/linux-4.1.27/security/smack/ |
D | smack_access.c | 93 int may = -ENOENT; in smk_access_entry() local 99 may = srp->smk_access; in smk_access_entry() 107 if ((may & MAY_WRITE) == MAY_WRITE) in smk_access_entry() 108 may |= MAY_LOCK; in smk_access_entry() 109 return may; in smk_access_entry() 128 int may = MAY_NOT; in smk_access() local 178 may = smk_access_entry(subject->smk_known, object->smk_known, in smk_access() 182 if (may <= 0 || (request & may) != request) { in smk_access() 192 if (may & MAY_BRINGUP) in smk_access() 232 int may; in smk_tskacc() local [all …]
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D | smack_lsm.c | 839 int may; in smack_inode_init_security() local 846 may = smk_access_entry(skp->smk_known, dsp->smk_known, in smack_inode_init_security() 856 if (may > 0 && ((may & MAY_TRANSMUTE) != 0) && in smack_inode_init_security() 1529 int may; in smack_mmap_file() local 1563 may = smk_access_entry(srp->smk_subject->smk_known, in smack_mmap_file() 1566 if (may == -ENOENT) in smack_mmap_file() 1567 may = srp->smk_access; in smack_mmap_file() 1569 may &= srp->smk_access; in smack_mmap_file() 1574 if (may == 0) in smack_mmap_file() 1602 if ((may | mmay) != mmay) { in smack_mmap_file() [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/arch/m68k/ifpsp060/ |
D | fpsp.doc | 206 may exit through _060_real_inex <---| 208 may exit through _060_real_ovfl <---| 210 may exit through _060_fpsp_done <---| 218 may exit through _060_real_inex <---| 220 may exit through _060_real_unfl <---| 222 may exit through _060_fpsp_done <---| 253 |----> may exit through _060_real_trace 255 |----> may exit through _060_real_trap 257 |----> may exit through _060_real_bsun 259 |----> may exit through _060_fpsp_done [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/virtual/kvm/ |
D | timekeeping.txt | 27 timekeeping which may be difficult to find elsewhere, specifically, 267 the APIC CPU-local memory-mapped hardware. Beware that CPU errata may affect 268 the use of the APIC and that workarounds may be required. In addition, some of 271 functionality that may be more computationally expensive to implement. 284 systems designated as legacy free may support only the HPET as a hardware timer 303 timing chips built into the cards which may have registers which are accessible 346 platforms, the TSCs of different CPUs may start at different times depending 350 The BIOS may attempt to resynchronize the TSCs during the poweron process and 351 the operating system or other system software may attempt to do this as well. 353 write the full 64-bits of the TSC, it may be impossible to match the TSC in [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/isdn/ |
D | README.diversion | 5 document. The diversion services may be used with all cards supported by 45 only supported by isdn phones. Incoming calls may be diverted 48 The diversions may be invoked statically in the providers exchange 51 forwarding reason is met. Activated static services may also be 56 In this case all incoming calls are checked by rules that may be 64 Actions that may be invoked by a rule are ignore, proceed, reject, 77 driver for passive isdn cards. All HiSax supported cards may be used for 80 CFU, CFNR, CFB activated on an MSN-line. The static services may not be 84 not supported but may use the tty devices for this purpose. 85 The dynamic diversion services may be used in all countries if the provider [all …]
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D | README.hfc-pci | 1 The driver for the HFC-PCI and HFC-PCI-A chips from CCD may be used 5 may be logged. 23 If more than one HFC-PCI cards are installed, a specific card may be selected 32 0xd000 you may give the parameters type=35,35,35 io=0xdc00,0xd400,0xd00 36 invoked which may not give the wanted result.
