barrier-support.patch
  reiserfs v3 barrier support

ext3-barrier-support.patch
  ext3 barrier support

sync_dirty_buffer-retval.patch
  make sync_dirty_buffer() return something useful

jbd-barrier-fallback-on-failure.patch
  jbd: barrier fallback on failure

x86-stack-dump-fixes.patch
  x86 stack dump fixes

add-futex_cmp_requeue-futex-op.patch
  Add FUTEX_CMP_REQUEUE futex op

swsusp-kill-unneccessary-debugging.patch
  From: Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz>
  Subject: swsusp: kill unneccessary debugging

race-condition-with-current-group_info.patch
  Fix race condition with current->group_info

race-condition-with-current-group_info-tweaks.patch
  race-condition-with-current-group_info-tweaks

swsusp-fix-devfs-breakage-introduced-in-266.patch
  swsusp: fix devfs breakage introduced in 2.6.6

check-return-status-of-register-calls-in-i82365.patch
  Check return status of register calls in i82365

26-isdn-eicon-driver-fix-__devexit-in-prototype.patch
  i4l: Eicon driver: fix __devexit in prototype

cpuid-cache-info-update.patch
  x86 cpuid cache info update

3ware-9000-sata-raid-driver-for-266-mm5.patch
  3ware 9000 SATA-RAID driver for 2.6.6-mm5

autofs4-printk-cleanup.patch
  autofs4: printk cleanup

autofs4-maintainer.patch
  autofs4: MAINTAINERS update




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
@ 2004-05-22  9:09 ` Jeff Garzik
  2004-05-22  9:22   ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
  2004-05-22 11:51   ` 2.6.6-mm5 R. J. Wysocki
  2004-05-22  9:26 ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
                   ` (8 subsequent siblings)
  9 siblings, 2 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Jeff Garzik @ 2004-05-22  9:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: linux-kernel, SCSI Mailing List

Andrew Morton wrote:
> - Added a new SATA RAID driver from 3ware.  From a quick peek it seem to
>   need a little work yet.


It's not too bad... but it looks more like a 2.2 driver forward ported 
to 2.4, than a 2.6.x driver.  Needs some luvin' from the 2.6 scsi api crew.

Overall, it appears to be a message-based firmware engine like 
drivers/block/carmel.c, that hides the SATA details in the firmware.

	Jeff



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  9:09 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jeff Garzik
@ 2004-05-22  9:22   ` hch
  2004-05-22  9:26     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
  2004-05-22 11:51   ` 2.6.6-mm5 R. J. Wysocki
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: hch @ 2004-05-22  9:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jeff Garzik; +Cc: Andrew Morton, linux-kernel, SCSI Mailing List

On Sat, May 22, 2004 at 05:09:59AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
> Andrew Morton wrote:
> >- Added a new SATA RAID driver from 3ware.  From a quick peek it seem to
> >  need a little work yet.
> 
> 
> It's not too bad... but it looks more like a 2.2 driver forward ported 
> to 2.4, than a 2.6.x driver.  Needs some luvin' from the 2.6 scsi api crew.
> 
> Overall, it appears to be a message-based firmware engine like 
> drivers/block/carmel.c, that hides the SATA details in the firmware.

In addition driver submission should always go through linux-scsi.  Please
tell them to submit it to linux-scsi so we can have a public review process
there.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
  2004-05-22  9:09 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jeff Garzik
@ 2004-05-22  9:26 ` hch
  2004-05-22  9:32   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
  2004-05-22  9:38 ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
                   ` (7 subsequent siblings)
  9 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: hch @ 2004-05-22  9:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton, brking; +Cc: linux-kernel

> +ipr-ppc64-depends.patch
> 
>  Make ipr.c depend on PPC

>> Makes ipr depend on CONFIG_PPC since this driver is unique to PPC hardware.
>> 
>> (It actually builds OK on x86, but it heavily uses anonymous unions, which
>> breaks on gcc-2.95)

I use gcc-2.95 happily on ppc.  Better thing is to either fix it up not to
use anonymous unions (which is a pitty because that feature helps making
code more readable sometimes) or stick a

#if (__GNUC__ < 3)
# error "This driver requires GCC 3.x"
#endif

ontop of the driver so people know why it fails at least.

Still wondering why these fixes don't go trhough linux-scsi..

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  9:22   ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
@ 2004-05-22  9:26     ` Andrew Morton
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2004-05-22  9:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: hch; +Cc: jgarzik, linux-kernel, linux-scsi

hch@infradead.org wrote:
>
> On Sat, May 22, 2004 at 05:09:59AM -0400, Jeff Garzik wrote:
> > Andrew Morton wrote:
> > >- Added a new SATA RAID driver from 3ware.  From a quick peek it seem to
> > >  need a little work yet.
> > 
> > 
> > It's not too bad... but it looks more like a 2.2 driver forward ported 
> > to 2.4, than a 2.6.x driver.  Needs some luvin' from the 2.6 scsi api crew.
> > 
> > Overall, it appears to be a message-based firmware engine like 
> > drivers/block/carmel.c, that hides the SATA details in the firmware.
> 
> In addition driver submission should always go through linux-scsi.  Please
> tell them to submit it to linux-scsi so we can have a public review process
> there.

Adam did attempt to cc linux-scsi but at 140kbytes the email probably got
spat out.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  9:26 ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
@ 2004-05-22  9:32   ` Andrew Morton
  2004-05-22  9:41     ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2004-05-22  9:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: hch; +Cc: brking, linux-kernel

hch@infradead.org wrote:
>
> > +ipr-ppc64-depends.patch
> > 
> >  Make ipr.c depend on PPC
> 
> >> Makes ipr depend on CONFIG_PPC since this driver is unique to PPC hardware.
> >> 
> >> (It actually builds OK on x86, but it heavily uses anonymous unions, which
> >> breaks on gcc-2.95)
> 
> I use gcc-2.95 happily on ppc.  Better thing is to either fix it up not to
> use anonymous unions (which is a pitty because that feature helps making
> code more readable sometimes) or stick a

It uses a *ton* of anonymous unions.

