forked from luck/tmp_suning_uos_patched
478c7cf7a8
- ACPICA fix for a stale pointer access introduced by a recent commit in the XSDT validation code from Lv Zheng. - ACPICA fix for the default value of the command line switch to favor 32-bit FADT addresses (in case there's a conflict between a 64-bit and a 32-bit address). The previous default was that the 32-bit version would take precedence and we tried to change it to the other way around and it didn't work. From Lv Zheng. - A TPM commit related to ACPI _DSM in 3.14 caused the driver to refuse to load if a specific _DSM was missing and that broke resume from system suspend on Chromebooks that require the TPM hardware to be restored to a working state during resume by the OS. Restore the old behavior to load the driver if the _DSM in question is not present, but prevent it from using the feature the _DSM is for. - ACPI AC driver conversion in 3.13 broke thermal management on at least one machine and has to be reverted. From Guenter Roeck. - Two reverts of 3.13 commits that attempted to remove the old ACPI battery interface in /proc, but turned out to break some utilities still using that interface. From Lan Tianyu. - ACPI processor driver fix to prevent acpi_processor_add() from modifying the CPU device's .offline field which leads to breakage if the initial online of the CPU fails. From Igor Mammedov. - Two intel_pstate fixes, one to take a BayTrail documentation update into account and one to avoid forcing the maximum P-state on init which causes CPU PM trouble on systems with P-states coordination when one of the CPU cores is initialized after an offline/online cycle triggered by user space. Both stable candidates, from Dirk Brandewie. - Fix for the ACPI video DMI blacklist entry for Dell Inspiron 7520 from Aaron Lu. - Two new ACPI video blacklist entries for machines shipping with Win8 that need to use native backlight so that it can be controlled in a usual way (which doesn't work otherwise due bugs in the ACPI tables) from Hans de Goede. - Two ACPI _OSI quirks for systems that need them to work correctly with Linux from Edward Lin and Hans de Goede. / -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (GNU/Linux) iQIcBAABCAAGBQJTdow6AAoJEILEb/54YlRxUWcP/0nczFCxZ7C1c7l7Ya8r9iRZ HXT+AAbakanPs6Ms4VRxao65v1AcdlruWHPhJ6JiEoiO60yKxIIzy7f3mO5gVesr tcaxaFaCTNdUDFdRDhyN6y+RzO/ohYSKdOJng2tcz2IvcsRD93hXk+095BlVzfJV EFycqXPb3nmP6oZo1KjPebk4cmlC8Sw9aWcBxK0O1aRoIrAdObf3+rCXfc2/FvC0 vAquOI2OaJ0bwNl7QhGHMLMnvoDvq+/y2mDQ+BvxPERbtDBDS66tkhjsxEx89kpi ow6WKX1vgfsWYGa5tCxFDZvYIYP5x4+YWPwvYfOFmCO520PUIojT81qT+P6hLHMy jf2G7QWvL/3qn89qKsR26YNE/fadNDZq0IHh3KD8kOaKtXBV30fIh2rLG3XZfB8q lhWAcx5ot2ZoQy5ppAuKNG+zA6MniWbN/a5acUIS6zsvVRFkGeZE5ORyEUgkWMjk QiiL3kcx/Fe528A1cMVXR2fb4kzKBpnVXxWQlzptKCX/3JAOxe6ElZqHMDff983b LHJjMfVUX9m1yGUZHqbH6CiK9kuQv2fQXSESLrkUDItVs9VFskYQb6AZE5Ow+k+A QKnDg7n81YlYiau997g0+yA7EqwQmQZx+EwfVtOIfppOlp4LFbCKC6Ytu9pcgbZB GuYsd/bPvEVswylJMu6U =v+oA -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Merge tag 'pm+acpi-3.15-rc6' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rafael/linux-pm Pull ACPI and power management fixes from Rafael Wysocki: "Still fixing regressions (partly by reverting commits that broke things for people), fixing other stable-candidate bugs and adding some blacklist entries for ACPI video and _OSI. Two ACPICA regression fixes (one recent and one for a 3.14 commit), a fix for an ACPI-related regression in TPM (introduced in 3.14), a revert of the ACPI AC driver conversion in 3.13 that went wrong for an unknown reason, two reverts of commits that attempted to remove an old user space interface in /proc and broke some utilities, in 3.13 too, a fix for a CPU hotplug bug in the ACPI processor driver (stable material), two (stable candidate) fixes for intel_pstate and a few new blacklist entries, mostly for systems that shipped with Windows 8. Specifics: - ACPICA fix for a stale pointer access introduced by a recent commit in the XSDT validation code from Lv Zheng. - ACPICA fix for the default value of the command line switch to favor 32-bit FADT addresses (in case there's a conflict between a 64-bit and a 32-bit address). The previous default was that the 32-bit version would take precedence and we tried to change it to the other way around and it didn't work. From Lv Zheng. - A TPM commit related to ACPI _DSM in 3.14 caused the driver to refuse to load if a specific _DSM was missing and that broke resume from system suspend on Chromebooks that require the TPM hardware to be restored to a working state during resume by the OS. Restore the old behavior to load the driver if the _DSM in question is not present, but prevent it from using the feature the _DSM is for. - ACPI AC driver conversion in 3.13 broke thermal management on at least one machine and has to be reverted. From Guenter Roeck. - Two reverts of 3.13 commits that attempted