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D | README.hysdn | 46 the active cards submenu. The driver may only be compiled and used if 53 and firmware may be fetched from Hypercopes WWW-Site www.hypercope.de. 88 This file may be read to get by everyone to get info about the cards type, 121 config lines may be copied to this file. 138 Additional info about error reasons may be fetched from the log output. 142 The cardlogX file entry may be opened multiple for reading by everyone to 145 The driver log data may be redirected to the syslog by selecting the 149 A root user may write a decimal or hex (with 0x) value t this file to select
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D | INTERFACE.CAPI | 44 From then on, Kernel CAPI may call the registered callback functions for the 62 application may be passed to the driver for the device via calls to the 63 send_message() callback function. Conversely, the driver may call Kernel 70 messages for that application may be passed to or from the device anymore. 87 a callback function pointer (may be NULL) 116 The function may return before the operation has completed. 124 The function may return before the operation has completed. 141 of the skb and the caller may no longer access it. If it returns a 143 who may reuse or free it. 190 parameter may be omitted by setting the length field of the CAPI message to 22 [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/security/ |
D | credentials.txt | 37 Objects are things in the system that may be acted upon directly by 63 indicates the 'objective context' of that object. This may or may not be 78 Objects other than tasks may under some circumstances also be subjects. 79 For instance an open file may send SIGIO to a task using the UID and EUID 97 Linux has a number of actions available that a subject may perform upon an 118 file may supply more than one ACL. 122 'group' and 'other'), each of which may be granted certain privileges 132 The system as a whole may have one or more sets of rules that get 187 The inheritable capabilities are the ones that may get passed across 190 The bounding set limits the capabilities that may be inherited across [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/ABI/stable/ |
D | sysfs-firmware-opal-elog | 13 Log entries may be purged by the service processor 20 the only remaining copy of a log message may be in 26 The service processor may be able to store more log 28 an event from Linux you may instantly get another one 33 user space to solve the problem. In future, we may 47 In the future there may be additional types.
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D | sysfs-class-ubi | 31 device may have many UBI volumes) 38 Amount of available logical eraseblock. For example, one may 70 Maximum logical eraseblock size this UBI device may provide. UBI 71 volumes may have smaller logical eraseblock size because of their 86 Maximum number of volumes which this UBI device may have. 93 Minimum input/output unit size. All the I/O may only be done 202 at the moment of the update was interrupted. The later may be
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/atm/ |
D | Kconfig | 60 Note that extended debugging may create certain race conditions 72 chipsets. However, in some cases, large bursts may overrun buffers 79 may increase the cost of setting up a transfer such that the 91 Burst sixteen words at once in the send direction. This may work 105 Burst four words at once in the send direction. You may want to try 107 may or may not improve throughput. 113 Burst two words at once in the send direction. You may want to try 115 are also set may or may not improve throughput. 121 Burst sixteen words at once in the receive direction. This may work 128 Burst eight words at once in the receive direction. This may work [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/thermal/ |
D | nouveau_thermal | 16 cannot access any of the i2c external monitoring chips it may find. If you 18 interface is likely not to work. This document may then not cover your situation 34 WARNING: Some of these thresholds may not be used by Nouveau depending 59 You may also have the following attribute: 72 [PWM_min, PWM_max] range, the reported fan speed (RPM) may not be accurate 78 Thermal management on Nouveau is new and may not work on all cards. If you have
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/sound/oss/ |
D | Introduction | 56 The modular sound drivers may be loaded via insmod or modprobe. 78 The ALSA drivers support some newer hardware that may not 82 2. The commercial OSS driver may be obtained from the site: 83 http://www.opensound.com. This may be used for cards that 84 are unsupported by the kernel driver, or may be used 87 3. The enlightenment sound daemon may be used for playing 91 The "esd" program may be used with the real-player and mpeg 129 If the sound card is an ISA PnP card, isapnp may be used 146 modules may then be loaded (most require parameters). For example, 184 The status of sound may be read/checked by: [all …]
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D | PAS16 | 31 when answering to these questions since answering y to a question may 34 configuration may also be made modular by answering m to configuration 37 Note also that all questions may not be asked. The configuration program 38 may disable some questions depending on the earlier choices. It may also 118 cards may have software (TSR) FM emulation. Enabling FM support with 119 these cards may cause trouble (I don't currently know of any such 154 irq of 10 and dma of 3 may not match your installation. The above 160 If sound is built totally modular, the above options may be
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D | oss-parameters.txt | 7 This document may not be entirely up to date and comprehensive. The command 11 parameters may be changed at runtime by the command
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/infiniband/ |
D | core_locking.txt | 11 all of the methods in struct ib_device may sleep. The exceptions 25 which may not sleep and must be callable from any context. 61 some serialization may be required to get sensible results. For 62 example, a consumer may safely call ib_poll_cq() on multiple CPUs 94 may be process context, softirq context, or interrupt context. 95 Upper level protocol consumers may not sleep in a callback. 109 An upper level protocol consumer may begin using an IB device as
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/ |
D | cdns,xtensa-pic.txt | 7 It may be either 1 or 2. 12 core variants it may be mapped to different internal IRQ. 13 IRQ sensitivity and priority are fixed for each core variant and may not be
