The OUTPUT_ENABLE action jumps past the point in the coder where
the data_offset is set on certain rs780 cards. This worked
previously because the OUTPUT_ENABLE action is always called
immediately after the ENABLE action so the data_offset remained
set. In 6f8bbaf568c7f2c497558bfd04654c0b9841ad57
(drm/radeon/atom: initialize more atom interpretor elements to 0),
we explictly reset data_offset to 0 between atom calls which then
caused this to fail. The fix is to just skip calling the
OUTPUT_ENABLE action on the problematic chipsets. The ENABLE
action does the same thing and more. Ultimately, we could
probably drop the OUTPUT_ENABLE action all together on DCE3
asics.
make Maxim machine freeze when try to start wireless device.
Initialization order and sending MCU_BOOT_SIGNAL request, changed in
above commit, is important. Doing things incorrectly make PCIe bus
problems, which can froze the machine.
This patch change initialization sequence like vendor driver do:
function NICInitializeAsic() from
2011_1007_RT5390_RT5392_Linux_STA_V2.5.0.3_DPO (PCI devices) and
DPO_RT5572_LinuxSTA_2.6.1.3_20121022 (according Mediatek, latest driver
for RT8070/RT3070/RT3370/RT3572/RT5370/RT5372/RT5572 USB devices).
It fixes freezes on Maxim system.
typedef struct _ATOM_SRC_DST_TABLE_FOR_ONE_OBJECT //usSrcDstTableOffset pointing to this structure
{
UCHAR ucNumberOfSrc;
USHORT usSrcObjectID[1];
UCHAR ucNumberOfDst;
USHORT usDstObjectID[1];
}ATOM_SRC_DST_TABLE_FOR_ONE_OBJECT;
usSrcObjectID[] and usDstObjectID[] are variably sized, so we
can't access them directly. Use pointers and update the offset
appropriately when accessing the Dst members.
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Setting MC_MISC_CNTL.GART_INDEX_REG_EN causes hangs on
some boards on resume. The systems seem to work fine
without touching this bit so leave it as is.
v2: read-modify-write the GART_INDEX_REG_EN bit.
I suspect the problem is that we are losing the other
settings in the register.
We need to allocate line buffer to each display when
setting up the watermarks. Failure to do so can lead
to a blank screen. This fixes blank screen problems
on dce6 asics.
We need to allocate line buffer to each display when
setting up the watermarks. Failure to do so can lead
to a blank screen. This fixes blank screen problems
on dce4.1/5 asics.
Based on an initial fix from:
Jay Cornwall <jay.cornwall@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Also add a new RADEON_INFO query to check that CP DMA packets are
supported on the compute ring.
CP DMA has been supported since the 3.8 kernel, but due to an oversight
we forgot to teach the CS checker that the CP DMA packet was legal for
the compute ring on Southern Islands GPUs.
This patch fixes a bug where the radeon driver will incorrectly reject a legal
CP DMA packet from user space. I would like to have the patch
backported to stable so that we don't have to require Mesa users to use a
bleeding edge kernel in order to take advantage of this feature which
is already present in the stable kernels (3.8 and newer).
v2:
- Don't bump kms version, so this patch can be backported to stable
kernels.
Signed-off-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com> Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Commit ea9197cc323839ef3d5280c0453b2c622caa6bc7 effectively enabled the
use of an improved DAC detection code, but introduced a regression on
the original nv50 chipset, causing a ghost monitor to be detected.
v2 (Ben Skeggs): the offending line was likely a thinko, removed it for
all chipsets (tested nv50 and nve6 to cover entire range) and added
some additional debugging.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=67382 Tested-by: Martin Peres <martin.peres@labri.fr> Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.l.velikov@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Ben Skeggs <bskeggs@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
After a vmalloc failure in ttm_dma_tt_alloc_page_directory(),
ttm_dma_tt_init() will call ttm_tt_destroy() to cleanup, and end up
inside the driver's unpopulate() hook when populate() has never yet
been called.
On nouveau, the first issue to be hit because of this is that
dma_address[] may be a NULL pointer. After working around this,
ttm_pool_unpopulate() may potentially hit the same issue with
the pages[] array.
It seems to make more sense to avoid calling unpopulate on already
unpopulated TTMs than to add checks to all the implementations.
Signed-off-by: Ben Skeggs <bskeggs@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Thomas Hellstrom <thellstrom@vmware.com> Cc: Jerome Glisse <jglisse@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
DRM_IOCTL_MODE_GETFB is used to retrieve information about a given
framebuffer ID. It is a read-only helper and was thus declassified for
unprivileged access in:
drm: remove master fd restriction on mode setting getters
However, alongside width, height and stride information,
DRM_IOCTL_MODE_GETFB also passes back a handle to the underlying buffer of
the framebuffer. This handle allows users to mmap() it and read or write
into it. Obviously, this should be restricted to DRM-Master.
With the current setup, *any* process with access to /dev/dri/card0 (which
means any process with access to hardware-accelerated rendering) can
access the current screen framebuffer and modify it ad libitum.
For backwards-compatibility reasons we want to keep the
DRM_IOCTL_MODE_GETFB call unprivileged. Besides, it provides quite useful
information regarding screen setup. So we simply test whether the caller
is the current DRM-Master and if not, we return 0 as handle, which is
always invalid. A following DRM_IOCTL_GEM_CLOSE on this handle will fail
with EINVAL, but we accept this. Users shouldn't test for errors during
GEM_CLOSE, anyway. And it is still better as a failing MODE_GETFB call.
v2: add capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN) check for compatibility with i-g-t
Signed-off-by: David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
My g33 here seems to be shockingly good at hitting them all. This time
around kms_flip/flip-vs-panning-vs-hang blows up:
intel_crtc_wait_for_pending_flips correctly checks for gpu hangs and
if a gpu hang is pending aborts the wait for outstanding flips so that
the setcrtc call will succeed and release the crtc mutex. And the gpu
hang handler needs that lock in intel_display_handle_reset to be able
to complete outstanding flips.
The problem is that we can race in two ways:
- Waiters on the dev_priv->pending_flip_queue aren't woken up after
we've the reset as pending, but before we actually start the reset
work. This means that the waiter doesn't notice the pending reset
and hence will keep on hogging the locks.