to remove the old ACPI battery interface in /proc, but turned out to break some utilities still using that interface. From Lan Tianyu. - ACPI processor driver fix to prevent acpi_processor_add() from modifying the CPU device's .offline field which leads to breakage if the initial online of the CPU fails. From Igor Mammedov. - Two intel_pstate fixes, one to take a BayTrail documentation update into account and one to avoid forcing the maximum P-state on init which causes CPU PM trouble on systems with P-states coordination when one of the CPU cores is initialized after an offline/online cycle triggered by user space. Both stable candidates, from Dirk Brandewie. - Fix for the ACPI video DMI blacklist entry for Dell Inspiron 7520 from Aaron Lu. - Two new ACPI video blacklist entries for machines shipping with Win8 that need to use native backlight so that it can be controlled in a usual way (which doesn't work otherwise due bugs in the ACPI tables) from Hans de Goede. - Two ACPI _OSI quirks for systems that need them to work correctly with Linux from Edward Lin and Hans de Goede" * tag 'pm+acpi-3.15-rc6' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rafael/linux-pm: ACPI / video: Revert native brightness quirk for ThinkPad T530 intel_pstate: remove setting P state to MAX on init ACPICA: Tables: Restore old behavor to favor 32-bit FADT addresses. ACPI / video: correct DMI tag for Dell Inspiron 7520 intel_pstate: Set turbo VID for BayTrail ACPI / TPM: Fix resume regression on Chromebooks ACPI / proc: Do not say when /proc interfaces will be deleted in Kconfig ACPI / processor: do not mark present at boot but not onlined CPU as onlined ACPI: Revert "ACPI / AC: convert ACPI ac driver to platform bus" ACPI / blacklist: Add dmi_enable_osi_linux quirk for Asus EEE PC 1015PX ACPI: blacklist win8 OSI for Dell Inspiron 7737 ACPI / video: Add use_native_backlight quirks for more systems ACPI: Revert "ACPI / Battery: Remove battery's proc directory" ACPI: Revert "ACPI: Remove CONFIG_ACPI_PROCFS_POWER and cm_sbsc.c" ACPICA: Tables: Fix invalid pointer accesses in acpi_tb_parse_root_table(). |
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arch | ||
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crypto | ||
Documentation | ||
drivers | ||
firmware | ||
fs | ||
include | ||
init | ||
ipc | ||
kernel | ||
lib | ||
mm | ||
net | ||
samples | ||
scripts | ||
security | ||
sound | ||
tools | ||
usr | ||
virt/kvm | ||
.gitignore | ||
.mailmap | ||
COPYING | ||
CREDITS | ||
Kbuild | ||
Kconfig | ||
MAINTAINERS | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
REPORTING-BUGS |
Linux kernel release 3.x <http://kernel.org/> These are the release notes for Linux version 3. Read them carefully, as they tell you what this is all about, explain how to install the kernel, and what to do if something goes wrong. WHAT IS LINUX? Linux is a clone of the operating system Unix, written from scratch by Linus Torvalds with assistance from a loosely-knit team of hackers across the Net. It aims towards POSIX and Single UNIX Specification compliance. It has all the features you would expect in a modern fully-fledged Unix, including true multitasking, virtual memory, shared libraries, demand loading, shared copy-on-write executables, proper memory management, and multistack networking including IPv4 and IPv6. It is distributed under the GNU General Public License - see the accompanying COPYING file for more details. ON WHAT HARDWARE DOES IT RUN? Although originally developed first for 32-bit x86-based PCs (386 or higher), today Linux also runs on (at least) the Compaq Alpha AXP, Sun SPARC and UltraSPARC, Motorola 68000, PowerPC, PowerPC64, ARM, Hitachi SuperH, Cell, IBM S/390, MIPS, HP PA-RISC, Intel IA-64, DEC VAX, AMD x86-64, AXIS CRIS, Xtensa, Tilera TILE, AVR32 and Renesas M32R architectures. Linux is easily portable to most general-purpose 32- or 64-bit architectures as long as they have a paged memory management unit (PMMU) and a port of the GNU C compiler (gcc) (part of The GNU Compiler Collection, GCC). Linux has also been ported to a number of architectures without a PMMU, although functionality is then obviously somewhat limited. Linux has also been ported to itself. You can now run the kernel as a userspace application - this is called UserMode Linux (UML). DOCUMENTATION: - There is a lot of documentation available both in electronic form on the Internet and in books, both Linux-specific and pertaining to general UNIX questions. I'd recommend looking into the documentation subdirectories on any Linux FTP site for the LDP (Linux Documentation Project) books. This README is not meant to be documentation on the system: there are much better sources available. - There are various README files in the Documentation/ subdirectory: these typically contain kernel-specific installation notes for some drivers for example. See