> #if (__GNUC__ < 3)
> # error "This driver requires GCC 3.x"
> #endif

That breaks allfooconfig.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
  2004-05-22  9:09 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jeff Garzik
  2004-05-22  9:26 ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
@ 2004-05-22  9:38 ` hch
  2004-05-22  9:44   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jens Axboe
  2004-05-22  9:46 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Felipe Alfaro Solana
                   ` (6 subsequent siblings)
  9 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: hch @ 2004-05-22  9:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton, axboe; +Cc: linux-kernel

> +disk-barrier-core.patch
> +disk-barrier-core-tweaks.patch
> +disk-barrier-ide.patch
> +disk-barrier-ide-symbol-expoprt.patch
> +disk-barrier-ide-warning-fix.patch
> +disk-barrier-scsi.patch
> 
>  Support for IDE and SCSI barriers
> 
> +disk-barrier-dm.patch
> +disk-barrier-md.patch
> 
>  Via device mapper and raid as well.

Some comments on the API and the SCSI part:

 - issue_flush_fn prototype choice is bad, the request_queue_t argument
   wile always be disk->queue so it's not needed and only causes
   confusion.
 - issue_flush sounds a little strange to me, what about cache_flush
   or sync_cache instead?
 - scsi_drive.issue_flush should take a scsi_device * as first parameter,
   not struct device * - makes life for bother caller and callee easier.
 - should probably add a small helper to get the scsi_driver from the
   gendisk instead of duplicating the code, ala:

static inline struct scsi_driver *scsi_disk_driver(struct gendisk *disk)
{
	return *(struct scsi_driver **) disk->private_data;
}

 - the WCE check should move into sd_sync_cache
 - NULL scsi_disk can't happen for sd_issue_flush, no need to check,
   and thus the disctinction of sd_issue_flush vs sd_sync_cache can
   go and sd_shutdown can simply call the cache flush method.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  9:32   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
@ 2004-05-22  9:41     ` hch
  2004-05-22 19:03       ` 2.6.6-mm5 Brian King
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: hch @ 2004-05-22  9:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: brking, linux-kernel

On Sat, May 22, 2004 at 02:32:18AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > code more readable sometimes) or stick a
> 
> It uses a *ton* of anonymous unions.
> 
> > #if (__GNUC__ < 3)
> > # error "This driver requires GCC 3.x"
> > #endif
> 
> That breaks allfooconfig.

Well, the patch currently in -mm also breaks allmodconfig.  Just not on
your arch or with a recent enough compiler, while with this it'll break
an all arches unless you have a recent enough compiler.  And give the
driver isn't actually ppc specific that sounds like a really bad tradeoff.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  9:38 ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
@ 2004-05-22  9:44   ` Jens Axboe
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Jens Axboe @ 2004-05-22  9:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: hch, Andrew Morton, linux-kernel

On Sat, May 22 2004, hch@infradead.org wrote:
> > +disk-barrier-core.patch
> > +disk-barrier-core-tweaks.patch
> > +disk-barrier-ide.patch
> > +disk-barrier-ide-symbol-expoprt.patch
> > +disk-barrier-ide-warning-fix.patch
> > +disk-barrier-scsi.patch
> > 
> >  Support for IDE and SCSI barriers
> > 
> > +disk-barrier-dm.patch
> > +disk-barrier-md.patch
> > 
> >  Via device mapper and raid as well.
> 
> Some comments on the API and the SCSI part:
> 
>  - issue_flush_fn prototype choice is bad, the request_queue_t argument
>    wile always be disk->queue so it's not needed and only causes
>    confusion.

Agree, it's mutated into place which is probably the reason for the
dupe.

>  - issue_flush sounds a little strange to me, what about cache_flush
>    or sync_cache instead?

Fine with me, I'm notoriously bad at naming.

>  - scsi_drive.issue_flush should take a scsi_device * as first parameter,
>    not struct device * - makes life for bother caller and callee easier.
>  - should probably add a small helper to get the scsi_driver from the
>    gendisk instead of duplicating the code, ala:
> 
> static inline struct scsi_driver *scsi_disk_driver(struct gendisk *disk)
> {
> 	return *(struct scsi_driver **) disk->private_data;
> }

Fine too.

>  - the WCE check should move into sd_sync_cache

Ditto

>  - NULL scsi_disk can't happen for sd_issue_flush, no need to check,
>    and thus the disctinction of sd_issue_flush vs sd_sync_cache can
>    go and sd_shutdown can simply call the cache flush method.

Neat, thanks.

Thanks for the review Christoph!

-- 
Jens Axboe


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
                   ` (2 preceding siblings ...)
  2004-05-22  9:38 ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
@ 2004-05-22  9:46 ` Felipe Alfaro Solana
  2004-05-23 15:51   ` 2.6.6-mm5 James Morris
  2004-05-22 11:59 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Matthias Andree
                   ` (5 subsequent siblings)
  9 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: Felipe Alfaro Solana @ 2004-05-22  9:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: Kernel Mailinglist

On Sat, 2004-05-22 at 10:36, Andrew Morton wrote:
> http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
> ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
> 

Will you included the i586-optimized AES patch from Fruhwirth Clemens to
the -mm tree? I find this patch really interesting, as it boost IPSec
ESP AES considerably.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  9:09 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jeff Garzik
  2004-05-22  9:22   ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
@ 2004-05-22 11:51   ` R. J. Wysocki
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: R. J. Wysocki @ 2004-05-22 11:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jeff Garzik, Andrew Morton; +Cc: linux-kernel, SCSI Mailing List

On Saturday 22 of May 2004 11:09, Jeff Garzik wrote:
> Andrew Morton wrote:
> > - Added a new SATA RAID driver from 3ware.  From a quick peek it seem to
> >   need a little work yet.
>
> It's not too bad... but it looks more like a 2.2 driver forward ported
> to 2.4, than a 2.6.x driver.  Needs some luvin' from the 2.6 scsi api crew.
>
> Overall, it appears to be a message-based firmware engine like
> drivers/block/carmel.c, that hides the SATA details in the firmware.