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/networking/ |
D | cxgb.txt | 51 You may set the timer latency after disabling adaptive-rx: 59 You may also provide a timer latency value while disabling adaptive-rx: 100 parameters for "performance tuning" an what value to use. You may or may not 106 Your distribution may have a different way of doing things, or you may prefer 111 your system. You may want to write a script that runs at boot-up which 159 receiver. Due to the variations of RTT, you may want to increase the buffer 170 The receive buffer (RX_WINDOW) size may be calculated the same as single 174 not supported on the machine. Experimentation may be necessary to attain 185 may be found in /var/log/messages. 211 controller may be bound to more than one CPU. This will cause TCP [all …]
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D | ixgb.txt | 149 dropped receives, this value may be set too high, causing the driver to 188 behavior after modifying this register may be undefined (possibly errors of 190 back to 22 (setpci -d 8086:1a48 e6.b=22) may be required to get back to a 211 # some of the defaults may be different for your kernel 214 # several network benchmark tests, your mileage may vary 342 Excessive CRC errors may be observed if the Intel(R) PRO/10GbE CX4 345 The CRC errors may be received either by the Intel(R) PRO/10GbE CX4 347 cable assembly may resolve the issue. 352 Excessive CRC errors may be observed if the Intel(R) PRO/10GbE CX4 Server 354 (1 m or shorter). If this situation occurs, using a longer cable may resolve [all …]
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D | LICENSE.qla3xxx | 4 This program includes a device driver for Linux 2.6 that may be 6 You may modify and redistribute the device driver code under the 10 You may redistribute the hardware specific firmware binary file 22 3. The name of QLogic Corporation may not be used to
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D | e1000.txt | 134 and may improve small packet latency, but is generally not suitable 145 greater than 75,000, may hang (stop transmitting) adapters 154 are in use simultaneously, the CPU utilization may increase non- 184 for a higher number of receive descriptors may be denied. In this 197 may be set too high, causing the driver to run out of available receive 200 CAUTION: When setting RxIntDelay to a value other than 0, adapters may 217 along with RxIntDelay, may improve traffic throughput in specific network 242 higher number of transmit descriptors may be denied. In this case, 253 traffic bursts of short packets may result in an improper descriptor 255 the adapter, after which the transmit flow will restart, though data may [all …]
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D | LICENSE.qlge | 4 You may modify and redistribute the device driver code under the 73 a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed 89 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's 97 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and 98 you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. 100 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion 118 a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under 144 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, 182 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program 202 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further [all …]
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D | LICENSE.qlcnic | 4 You may modify and redistribute the device driver code under the 73 a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed 89 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's 97 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and 98 you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. 100 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion 118 a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under 144 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, 182 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program 202 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further [all …]
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D | vortex.txt | 69 There are several parameters which may be provided to the driver when 75 If you are using the PCMCIA tools (cardmgr) then the options may be 113 selection values may be OR'ed (or added to) the following: 199 may disable the feature with `hw_checksums=0'. 223 This is mainly for debugging purposes, although it may be advantageous 230 Becker's `ether-wake' application may be used to wake suspended 295 Donald's mii-diag program may be used for inspecting and manipulating 335 If autonegotiation is a problem, you may need to specify "speed 403 o Any additional module parameters which you may be providing to the driver. 420 (The above may vary, depending upon which Linux distribution you use). [all …]
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D | rxrpc.txt | 102 (*) Each connection goes to a particular "service". A connection may not go 103 to multiple services. A service may be considered the RxRPC equivalent of 110 (*) Up to a billion connections may be supported concurrently between one 122 (*) Each RxRPC operation is a "call". A connection may make up to four 123 billion calls, but only up to four calls may be in progress on a 131 flag in the packet. The number of packets of data making up one blob may 152 been received but may yet be discarded and re-requested. The sender may 162 (*) An call may be aborted by either end at any time up to its completion. 175 connections are handled transparently. One client socket may be used to 177 may handle calls from many clients. [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/block/paride/ |
D | Kconfig | 17 support into your kernel, you may answer Y here to build in the 31 support into your kernel, you may answer Y here to build in the 47 support into your kernel, you may answer Y here to build in the 61 support into your kernel, you may answer Y here to build in the 77 If you chose to build PARIDE support into your kernel, you may 102 support into your kernel, you may answer Y here to build in the 120 If you chose to build PARIDE support into your kernel, you may 139 If you chose to build PARIDE support into your kernel, you may 151 into your kernel, you may answer Y here to build in the protocol 162 into your kernel, you may answer Y here to build in the protocol [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/ABI/testing/ |
D | sysfs-gpio | 7 As a Kconfig option, individual GPIO signals may be accessed from 10 kernel code, it may be exported by userspace (and unexported later). 11 Kernel code may export it for complete or partial access.