Documentation/00-INDEX for a list of what is contained in each file. Please read the Changes file, as it contains information about the problems, which may result by upgrading your kernel. - The Documentation/DocBook/ subdirectory contains several guides for kernel developers and users. These guides can be rendered in a number of formats: PostScript (.ps), PDF, HTML, & man-pages, among others. After installation, "make psdocs", "make pdfdocs", "make htmldocs", or "make mandocs" will render the documentation in the requested format. INSTALLING the kernel source: - If you install the full sources, put the kernel tarball in a directory where you have permissions (eg. your home directory) and unpack it: gzip -cd linux-3.X.tar.gz | tar xvf - or bzip2 -dc linux-3.X.tar.bz2 | tar xvf - Replace "X" with the version number of the latest kernel. Do NOT use the /usr/src/linux area! This area has a (usually incomplete) set of kernel headers that are used by the library header files. They should match the library, and not get messed up by whatever the kernel-du-jour happens to be. - You can also upgrade between 3.x releases by patching. Patches are distributed in the traditional gzip and the newer bzip2 format. To install by patching, get all the newer patch files, enter the top level directory of the kernel source (linux-3.X) and execute: gzip -cd ../patch-3.x.gz | patch -p1 or bzip2 -dc ../patch-3.x.bz2 | patch -p1 Replace "x" for all versions bigger than the version "X" of your current source tree, _in_order_, and you should be ok. You may want to remove the backup files (some-file-name~ or some-file-name.orig), and make sure that there are no failed patches (some-file-name# or some-file-name.rej). If there are, either you or I have made a mistake. Unlike patches for the 3.x kernels, patches for the 3.x.y kernels (also known as the -stable kernels) are not incremental but instead apply directly to the base 3.x kernel. For example, if your base kernel is 3.0 and you want to apply the 3.0.3 patch, you must not first apply the 3.0.1 and 3.0.2 patches. Similarly, if you are running kernel version 3.0.2 and want to jump to 3.0.3, you must first reverse the 3.0.2 patch (that is, patch -R) _before_ applying the 3.0.3 patch. You can read more on this in Documentation/applying-patches.txt Alternatively, the script patch-kernel can be used to automate this process. It determines the current kernel version and applies any patches found. linux/scripts/patch-kernel linux The first argument in the command above is the location of the kernel source. Patches are applied from the current directory, but an alternative directory can be specified as the second argument. - Make sure you have no stale .o files and dependencies lying around: cd linux make mrproper You should now have the sources correctly installed. SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS Compiling and running the 3.x kernels requires up-to-date versions of various software packages. Consult Documentation/Changes for the minimum version numbers required and how to get updates for these packages. Beware that using excessively old versions of these packages can cause indirect errors that are very difficult to track down, so don't assume that you can just update packages when obvious problems arise during build or operation. BUILD directory for the kernel: When compiling the kernel, all output files will per default be stored together with the kernel source code. Using the option "make O=output/dir" allow you to specify an alternate place for the output files (including .config). Example: kernel source code: /usr/src/linux-3.X build directory: /home/name/build/kernel To configure and build the kernel, use: cd /usr/src/linux-3.X make O=/home/name/build/kernel menuconfig make O=/home/name/build/kernel sudo make O=/home/name/build/kernel modules_install install Please note: If the 'O=output/dir' option is used, then it must be used for all invocations of make. CONFIGURING the kernel: Do not skip this step even if you are only upgrading one minor version. New configuration options are added in each release, and odd problems will turn up if the configuration files are not set up as expected. If you want to carry your existing configuration to a new version with minimal work, use "make oldconfig", which will only ask you for the answers to new questions. - Alternative configuration commands are: "make config" Plain text interface. "make menuconfig" Text based color menus, radiolists & dialogs. "make nconfig" Enhanced text based color menus. "make xconfig" X windows (Qt) based configuration tool. "make gconfig" X windows (Gtk) based configuration tool. "make oldconfig" Default all questions based on the contents of your existing ./.config file and asking about new config symbols. "make silentoldconfig" Like above, but avoids cluttering the screen with questions already answered. Additionally