Searched refs:infinite (Results 1 – 21 of 21) sorted by relevance
182 int err = 0, i, infinite = !cycles_count; in tort_init() local344 if (!infinite && --cycles_count == 0) in tort_init()
26 when we ERET back to the guest. This causes the guest to hang in an infinite loop.
57 valid values is [0..15], where 0 indicates infinite retries.
92 Otherwise the set of contended objects would be infinite - each of them99 would again have an infinite set of contended objects). But that
110 The default is infinite. Note that the size of read requests is
136 Now this puts kernel into infinite loop after first oops. Till
50 to complete before exiting. Note that if 'iterations' is set to 'infinite' then
54 allowing an infinite amount of data to flow through the buffer.
241 supported by the graph traversal API. To prevent infinite loops, the graph
500 typing - an infinite number of monkeys typing into GNU emacs would never
328 0: means infinite timeout - no checking done.340 -1: report an infinite number of warnings.
976 # to pop the stack frame we end up in an infinite loop of failsafe callbacks.
74 between 0 and infinite time, until a wake-up event occurs.
546 goes into an infinite loop (calling cond_sched() to let other tasks
177 >>> assumes that the device driver has gone into an infinite loop
523 and allow infinite transmission time.
1512 avoid infinite Neighbor Solicitation "recursion" when the peer node
1137 evaluated with infinite-precision integer arithmetic. */
1062 evaluated with infinite-precision integer arithmetic. */
965 evaluated with infinite-precision integer arithmetic. */
419 set inf_bit, 0x1 # infinite result