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D | sysfs-block | 76 Storage devices may report a physical block size that is 87 Storage devices may report a physical block size that is 107 block size but may be bigger. One example is SATA 117 Storage devices may report a granularity or preferred 131 Storage devices may report an optimal I/O size, which is 158 Devices that support discard functionality may 169 Devices that support discard functionality may 180 Devices that support discard functionality may 193 Devices that support discard functionality may have 209 Devices that support discard functionality may return
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D | sysfs-bus-platform | 11 driver_override) and may be cleared with an empty string 19 name such as "none". Only a single driver may be specified in
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D | sysfs-bus-amba | 10 driver_override file (echo vfio-amba > driver_override) and may 19 Only a single driver may be specified in the override, there is
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D | sysfs-class-scsi_host | 24 '1' indicates the feature is enabled, and the controller may 26 means the feature is disabled and the controller may not use
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D | sysfs-class-rc | 47 This value may be reset to 0 if the current protocol is altered. 62 This value may be reset to 0 if the current protocol is altered. 96 This value may be reset to 0 if the wakeup protocol is altered. 111 This value may be reset to 0 if the wakeup protocol is altered.
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D | sysfs-platform-asus-laptop | 42 This may control the led, the device or both. 51 This may control the led, the device or both.
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D | sysfs-class-extcon | 11 port. An external connector may have multiple cables 15 may have both HDMI and Charger attached, or analog audio, 19 such binary relations may be expressed with extcon_dev's
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D | sysfs-class-cxl | 24 userspace must request on a CXL_START_WORK ioctl. Userspace may 32 Decimal value of the size of the MMIO space that may be mmaped 86 An AFU may optionally export one or more PCIe like configuration records, known 127 Decimal value of the size of the MMIO space that may be mmaped 191 Writing 1 will issue a PERST to card which may cause the card
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/timers/ |
D | timers-howto.txt | 8 deal with hardware delays and who may not be the most intimately 30 precision may not actually exist on many non-PC devices. 39 There are a few more options here, while any of them may 63 for usleep *may* not be worth it. Such an evaluation 73 msleep(1~20) may not do what the caller intends, and 86 that may have happened for other reasons, or at the
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D | timekeeping.txt | 6 drivers/clocksource in the kernel tree, but the code may be spread out 32 may stop during system suspend. 55 Since this operation may be invoked very often, doing this in a strict 92 and register range may be used for the clock event, but it is essentially 112 number of nanoseconds since the system was started. An architecture may or 113 may not provide an implementation of sched_clock() on its own. If a local 124 between accuracy compared to the clock source, you may sacrifice accuracy 128 The sched_clock() function may wrap only on unsigned long long boundaries, 137 The clock driving sched_clock() may stop or reset to zero during system 139 events on the system. However it may result in interesting timestamps in [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/i2c/ |
D | fault-codes | 9 faults. There may be fancier recovery schemes that are appropriate in 17 In short, your I2C driver code may need to know these codes in order 18 to respond correctly. Other code may need to rely on YOUR code reporting 30 codes that may be returned, and other cases where these codes should 52 may have a way to report PEC mismatches on writes from the 76 may verify the device returns *correct* responses, and 91 found no device to bind to. (ENODEV may also be used.) 119 SMBus adapters may return it when an operation took more
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/gpio/ |
D | sysfs.txt | 4 Platforms which use the "gpiolib" implementors framework may choose to 13 may need to temporarily remove that protection, first importing a GPIO, 45 "export" ... Userspace may ask the kernel to export control of 61 "direction" ... reads as either "in" or "out". This value may 64 operation, values "low" and "high" may be written to 73 is configured as an output, this value may be written; 115 or other cards in the stack. In such cases, you may need to use the 138 After a kernel driver requests a GPIO, it may only be made available in 140 signal direction may change. This helps drivers prevent userspace code
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D | gpio-legacy.txt | 37 cases (to support bidirectional signaling). GPIO controllers may have 41 sometimes level triggered. Such IRQs may be configurable as system 61 glue logic that may even change between board revisions, and can't ever be 113 may use this predicate: 117 A number that's not valid will be rejected by calls which may request 118 or free GPIOs (see below). Other numbers may also be rejected; for 195 GPIO access that may sleep 217 Accessing such GPIOs requires a context which may sleep, for example 226 from contexts which may sleep, since they may need to access the GPIO 248 * non-null labels may be useful for diagnostics. [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/filesystems/caching/ |