updates the dependencies. "make olddefconfig" Like above, but sets new symbols to their default values without prompting. "make defconfig" Create a ./.config file by using the default symbol values from either arch/$ARCH/defconfig or arch/$ARCH/configs/${PLATFORM}_defconfig, depending on the architecture. "make ${PLATFORM}_defconfig" Create a ./.config file by using the default symbol values from arch/$ARCH/configs/${PLATFORM}_defconfig. Use "make help" to get a list of all available platforms of your architecture. "make allyesconfig" Create a ./.config file by setting symbol values to 'y' as much as possible. "make allmodconfig" Create a ./.config file by setting symbol values to 'm' as much as possible. "make allnoconfig" Create a ./.config file by setting symbol values to 'n' as much as possible. "make randconfig" Create a ./.config file by setting symbol values to random values. "make localmodconfig" Create a config based on current config and loaded modules (lsmod). Disables any module option that is not needed for the loaded modules. To create a localmodconfig for another machine, store the lsmod of that machine into a file and pass it in as a LSMOD parameter. target$ lsmod > /tmp/mylsmod target$ scp /tmp/mylsmod host:/tmp host$ make LSMOD=/tmp/mylsmod localmodconfig The above also works when cross compiling. "make localyesconfig" Similar to localmodconfig, except it will convert all module options to built in (=y) options. You can find more information on using the Linux kernel config tools in Documentation/kbuild/kconfig.txt. - NOTES on "make config": - Having unnecessary drivers will make the kernel bigger, and can under some circumstances lead to problems: probing for a nonexistent controller card may confuse your other controllers - Compiling the kernel with "Processor type" set higher than 386 will result in a kernel that does NOT work on a 386. The kernel will detect this on bootup, and give up. - A kernel with math-emulation compiled in will still use the coprocessor if one is present: the math emulation will just never get used in that case. The kernel will be slightly larger, but will work on different machines regardless of whether they have a math coprocessor or not. - The "kernel hacking" configuration details usually result in a bigger or slower kernel (or both), and can even make the kernel less stable by configuring some routines to actively try to break bad code to find kernel problems (kmalloc()). Thus you should probably answer 'n' to the questions for "development", "experimental", or "debugging" features. COMPILING the kernel: - Make sure you have at least gcc 3.2 available. For more information, refer to Documentation/Changes. Please note that you can still run a.out user programs with this kernel. - Do a "make" to create a compressed kernel image. It is also possible to do "make install" if you have lilo installed to suit the kernel makefiles, but you may want to check your particular lilo setup first. To do the actual install, you have to be root, but none of the normal build should require that. Don't take the name of root in vain. - If you configured any of the parts of the kernel as `modules', you will also have to do "make modules_install". - Verbose kernel compile/build output: Normally, the kernel build system runs in a fairly quiet mode (but not totally silent). However, sometimes you or other kernel developers need to see compile, link, or other commands exactly as they are executed. For this, use "verbose" build mode. This is done by inserting "V=1" in the "make" command. E.g.: make V=1 all To have the build system also tell the reason for the rebuild of each target, use "V=2". The default is "V=0". - Keep a backup kernel handy in case something goes wrong. This is especially true for the development releases, since each new release contains new code which has not been debugged. Make sure you keep a backup of the modules corresponding to that kernel, as well. If you are installing a new kernel with the same version number as your working kernel, make a backup of your modules directory before you do a "make modules_install". Alternatively, before compiling, use the kernel config option "LOCALVERSION" to append a unique suffix to the regular kernel version. LOCALVERSION can be set in the "General Setup" menu. - In order to boot your new kernel, you'll need to copy the kernel image (e.g. .../linux/arch/i386/boot/bzImage after compilation) to the place where your regular bootable kernel is found. - Booting a kernel directly from a floppy without the assistance of a bootloader such as LILO, is no longer supported. If you boot Linux from the hard drive, chances are you use LILO, which uses the kernel image as specified in the file /etc/lilo.conf. The kernel image file is usually /vmlinuz, /boot/vmlinuz, /bzImage or /boot/bzImage. To use the new kernel, save a copy of the old