Philipp Rumpf writes:
> On Wed, Jan 10, 2001 at 05:55:05PM +0100, Daniel Phillips wrote:
> > Mark Hindley wrote:
> > > I am running 2.4.0 final. I got the following failed paging request which
> > > produced a complete freeze.
> > >
> > > As you can see it was precipitated by cron starting
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001 08:23:33 + (GMT),
Mark Hindley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>As I use the kernel module autoloader I also have a cron entry for rmmod -a
>which runs every so often to clear out the unused modules. Although
>the logs record rmmod running, they don't say what if any modules we
On Thursday 11 January 2001 09:06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Between 2.4.0-test10 and 2.4.0 enough stuff changed that I can't get
> the OpenGL NVIDIA_kernel module compiled and linked properly. Has
> anyone else taken a shot at this?
This was on linuxgames.com: does this not work? I haven't ha
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Udo A. Steinberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Next backed out the entire XMM and FXSR related stuff and now everything
>is fine again. The CPU in question is an AMD Thunderbird (see cpuinfo
>below). A friend with a similar setup but a Pentium-3 CPU doesn't seem
>to
Hi
* David Meyer wrote:
> Between 2.4.0-test10 and 2.4.0 enough stuff changed that I can't get
> the OpenGL NVIDIA_kernel module compiled and linked properly. Has
> anyone else taken a shot at this?
Try using this Patch. It compiles well on my 2.4.0 machine.
--- snipp ---
diff -ruN NVIDIA_ke
Hi all.
I found a bug in the sysklogd package version 1.4. When it encounters a zero
byte in the kernel logging output, the text parser enters a busy loop. I
came upon it when the 3c59x driver from kernel 2.4.0 started outputting two
zero bytes for the product code of my laptop's 3Com card. It co
Hi!
> > This is horrible bugreport. Kill "keywords". Putting "modules" into
> > keywords i not going to help anyone. Having "4. Kernel version" and
> > minuses before actuall version is not helpfull, either.
>
> "modules" as keyword, keywords in general: This is a suggestion from
> REPORTING-BUG
> " " == Alan Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> As the thread started it's not only only needed for pthreads,
>> but also for NFS and setuid (actually NFS already implements it
>> privately), and probably other network file systems too. So
>> it's far from being only a "bad
On Tue, Jan 09, 2001 at 03:56:11PM -0500, Tim Sailer wrote:
> > The defaults must be large unless your application calls setsockopt() to
> > set the buffers itself. (Some FTP clients and servers can do this, but
> > for testing, your're still probably better always having the _max's and
> > _defa
Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
> Mind trying it with the "HAVE_FXSR" and "HAVE_XMM" macros in
>
> linux/include/asm-i386/processor.h
>
> fixed? They _should_ be just
>
> #define HAVE_FXSR (cpu_has_fxsr)
> #define HAVE_XMM(cpu_has_xmm)
That doesn't help either.
On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 11:05:55AM +0100, Udo A. Steinberg wrote:
> Linus Torvalds wrote:
> >
> > Mind trying it with the "HAVE_FXSR" and "HAVE_XMM" macros in
> >
> > linux/include/asm-i386/processor.h
> >
> > fixed? They _should_ be just
> >
> > #define HAVE_FXSR (cpu_ha
Andrea Arcangeli writes:
> However I'd _love_ to see the EIP where you get the fault, I currently don't
> see the line of code that is crashing your ARM and I know this code doesn't
> segfault on ARM.
Examine nlm_lookup_file() and the usage of fh->fh_dev and fh->fh_ino.
What happens is that in th
Hans Grobler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>The softnet changes are most likely the primary source of breakage (for
>network drivers).
I happen to have a multimedia box from siemens/fujitsu with a
cyrix processor, chipset and amd/lance ethernet chipset onboard.
It' working fine with 2.2.x but not
I had a misconfigured swap partition: it went 480 blocks beyond the end of
the disk (last partition, SCSI, OSF/1 disklabels, Alpha). mkswap -c
reported bad pages, and the kernel said IO error in the log on the last
mumble blocks.
When this system started to swap, the processes would just go into
Hello John,
This is really interesting. Great stuff.