D | operations.txt | 66 FSCACHE_OP_WAITING may be set in op->flags prior to each submission of the 78 (1) The operation may be done synchronously (FSCACHE_OP_MYTHREAD). A thread 79 may decide it wants to handle an operation itself without deferring it to 96 (2) The operation may be fast asynchronous (FSCACHE_OP_FAST), in which case it 109 (3) The operation may be slow asynchronous (FSCACHE_OP_SLOW), in which case it 122 Furthermore, operations may be one of two types: 124 (1) Exclusive (FSCACHE_OP_EXCLUSIVE). Operations of this type may not run in 128 being written to may need truncation. 130 (2) Shareable. Operations of this type may be running simultaneously. It's
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D | object.txt | 35 There is a 1:N relationship between cookies and objects. A cookie may be 36 represented by multiple objects - an index may exist in more than one cache - 37 or even by no objects (it may not be cached). 83 and DObject represent data storage objects. Indices may have representation in 84 multiple caches, but currently, non-index objects may not. Objects of any type 85 may also be entirely unrepresented. 98 object->state. A cookie may point to a set of objects that are in different 134 (1) Threads may be completely occupied for very long periods of time by a 135 particular work item. These state actions may be doing sequences of 139 (2) Threads may do little actual work, but may rather spend a lot of time [all …]
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D | netfs-api.txt | 14 may or may not have anything associated with it, but the netfs doesn't 184 in the hierarchy may be stored in multiple caches. This function does not 195 cookie acquisition function and the maximum length of key data that it may 203 this is a data file. The size may be used to govern how much cache must 212 it may provide. It should write the auxiliary data into the given buffer 217 The length of the auxiliary data buffer may be dependent on the key 245 valid until after the I/O completion is called, two functions may be 251 required for indices as indices may not contain data. These functions may 252 be called in interrupt context and so may not sleep. 259 or not. Note that several pages at once may be presented for marking. [all …]
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D | backend-api.txt | 57 This function may return -ENOMEM if it ran out of memory or -EEXIST if the tag 84 In either case, this may not be an appropriate context in which to access the 87 The calling process's fsuid, fsgid and SELinux security identities may need to 96 The cache may present data to the outside world through FS-Cache's interfaces 187 backend to do the operation. The backend may get extra refs to it by 188 calling fscache_get_retrieval() and refs may be discarded by calling 241 This function may also be used to parse the index key to be used for 279 may fail (for instance if the cache is being withdrawn) by returning NULL. 309 may also be returned. 348 This method is used to discard a reference to an object. The object may [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/fs/fscache/ |
D | Kconfig | 23 multi-CPU system these may be on cachelines that keep bouncing 40 and on a multi-CPU system these may be on cachelines that keep 41 bouncing between CPUs. On the other hand, the histogram may be 51 management module. If this is set, the debugging output may be
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/linux-4.1.27/arch/powerpc/boot/dts/ |
D | iss4xx.dts | 38 i-cache-line-size = <32>; // may need fixup in sim 39 d-cache-line-size = <32>; // may need fixup in sim 40 i-cache-size = <32768>; /* may need fixup in sim */ 41 d-cache-size = <32768>; /* may need fixup in sim */
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D | t1040rdb.dts | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | t1042rdb.dts | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/ |
D | phy.txt | 16 - compatible: Compatible list, may contain 20 assume clause 22. The compatible list may also contain other 23 If the phy's identifier is known then the list may contain an entry
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/linux-4.1.27/firmware/keyspan/ |
D | usa19qi.HEX | 90 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 98 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | usa19.HEX | 90 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 98 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | mpr.HEX | 89 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 97 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | usa28xa.HEX | 130 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 138 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | usa28xb.HEX | 131 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 139 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | usa19w.HEX | 130 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 138 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | usa28x.HEX | 130 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 138 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | usa19qw.HEX | 131 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 139 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | usa18x.HEX | 130 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 138 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | usa28.HEX | 137 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 145 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | usa49w.HEX | 134 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 142 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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D | usa49wlc.HEX | 135 derived. Except as noted below this firmware image may not be 143 This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with
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/linux-4.1.27/fs/cachefiles/ |
