On Tue, 2 Oct 2007 09:01:10 +0200 Andi Kleen <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > These are fine to me, but should not all go through my tree
> > > because most changes are in other architectures.
> >
> > I assume you're referring to just
> > convert-cpu_sibling_map-to-be-a-per-cpu-variable* here.
>
> All the *-to-*per-cpu* patches from Mike yes
OK, I'll merge those directly.
> >
> > > I have nothing pending currently. I rejected
> > > also quite a few of these.
> >
> > You did? I'd have dropped them if you had.
> >
> > Oh well, I was planning on a maintainer patch-bombing tomorrow - let's go
> > through them again.
>
> I'll send you a detailed list after the patch bomb.
Thanks
> > >
> > > Hmm, need to recheck the x86_64 bits I think.
> >
> > Thanks.
>
> Done now (adding ccs)
>
> x86_64-sparsemem_vmemmap-2m-page-size-support.patch
> x86_64-sparsemem_vmemmap-vmemmap-x86_64-convert-to-new-helper-based-initialisation.patch
> Look like these two should be merged together
Shall do.
> Also I'm concerned about a third variant of memmappery. Can we agree
> to only merge that when the old sparsemem support is removed from x86-64?
How much work would that be?
> Otherwise it looks good to me.
>
> > How come? Memoryless node can and do occur in real-world machines. Kernel
> > should support that?
>
> But a node is just defined by its memory?
Don't think so. A node is a lump of circuitry which can have zero or more
CPUs, IO and memory.
It may initially have been conceived as a memory-only concept in the Linux
kernel, but that doesn't fully map onto reality (does it?)
There was a real-world need for this, I think from the Fujitsu guys. That
should be spelled out in the changelog but isn't.
> > If so, that might be OK - the app just needs a reliable way of working out
> > whether it's on a 32- or 64-bit kernel?
>
> That would be ugly and a little error prone (would this case really be
> tested in user space normally?) but might work.
I guess it wouldn't be too hard for a 64-bit kernel to fake up 32-bit data
for 32-bit userspace. For each architecture :( But let's see what Matt
thinks.
> >
> > > > x86_64-efi-boot-support-efi-frame-buffer-driver.patch
> > > > x86_64-efi-boot-support-efi-boot-document.patch
> > >
> > > This required changes from review I think. And the previous patch is useless
> > > without a boot protocol.
> >
> > So should I drop them?
>
> Yes for now please.
Done.
> e.g. we at least need a patch to actually check the version number
> of the boot protocol.
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