As Alan had once suggested, it would be very interesting to have this
information correlated with the content of the traces collected using
the Linux Trace Toolkit (www.opersys.com/LTT). For instance, you could see
how many cache faults the r
On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 10:24:01AM +, Danny ter Haar wrote:
> Version number of the driver is the same but it doesn't work.
>
> Any thoughts anyone ?
"Doesn't work" isn't a very useful bug report. What happens exactly?
Do the RX/TX/error counters increase when you try to send packets?
-An
Andi Kleen wrote:
>
> Did you have CONFIG_X86_FXSR or CONFIG_X86_RUNTIME_FXSR enabled when it
> worked?
>
> If not it probably means that the XServer is testing OSFXSR and the branch
> that handles it doesn't work.
--- linux-2.4.0/.config Thu Jan 11 11:22:11 2001
+++ linux-2.4.1/.config Thu Jan
> I also really, really, *REALLY* hate them for killing serial ports. It's
> a Bad Idea[TM].
Why, it opens up the market for serial-ports-on-USB devices. HW
manufactures can make significantly more money on that than on $7.95
ISA multi I/O cards[1] ;-)
Olaf
[1] and I still dislike those, becau
On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 07:34:01AM +, Russell King wrote:
> 1. Yucky code in the NFS layers to copy a nfs_fh from userspace to kernel
>space, translating it into something sane.
> 2. Yucky code in the NFS layers to manually handle the nfs_fh to knfs_fh
>translation.
> 3. Accept the bre
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001, Frank Davis wrote:
> Hello,
> The following error occurred while compiling 2.4.0-ac6. [...]
> vmalloc.c: In function `get_vm_area':
> vmalloc.c:188: `PKMAP_BASE' undeclared (first use in this function)
you are compiling with HIGHMEM enabled (which makes sense only if you
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001, Nguyen Truong Sinh wrote:
> I am using Redhat 7.0 for my system. After install new kernel (2.4.0). My system
>always inform
> NET: 3 messages suppressed
>
> What does it mean ? and how to fix it, I don't want it appears on the console at all.
man syslog
messages supresse
On 2001.01.11 Alan Cox wrote:
> ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/alan/2.4/
>
> 2.4.0-ac6
The PentiumIII misnaming in arch/i386/Makefile is still there:
--- linux-2.4.0-ac6/arch/i386/Makefile.org Thu Jan 11 11:48:09 2001
+++ linux-2.4.0-ac6/arch/i386/Makefile Thu Jan 11
Erik,
I thought that may be the case :)
Grahame Jordan
On Wed, 10 Jan 2001, Erik Mouw wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 09, 2001 at 07:08:58PM +1100, Grahame Jordan wrote:
> > I have a Tyan Thunder ATX S1696DULA Motherboard with 2 x PII266, humble for
> > today. I have tried compiling the kernel serveral
According to Andi Kleen:
> "Doesn't work" isn't a very useful bug report. What happens exactly?
> Do the RX/TX/error counters increase when you try to send packets?
no, the counters you see with ifconfig eth0 are set to zero
for rx and to 1 for tx.
So it's trying to send out data but somehow
On 2001.01.11 Grahame Jordan wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Jan 09, 2001 at 07:08:58PM +1100, Grahame Jordan wrote:
> > > I have a Tyan Thunder ATX S1696DULA Motherboard with 2 x PII266, humble
^^
Perhaps this ???:
> #
> # Processor type
Alan and All,
I've detected a bug somewhere in 2.4.0-acX, at least in ac4,
the first ac kernel I built. It seems that I can't mount
a scsi zip disk in, unless the following has occurred:
1. There is a disk in the zip drive when I boot.
2. I fdisk the scsi block device and re-write the partit
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> i prefer clear oopses and bug reports instead of ignoring them. A
> failed MSR write is not something to be taken easily. MSR writes if
> fail mean that there is a serious kernel bug - we want to stop the
> kernel and complain ASAP. And correct code will be much more re
Danny ter Haar wrote:
>
> According to Andi Kleen:
> > "Doesn't work" isn't a very useful bug report. What happens exactly?
> > Do the RX/TX/error counters increase when you try to send packets?
>
> no, the counters you see with ifconfig eth0 are set to zero
> for rx and to 1 for tx.