BTW, which 3ware driver would you suggest to use with the 2.6.x now?  I'm 
going to install such a controller in my box ...

RJW


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
                   ` (3 preceding siblings ...)
  2004-05-22  9:46 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Felipe Alfaro Solana
@ 2004-05-22 11:59 ` Matthias Andree
  2004-05-22 12:19 ` [patch] 2.6.6-mm5: JFFS2_FS_NAND=y compile error Adrian Bunk
                   ` (4 subsequent siblings)
  9 siblings, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Matthias Andree @ 2004-05-22 11:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Sat, 22 May 2004, Andrew Morton wrote:

> - Implementation of request barriers for IDE and SCSI.  The idea here is
>   that a filesystem can tag an IO request as a barrier and the disk will not
>   reorder writes across the barrier.  It provides additional integrity
>   guarantees for the journalling filesystems.  The feature is enabled for
>   reiserfs and ext3.
> 
>   On reiserfs do `mount /dev/hda /wherever -o barrier=flush' or
>   `barrier=none'.
> 
>   On ext3 do `mount ... -o barrier=1' or `barrier=0'.
> 
>   ext3 also supports `mount -o remount,barrier=N'.  I didn't check whether
>   reiserfs supports switching at remount time and nobody tells me these
>   things.

Ah, progress!

What SCSI low level drivers will translate barriers to tags?

Of particular personal egoistic interest for me are, in decreasing order
of importance: sym53c8xx_2 megaraid aic7xxx tmscsim


How will the system handle the Queue Algorithm Modifier? Appearently,
allowing command reordering is a matter of the device, not of the
individual partitions, so the barrier stuff is a property that would
belong into the block driver rather than into partition handling. Upon
mounting, the file system would have to query if the underlying block
device requires write barriers or will execute commands in order
(control mode page, queue algorithm modifier). If I need to operate the
target with "restricted reordering" algorithm for any other partition
that is mounted without barriers or with a barriers-unaware file system,
we won't gain much by all this barrier stuff for the target mustn't
reorder operations anyways.

The potential benefits of Queue Algorithm Modifier "Unrestricted
Reordering allowed" however requires that all file systems inform the
target about their write ordering requirements. IMHO, the barrier
"switch" does not belong into the file systems -- I don't see OTOH how
using these on a device that performs writes in order will matter, so
using these always will probably not harm (it's still useful for testing
probably).

-- 
Matthias Andree

Encrypted mail welcome: my GnuPG key ID is 0x052E7D95

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* [patch] 2.6.6-mm5: JFFS2_FS_NAND=y compile error
  2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
                   ` (4 preceding siblings ...)
  2004-05-22 11:59 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Matthias Andree
@ 2004-05-22 12:19 ` Adrian Bunk
  2004-05-23  1:01 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
                   ` (3 subsequent siblings)
  9 siblings, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Adrian Bunk @ 2004-05-22 12:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton, Rusty Russell, David Woodhouse, Sam Ravnborg,
	l.s.r, Linus Torvalds
  Cc: linux-kernel

The patch
  [PATCH] trivial: Make JFFS2 ready for Linux 2.7
from Linus' tree is broken with CONFIG_JFFS2_FS_NAND=y:

<--  snip  -->

...
  LD      .tmp_vmlinux1
fs/built-in.o(.text+0x16bdc2): In function `jffs2_wbuf_recover':
: undefined reference to `jffs2_erase_pending_trigger'
fs/built-in.o(.text+0x16c0e2): In function `jffs2_wbuf_recover':
: undefined reference to `jffs2_reserve_space_gc'
fs/built-in.o(.text+0x16c198): In function `jffs2_wbuf_recover':
: undefined reference to `jffs2_alloc_raw_node_ref'
fs/built-in.o(.text+0x16c1d0): In function `jffs2_wbuf_recover':
: undefined reference to `jffs2_add_physical_node_ref'
fs/built-in.o(.text+0x16c46b): In function `jffs2_wbuf_recover':
: undefined reference to `jffs2_erase_pending_trigger'
fs/built-in.o(.text+0x16c8f9): In function `__jffs2_flush_wbuf':
: undefined reference to `jffs2_erase_pending_trigger'
fs/built-in.o(.text+0x16c9f3): In function `jffs2_flush_wbuf_gc':
: undefined reference to `jffs2_garbage_collect_pass'
fs/built-in.o(.text+0x16cac8): In function `jffs2_flash_writev':
: undefined reference to `jffs2_flash_direct_writev'
make: *** [.tmp_vmlinux1] Error 1

<--  snip  -->


The bug is obvious, and the fix is trivial:


--- linux-2.6.6-mm5-full/fs/jffs2/Makefile.old	2004-05-22 14:15:47.000000000 +0200
+++ linux-2.6.6-mm5-full/fs/jffs2/Makefile	2004-05-22 14:16:30.000000000 +0200
@@ -12,4 +12,4 @@
 jffs2-y	+= symlink.o build.o erase.o background.o fs.o writev.o
 jffs2-y	+= super.o
 
-jffs2-$(CONFIG_JFFS2_FS_NAND)	:= wbuf.o
+jffs2-$(CONFIG_JFFS2_FS_NAND)	+= wbuf.o



cu
Adrian

-- 

       "Is there not promise of rain?" Ling Tan asked suddenly out
        of the darkness. There had been need of rain for many days.
       "Only a promise," Lao Er said.
                                       Pearl S. Buck - Dragon Seed


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  9:41     ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
@ 2004-05-22 19:03       ` Brian King
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Brian King @ 2004-05-22 19:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: hch; +Cc: Andrew Morton, linux-kernel

hch@infradead.org wrote:
> On Sat, May 22, 2004 at 02:32:18AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> 
>>>code more readable sometimes) or stick a
>>
>>It uses a *ton* of anonymous unions.
>>
>>
>>>#if (__GNUC__ < 3)
>>># error "This driver requires GCC 3.x"
>>>#endif
>>
>>That breaks allfooconfig.
> 
> 
> Well, the patch currently in -mm also breaks allmodconfig.  Just not on
> your arch or with a recent enough compiler, while with this it'll break
> an all arches unless you have a recent enough compiler.  And give the
> driver isn't actually ppc specific that sounds like a really bad tradeoff.