D | Kconfig | 18 caching on files module. If this is set, the debugging output may be 34 and on a multi-CPU system these may be on cachelines that keep 35 bouncing between CPUs. On the other hand, the histogram may be
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/linux-4.1.27/firmware/emi26/ |
D | loader.HEX | 109 * and which may not be reproduced, used, sold or transferred to 112 * This firmware may not be modified and may only be used with the
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/fmc/ |
D | carrier.txt | 16 (actually, the carrier driver may choose whether or not to return it - 21 Please note that all the machinery is in place but some details may 37 int eeprom_len; /* Usually 8kB, may be less */ 68 * irq: number for the mezzanine; may be zero. 80 * fpga_base: the I/O memory address (may be NULL). 118 Note: mezzanine_data may be redundant, because Linux offers the drvdata 119 approach, so the field may be removed in later versions of this bus 156 carrier provides a fpga_base pointer, the driver may use direct 197 but fmc-specific flags may be added in the future. You'll most 211 reserved to fit bigger I2C devices in the future. Carriers may [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/fb/ |
D | deferred_io.txt | 6 IO. The following example may be a useful explanation of how one such setup 33 It may be the case that this is useful in other scenarios as well. Paul Mundt 37 Another one may be if one has a device framebuffer that is in an usual format, 38 say diagonally shifting RGB, this may then be a mechanism for you to allow 48 The following example may be helpful.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/vm/ |
D | slub.txt | 8 an impact on overall system performance which may make a bug more 30 Parameters may be given to slub_debug. If none is specified then full 60 Red zoning and tracking may realign the slab. We can just apply sanity checks 65 Debugging options may require the minimum possible slab order to increase as 82 and tracing may only be enabled. The other options may cause the realignment 85 Careful with tracing: It may spew out lots of information and never stop if 91 If no debug options are specified then SLUB may merge similar slabs together 126 contention may occur. 237 of the corruption is may be more likely found by looking at the function that 264 keep corrupting objects. This may be important for production systems. [all …]
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D | numa | 9 comprises multiple components or assemblies each of which may contain 0 15 Each of the 'cells' may be viewed as an SMP [symmetric multi-processor] subset 17 may not be populated on any given cell. The cells of the NUMA system are 47 architectures. As with physical cells, software nodes may contain 0 or more 84 default zonelist order may be overridden using the numa_zonelist_order kernel 137 may revert to its own fallback path. The slab kernel memory allocator is an 138 example of this. Or, the subsystem may choose to disable or not to enable
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/video4linux/ |
D | README.cx88 | 21 - Most tuner chips do provide mono sound, which may or may not 29 TV norms may or may not work.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/usb/ |
D | mass-storage.txt | 18 there may be some with hardware restrictions that prevent a buffer 35 backing storage for each logical unit. There may be at most 39 *BEWARE* that if a file is used as a backing storage, it may not 41 assumes the data does not change without its knowledge. It may be 111 Note that this may mean that if the device is powered from USB and 113 least some Windows users do), the data may be lost. 162 not specified as removable (but that may look strange to the 163 host). It may fail, however, if host disallowed medium removal 183 mass storage protocol. As a composite function, MSF may be used by 188 module parameters may be missing, or the parameters may have [all …]
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D | functionfs.txt | 4 unique behaviour. It may be added to an USB configuration only after 11 may not be in init section (ie. may not use the __init tag). 27 "ep1" file may be really mapped to (say) endpoint 3 (and when
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D | proc_usb_info.txt | 36 "usbfs", to reduce confusion with "devfs". You may 65 These files may also be used to write user-level drivers for the USB 78 usbfs mount options such as "devmode=0666" may be helpful. 110 d = decimal number (may have leading spaces or 0's) 111 x = hexadecimal number (may have leading spaces or 0's) 128 Speed may be: 185 | For USB host controller drivers (virtual root hubs) this may 216 USB devices may have multiple configurations, each of which act 243 A given interface may have one or more "alternate" settings. 244 For example, default settings may not use more than a small [all …]
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D | callbacks.txt | 48 context. You may sleep. However, it is important that all sleeps have a 71 particular interface. The device will not be suspended and you may do IO 82 callback. You also may not do any other operation that may interfere 101 restore. No more URBs may be submitted until the post_reset method
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D | power-management.txt | 73 device is enabled for remote wakeup and it is suspended, it may resume 135 autosuspend_delay_ms. (There may also be a file named "level"; this 308 operation. URBs may once more be submitted. 365 then the interface is considered to be idle, and the kernel may 456 driver may call the usb_autopm_get_interface_async() routine at a time 495 Firstly, a device may already be autosuspended when a system suspend 498 resume. But this theory may not work out well in practice; over time 503 Secondly, a dynamic power-management event may occur as a system 506 For example, a suspended device may send a remote-wakeup signal while 507 the system is suspending. The remote wakeup may succeed, which would [all …]
