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2005-10-13[SPARC64]: Eliminate PCI IOMMU dma mapping size limit.David S. Miller
The hairy fast allocator in the sparc64 PCI IOMMU code has a hard limit of 256 pages. Certain devices can exceed this when performing very large I/Os. So replace with a more simple allocator, based largely upon the arch/ppc64/kernel/iommu.c code. Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2005-10-13[SPARC64]: Consolidate common PCI IOMMU init code.David S. Miller
All the PCI controller drivers were doing the same thing setting up the IOMMU software state, put it all in one spot. Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2005-07-04[SPARC64]: Do proper DMA IRQ syncing on TomatilloDavid S. Miller
This was the main impetus behind adding the PCI IRQ shim. In order to properly order DMA writes wrt. interrupts, you have to write to a PCI controller register, then poll for that bit clearing. There is one bit for each interrupt source, and setting this register bit tells Tomatillo to drain all pending DMA from that device. Furthermore, Tomatillo's with revision less than 4 require us to do a block store due to some memory transaction ordering issues it has on JBUS. Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2005-05-31[SPARC64]: Fix streaming buffer flushing on PCI and SBUS.David S. Miller
Firstly, if the direction is TODEVICE, then dirty data in the streaming cache is impossible so we can elide the flush-flag synchronization in that case. Next, the context allocator is broken. It is highly likely that contexts get used multiple times for different dma mappings, which confuses the strbuf flushing code and makes it run inefficiently. Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2005-04-16Linux-2.6.12-rc2Linus Torvalds
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!