I'll pull out the anonymous unions and submit to linux-scsi.


-- 
Brian King
eServer Storage I/O
IBM Linux Technology Center


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
                   ` (5 preceding siblings ...)
  2004-05-22 12:19 ` [patch] 2.6.6-mm5: JFFS2_FS_NAND=y compile error Adrian Bunk
@ 2004-05-23  1:01 ` Eric W. Biederman
  2004-05-23  1:08   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
  2004-05-24 22:11 ` 2.6.6-mm5 (compile stats) John Cherry
                   ` (2 subsequent siblings)
  9 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: Eric W. Biederman @ 2004-05-23  1:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: linux-kernel

Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> writes:

> http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
> ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
> 
> 
> add-i386-readq.patch
>   add i386 readq()/writeq()

> static inline u64 readq(void *addr)
> {
> 	return readl(addr) | (((u64)readl(addr + 4)) << 32);
> }
> 
> static inline void writeq(u64 v, void *addr)
> {
> 	u32 v32;
> 
> 	v32 = v;
> 	writel(v32, addr);
> 	v32 = v >> 32;
> 	writel(v32, addr + 4);
> }
> 
> #endif

The implementation is broken and it will break drivers that actually
expect writeq and readq to be 64bit reads and writes.

In particular an interrupt can come in during the middle of a read
or a write and widely separate the two different halves.

Unless the driver has a lock protecting access to the card already
this race could be nasty and quite difficult to debug.  And I have
looked and we do have some cases in the kernel that do not have
a lock protecting them.

I attempted to suggest some alternative implementations earlier
in the original thread that brought this up but it looks like
you missed that.

Eric

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-23  1:01 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
@ 2004-05-23  1:08   ` Andrew Morton
  2004-05-23  1:15     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Roland Dreier
  2004-05-23  2:45     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Morton @ 2004-05-23  1:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eric W. Biederman; +Cc: linux-kernel

ebiederm@xmission.com (Eric W. Biederman) wrote:
>
> Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> writes:
> 
> > http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
> > ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
> > 
> > 
> > add-i386-readq.patch
> >   add i386 readq()/writeq()
> 
> > static inline u64 readq(void *addr)
> > {
> > 	return readl(addr) | (((u64)readl(addr + 4)) << 32);
> > }
> > 
> > static inline void writeq(u64 v, void *addr)
> > {
> > 	u32 v32;
> > 
> > 	v32 = v;
> > 	writel(v32, addr);
> > 	v32 = v >> 32;
> > 	writel(v32, addr + 4);
> > }
> > 
> > #endif
> 
> The implementation is broken and it will break drivers that actually
> expect writeq and readq to be 64bit reads and writes.

I don't think we can expect all architectures to be able to implement
atomic 64-bit IO's, can we?

ergo, drivers which want to use readq and writeq should provide the
appropriate locking.

> I attempted to suggest some alternative implementations earlier
> in the original thread that brought this up but it looks like
> you missed that.

I saw some stuff float past, but I don't recall seeing anything which would
work on all architectures?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-23  1:08   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
@ 2004-05-23  1:15     ` Roland Dreier
  2004-05-24 16:17       ` 2.6.6-mm5 Matt Mackall
  2004-05-23  2:45     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: Roland Dreier @ 2004-05-23  1:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: Eric W. Biederman, linux-kernel

    Andrew> I don't think we can expect all architectures to be able
    Andrew> to implement atomic 64-bit IO's, can we?

    Andrew> ergo, drivers which want to use readq and writeq should
    Andrew> provide the appropriate locking.

Perhaps we should have ARCH_HAS_ATOMIC_WRITEQ or something so that
drivers don't add the overhead of locking on architectures where it's
not necessary?

(I happen to be working on a driver that needs atomic 64-bit writes,
and where those writes happen to be in the fast path)

Thanks,
  Roland

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-23  1:08   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
  2004-05-23  1:15     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Roland Dreier
@ 2004-05-23  2:45     ` Eric W. Biederman
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Eric W. Biederman @ 2004-05-23  2:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: linux-kernel

Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> writes:

> ebiederm@xmission.com (Eric W. Biederman) wrote:
> >
> > Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> writes:
> > 
> > >
> http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
> 
> > >
> ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
> 
> > > 
> > > 
> > > add-i386-readq.patch
> > >   add i386 readq()/writeq()
> > 
> > > static inline u64 readq(void *addr)
> > > {
> > > 	return readl(addr) | (((u64)readl(addr + 4)) << 32);
> > > }
> > > 
> > > static inline void writeq(u64 v, void *addr)
> > > {
> > > 	u32 v32;
> > > 
> > > 	v32 = v;
> > > 	writel(v32, addr);
> > > 	v32 = v >> 32;
> > > 	writel(v32, addr + 4);
> > > }
> > > 
> > > #endif
> > 
> > The implementation is broken and it will break drivers that actually
> > expect writeq and readq to be 64bit reads and writes.
> 
> I don't think we can expect all architectures to be able to implement
> atomic 64-bit IO's, can we?

