29 Sep, 2006

1 commit


04 Jul, 2006

2 commits


01 Jul, 2006

1 commit


26 Mar, 2006

1 commit

  • Implement the half-closed devices notifiation, by adding a new POLLRDHUP
    (and its alias EPOLLRDHUP) bit to the existing poll/select sets. Since the
    existing POLLHUP handling, that does not report correctly half-closed
    devices, was feared to be changed, this implementation leaves the current
    POLLHUP reporting unchanged and simply add a new bit that is set in the few
    places where it makes sense. The same thing was discussed and conceptually
    agreed quite some time ago:

    http://lkml.org/lkml/2003/7/12/116

    Since this new event bit is added to the existing Linux poll infrastruture,
    even the existing poll/select system calls will be able to use it. As far
    as the existing POLLHUP handling, the patch leaves it as is. The
    pollrdhup-2.6.16.rc5-0.10.diff defines the POLLRDHUP for all the existing
    archs and sets the bit in the six relevant files. The other attached diff
    is the simple change required to sys/epoll.h to add the EPOLLRDHUP
    definition.

    There is "a stupid program" to test POLLRDHUP delivery here:

    http://www.xmailserver.org/pollrdhup-test.c

    It tests poll(2), but since the delivery is same epoll(2) will work equally.

    Signed-off-by: Davide Libenzi
    Cc: "David S. Miller"
    Cc: Michael Kerrisk
    Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton
    Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds

    Davide Libenzi
     

04 Jan, 2006

1 commit

  • It also looks like there were 2 places where the test on sk_err was
    missing from the event wait logic (in sk_stream_wait_connect and
    sk_stream_wait_memory), while the rest of the sock_error() users look
    to be doing the right thing. This version of the patch fixes those,
    and cleans up a few places that were testing ->sk_err directly.

    Signed-off-by: Benjamin LaHaise
    Signed-off-by: David S. Miller

    Benjamin LaHaise
     

09 Nov, 2005

1 commit


29 Oct, 2005

1 commit


26 Apr, 2005

1 commit

  • A lot of places in there are including major.h for no reason whatsoever.
    Removed. And yes, it still builds.

    The history of that stuff is often amusing. E.g. for net/core/sock.c
    the story looks so, as far as I've been able to reconstruct it: we used
    to need major.h in net/socket.c circa 1.1.early. In 1.1.13 that need
    had disappeared, along with register_chrdev(SOCKET_MAJOR, "socket",
    &net_fops) in sock_init(). Include had not. When 1.2 -> 1.3 reorg of
    net/* had moved a lot of stuff from net/socket.c to net/core/sock.c,
    this crap had followed...

    Signed-off-by: Al Viro
    Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds

    Al Viro
     

17 Apr, 2005

1 commit

  • Initial git repository build. I'm not bothering with the full history,
    even though we have it. We can create a separate "historical" git
    archive of that later if we want to, and in the meantime it's about
    3.2GB when imported into git - space that would just make the early
    git days unnecessarily complicated, when we don't have a lot of good
    infrastructure for it.

    Let it rip!

    Linus Torvalds