Like with dev->struct_mutex and the ring->irq_queue wait queues we
there need to wake up everyone that potentially holds a lock which
the reset handler needs.
- intel_display_handle_reset was called _after_ we've already
signalled the completion of the reset work. Which means a waiter
could sneak in, grab the lock and never release it (since the
pageflips won't ever get released).
Similar to resetting the gem state all the reset work must complete
before we update the reset counter. Contrary to the gem reset we
don't need to have a second explicit wake up call since that will
have happened already when completing the pageflips. We also don't
have any issues that the completion happens while the reset state is
still pending - wait_for_pending_flips is only there to ensure we
display the right frame. After a gpu hang&reset events such
guarantees are out the window anyway. This is in contrast to the gem
code where too-early wake-up would result in unnecessary restarting
of ioctls.
Also, since we've gotten these various deadlocks and ordering
constraints wrong so often throw copious amounts of comments at the
code.
This deadlock regression has been introduced in the commit which added
the pageflip reset logic to the gpu hang work:
drm/i915: Finish page flips and update primary planes after a GPU reset
v2:
- Add comments to explain how the wake_up serves as memory barriers
for the atomic_t reset counter.
- Improve the comments a bit as suggested by Chris Wilson.
- Extract the wake_up calls before/after the reset into a little
i915_error_wake_up and unconditionally wake up the
pending_flip_queue waiters, again as suggested by Chris Wilson.
v3: Throw copious amounts of comments at i915_error_wake_up as
suggested by Chris Wilson.
Cc: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com> Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
drm/i915: Finish page flips and update primary planes after a GPU reset
the gpu reset work now also grabs modeset locks. But since work items
on our private work queue are not allowed to do that due to the
flush_workqueue from the pageflip code this results in a neat
deadlock:
This blew up while running kms_flip/flip-vs-panning-vs-hang-interruptible
on one of my older machines.
Unfortunately (despite the proper lockdep annotations for
flush_workqueue) lockdep still doesn't detect this correctly, so we
need to rely on chance to discover these bugs.
Apply the usual bugfix and schedule the reset work on the system
workqueue to keep our own driver workqueue free of any modeset lock
grabbing.
Note that this is not a terribly serious regression since before the
offending commit we'd simply have stalled userspace forever due to
failing to abort all outstanding pageflips.
v2: Add a comment as requested by Chris.
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Cc: Ville Syrjälä <ville.syrjala@linux.intel.com> Cc: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
This patch fixes a NULL pointer dereference and a WARN_ON in
dummy-hcd. These things were the result of moving to the UDC core
framework, and possibly of changes to that framework.
Now unloading a gadget driver causes the UDC to be stopped after the
gadget driver is unbound, not before. Therefore the "driver" argument
to dummy_udc_stop() can be NULL, so we must not try to print the
driver's name without checking first.
Also, the UDC framework automatically unregisters the gadget when the
UDC is deleted. Therefore a sysfs attribute file attached to the
gadget must be removed before the UDC is deleted, not after.
Signed-off-by: Alan Stern <stern@rowland.harvard.edu> Signed-off-by: Felipe Balbi <balbi@ti.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
A HID device could send a malicious output report that would cause the
logitech-dj HID driver to leak kernel memory contents to the device, or
trigger a NULL dereference during initialization:
[ 304.424553] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=046d, idProduct=c52b
...
[ 304.780467] BUG: unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at 0000000000000028
[ 304.781409] IP: [<ffffffff815d50aa>] logi_dj_recv_send_report.isra.11+0x1a/0x90
A HID device could send a malicious output report that would cause the
lenovo-tpkbd HID driver to write just beyond the output report allocation
during initialization, causing a heap overflow:
[ 76.109807] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=17ef, idProduct=6009
...
[ 80.462540] BUG kmalloc-192 (Tainted: G W ): Redzone overwritten
A HID device could send a malicious output report that would cause the
steelseries HID driver to write beyond the output report allocation
during initialization, causing a heap overflow:
[ 167.981534] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=1038, idProduct=1410
...
[ 182.050547] BUG kmalloc-256 (Tainted: G W ): Redzone overwritten
The zeroplus HID driver was not checking the size of allocated values
in fields it used. A HID device could send a malicious output report
that would cause the driver to write beyond the output report allocation
during initialization, causing a heap overflow:
[ 1442.728680] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=0c12, idProduct=0005
...
[ 1466.243173] BUG kmalloc-192 (Tainted: G W ): Redzone overwritten
A HID device could send a malicious output report that would cause the
lg, lg3, and lg4 HID drivers to write beyond the output report allocation
during an event, causing a heap overflow:
[ 325.245240] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=046d, idProduct=c287
...
[ 414.518960] BUG kmalloc-4096 (Not tainted): Redzone overwritten
Additionally, while lg2 did correctly validate the report details, it was
cleaned up and shortened.
When working on report indexes, always validate that they are in bounds.
Without this, a HID device could report a malicious feature report that
could trick the driver into a heap overflow:
[ 634.885003] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=0596, idProduct=0500
...
[ 676.469629] BUG kmalloc-192 (Tainted: G W ): Redzone overwritten
Note that we need to change the indexes from s8 to s16 as they can
be between -1 and 255.
When dealing with usage_index, be sure to properly use unsigned instead of
int to avoid overflows.
When working on report fields, always validate that their report_counts are
in bounds.
Without this, a HID device could report a malicious feature report that
could trick the driver into a heap overflow:
[ 634.885003] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=0596, idProduct=0500
...
[ 676.469629] BUG kmalloc-192 (Tainted: G W ): Redzone overwritten
Many drivers need to validate the characteristics of their HID report
during initialization to avoid misusing the reports. This adds a common
helper to perform validation of the report exisitng, the field existing,
and the expected number of values within the field.
There is a small race between copy_process() and cgroup_attach_task()
where child->se.parent,cfs_rq points to invalid (old) ones.
parent doing fork() | someone moving the parent to another cgroup
-------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
copy_process()
+ dup_task_struct()
-> parent->se is copied to child->se.
se.parent,cfs_rq of them point to old ones.
cgroup_attach_task()
+ cgroup_task_migrate()
-> parent->cgroup is updated.
+ cpu_cgroup_attach()
+ sched_move_task()
+ task_move_group_fair()
+- set_task_rq()
-> se.parent,cfs_rq of parent
are updated.