image and copy the new image over the old one. Then, you MUST RERUN LILO to update the loading map!! If you don't, you won't be able to boot the new kernel image. Reinstalling LILO is usually a matter of running /sbin/lilo. You may wish to edit /etc/lilo.conf to specify an entry for your old kernel image (say, /vmlinux.old) in case the new one does not work. See the LILO docs for more information. After reinstalling LILO, you should be all set. Shutdown the system, reboot, and enjoy! If you ever need to change the default root device, video mode, ramdisk size, etc. in the kernel image, use the 'rdev' program (or alternatively the LILO boot options when appropriate). No need to recompile the kernel to change these parameters. - Reboot with the new kernel and enjoy. IF SOMETHING GOES WRONG: - If you have problems that seem to be due to kernel bugs, please check the file MAINTAINERS to see if there is a particular person associated with the part of the kernel that you are having trouble with. If there isn't anyone listed there, then the second best thing is to mail them to me (torvalds@linux-foundation.org), and possibly to any other relevant mailing-list or to the newsgroup. - In all bug-reports, *please* tell what kernel you are talking about, how to duplicate the problem, and what your setup is (use your common sense). If the problem is new, tell me so, and if the problem is old, please try to tell me when you first noticed it. - If the bug results in a message like unable to handle kernel paging request at address C0000010 Oops: 0002 EIP: 0010:XXXXXXXX eax: xxxxxxxx ebx: xxxxxxxx ecx: xxxxxxxx edx: xxxxxxxx esi: xxxxxxxx edi: xxxxxxxx ebp: xxxxxxxx ds: xxxx es: xxxx fs: xxxx gs: xxxx Pid: xx, process nr: xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx or similar kernel debugging information on your screen or in your system log, please duplicate it *exactly*. The dump may look incomprehensible to you, but it does contain information that may help debugging the problem. The text above the dump is also important: it tells something about why the kernel dumped code (in the above example, it's due to a bad kernel pointer). More information on making sense of the dump is in Documentation/oops-tracing.txt - If you compiled the kernel with CONFIG_KALLSYMS you can send the dump as is, otherwise you will have to use the "ksymoops" program to make sense of the dump (but compiling with CONFIG_KALLSYMS is usually preferred). This utility can be downloaded from ftp://ftp.<country>.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/ksymoops/ . Alternatively, you can do the dump lookup by hand: - In debugging dumps like the above, it helps enormously if you can look up what the EIP value means. The hex value as such doesn't help me or anybody else very much: it will depend on your particular kernel setup. What you should do is take the hex value from the EIP line (ignore the "0010:"), and look it up in the kernel namelist to see which kernel function contains the offending address. To find out the kernel function name, you'll need to find the system binary associated with the kernel that exhibited the symptom. This is the file 'linux/vmlinux'. To extract the namelist and match it against the EIP from the kernel crash, do: nm vmlinux | sort | less This will give you a list of kernel addresses sorted in ascending order, from which it is simple to find the function that contains the offending address. Note that the address given by the kernel debugging messages will not necessarily match exactly with the function addresses (in fact, that is very unlikely), so you can't just 'grep' the list: the list will, however, give you the starting point of each kernel function, so by looking for the function that has a starting address lower than the one you are searching for but is followed by a function with a higher address you will find the one you want. In fact, it may be a good idea to include a bit of "context" in your problem report, giving a few lines around the interesting one. If you for some reason cannot do the above (you have a pre-compiled kernel image or similar), telling me as much about your setup as possible will help. Please read the REPORTING-BUGS document for details. - Alternatively, you can use gdb on a running kernel. (read-only; i.e. you cannot change values or set break points.) To do this, first compile the kernel with -g; edit arch/i386/Makefile appropriately, then do a "make clean". You'll also need to enable CONFIG_PROC_FS (via "make config"). After you've rebooted with the new kernel, do "gdb vmlinux /proc/kcore". You can now use all the usual gdb commands. The command to look up the point where your system crashed is "l *0xXXXXXXXX". (Replace the XXXes with the EIP value.) gdb'ing a non-running kernel currently fails because gdb (wrongly) disregards the starting offset for which the kernel is compiled.