>
> So it'
# ls -il /proc/sys/net/unix/
total 24
4446 -rw--- 1 root root0 Jan 11 11:06
max_dgram_qlen
4446 -rw--- 1 root root0 Jan 11 11:06
max_dgram_qlen
Identical filenames, nothing bad appears to be happening it just looks
weird.
--
Darryl Miles
-
To u
Zitiere Troels Walsted Hansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Hi all.
>
> I found a bug in the sysklogd package version 1.4. When it encounters a
> zero
> byte in the kernel logging output, the text parser enters a busy loop.
That finally explains the "klogd eats 100% cpu time" reports with ~2.2.10:
We
> " " == Russell King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hubert Mantel writes:
>> is this part of 2.2.19pre7 really a good idea? Even in 2.4.0
>> the size field is still a short.
>> #define NFS_MAXFHSIZE 64
>> struct nfs_fh {
>> - unsigned short size;
>> + unsigned int
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001, Darryl Miles wrote:
> # ls -il /proc/sys/net/unix/
> total 24
>4446 -rw--- 1 root root0 Jan 11 11:06
> max_dgram_qlen
>4446 -rw--- 1 root root0 Jan 11 11:06
> max_dgram_qlen
>
> Identical filenames, nothing bad appears to be
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001, David Woodhouse wrote:
> The bug here seems to be that we're using the same bit
> (X86_FEATURE_APIC) to report two _different_ features.
i think that the AMD APIC is truly 'compatible', but we are trying to
enable the APIC and program performance counters in an Intel-way. T
Frank de Lange wrote:
>
> Hi'all,
>
> Ever since I put two ethernet-cards (cheap Winbond W89C940 based PCI NE2K
> clones) in my BP-6 system, I've been experiencing intermittent network hangs. A
> hang manifests itself as a total failure to communicate through either network
> card, and can only
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> And what a pile of crud those patches are!! Instead of using the
> clean replacement interface for get_module_symbol, nvidia/
> patch-2.4.0-PR hard codes the old get_module_symbol algorithm as
> inline code.
Taking away get_module_symbol() and providing a replacement
Hi,
I have a Sony VAIO C1XE (Picturebook) that is
giving me some grief with 2.4.0.
I compiled it with ACPI compiled as a module and
APM not compiled in at all, but on booting I get the following.
ACPI: System description tables found
ACPI: System description tables loaded
and then the sy
David Hinds wrote:
>
> On Wed, Jan 10, 2001 at 06:56:22PM -0800, Miles Lane wrote:
> >
> > There's one other annoyance:
> >
> > The config files for pcmcia-cs expect the 3c575_cb driver,
> > so I either have to hack the configuration files or load
> > the 3c59x driver by hand.
>
> Yes, I'm not s
--- ./drivers/net/rcpci45.c.origThu Jan 11 12:49:19 2001
+++ ./drivers/net/rcpci45.c Thu Jan 11 12:47:04 2001
@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@
{ RC_PCI45_VENDOR_ID, RC_PCI45_DEVICE_ID, PCI_ANY_ID,
PCI_ANY_ID, },
{ }
};
-MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(pci, rcpci_pci_table);
+MODULE_DEVICE_TABL
Troels Walsted Hansen wrote:
>
> Hi all.
>
> I found a bug in the sysklogd package version 1.4. When it encounters a zero
> byte in the kernel logging output, the text parser enters a busy loop. I
> came upon it when the 3c59x driver from kernel 2.4.0 started outputting two
> zero bytes for the
Andrew Morton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>There's a "reporting problems" section at the end
>of Documentation/networking/vortex.txt. Should help.