No I don't think we can expect all architectures to be able to
generate 64-bit bus cycles.  Although I think we can expect a majority
of them to, and I believe that majority encompasses all the platforms
we want to run drivers that require readq and writeq.

There are some drivers that cannot be implemented on architectures
without 64bit transactions on the I/O bus.  This is not always a race
issue that can be fixed with locking.  I know of at least mtd map
driver where if you don't feed the device 64bit writes you will store
corrupt data.

If we want to use the above quoted functions we need to call them
readq_emulated and writeq_emulated.  Because they are not the real
mccoy.  Likely only readq_emulated and writeq_emulated can be
implemented on all architectures.

As I understand the current situation every architecture that
implements readq/writeq generates true 64bit bus cycles.  A driver can
test if it the support exists at compile time with a simple #ifdef to
see if the function is present.  If the function is not supported at
compile time the driver can implement a work around (like
readq_emulated) or it can fail to compile.

> ergo, drivers which want to use readq and writeq should provide the
> appropriate locking.

Hmm.  I thought the logic:
   I am going to introduce a broken implementation of a generic
   function and this will reduce the maintainability of your driver in
   subtle incomprehensible ways by not doing what is advertised.  In
   addition I will not even attempt to fix all of the drivers in the
   tree when I generate the patch.
did not fly in linux.

I am worried about the general and subtle breakage that may occur
from a driver that works when real 64bit read/writes are generated
on the bus, and fails when we emulate them.

Knowing of two drivers off the top of my head that will break
with this patch, I am opposed to it on general grounds.  The
infiniband driver is not in the tree and it can have locking
added to correct the additional race.  The 64bit mtd map drivers
I have seen for some ppc platrrom will break as soon as they stop
rolling readq/writeq by hand, and no amount of locking will help
there.  I don't know what else in the tree will break.

> > I attempted to suggest some alternative implementations earlier
> > in the original thread that brought this up but it looks like
> > you missed that.
> 
> I saw some stuff float past, but I don't recall seeing anything which would
> work on all architectures?

I am not yet convinced you can write code that will work on all
architectures.  I have yet to see generic code that with all
existing drivers.

I was attempting to start the conversation, because I don't know all
of the answers, I can just detect failures.  In general on a 32bit
arch you need to use the FPU to implement a 64bit read or write. This
is not something you can code casually in the kernel or that you can
write generically.  Although the basic idiom will likely be the same
for different architectures.

Currently I know of a safe version that will work on x86 on processors
with sse support.   And I how to generate 64bit I/O cycles with using
mmx or x87 registers,  but don't know if I can write code that touches
the FPU registers that is interrupt safe.

Eric



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  9:46 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Felipe Alfaro Solana
@ 2004-05-23 15:51   ` James Morris
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: James Morris @ 2004-05-23 15:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Felipe Alfaro Solana; +Cc: Andrew Morton, Kernel Mailinglist, David S. Miller

On Sat, 22 May 2004, Felipe Alfaro Solana wrote:

> On Sat, 2004-05-22 at 10:36, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
> > ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/akpm/patches/2.6/2.6.6/2.6.6-mm5/
> > 
> 
> Will you included the i586-optimized AES patch from Fruhwirth Clemens to
> the -mm tree? I find this patch really interesting, as it boost IPSec
> ESP AES considerably.

The problem is that we still need some kind of algorithm selection
mechanism (config time, preferrably), so that the right boxes get the asm
version loaded.


- James
-- 
James Morris
<jmorris@redhat.com>



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-23  1:15     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Roland Dreier
@ 2004-05-24 16:17       ` Matt Mackall
  2004-05-24 17:03         ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: Matt Mackall @ 2004-05-24 16:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Roland Dreier; +Cc: Andrew Morton, Eric W. Biederman, linux-kernel

On Sat, May 22, 2004 at 06:15:51PM -0700, Roland Dreier wrote:
>     Andrew> I don't think we can expect all architectures to be able
>     Andrew> to implement atomic 64-bit IO's, can we?
> 
>     Andrew> ergo, drivers which want to use readq and writeq should
>     Andrew> provide the appropriate locking.
> 
> Perhaps we should have ARCH_HAS_ATOMIC_WRITEQ or something so that
> drivers don't add the overhead of locking on architectures where it's
> not necessary?

Or perhaps we just need a lockless __readq/__writeq for drivers that
know better.

-- 
Mathematics is the supreme nostalgia of our time.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-24 16:17       ` 2.6.6-mm5 Matt Mackall
@ 2004-05-24 17:03         ` Eric W. Biederman
  2004-05-24 17:43           ` 2.6.6-mm5 Roland Dreier
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: Eric W. Biederman @ 2004-05-24 17:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Matt Mackall; +Cc: Roland Dreier, Andrew Morton, linux-kernel

Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> writes:

> On Sat, May 22, 2004 at 06:15:51PM -0700, Roland Dreier wrote:
> >     Andrew> I don't think we can expect all architectures to be able
> >     Andrew> to implement atomic 64-bit IO's, can we?
> > 
> >     Andrew> ergo, drivers which want to use readq and writeq should
> >     Andrew> provide the appropriate locking.
> > 
> > Perhaps we should have ARCH_HAS_ATOMIC_WRITEQ or something so that
> > drivers don't add the overhead of locking on architectures where it's
> > not necessary?
> 
> Or perhaps we just need a lockless __readq/__writeq for drivers that
> know better.

I can see implementing these emulations with a name of
readq_emulated/writeq_emulated, or readl2/writel2.  For drivers that
can stand not generating a true 64bit bus I/O cycle to the device,
that sounds helpful.

However there are and will likely continue to be devices that need a
64bit I/O cycle on the bus.  That is what writeq logically/obviously
does.  Putting an emulation in place of the real thing is likely to
cause all sorts subtle of problems. 

Having listened to this conversation for a while I strongly dislike
the atomic language because that sounds like generating the wrong bus
cycles are somehow OK, and doing what the function says it does is
somehow just an optimization.