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D | gadget_multi.txt | 13 A CDC ECM (Ethernet) function may be turned on via a Kconfig option 18 CDC ECM) you may need to change vendor and/or product ID. 95 Failing to comply may cause brain damage after wondering for hours why 97 some drivers information (changing USB port may sometimes help plus 145 [7] You may find [[http://www.cygnal.org/ubb/Forum9/HTML/001050.html]]
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D | error-codes.txt | 72 USB device drivers may only test urb status values in completion handlers. 76 A transfer's actual_length may be positive even when an error has been 85 Individual frame descriptor status fields may report more status codes. 112 bus turn-around time. This error may instead be 160 processing, devices may receive such fault reports for every request.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/ia64/ |
D | aliasing.txt | 21 like UC is, but writes may be delayed and combined to increase 90 mappings may be either WB or UC. If the region being mapped 91 happens to be in kern_memmap, meaning that it may also be mapped 106 physical address space, but it may be different on machines with 117 This is an MMIO mmap of PCI functions, which additionally may or 118 may not be requested as using the WC attribute. 133 There may be corner cases of things that are not in kern_memmap, 162 The EFI memory map may not report these MMIO regions. 166 succeed. It may create either WB or UC user mappings, depending 179 The kernel VGA driver may ioremap the VGA frame buffer at 0xA0000, [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pinctrl/ |
D | pinctrl-bindings.txt | 24 Note that pin controllers themselves may also be client devices of themselves. 25 For example, a pin controller may set up its own "active" state when the 37 property exists to define the pin configuration. Each state may also be 50 entries may exist in this list so that multiple pin 51 controllers may be configured, or so that a state may be built 57 In some cases, it may be useful to define a state, but for it 58 to be empty. This may be required when a common IP block is 62 exist, they must still be defined, but may be left empty. 125 device; they may be grandchildren, for example. Whether this is legal, and
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/ptp/ |
D | ptp.txt | 44 the character device as a POSIX clock id and may call 48 User space programs may control the clock using standardized 49 ioctls. A program may query, enable, configure, and disable the 52 signals may be configured via the POSIX timer_settime() system 69 class driver, since the lock may also be needed by the clock
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/devfreq/ |
D | Kconfig | 5 A device may have a list of frequencies and voltages available. 10 Each device may have its own governor and policy. Devfreq can 14 Like some CPUs with CPUfreq, a device may have multiple clocks. 26 used with the devfreq device, you may use OPP helper 39 values that imply the usage rate. A device may provide tuned
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/input/ |
D | event-codes.txt | 3 may be used. 13 input subsystem; drivers do not need to maintain the state and may attempt to 14 emit unchanged values without harm. Userspace may obtain the current state of 27 - Used as markers to separate events. Events may be separated in time or in 77 occurring at the same moment in time. For example, motion of a mouse may set 107 touchscreens. These devices may be used with fingers, pens, or other tools. 117 to 1. Meaningful physical contact may mean any contact, or it may mean 119 touchpad may set the value to 1 only when the touch pressure rises above a 120 certain value. BTN_TOUCH may be combined with BTN_TOOL_<name> codes. For 121 example, a pen tablet may set BTN_TOOL_PEN to 1 and BTN_TOUCH to 0 while the [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/kernel/ |
D | Kconfig.hz | 10 to have the timer interrupt run at 1000 Hz but 100 Hz may be more 12 a fast response for user interaction and that may experience bus 23 with lots of processors that may show reduced performance if
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/ |
D | memory-barriers.txt | 18 - What may not be assumed about memory barriers? 102 abstract CPU, memory operation ordering is very relaxed, and a CPU may actually 104 appears to be maintained. Similarly, the compiler may also arrange the 142 Furthermore, the stores committed by a CPU to the memory system may not be 192 There are some minimal guarantees that may be expected of a CPU: 242 we may get any of the following sequences: 251 (*) It _must_ be assumed that overlapping memory accesses may be merged or 256 we may get any one of the following sequences: 266 we may get any of: 436 Memory operations that occur before an ACQUIRE operation may appear to [all …]
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D | parport-lowlevel.txt | 81 registers: data, status, and control. The hardware may not actually 83 modelled after common PC implementations. Other low-level drivers may 91 Hardware assistance for EPP and/or ECP transfers may or may not be 92 available, and if it is available it may or may not be used. If 148 hardware. It consists of flags which may be bitwise-ored together: 155 PARPORT_MODE_TRISTATE The data drivers may be turned off. 173 There may be other flags in 'modes' as well. 347 'preempt', 'wakeup' and 'irq'. Each of these may be NULL in order to 369 'flags' may be a bitwise combination of the following flags: 487 'parport_claim_or_block' may do. (Put something here about blocking [all …]