okidoki, have read it, thanks
>Probably the most important thing is inserting the driver
>module with `debug=7', opening the device, sending some
>t
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001, Karsten Hopp (Red Hat) wrote:
> --- ./drivers/net/rcpci45.c.origThu Jan 11 12:49:19 2001
> +++ ./drivers/net/rcpci45.c Thu Jan 11 12:47:04 2001
> @@ -120,7 +120,7 @@
> { RC_PCI45_VENDOR_ID, RC_PCI45_DEVICE_ID, PCI_ANY_ID,
> PCI_ANY_ID, },
> { }
> }
Zitiere Russell King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> The API changed:
> struct nfs_mount_data {
> int version;/* 1 */
> int fd; /* 1 */
> - struct nfs_fh root; /* 1 */
> + struct nfs2_fh old_root;
On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 01:59:31PM +0200, Hans Grobler wrote:
> Yes we know about this one. This is a bug that was killed, and then came
> back to life. We're still trying to figure out how... :)
>
I feel that I must step up and claim responsibility here: The patch is
mine and I apparently messed
On Wed, 10 Jan 2001, Richard Torkar wrote:
> I do not have any PPP, and no kdb installed on that machine, neither do I
> have procinfo. Shouldn't it say N/A or not found instead of the above? The
> ppp part is not true ;-).
> Other thing I thought about was the Ctrl-D thingy when entering text
On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 07:10:27AM -0500, Manfred wrote:
> Zitiere Russell King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > The API changed:
> > struct nfs_mount_data {
> > int version;/* 1 */
> > int fd; /* 1 */
> > - struct nfs_fh
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001 11:42:24 +,
David Woodhouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Taking away get_module_symbol() and providing a replacement which has link
>order problems wasn't really very sensible.
>
>It's too late to do the sensible thing and deprecate the old version rather
>than having a '
On Tue, Jan 09, 2001 at 10:17:47PM +0100, Robert Kaiser wrote:
> On Die, 09 Jan 2001 you wrote:
> > Robert Kaiser wrote:
> > > if someone had pressed the reset button. The same kernel boots fine on
> > > 486 and Pentium Systems.
> > >
> > > Any ideas/suggestions ?
> >
> >
> > is "Checking if th
Zitiere Andi Kleen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 07:10:27AM -0500, Manfred wrote:
> > Zitiere Russell King <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > > The API changed:
> > > struct nfs_mount_data {
> > > int version;/* 1 */
> > > int fd;
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> Q. With your suggested static method, what happens when Y initialises
>before X, calls inter_module_get, retrieves X's static data and
>starts to use it before X has initialised?
> A. Oops!
No. You'd explicitly only use the static registration when object X do
> A Duron box running 2.4.0-ac5 (and -ac6) shows NaN in many
> places (such as df output showing usage "nan%"). Right now I
> reverted back to 2.4.0-ac4 which does not show the problem.
> The kernel was compiled with CONFIG_MK7 and without
> MATH_EMULATION, if that makes any difference.
If you b
Chris Mason wrote:
>
> On Wednesday, January 10, 2001 02:32:09 AM +0100 Marc Lehmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>> EIP; c013f911<=
> > Trace; c013f706
> > Trace; c0136e01
> >
>
> Here is a patch against our 2.4 code (3.6.25) that does the
> same as the patch posted for 3.5.29:
>
>
> The following error occurred while compiling 2.4.0-ac6..The strange
> thing is that I checked mm/vmalloc.c (line 188, and the entire file) and
> didn't see PKMAP_BASE mentioned. My guess is that there is a problem with
> one of the header files.
Its defined in asm/highmem.h/ Probabyl a missin
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001 12:32:10 +,
David Woodhouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I'm not suggesting that we change it drastically, only that we add
>the option of static (compile-time) registration for those entries which
>require it.
So you want two services, one static for code that does not
> #define HAVE_FXSR (cpu_has_fxsr)
> #define HAVE_XMM(cpu_has_xmm)
>
> I'm surprised actually - the same CR4 tests are in newer 2.2.x kernels,
> I think. (And in 2.2.x kernels, the above "cpu_has_xxx" do _not_ work
Nope. 2.2 doesnt have XMM/FXSR support. There are add o
> cyrix processor, chipset and amd/lance ethernet chipset onboard.
> It' working fine with 2.2.x but not with 2.4.x kernels with
> the same driver version of the pcnet32 networkdriver.
What problems do you see
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body
David Woodhouse wrote:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
>> i prefer clear oopses and bug reports instead of ignoring them. A
>> failed MSR write is not something to be taken easily. MSR writes if
>> fail mean that there is a serious kernel bug - we want to stop the
>> kernel and complain ASAP. And corre
Hi,
On Wed, Jan 10, 2001 at 12:11:16PM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
> That said, we can easily support the notion of CLONE_CRED if we absolutely
> have to (and sane people just shouldn't use it), so if somebody wants to
> work on this for 2.5.x...