+ cgroup_fork()
-> parent->cgroup is copied to child->cgroup. (*1)
+ sched_fork()
+ task_fork_fair()
-> se.parent,cfs_rq of child are accessed
while they point to old ones. (*2)
In the worst case, this bug can lead to "use-after-free" and cause a panic,
because it's new cgroup's refcount that is incremented at (*1),
so the old cgroup(and related data) can be freed before (*2).
In fact, a panic caused by this bug was originally caught in RHEL6.4.
scale_stime() silently assumes that stime < rtime, otherwise
when stime == rtime and both values are big enough (operations
on them do not fit in 32 bits), the resulting scaling stime can
be bigger than rtime. In consequence utime = rtime - stime
results in negative value.
User space visible symptoms of the bug are overflowed TIME
values on ps/top, for example:
Gerlando Falauto reported that when HRTICK is enabled, it is
possible to trigger system deadlocks. These were hard to
reproduce, as HRTICK has been broken in the past, but seemed
to be connected to the timekeeping_seq lock.
Since seqlock/seqcount's aren't supported w/ lockdep, I added
some extra spinlock based locking and triggered the following
lockdep output:
[ 15.849182] ntpd/4062 is trying to acquire lock:
[ 15.849765] (&(&pool->lock)->rlock){..-...}, at: [<ffffffff810aa9b5>] __queue_work+0x145/0x480
[ 15.850051]
[ 15.850051] but task is already holding lock:
[ 15.850051] (timekeeper_lock){-.-.-.}, at: [<ffffffff810df6df>] do_adjtimex+0x7f/0x100
We should not do temperature compensation on devices without
EXTERNAL_TX_ALC bit set (called DynamicTxAgcControl on vendor driver).
Such devices can have totally bogus TSSI parameters on the EEPROM,
but still threaded by us as valid and result doing wrong TX power
calculations.
This fix inability to connect to AP on slightly longer distance on
some Ralink chips/devices.
Reported-and-tested-by: Fabien ADAM <id2ndr@crocobox.org> Signed-off-by: Stanislaw Gruszka <sgruszka@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Some devices (BCM4749, BCM5357, BCM53572) have internal switch that
requires initialization. We already have code for this, but because
of the typo in code it was never working. This resulted in network not
working for some routers and possibility of soft-bricking them.
Use correct bit for switch initialization and fix typo in the define.
Signed-off-by: Rafał Miłecki <zajec5@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Fabio Porcedda <fabio.porcedda@gmail.com> Acked-by: Oliver Neukum <oliver@neukum.org> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Commit 448bd85 (PCI/PM: add PCIe runtime D3cold support) added a
piece of code to pci_acpi_wake_dev() causing that function to behave
in a special way for devices in D3cold (so that their configuration
registers are not accessed before those devices are resumed).
However, it didn't take the clearing of the pme_poll flag into
account. That has to be done for all devices, even if they are in
D3cold, or pci_pme_list_scan() will not know that wakeup has been
signaled for the device and will poll its PME Status bit
unnecessarily.
Fix the problem by moving the clearing of the pme_poll flag in
pci_acpi_wake_dev() before the code introduced by commit 448bd85.
Reported-and-tested-by: David E. Box <david.e.box@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com> Acked-by: Bjorn Helgaas <bhelgaas@google.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
The way how fuse calls truncate_pagecache() from fuse_change_attributes()
is completely wrong. Because, w/o i_mutex held, we never sure whether
'oldsize' and 'attr->size' are valid by the time of execution of
truncate_pagecache(inode, oldsize, attr->size). In fact, as soon as we
released fc->lock in the middle of fuse_change_attributes(), we completely
loose control of actions which may happen with given inode until we reach
truncate_pagecache. The list of potentially dangerous actions includes
mmap-ed reads and writes, ftruncate(2) and write(2) extending file size.
The typical outcome of doing truncate_pagecache() with outdated arguments
is data corruption from user point of view. This is (in some sense)
acceptable in cases when the issue is triggered by a change of the file on
the server (i.e. externally wrt fuse operation), but it is absolutely
intolerable in scenarios when a single fuse client modifies a file without
any external intervention. A real life case I discovered by fsx-linux
looked like this:
1. Shrinking ftruncate(2) comes to fuse_do_setattr(). The latter sends
FUSE_SETATTR to the server synchronously, but before getting fc->lock ...
2. fuse_dentry_revalidate() is asynchronously called. It sends FUSE_LOOKUP
to the server synchronously, then calls fuse_change_attributes(). The
latter updates i_size, releases fc->lock, but before comparing oldsize vs
attr->size..
3. fuse_do_setattr() from the first step proceeds by acquiring fc->lock and
updating attributes and i_size, but now oldsize is equal to
outarg.attr.size because i_size has just been updated (step 2). Hence,
fuse_do_setattr() returns w/o calling truncate_pagecache().
4. As soon as ftruncate(2) completes, the user extends file size by
write(2) making a hole in the middle of file, then reads data from the hole
either by read(2) or mmap-ed read. The user expects to get zero data from
the hole, but gets stale data because truncate_pagecache() is not executed
yet.
The scenario above illustrates one side of the problem: not truncating the
page cache even though we should. Another side corresponds to truncating
page cache too late, when the state of inode changed significantly.
Theoretically, the following is possible:
1. As in the previous scenario fuse_dentry_revalidate() discovered that
i_size changed (due to our own fuse_do_setattr()) and is going to call
truncate_pagecache() for some 'new_size' it believes valid right now. But
by the time that particular truncate_pagecache() is called ...
2. fuse_do_setattr() returns (either having called truncate_pagecache() or
not -- it doesn't matter).
3. The file is extended either by write(2) or ftruncate(2) or fallocate(2).
4. mmap-ed write makes a page in the extended region dirty.
The result will be the lost of data user wrote on the fourth step.
The patch is a hotfix resolving the issue in a simplistic way: let's skip
dangerous i_size update and truncate_pagecache if an operation changing
file size is in progress. This simplistic approach looks correct for the
cases w/o external changes. And to handle them properly, more sophisticated
and intrusive techniques (e.g. NFS-like one) would be required. I'd like to
postpone it until the issue is well discussed on the mailing list(s).
Changed in v2:
- improved patch description to cover both sides of the issue.