If no hardware actually cared or someone could show me that you can't
generate a 64bit memory I/O cycle on the PCI bus that would be
interesting.  I have seen several drivers that care.  Later today
I intend to look at my pci docs and confirm that 64bit I/O cycles
do exist on the bus, even in 32bit slots.  PCI bus traffic is packet
based so I would be strongly surprised if 64bit cycles did not
exist.

Eric


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-24 17:03         ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
@ 2004-05-24 17:43           ` Roland Dreier
  2004-05-25  7:25             ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: Roland Dreier @ 2004-05-24 17:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eric W. Biederman; +Cc: Matt Mackall, Andrew Morton, linux-kernel

    Eric> If no hardware actually cared or someone could show me that
    Eric> you can't generate a 64bit memory I/O cycle on the PCI bus
    Eric> that would be interesting.  I have seen several drivers that
    Eric> care.  Later today I intend to look at my pci docs and
    Eric> confirm that 64bit I/O cycles do exist on the bus, even in
    Eric> 32bit slots.  PCI bus traffic is packet based so I would be
    Eric> strongly surprised if 64bit cycles did not exist.

Hang on -- how could you generate a 64-bit cycle on a 32-bit PCI bus?
By definition a 32-bit PCI bus can only transfer 32 bits per cycle.

PCI Express traffic is packet based but parallel PCI definitely is not.

 - Roland


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5 (compile stats)
  2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
                   ` (6 preceding siblings ...)
  2004-05-23  1:01 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
@ 2004-05-24 22:11 ` John Cherry
  2004-05-25 13:53 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Pavel Machek
  2004-05-26 12:41 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Anders Gustafsson
  9 siblings, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: John Cherry @ 2004-05-24 22:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: linux-kernel

Linux 2.6 (mm tree) Compile Statistics (gcc 3.2.2)
Warnings/Errors Summary

Kernel            bzImage   bzImage  bzImage  modules  bzImage  modules
                (defconfig) (allno) (allyes) (allyes) (allmod) (allmod)
--------------- ---------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
2.6.6-mm5         0w/0e     0w/0e   109w/5e    5w/0e   2w/0e    110w/0e
2.6.6-mm4         0w/0e     0w/0e   112w/9e    5w/0e   2w/5e    106w/1e
2.6.6-mm3         3w/9e     0w/0e   120w/26e   5w/0e   2w/0e    114w/10e
2.6.6-mm2         4w/11e    0w/0e   120w/24e   6w/0e   2w/0e    118w/9e
2.6.6-mm1         1w/0e     0w/0e   118w/25e   6w/0e   2w/0e    114w/10e
2.6.6-rc3-mm2     0w/0e     0w/0e   117w/ 0e   8w/0e   2w/0e    116w/0e
2.6.6-rc3-mm1     0w/0e     0w/0e   120w/10e   8w/0e   2w/0e    152w/2e
2.6.6-rc2-mm2     0w/0e     1w/5e   118w/ 0e   8w/0e   3w/0e    118w/0e
2.6.6-rc2-mm1     0w/0e     0w/0e   115w/ 0e   7w/0e   3w/0e    116w/0e
2.6.6-rc1-mm1     0w/0e     0w/7e   122w/ 0e   7w/0e   4w/0e    122w/0e
2.6.5-mm6         0w/0e     0w/0e   123w/ 0e   7w/0e   4w/0e    124w/0e
2.6.5-mm5         0w/0e     0w/0e   119w/ 0e   7w/0e   4w/0e    120w/0e
2.6.5-mm4         0w/0e     0w/0e   120w/ 0e   7w/0e   4w/0e    121w/0e
2.6.5-mm3         0w/0e     1w/0e   121w/12e   7w/0e   3w/0e    123w/0e
2.6.5-mm2         0w/0e     0w/0e   128w/12e   7w/0e   3w/0e    134w/0e
2.6.5-mm1         0w/0e     5w/0e   122w/ 0e   7w/0e   3w/0e    124w/0e
2.6.5-rc3-mm4     0w/0e     0w/0e   124w/ 0e   8w/0e   4w/0e    126w/0e
2.6.5-rc3-mm3     0w/0e     5w/0e   129w/14e   8w/0e   4w/0e    129w/6e
2.6.5-rc3-mm2     0w/0e     5w/0e   130w/14e   8w/0e   4w/0e    129w/6e
2.6.5-rc3-mm1     0w/0e     5w/0e   129w/ 0e   8w/0e   4w/0e    129w/0e
2.6.5-rc2-mm5     0w/0e     5w/0e   130w/ 0e   8w/0e   4w/0e    129w/0e
2.6.5-rc2-mm4     0w/0e     5w/0e   134w/ 0e   8w/0e   3w/0e    133w/0e
2.6.5-rc2-mm3     0w/0e     5w/0e   134w/ 0e   8w/0e   3w/0e    133w/0e
2.6.5-rc2-mm2     0w/0e     5w/0e   137w/ 0e   8w/0e   3w/0e    134w/0e
2.6.5-rc2-mm1     0w/0e     5w/0e   136w/ 0e   8w/0e   3w/0e    134w/0e
2.6.5-rc1-mm2     0w/0e     5w/0e   135w/ 5e   8w/0e   3w/0e    133w/0e
2.6.5-rc1-mm1     0w/0e     5w/0e   135w/ 5e   8w/0e   3w/0e    133w/0e
2.6.4-mm2         1w/2e     5w/2e   144w/10e   8w/0e   3w/2e    144w/0e
2.6.4-mm1         1w/0e     5w/0e   146w/ 5e   8w/0e   3w/0e    144w/0e
2.6.4-rc2-mm1     1w/0e     5w/0e   146w/12e  11w/0e   3w/0e    147w/2e
2.6.4-rc1-mm2     1w/0e     5w/0e   144w/ 0e  11w/0e   3w/0e    145w/0e
2.6.4-rc1-mm1     1w/0e     5w/0e   147w/ 5e  11w/0e   3w/0e    147w/0e
2.6.3-mm4         1w/0e     5w/0e   146w/ 0e   7w/0e   3w/0e    142w/0e
2.6.3-mm3         1w/2e     5w/2e   146w/15e   7w/0e   3w/2e    144w/5e
2.6.3-mm2         1w/8e     5w/0e   140w/ 0e   7w/0e   3w/0e    138w/0e
2.6.3-mm1         1w/0e     5w/0e   143w/ 5e   7w/0e   3w/0e    141w/0e
2.6.3-rc3-mm1     1w/0e     0w/0e   144w/13e   7w/0e   3w/0e    142w/3e
2.6.3-rc2-mm1     1w/0e     0w/265e 144w/ 5e   7w/0e   3w/0e    145w/0e
2.6.3-rc1-mm1     1w/0e     0w/265e 141w/ 5e   7w/0e   3w/0e    143w/0e
2.6.2-mm1         2w/0e     0w/264e 147w/ 5e   7w/0e   3w/0e    173w/0e
2.6.2-rc3-mm1     2w/0e     0w/265e 146w/ 5e   7w/0e   3w/0e    172w/0e
2.6.2-rc2-mm2     0w/0e     0w/264e 145w/ 5e   7w/0e   3w/0e    171w/0e
2.6.2-rc2-mm1     0w/0e     0w/264e 146w/ 5e   7w/0e   3w/0e    172w/0e
2.6.2-rc1-mm3     0w/0e     0w/265e 144w/ 8e   7w/0e   3w/0e    169w/0e
2.6.2-rc1-mm2     0w/0e     0w/264e 144w/ 5e  10w/0e   3w/0e    171w/0e
2.6.2-rc1-mm1     0w/0e     0w/264e 144w/ 5e  10w/0e   3w/0e    171w/0e
2.6.1-mm5         2w/5e     0w/264e 153w/11e  10w/0e   3w/0e    180w/0e
2.6.1-mm4         0w/821e   0w/264e 154w/ 5e   8w/1e   5w/0e    179w/0e
2.6.1-mm3         0w/0e     0w/0e   151w/ 5e  10w/0e   3w/0e    177w/0e
2.6.1-mm2         0w/0e     0w/0e   143w/ 5e  12w/0e   3w/0e    171w/0e
2.6.1-mm1         0w/0e     0w/0e   146w/ 9e  12w/0e   6w/0e    171w/0e
2.6.1-rc2-mm1     0w/0e     0w/0e   149w/ 0e  12w/0e   6w/0e    171w/4e
2.6.1-rc1-mm2     0w/0e     0w/0e   157w/15e  12w/0e   3w/0e    185w/4e
2.6.1-rc1-mm1     0w/0e     0w/0e   156w/10e  12w/0e   3w/0e    184w/2e
2.6.0-mm2         0w/0e     0w/0e   161w/ 0e  12w/0e   3w/0e    189w/0e
2.6.0-mm1         0w/0e     0w/0e   173w/ 0e  12w/0e   3w/0e    212w/0e