But is it really worth the pain? I'd hate to
> Stick to one method that works for all routines, dynamic registration.
> If that imposes the occasional need for a couple of extra calls in some
> routines and for people to think about initialisation order right from
> the start then so be it, it is a small price to pay for long term
> stabilit
On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 12:56:04PM +, Stephen C. Tweedie wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Wed, Jan 10, 2001 at 12:11:16PM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> >
> > That said, we can easily support the notion of CLONE_CRED if we absolutely
> > have to (and sane people just shouldn't use it), so if somebody wan
> " " == Stephen C Tweedie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi, On Wed, Jan 10, 2001 at 12:11:16PM -0800, Linus Torvalds
> wrote:
>>
>> That said, we can easily support the notion of CLONE_CRED if we
>> absolutely have to (and sane people just shouldn't use it), so
>> i
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001 13:09:13 + (GMT),
Alan Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Stick to one method that works for all routines, dynamic registration.
>> If that imposes the occasional need for a couple of extra calls in some
>> routines and for people to think about initialisation order right f
kernel: 2.4.0
modutils: 2.3.23
loading the es1371 module gives me the following error:
/lib/modules/2.4.0/kernel/drivers/sound/es1371.o: unresolved symbol
ac97_probe_codec_Rsmp_1c61c357
soundcore.o loads ok, but es1371 not. Looking through the sources, i've
found that ac97_codec.c exports the s
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> So you want two services, one static for code that does not do any
> initialisation and one dynamic for code that does do initialisation.
> Can you imagine the fun when somebody adds startup code to a routine
> that was using static registration?
Oh come on. If you ch
Hello,
Since this looks like either a chipset, drive, or driver problem, I am
submitting this.
I have recently started using DMA mode on my harddisk. However, I
occasionally (not often/constant, but sometimes) get CRC errors:
hda: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error }
hda: dma_
The problem I'm seeing must be different. I tried your suggestion of
booting with nmi_watchdog=0, and I still see the same crashes. I'm now in
the process of getting a SMP Dell to try and do the same testing.
Thanks!
kenbo
__
Firebirds rule, `stangs serve!
Kenneth "kenbo
Hi,
Please, get the information below and help me, if possible...
Regards,
Wojtek Czuba
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[1.] CRC and ECC error burning CD (adaptec 2940), kernel 2.2.18
[2.] VMWARE Workstation said that my cdrom will work as an audio
device with Windows 9x under the vmware with the
>Jan 11 12:45:49 multimedia kernel: eth0: pcnet32_start_xmit() called, csr0 07f3.
>Jan 11 12:46:01 multimedia last message repeated 12 times
hot from the ethernet wire: more info just arrived:
NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth0: transmit timed out
eth0: transmit timed out, status 07f3, resetting.
Ring data
> Yep. %02x%02x it now is.
I suppose it might be worthwhile to search the kernel sources for other
instances of printk("%c"), there's no telling when all distributions will be
up to date with new sysklogd releases...
> The code in question was snitched from pcmcia-cs's 3c575_cb.c, and
> I assum
Hi!
I just wanted to let you know that I successfully ruined
a CD with 2.4.0 + sym-2.1.0-20001230. The system is a RH 7.0
with glibc-2.2-9, cdrecord-1.9.
When will it be really usable?
Regards,
Zoltan Boszormenyi
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the
Matthias Juchem wrote:
> http://www.brightice.de/src/bugreport.sh
I have a suggestion, there is a kernel patch to add a config.gz entry in
the /proc fs. It reflects the configuration used in building the running
kernel, which may differ from the one you have in /usr/src/linux. It's
part of the
Hi,
On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 02:12:05PM +0100, Trond Myklebust wrote:
>
> What's wrong with copy-on-write style semantics? IOW, anyone who
> wants to change the credentials needs to make a private copy of the
> existing structure first.