The patch fixes a race between ftruncate(2), mmap-ed write and write(2):
1) An user makes a page dirty via mmap-ed write.
2) The user performs shrinking truncate(2) intended to purge the page.
3) Before fuse_do_setattr calls truncate_pagecache, the page goes to
writeback. fuse_writepage_locked fills FUSE_WRITE request and releases
the original page by end_page_writeback.
4) fuse_do_setattr() completes and successfully returns. Since now, i_mutex
is free.
5) Ordinary write(2) extends i_size back to cover the page. Note that
fuse_send_write_pages do wait for fuse writeback, but for another
page->index.
6) fuse_writepage_locked proceeds by queueing FUSE_WRITE request.
fuse_send_writepage is supposed to crop inarg->size of the request,
but it doesn't because i_size has already been extended back.
Moving end_page_writeback to the end of fuse_writepage_locked fixes the
race because now the fact that truncate_pagecache is successfully returned
infers that fuse_writepage_locked has already called end_page_writeback.
And this, in turn, infers that fuse_flush_writepages has already called
fuse_send_writepage, and the latter used valid (shrunk) i_size. write(2)
could not extend it because of i_mutex held by ftruncate(2).
Otherwise any attempt to interact with the hardware will crash. This is
what happens when drivers get written blind.
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Mike Turquette <mturquette@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
The code for NAND_BUSWIDTH_AUTO is broken. According to Alexander:
"I have a problem with attach NAND UBI in 16 bit mode.
NAND works fine if I specify NAND_BUSWIDTH_16 option, but not
working with NAND_BUSWIDTH_AUTO option. In second case NAND
chip is identifyed with ONFI."
Anyway, the problem is that nand_set_defaults() is called twice, we
intend it to reset the chip functions to their x16 buswidth verions
if the buswidth changed from x8 to x16; however, nand_set_defaults()
does exactly nothing if called a second time.
Fix this by hacking nand_set_defaults() to reset the buswidth-dependent
functions if they were set to the x8 version the first time. Note that
this does not do anything to reset from x16 to x8, but that's not the
supported use case for NAND_BUSWIDTH_AUTO anyway.
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com> Reported-by: Alexander Shiyan <shc_work@mail.ru> Tested-by: Alexander Shiyan <shc_work@mail.ru> Cc: Matthieu Castet <matthieu.castet@parrot.com> Signed-off-by: Artem Bityutskiy <artem.bityutskiy@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Any calls to dt_alloc() need to be zeroed. This is a temporary fix, but
the allocation function itself needs to zero memory before returning
it. This is a follow up to patch 9e4012752, "of: fdt: fix memory
initialization for expanded DT" which fixed one call site but missed
another.
I'm testing SH-Mobile SDHI driver in DMA mode with a new DMA controller using
'bonnie++' and getting DMA error after which the tmio_mmc_dma.c code falls back
to PIO but all commands time out after that. It turned out that the fallback
code calls tmio_mmc_enable_dma() with RX/TX channels already freed and pointers
to them cleared, so that the function bails out early instead of clearing the
DMA bit in the CTL_DMA_ENABLE register. The regression was introduced by commit 162f43e31c5a376ec16336e5d0ac973373d54c89 (mmc: tmio: fix a deadlock).
Moving tmio_mmc_enable_dma() calls to the top of the PIO fallback code in
tmio_mmc_start_dma_{rx|tx}() helps.
Signed-off-by: Sergei Shtylyov <sergei.shtylyov@cogentembedded.com> Acked-by: Guennadi Liakhovetski <g.liakhovetski@gmx.de> Signed-off-by: Chris Ball <cjb@laptop.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
When a request returns an error, the driver needs to report the entire
extent of the request as completed. Writes already did this, since
they always set xferred = length, but reads were skipping that step if
an error other than -ENOENT occurred. Instead, rbd would end up
passing 0 xferred to blk_end_request(), which would always report
needing more data. This resulted in an assert failing when more data
was required by the block layer, but all the object requests were
done:
[ 1868.719077] rbd: obj_request read result -108 xferred 0
[ 1868.719077]
[ 1868.719518] end_request: I/O error, dev rbd1, sector 0
[ 1868.719739]
[ 1868.719739] Assertion failure in rbd_img_obj_callback() at line 1736:
[ 1868.719739]
[ 1868.719739] rbd_assert(more ^ (which == img_request->obj_request_count));
Without this assert, reads that hit errors would hang forever, since
the block layer considered them incomplete.
Fix a typo that used the wrong bitmask for the pg.seed calculation. This
is normally unnoticed because in most cases pg_num == pgp_num. It is, however,
a bug that is easily corrected.
Signed-off-by: Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com> Reviewed-by: Alex Elder <alex.elder@linary.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
For nofail == false request, if __map_request failed, the caller does
cleanup work, like releasing the relative pages. It doesn't make any sense
to retry this request.
Signed-off-by: Jianpeng Ma <majianpeng@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
UML needs it's own probe_kernel_read() to handle kernel
mode faults correctly.
The implementation uses mincore() on the host side to detect
whether a page is owned by the UML kernel process.
This fixes also a possible crash when sysrq-t is used.
Starting with 3.10 sysrq-t calls probe_kernel_read() to
read details from the kernel workers. As kernel worker are
completely async pointers may turn NULL while reading them.
This LCD monitor (1280x1024 native) has a completely
bogus detailed timing (640x350@70hz). User reports that
1280x1024@60 has waves so prefer 1280x1024@75.