Web page with links to complete details:
   http://developer.osdl.org/cherry/compile/

John



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-24 17:43           ` 2.6.6-mm5 Roland Dreier
@ 2004-05-25  7:25             ` Eric W. Biederman
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Eric W. Biederman @ 2004-05-25  7:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Roland Dreier; +Cc: Matt Mackall, Andrew Morton, linux-kernel

Roland Dreier <roland@topspin.com> writes:

>     Eric> If no hardware actually cared or someone could show me that
>     Eric> you can't generate a 64bit memory I/O cycle on the PCI bus
>     Eric> that would be interesting.  I have seen several drivers that
>     Eric> care.  Later today I intend to look at my pci docs and
>     Eric> confirm that 64bit I/O cycles do exist on the bus, even in
>     Eric> 32bit slots.  PCI bus traffic is packet based so I would be
>     Eric> strongly surprised if 64bit cycles did not exist.
> 
> Hang on -- how could you generate a 64-bit cycle on a 32-bit PCI bus?
> By definition a 32-bit PCI bus can only transfer 32 bits per cycle.
> 
> PCI Express traffic is packet based but parallel PCI definitely is not.

But parallel PCI is transaction based, which largely gives the same
effect as being packet based.  And you can have man data cycles for
every address cycle.  What I am not yet clear are the transaction splitting
rules.  My outstanding questions that I really need to track down are:

- Must a 64bit memory write transaction have the same effect as 2
  32bit write transactions?   

- Must a 64bit read transaction have the same effect as 2 32bit
  read transactions?

If true then it is impossible to implement the corresponding 64bit
atomic transaction on the PCI bus, and locks are required for
everyone's code.

The same questions can be asked of PCI-Express.

As soon as I managed to dig a copy of the protocol specifications
I will see if I can answer those questions.  

Eric


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
                   ` (7 preceding siblings ...)
  2004-05-24 22:11 ` 2.6.6-mm5 (compile stats) John Cherry
@ 2004-05-25 13:53 ` Pavel Machek
  2004-05-26 12:41 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Anders Gustafsson
  9 siblings, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Pavel Machek @ 2004-05-25 13:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: linux-kernel

Hi!

> - Implementation of request barriers for IDE and SCSI.  The idea here is
>   that a filesystem can tag an IO request as a barrier and the disk will not
>   reorder writes across the barrier.  It provides additional integrity
>   guarantees for the journalling filesystems.  The feature is enabled for
>   reiserfs and ext3.

*Additional* guarantees? Is there anything we can garant
without request barriers?