Because COW only solves the problem if each task is only c
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001, Rafael E. Herrera wrote:
> I have a suggestion, there is a kernel patch to add a config.gz entry in
> the /proc fs. It reflects the configuration used in building the running
> kernel, which may differ from the one you have in /usr/src/linux. It's
> part of the suse distribut
Hi,
I have a Digital HiNote VP.
PCMCIA's works fine with Kernel 2.4.0 test12 (I think that I cannot change
pcmcia card with the computer running because the new PCMCIA is not
detected).
With Kernel 2.4.0 and the same .config PCMCIA don't work. It is detected
on boot, yenta socket, assigns two
Danny ter Haar wrote:
>
> >Jan 11 12:45:49 multimedia kernel: eth0: pcnet32_start_xmit() called, csr0 07f3.
> >Jan 11 12:46:01 multimedia last message repeated 12 times
>
> hot from the ethernet wire: more info just arrived:
>
> NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth0: transmit timed out
> eth0: transmit timed o
Jamie Lokier wrote:
> Daniel Phillips wrote:
> > [things that can benefit from dnotify]
> > locate (reindex only those directories that have changed, keep index
> > database current).
>
> Not a chance. dnotify doesn't work recursively, so you can't monitor
> just a few top level directories like
On Thursday 11 January 2001 08:33 am, James Brents wrote:
| Since this looks like either a chipset, drive, or driver problem, I
| am submitting this.
| I have recently started using DMA mode on my harddisk. However, I
| occasionally (not often/constant, but sometimes) get CRC errors:
| hda: dma_i
> Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> From: Linus Torvalds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: Wed, 10 Jan 2001 09:03:03 -0800 (PST)
> To: David Woodhouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: Zlatko Calusic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> "Eric W. Biederman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> Rik van Riel <[EMAIL PROTEC
> Since this looks like either a chipset, drive, or driver problem, I am
no: the only entities involved with udma crc's are the drive,
the controller (and the cable). the kernel is not involved in any way
(except to configure udma, of course.)
> occasionally (not often/constant, but sometimes)
> us who have via chipset motherboards, suggesting that it is limited
> to that chipset, that chipset is ubiquitous, or via chipset
> motherboard owners are generally the complaining type. no idea which
> applies there, either.
Or there are a lot of them. 90% of scsi bug reports I get are adap
Hey,
After upgrading from -test11 to 2.4.0, I find that under heavy network
load the eth0 interface seems to lockup... with the following output in
dmesg:
NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth0: transmit timed out
eth0: Tx timed out, lost interrupt? TSR=0x3, ISR=0x97, t=18556.
NETDEV WATCHDOG: eth0: transmit ti
Hi,
Please consider applying, comments in the patch.
- Arnaldo
--- linux-2.4.0-ac6/drivers/net/dgrs.c Tue Dec 19 11:25:40 2000
+++ linux-2.4.0-ac6.acme/drivers/net/dgrs.c Thu Jan 11 11:05:05 2001
@@ -71,6 +71,13 @@
* into the kernel.
* - Better handling of multicast a
On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 10:51:59PM +1100, Robert Lowery wrote:
> I compiled it with ACPI compiled as a module and APM not compiled in at all, but on
>booting I get the following.
> ACPI: System description tables found
> ACPI: System description tables loaded
>
> and then the system locks up..
Nathan Thompson wrote:
>
> On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 10:51:59PM +1100, Robert Lowery wrote:
>
> > I compiled it with ACPI compiled as a module and APM not compiled in at all, but
>on booting I get the following.
> > ACPI: System description tables found
> > ACPI: System description tables loaded
David <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> kernel: 2.4.0
> modutils: 2.3.23
>
> loading the es1371 module gives me the following error:
> /lib/modules/2.4.0/kernel/drivers/sound/es1371.o: unresolved symbol
> ac97_probe_codec_Rsmp_1c61c357
It works for me (tm). Kernel 2.4.0, modutils 2.3.23-2 (Debian
James Brents <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello,
> Since this looks like either a chipset, drive, or driver problem, I am
> submitting this.
>
> I have recently started using DMA mode on my harddisk. However, I occasionally
> (not often/constant, but sometimes) get CRC errors:
>
> hda: dma_int
On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 10:48:23PM +1100, Andrew Morton wrote:
> Losing both NICs at the same time could be the elusive "APIC
> stops generating interrupts" problem.