Manufacturer: MED Model: 7b8 Serial#: 99188
Year: 2005 Week: 5
EDID Version: 1.3
Analog Display Input, Input Voltage Level: 0.700/0.700 V
Sync: Separate
Max Image Size [cm]: horiz.: 34 vert.: 27
Gamma: 2.50
DPMS capabilities: Off; RGB/Color Display
First detailed timing is preferred mode
redX: 0.645 redY: 0.348 greenX: 0.280 greenY: 0.605
blueX: 0.142 blueY: 0.071 whiteX: 0.313 whiteY: 0.329
Supported established timings:
720x400@70Hz
640x480@60Hz
640x480@72Hz
640x480@75Hz
800x600@56Hz
800x600@60Hz
800x600@72Hz
800x600@75Hz
1024x768@60Hz
1024x768@70Hz
1024x768@75Hz
1280x1024@75Hz
Manufacturer's mask: 0
Supported standard timings:
Supported detailed timing:
clock: 25.2 MHz Image Size: 337 x 270 mm
h_active: 640 h_sync: 688 h_sync_end 784 h_blank_end 800 h_border: 0
v_active: 350 v_sync: 350 v_sync_end 352 v_blanking: 449 v_border: 0
Monitor name: MD30217PG
Ranges: V min: 56 V max: 76 Hz, H min: 30 H max: 83 kHz, PixClock max 145 MHz
Serial No: 501099188
EDID (in hex): 00ffffffffffff0034a4b80774830100 050f010368221b962a0c55a559479b24 125054afcf00310a0101010101018180 000000000000d60980a0205e63103060 0200510e1100001e000000fc004d4433 3032313750470a202020000000fd0038 4c1e530e000a202020202020000000ff 003530313039393138380a2020200078
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com> Reported-by: friedrich@mailstation.de Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
It can happen that configurations are running in a single-channel mode
even with a dual-channel memory controller, by, say, putting the DIMMs
only on the one channel and leaving the other empty. This causes a
problem in init_csrows which implicitly assumes that when the second
channel is enabled, i.e. channel 1, the struct dimm hierarchy will be
present. Which is not.
So always allocate two channels unconditionally.
This provides for the nice side effect that the data structures are
initialized so some day, when memory hotplug is supported, it should
just work out of the box when all of a sudden a second channel appears.
Refuse RW mount of isofs filesystem. So far we just silently changed it
to RO mount but when the media is writeable, block layer won't notice
this change and thus will think device is used RW and will block eject
button of the drive. That is unexpected by users because for
non-writeable media eject button works just fine.
Userspace mount(8) command handles this just fine and retries mounting
with MS_RDONLY set so userspace shouldn't see any regression. Plus any
tool mounting isofs is likely confronted with the case of read-only
media where block layer already refuses to mount the filesystem without
MS_RDONLY set so our behavior shouldn't be anything new for it.
Reported-by: Hui Wang <hui.wang@canonical.com> Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Don't allow mounting the proc filesystem unless the caller has
CAP_SYS_ADMIN rights over the pid namespace. The principle here is if
you create or have capabilities over it you can mount it, otherwise
you get to live with what other people have mounted.
Andy pointed out that this is needed to prevent users in a user
namespace from remounting proc and specifying different hidepid and gid
options on already existing proc mounts.
Reported-by: Andy Lutomirski <luto@amacapital.net> Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
In collapse_huge_page() there is a race window between releasing the
mmap_sem read lock and taking the mmap_sem write lock, so find_vma() may
return NULL. So check the return value to avoid NULL pointer dereference.
A memory cgroup with (1) multiple threshold notifications and (2) at least
one threshold >=2G was not reliable. Specifically the notifications would
either not fire or would not fire in the proper order.
The __mem_cgroup_threshold() signaling logic depends on keeping 64 bit
thresholds in sorted order. mem_cgroup_usage_register_event() sorts them
with compare_thresholds(), which returns the difference of two 64 bit
thresholds as an int. If the difference is positive but has bit[31] set,
then sort() treats the difference as negative and breaks sort order.
This fix compares the two arbitrary 64 bit thresholds returning the
classic -1, 0, 1 result.
The test below sets two notifications (at 0x1000 and 0x81001000):
cd /sys/fs/cgroup/memory
mkdir x
for x in 4096 2164264960; do
cgroup_event_listener x/memory.usage_in_bytes $x | sed "s/^/$x listener:/" &
done
echo $$ > x/cgroup.procs
anon_leaker 500M
v3.11-rc7 fails to signal the 4096 event listener:
Leaking...
Done leaking pages.
The fixed bug is old. It appears to date back to the introduction of
memcg threshold notifications in v2.6.34-rc1-116-g2e72b6347c94 "memcg:
implement memory thresholds"
Signed-off-by: Greg Thelen <gthelen@google.com> Acked-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.cz> Acked-by: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com> Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Call fiemap ioctl(2) with given start offset as well as an desired mapping
range should show extents if possible. However, we somehow figure out the
end offset of mapping via 'mapping_end -= cpos' before iterating the
extent records which would cause problems if the given fiemap length is
too small to a cluster size, e.g,
Commit 8382fcac1b81 ("pidns: Outlaw thread creation after
unshare(CLONE_NEWPID)") nacks CLONE_VM if the forking process unshared
pid_ns, this obviously breaks vfork:
Change this check to use CLONE_SIGHAND instead. This also forbids
CLONE_THREAD automatically, and this is what the comment implies.
We could probably even drop CLONE_SIGHAND and use CLONE_THREAD, but it
would be safer to not do this. The current check denies CLONE_SIGHAND
implicitely and there is no reason to change this.
Eric said "CLONE_SIGHAND is fine. CLONE_THREAD would be even better.
Having shared signal handling between two different pid namespaces is
the case that we are fundamentally guarding against."
Signed-off-by: Oleg Nesterov <oleg@redhat.com> Reported-by: Colin Walters <walters@redhat.com> Acked-by: Andy Lutomirski <luto@amacapital.net> Reviewed-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
> Since commit af4b8a83add95ef40716401395b44a1b579965f4 it's been
> possible to get into a situation where a pidns reaper is
> <defunct>, reparented to host pid 1, but never reaped. How to
> reproduce this is documented at
>
> https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/lxc/+bug/1168526
> (and see
> https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/lxc/+bug/1168526/comments/13)
> In short, run repeated starts of a container whose init is
>
> Process.exit(0);
>
> sysrq-t when such a task is playing zombie shows:
>
> [ 131.132978] init x ffff88011fc14580 0 2084 2039 0x00000000
> [ 131.132978] ffff880116e89ea80000000000000002ffff880116e89fd80000000000014580
> [ 131.132978] ffff880116e89fd80000000000014580ffff8801172a0000ffff8801172a0000
> [ 131.132978] ffff8801172a0630ffff88011729fff0ffff880116e14650ffff88011729fff0
> [ 131.132978] Call Trace:
> [ 131.132978] [<ffffffff816f6159>] schedule+0x29/0x70
> [ 131.132978] [<ffffffff81064591>] do_exit+0x6e1/0xa40
> [ 131.132978] [<ffffffff81071eae>] ? signal_wake_up_state+0x1e/0x30
> [ 131.132978] [<ffffffff8106496f>] do_group_exit+0x3f/0xa0
> [ 131.132978] [<ffffffff810649e4>] SyS_exit_group+0x14/0x20
> [ 131.132978] [<ffffffff8170102f>] tracesys+0xe1/0xe6
>
> Further debugging showed that every time this happened, zap_pid_ns_processes()
> started with nr_hashed being 3, while we were expecting it to drop to 2.