-- 
64 bytes from 195.113.31.123: icmp_seq=28 ttl=51 time=448769.1 ms         


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
                   ` (8 preceding siblings ...)
  2004-05-25 13:53 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Pavel Machek
@ 2004-05-26 12:41 ` Anders Gustafsson
  2004-05-26 12:49   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jens Axboe
  9 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: Anders Gustafsson @ 2004-05-26 12:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andrew Morton; +Cc: linux-kernel, Jens Axboe

On Sat, May 22, 2004 at 01:36:36AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> 
> - Implementation of request barriers for IDE and SCSI.  The idea here is
>   that a filesystem can tag an IO request as a barrier and the disk will not
>   reorder writes across the barrier.  It provides additional integrity
>   guarantees for the journalling filesystems.  The feature is enabled for
>   reiserfs and ext3.

I get: this error message when using barriers on a scsi disk:

lost page write due to I/O error on sdb1
JBD: barrier-based sync failed on sdb1 - bisabling barriers

and I don't want them barriers bisabled :)

ext3 filesystem. reiser also disables barriers.

I have a "Adaptec AIC-7902 U320 (rev 3)" SCSI controller and the disk is a
SEAGATE ST373307LW.

It works on ide.

-- 
Anders Gustafsson - andersg@0x63.nu - http://0x63.nu/

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-26 12:41 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Anders Gustafsson
@ 2004-05-26 12:49   ` Jens Axboe
  2004-05-26 12:59     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Anders Gustafsson
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: Jens Axboe @ 2004-05-26 12:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Anders Gustafsson; +Cc: Andrew Morton, linux-kernel

On Wed, May 26 2004, Anders Gustafsson wrote:
> On Sat, May 22, 2004 at 01:36:36AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > 
> > - Implementation of request barriers for IDE and SCSI.  The idea here is
> >   that a filesystem can tag an IO request as a barrier and the disk will not
> >   reorder writes across the barrier.  It provides additional integrity
> >   guarantees for the journalling filesystems.  The feature is enabled for
> >   reiserfs and ext3.
> 
> I get: this error message when using barriers on a scsi disk:
> 
> lost page write due to I/O error on sdb1
> JBD: barrier-based sync failed on sdb1 - bisabling barriers
> 
> and I don't want them barriers bisabled :)
> 
> ext3 filesystem. reiser also disables barriers.
> 
> I have a "Adaptec AIC-7902 U320 (rev 3)" SCSI controller and the disk is a
> SEAGATE ST373307LW.

But they need to be bisabled, since -o barrier doesn't work on SCSI yet.
Only non-data tagged flushes are supported, those from
blkdev_issue_flush().

-- 
Jens Axboe


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-26 12:49   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jens Axboe
@ 2004-05-26 12:59     ` Anders Gustafsson
  2004-05-26 13:03       ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jens Axboe
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 29+ messages in thread
From: Anders Gustafsson @ 2004-05-26 12:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jens Axboe; +Cc: Andrew Morton, linux-kernel

On Wed, May 26, 2004 at 02:49:44PM +0200, Jens Axboe wrote:
> But they need to be bisabled, since -o barrier doesn't work on SCSI yet.
> Only non-data tagged flushes are supported, those from
> blkdev_issue_flush().

:(

Is the problem in the scsi drivers or at a higher level? Would really
like to have them unbisabled, got a huge speed improvement in a
logging-application with barriers when tested on IDE.

 anders

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

* Re: 2.6.6-mm5
  2004-05-26 12:59     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Anders Gustafsson
@ 2004-05-26 13:03       ` Jens Axboe
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 29+ messages in thread
From: Jens Axboe @ 2004-05-26 13:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Anders Gustafsson; +Cc: Andrew Morton, linux-kernel

On Wed, May 26 2004, Anders Gustafsson wrote:
> On Wed, May 26, 2004 at 02:49:44PM +0200, Jens Axboe wrote:
> > But they need to be bisabled, since -o barrier doesn't work on SCSI yet.
> > Only non-data tagged flushes are supported, those from
> > blkdev_issue_flush().
> 
> :(
> 
> Is the problem in the scsi drivers or at a higher level? Would really
> like to have them unbisabled, got a huge speed improvement in a
> logging-application with barriers when tested on IDE.

The error handling needs some work to safely enbable it on SCSI. Will
happen soonish. Additionally, low level drivers need to be updated. This
last step should not be too bad, though.

-- 
Jens Axboe


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 29+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2004-05-27 19:16 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 29+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2004-05-22  8:36 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
2004-05-22  9:09 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jeff Garzik
2004-05-22  9:22   ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
2004-05-22  9:26     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
2004-05-22 11:51   ` 2.6.6-mm5 R. J. Wysocki
2004-05-22  9:26 ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
2004-05-22  9:32   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
2004-05-22  9:41     ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
2004-05-22 19:03       ` 2.6.6-mm5 Brian King
2004-05-22  9:38 ` 2.6.6-mm5 hch
2004-05-22  9:44   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jens Axboe
2004-05-22  9:46 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Felipe Alfaro Solana
2004-05-23 15:51   ` 2.6.6-mm5 James Morris
2004-05-22 11:59 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Matthias Andree
2004-05-22 12:19 ` [patch] 2.6.6-mm5: JFFS2_FS_NAND=y compile error Adrian Bunk
2004-05-23  1:01 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
2004-05-23  1:08   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Andrew Morton
2004-05-23  1:15     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Roland Dreier
2004-05-24 16:17       ` 2.6.6-mm5 Matt Mackall
2004-05-24 17:03         ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
2004-05-24 17:43           ` 2.6.6-mm5 Roland Dreier
2004-05-25  7:25             ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
2004-05-23  2:45     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Eric W. Biederman
2004-05-24 22:11 ` 2.6.6-mm5 (compile stats) John Cherry
2004-05-25 13:53 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Pavel Machek
2004-05-26 12:41 ` 2.6.6-mm5 Anders Gustafsson
2004-05-26 12:49   ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jens Axboe
2004-05-26 12:59     ` 2.6.6-mm5 Anders Gustafsson
2004-05-26 13:03       ` 2.6.6-mm5 Jens Axboe

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