Yup, that's what I thought... But the real question is, is this a
software/configuration problem or a hardware problem which can on
Robert Kaiser wrote:
>
> The one I'm currently using is an old Olivetti 386SX with 5 MB, I also
> tried two more boards, one 386SX, one 386DX, both with 8MB. All showed
> the same behavior.
I tested 2.4.0 on probably the exact same box - an Olivetti M300-05
386sx with 5MB and it came up ok, ex
> " " == Andrea Arcangeli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> As far I can see the only reason size makes sense to be 32bit
> is to get some more strict behaviour in the below code (to
> avoid discarding the most significant 16bits in sanity checks
> like this):
> nlm4_dec
Daniel Phillips wrote:
> DN_OPEN A file in the directory was opened
>
> You open the top level directory and register for events. When somebody
> opens a subdirectory of the top level directory, you receive
> notification and register for events on the subdirectory, and so on,
> do
On Wednesday, January 10, 2001 05:56:09 PM -0200 Marcelo Tosatti
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi Chris,
>
> It seems there is a possible deadlock condition with your patch which
> changes flush_dirty_buffers() to use ->writepage (something which we
> _definately_ want for 2.5). Take a look:
Three one-liners to make 2.4.1p2 compile.
--- linux/fs/proc/kcore.c.orig Thu Jan 11 07:35:16 2001
+++ linux/fs/proc/kcore.c Thu Jan 11 07:36:29 2001
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@
#include
#include
#include
-
+#include
static int open_kcore(struct inode * inode, struct file * filp)
{
--- lin
appreciate the info. i'll look at it.
glad it works as a module :)
tom
> -Original Message-
> From: David Ford [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2001 11:35 PM
> To: LKML; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: cs46xx only works as a module still (p
Alan Cox wrote:
>
> 2.4.0-ac6
> o Fix athlon crash on boot with local apic/nmi(Ingo Molnar)
Still crashes here with -ac6 on my Athlon. I'll have to write down the
oops by hand later on or set up a serial console, but once that's done
I'll post the trace - unless someone already knows w
Hi,
Please consider applying.
- Arnaldo
--- linux-2.4.0-ac6/drivers/net/hp100.c Tue Dec 19 11:25:41 2000
+++ linux-2.4.0-ac6.acme/drivers/net/hp100.cThu Jan 11 11:52:34 2001
@@ -45,6 +45,8 @@
** along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
** Foundation, Inc., 6
Jamie Lokier wrote:
>
> Daniel Phillips wrote:
> > DN_OPEN A file in the directory was opened
> >
> > You open the top level directory and register for events. When somebody
> > opens a subdirectory of the top level directory, you receive
> > notification and register for events on
Trond Myklebust wrote:
>
>
> As for the issue of casting 'fh->data' as a 'struct knfsd' then that
> is a perfectly valid operation.
>
No it isn't.
fh->data is an array of characters, thus without any alignment
restrictions.
'struct knfsd' begins with a pointer, thus it must be 4 or 8 byte
align
Just some commentary and a bug report on your patch Andrew:
Opinion: Personally, I think the approach in Andrew's patch
is the way to go.
Not because it can give the absolute best results.
But rather, it is because it says "here is where a lot
of time is spen
[regarding the buffer cache hash size and bad performance on machines
with little memory... (<32MB)]
On Tue, 9 Jan 2001, Anton Blanchard wrote:
> > Where is the size defined, and is it easy to modify?
>
> Look in fs/buffer.c:buffer_init()
I experimented some, and increasing the huffer cache has
Jeff Garzik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Does this patch help at all?
Nope, unfortunatly it didn't
> filename="pcnet32.patch"
pcnet32_probe_pci: found device 0x001022.0x002000
ioaddr=0x00fce0 resource_flags=0x000101
PCI: Found IRQ 9 for device 00:0f.0
PCnet chip version is 0x22
Does anyone know if ECN is supported by the Internet backbone routers yet,
i.e. will I gain anything by enabling ECN in my Linux boxes at this point?
(except pushing this excellent technology, of course).
/Tobias
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the bo
1 - 100 of 272 matches
Mail list logo