> Any time it didn't happen, nr_hashed was 1 or 2. So the reaper was
> waiting for nr_hashed to become 2, but free_pid() only wakes the reaper
> if nr_hashed hits 1.
The issue is that when the task group leader of an init process exits
before other tasks of the init process when the init process finally
exits it will be a secondary task sleeping in zap_pid_ns_processes and
waiting to wake up when the number of hashed pids drops to two. This
case waits forever as free_pid only sends a wake up when the number of
hashed pids drops to 1.
To correct this the simple strategy of sending a possibly unncessary
wake up when the number of hashed pids drops to 2 is adopted.
Sending one extraneous wake up is relatively harmless, at worst we
waste a little cpu time in the rare case when a pid namespace
appropaches exiting.
We can detect the case when the pid namespace drops to just two pids
hashed race free in free_pid.
Dereferencing pid_ns->child_reaper with the pidmap_lock held is safe
without out the tasklist_lock because it is guaranteed that the
detach_pid will be called on the child_reaper before it is freed and
detach_pid calls __change_pid which calls free_pid which takes the
pidmap_lock. __change_pid only calls free_pid if this is the
last use of the pid. For a thread that is not the thread group leader
the threads pid will only ever have one user because a threads pid
is not allowed to be the pid of a process, of a process group or
a session. For a thread that is a thread group leader all of
the other threads of that process will be reaped before it is allowed
for the thread group leader to be reaped ensuring there will only
be one user of the threads pid as a process pid. Furthermore
because the thread is the init process of a pid namespace all of the
other processes in the pid namespace will have also been already freed
leading to the fact that the pid will not be used as a session pid or
a process group pid for any other running process.
At best the current code only seems to free the leaf pagetables and
the root. If you're unlucky enough to have a large gap (like any
QEMU guest with more than 3G of memory), only the first chunk of leaf
pagetables are freed (plus the root). This is a massive memory leak.
This patch re-writes the pagetable freeing function to use a
recursive algorithm and manages to not only free all the pagetables,
but does it without any apparent performance loss versus the current
broken version.
This patch fixes a >= v3.9+ regression in __core_scsi3_write_aptpl_to_file()
+ core_alua_write_tpg_metadata() write-out, where a return value of -EIO was
incorrectly being returned upon success.
target: writev() on single-element vector is pointless
However, given that the return of core_scsi3_update_and_write_aptpl()
was not used to determine if a command should be returned with non GOOD
status, this bug was not being triggered in PR logic until v3.11-rc1 by
commit:
So, go ahead and only return -EIO if kernel_write() returned a
negative value.
Reported-by: Gera Kazakov <gkazakov@msn.com> Signed-off-by: Gera Kazakov <gkazakov@msn.com> Cc: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> Cc: Andy Grover <agrover@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Nicholas Bellinger <nab@linux-iscsi.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
The watchdog device on the AR933x is connected to
the AHB clock, however the current code uses the
reference clock. Due to the wrong rate, the watchdog
driver can't calculate correct register values for
a given timeout value and the watchdog unexpectedly
restarts the system.
The wm831x-status driver was not converted to use a REG resource when they
were introduced and the rest of the wm831x drivers converted, causing it
to fail to probe due to requesting the wrong resource type.
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Bryan Wu <cooloney@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Currently utask->depth is simply the number of allocated/pending
return_instance's in uprobe_task->return_instances list.
handle_trampoline() should decrement this counter every time we
handle/free an instance, but due to typo it does this only if
->chained == T. This means that in the likely case this counter
is never decremented and the probed task can't report more than
MAX_URETPROBE_DEPTH events.
If you start the replace procedure on a read only filesystem, at
the end the procedure fails to write the updated dev_items to the
chunk tree. The problem is that this error is not indicated except
for a WARN_ON(). If the user now thinks that everything was done
as expected and destroys the source device (with mkfs or with a
hammer). The next mount fails with "failed to read chunk root" and
the filesystem is gone.
This commit adds code to fail the attempt to start the replace
procedure if the filesystem is mounted read-only.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Behrens <sbehrens@giantdisaster.de> Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com> Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
This patch fixes following error:
include/media/v4l2-ctrls.h:193:15: error: field ‘_lock’ has incomplete type
include/media/v4l2-ctrls.h: In function ‘v4l2_ctrl_lock’:
include/media/v4l2-ctrls.h:570:2: error: implicit declaration of
function ‘mutex_lock’ [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
include/media/v4l2-ctrls.h: In function ‘v4l2_ctrl_unlock’:
include/media/v4l2-ctrls.h:579:2: error: implicit declaration of
function ‘mutex_unlock’ [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration]
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Hajda <a.hajda@samsung.com> Signed-off-by: Kyungmin Park <kyungmin.park@samsung.com> Signed-off-by: Hans Verkuil <hans.verkuil@cisco.com> Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <m.chehab@samsung.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
free_buff_list and rec_buff_list are initialized in the middle of hdpvr_probe(),
but if something bad happens before that, error handling code calls hdpvr_delete(),
which contains iteration over the lists (via hdpvr_free_buffers()).
The patch moves the lists initialization to the beginning and by the way fixes
goto label in error handling of registering videodev.
Found by Linux Driver Verification project (linuxtesting.org).
Fixes the last three errors of media_api DocBook validatation:
(...)
media_api.xml:414: element imagedata: validity error : Value "SVG" for attribute format of imagedata is not among the enumerated set
media_api.xml:432: element imagedata: validity error : Value "SVG" for attribute format of imagedata is not among the enumerated set
media_api.xml:452: element imagedata: validity error : Value "SVG" for attribute format of imagedata is not among the enumerated set
(...)
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Hajda <a.hajda@samsung.com> Signed-off-by: Kyungmin Park <kyungmin.park@samsung.com> Signed-off-by: Hans Verkuil <hans.verkuil@cisco.com> Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <m.chehab@samsung.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Commit 1c1d86a1ea ("[media] v4l2: always require v4l2_dev,
rename parent to dev_parent") expects v4l2_dev to be always set.
It converted most of the drivers using the parent field of video_device
to v4l2_dev field. G2D driver did not set the parent field. Hence it got
left out. Without this patch we get the following boot warning and G2D
driver fails to register the video device.
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 1 at drivers/media/v4l2-core/v4l2-dev.c:775 __video_register_device+0xfc0/0x1028()
Modules linked in:
CPU: 0 PID: 1 Comm: swapper/0 Not tainted 3.11.0-rc1-00001-g1c3e372-dirty #9
[<c0014b7c>] (unwind_backtrace+0x0/0xf4) from [<c0011524>] (show_stack+0x10/0x14)
[<c0011524>] (show_stack+0x10/0x14) from [<c041d7a8>] (dump_stack+0x7c/0xb0)
[<c041d7a8>] (dump_stack+0x7c/0xb0) from [<c001dc94>] (warn_slowpath_common+0x6c/0x88)
[<c001dc94>] (warn_slowpath_common+0x6c/0x88) from [<c001dd4c>] (warn_slowpath_null+0x1c/0x24)
[<c001dd4c>] (warn_slowpath_null+0x1c/0x24) from [<c02cf8d4>] (__video_register_device+0xfc0/0x1028)
[<c02cf8d4>] (__video_register_device+0xfc0/0x1028) from [<c0311a94>] (g2d_probe+0x1f8/0x398)
[<c0311a94>] (g2d_probe+0x1f8/0x398) from [<c0247d54>] (platform_drv_probe+0x14/0x18)
[<c0247d54>] (platform_drv_probe+0x14/0x18) from [<c0246b10>] (driver_probe_device+0x108/0x220)
[<c0246b10>] (driver_probe_device+0x108/0x220) from [<c0246cf8>] (__driver_attach+0x8c/0x90)
[<c0246cf8>] (__driver_attach+0x8c/0x90) from [<c0245050>] (bus_for_each_dev+0x60/0x94)
[<c0245050>] (bus_for_each_dev+0x60/0x94) from [<c02462c8>] (bus_add_driver+0x1c0/0x24c)
[<c02462c8>] (bus_add_driver+0x1c0/0x24c) from [<c02472d0>] (driver_register+0x78/0x140)
[<c02472d0>] (driver_register+0x78/0x140) from [<c00087c8>] (do_one_initcall+0xf8/0x144)
[<c00087c8>] (do_one_initcall+0xf8/0x144) from [<c05b29e8>] (kernel_init_freeable+0x13c/0x1d8)
[<c05b29e8>] (kernel_init_freeable+0x13c/0x1d8) from [<c041a108>] (kernel_init+0xc/0x160)
[<c041a108>] (kernel_init+0xc/0x160) from [<c000e2f8>] (ret_from_fork+0x14/0x3c)
---[ end trace 4e0ec028b0028e02 ]---
s5p-g2d 12800000.g2d: Failed to register video device
s5p-g2d: probe of 12800000.g2d failed with error -22
Gscaler video device registration was happening without reference to
a parent v4l2_dev causing probe to fail. The patch creates a parent
v4l2 device and uses it for the gsc m2m video device registration.
This fixes regression introduced with comit commit 1c1d86a1ea07506
[media] v4l2: always require v4l2_dev, rename parent to dev_parent
This changes puts the commit 4fe9f8e203f back in place
with the fixes for slab corruption because of the commit.
When a device is unplugged, wait for all processes that
have opened the device to close before deallocating the device.
This commit was solving kernel crash because of the corruption in
rb tree of vmalloc. The rootcause was the device data pointer was
geting excessed after the memory associated with hidraw was freed.
The commit 4fe9f8e203f was buggy as it was also freeing the hidraw
first and then calling delete operation on the list associated with
that hidraw leading to slab corruption.
When picolcd is switched into bootloader mode (for FW flashing) make
sure not to try to dereference NULL-pointers of feature-devices during
unplug/unbind.
The "Report ID" field of a HID report is used to build indexes of
reports. The kernel's index of these is limited to 256 entries, so any
malicious device that sets a Report ID greater than 255 will trigger
memory corruption on the host:
[ 1347.156239] BUG: unable to handle kernel paging request at ffff88094958a878
[ 1347.156261] IP: [<ffffffff813e4da0>] hid_register_report+0x2a/0x8b
A HID device could send a malicious feature report that would cause the
sensor-hub HID driver to read past the end of heap allocation, leaking
kernel memory contents to the caller.
Some devices of the "Speedlink VAD Cezanne" model need more aggressive fixing
than already done.
I made sure through testing that this patch would not interfere with the proper
working of a device that is bug-free. (The driver drops EV_REL events with
abs(val) >= 256, which are not achievable even on the highest laser resolution
hardware setting.)
A HID device could send a malicious output report that would cause the
pantherlord HID driver to write beyond the output report allocation
during initialization, causing a heap overflow:
[ 310.939483] usb 1-1: New USB device found, idVendor=0e8f, idProduct=0003
...
[ 315.980774] BUG kmalloc-192 (Tainted: G W ): Redzone overwritten
A recent patch (9d9a04ee) added support for the new machine, but got
the sequence of USB ids wrong. Reports from both Ian and Linus T show
that the 0x0291 id is for ISO, not ANSI, which should have the missing
number 0x0290. This patchs moves the three numbers accordingly, fixing
the problem.
Reported-and-tested-by: Ian Munsie <darkstarsword@gmail.com> Tested-by: Linus G Thiel <linus@hanssonlarsson.se> Signed-off-by: Henrik Rydberg <rydberg@euromail.se> Acked-by: Dmitry Torokhov <dmitry.torokhov@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
They are not implemented, and accessing them might trigger errors
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@openwrt.org> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Similar to a race condition that exists in the tx path, the hardware
might re-read the 'next' pointer of a descriptor of the last completed
frame. This only affects non-EDMA (pre-AR93xx) devices.
To deal with this race, defer clearing and re-linking a completed rx
descriptor until the next one has been processed.
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@openwrt.org> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Otherwise in some cases, EAPOL frames might be filtered during the
initial handshake, causing delays and assoc failures.
Signed-off-by: Felix Fietkau <nbd@openwrt.org> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
As the patch adds a new failure mechanism to dma_rxfill(). When I changed the
comment at the start of the routine to add that information, I also polished
the wording.
Signed-off-by: Larry Finger <Larry.Finger@lwfinger.net> Cc: Brett Rudley <brudley@broadcom.com> Cc: Franky (Zhenhui) Lin <frankyl@broadcom.com> Cc: Hante Meuleman <meuleman@broadcom.com> Cc: brcm80211-dev-list@broadcom.com Acked-by: Arend van Spriel <arend@broadcom.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Merge conditions in ext4_setattr() handling inode size changes, also
move ext4_begin_ordered_truncate() call somewhat earlier because it
simplifies error recovery in case of failure. Also add error handling in
case i_disksize update fails.
Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz> Signed-off-by: "Theodore Ts'o" <tytso@mit.edu> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Toshiba Satellite C870 shows interrupt problems occasionally when
certain mixer controls like "Mic Switch" is toggled. This seems
worked around by not using MSI.
hdmi_channel_allocation() tries to find a HDMI channel allocation that
matches the number channels in the playback stream and contains only
speakers that the HDMI sink has reported as available via EDID. If no
such allocation is found, 0 (stereo audio) is used.
Using CA 0 causes the audio causes the sink to discard everything except
the first two channels (front left and front right).
However, the sink may be capable of receiving more channels than it has
speakers (and then perform downmix or discard the extra channels), in
which case it is preferable to use a CA that contains extra channels
than to use CA 0 which discards all the non-stereo channels.
Additionally, it seems that HBR (HD) passthrough output does not work on
Intel HDMI codecs when CA is set to 0 (possibly the codec zeroes
channels not present in CA). This happens with all receivers that report
a 5.1 speaker mask since a HBR stream is carried on 8 channels to the
codec.
Add a fallback in the CA selection so that the CA channel count at least
matches the stream channel count, even if the stream contains channels
not present in the sink speaker descriptor.
Thanks to GrimGriefer at OpenELEC forums for discovering that changing
the sink speaker mask allowed HBR output.
When the transcoder:port mapping on Haswell HDMI/DP audio is changed
during the stream playback, the sound gets lost. Typically this
problem is seen when the user switches the graphics mode from eDP+DP
to DP-only configuration, where CRTC 1 is used for DP in the former
while CRTC 0 is used for the latter.
The graphics controller notifies the change via the normal ELD update
procedure, so we get the intrinsic event. For enabling the sound
again, the HDMI audio driver needs to reset the pin and set up the
audio infoframe again.
This patch achieves it by:
- keep the current status of channels and info frame setup in per_pin
struct,
- check the reconnection in the intrinsic event handler,
- reset the pin and the re-invoke hdmi_setup_audio_infoframe()
accordingly.
The hdmi_setup_audio_infoframe() function has been changed, too, so
that it can be invoked without passing the substream instance.
The patch is mostly based on the work by Mengdong Lin.
Dick Fowles, Don Zickus and Joe Mario have been working on
improvements to perf, and noticed heavy cache line contention
on the mm_cpumask, running linpack on a 60 core / 120 thread
system.
The cause turned out to be unnecessary atomic accesses to the
mm_cpumask. When in lazy TLB mode, the CPU is only removed from
the mm_cpumask if there is a TLB flush event.
Most of the time, no such TLB flush happens, and the kernel
skips the TLB reload. It can also skip the atomic memory
set & test.
Here is a summary of Joe's test results:
* The __schedule function dropped from 24% of all program cycles down
to 5.5%.
* The cacheline contention/hotness for accesses to that bitmask went
from being the 1st/2nd hottest - down to the 84th hottest (0.3% of
all shared misses which is now quite cold)
* The average load latency for the bit-test-n-set instruction in
__schedule dropped from 10k-15k cycles down to an average of 600 cycles.
* The linpack program results improved from 133 GFlops to 144 GFlops.
Peak GFlops rose from 133 to 153.
Reported-by: Don Zickus <dzickus@redhat.com> Reported-by: Joe Mario <jmario@redhat.com> Tested-by: Joe Mario <jmario@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Rik van Riel <riel@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Paul Turner <pjt@google.com> Acked-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20130731221421.616d3d20@annuminas.surriel.com
[ Made the comments consistent around the modified code. ] Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
The 0x1000 bit of the MCACOD field of machine check MCi_STATUS
registers is only defined for corrected errors (where it means
that hardware may be filtering errors see SDM section 15.9.2.1).
For uncorrected errors it may, or may not be set - so we should mask
it out when checking for the architecturaly defined recoverable
error signatures (see SDM 15.9.3.1 and 15.9.3.2)
Acked-by: Naveen N. Rao <naveen.n.rao@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
F15h, models 0x30 and later don't have a GART. Note that. Also check
CPUID leaf 0x80000006 for L3 prescence because there are models which
don't sport an L3 cache.
For performance reasons, when SMAP is in use, SMAP is left open for an
entire put_user_try { ... } put_user_catch(); block, however, calling
__put_user() in the middle of that block will close SMAP as the
STAC..CLAC constructs intentionally do not nest.
Furthermore, using __put_user() rather than put_user_ex() here is bad
for performance.
Thus, introduce new [compat_]save_altstack_ex() helpers that replace
__[compat_]save_altstack() for x86, being currently the only
architecture which supports put_user_try { ... } put_user_catch().
Reported-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@linux.intel.com> Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/n/tip-es5p6y64if71k8p5u08agv9n@git.kernel.org Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
The MC13783 Chip Errata, Rev. 4 says, that depending on SPI clock
and main audio clock speed, the Audio Codec or Stereo DAC do sometimes
not start when programmed to do so. This is due to an internal clock
timing issue related to the loading of the SPI bits into the audio block.
On an i.MX27 based system, this issue lead to switched audio channels under
certain circumstances: RTC + Touch + Audio are used and loaded at startup.
The mentioned workaround of writing registers 40 and 41 two times is implemented
here.
Signed-off-by: Steffen Trumtrar <s.trumtrar@pengutronix.de> Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Bit 9 of PLL2,3 and 4 is reserved as '0'. The 24bit fractional part
should be split across each register in 8bit chunks.
Signed-off-by: Mike Dyer <mike.dyer@md-soft.co.uk> Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>