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D | nommu-mmap.txt | 82 (such as ramfs or tmpfs) may choose to honour an open, truncate, mmap 101 In the no-MMU case: The character device driver may choose to honour 112 (*) A request for a private mapping of a file may return a buffer that is not 113 page-aligned. This is because XIP may take place, and the data may not be 118 of the space may be wasted as the kernel must allocate a power-of-2 187 The mremap() function is partially supported. It may change the size of a 188 mapping, and may move it[*] if MREMAP_MAYMOVE is specified and if the new size 195 Shared mappings may not be moved. Shareable mappings may not be moved either, 199 a previously mapped object. It may not be used to create holes in existing 212 to get a proposed address for the mapping. This may return an error if it [all …]
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D | SM501.txt | 7 which may provide numerous interfaces including USB host controller USB gadget, 9 The device may be connected by PCI or local bus with varying functions enabled. 22 On detection of a device, the core initialises the chip (which may 69 be divided down individually. If this is not set, then SM501 may
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D | preempt-locking.txt | 29 First, since the data is per-CPU, it may not have explicit SMP locking, but 31 the previous value of smp_processor_id may not equal the current. You must 128 These may be used to protect from preemption, however, on exit, if preemption 129 may be enabled, a test to see if preemption is required should be done. If 131 is done. They may also be called within a spin-lock protected region, however, 134 are also protected by preemption locks and so may use the versions which do
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D | io-mapping.txt | 16 This _wc variant provides a mapping which may only be used 33 page and may only be used with mappings created by 36 Note that the task may not sleep while holding this page 46 variant, although they may be significantly slower.
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D | iostats.txt | 15 is mounted on /sys, although of course it may be mounted anywhere. 37 if you are watching a known, small set of disks. /proc/diskstats may 53 may wrap. Applications should be prepared to deal with that; unless 63 Reads and writes which are adjacent to each other may be merged for 64 efficiency. Thus two 4K reads may become one 8K read before it is 91 I/O completion time and the backlog that may be accumulating. 95 modifying these counters. This implies that minor inaccuracies may be 98 but due to the lack of locking it may only be very close.
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D | circular-buffers.txt | 60 be careful, however, as a region more than one unit in size may wrap the end of 117 but the consumer may still be depleting the buffer on another CPU and 120 To the consumer it will show an upper bound as the producer may be busy 125 producer may still be filling the buffer on another CPU and moving the 128 To the producer it will show an upper bound as the consumer may be busy 133 independent and may be made on different CPUs - so the result in such a 134 situation will merely be a guess, and may even be negative.
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D | kref.txt | 40 refcount cannot go to zero) you may do this without a lock. 117 First of all, you may not know what you are doing. Second, you may 119 involved where the above may be legal) but someone else who doesn't 120 know what they are doing may change the code or copy the code. It's 251 otherwise kref_get_unless_zero may reference already freed memory. 299 before using kfree, but note that synchronize_rcu() may sleep for a
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D | DMA-API.txt | 23 a dma_addr_t directly because there may be translation between its physical 35 without having to worry about caching effects. (You may however need 44 It also returns a <dma_handle> which may be cast to an unsigned integer the 49 minimum allocation length may be as big as a page, so you should 55 implementation may choose to ignore flags that affect the location of 75 may only be called with IRQs enabled. 198 The direction for both APIs may be converted freely by casting. 208 Further, contiguous kernel virtual space may not be contiguous as 221 the driver may specify various platform-dependent flags to restrict 227 dma_mask may not apply if the platform has an IOMMU (a device which [all …]
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D | pinctrl.txt | 20 can control PINs. It may be able to multiplex, bias, set load capacitance, 28 there may be several such number spaces in a system. This pin space may 29 be sparse - i.e. there may be gaps in the space with numbers where no 98 and such things in your driver, or the code may become complicated. You must 99 also consider matching of offsets to the GPIO ranges that may be handled by 190 may need more entries in your group structure, for example specific register 199 may be able to make an output pin high impedance, or "tristate" meaning it is 200 effectively disconnected. You may be able to connect an input pin to VDD or GND 281 The GPIO drivers may want to perform operations of various types on the same 292 pin controller may be muxing several GPIO ranges (typically SoCs that have [all …]
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D | ManagementStyle | 10 simple coding style rules, so this document may or may not have anything 18 These suggestions may or may not apply to you. 67 you cannot escape. A cornered rat may be dangerous - a cornered manager 89 deleting it, you may have irrevocably lost the trust of that 120 answer may end up being that both teams get so frustrated by the 123 That may sound like a failure, but it's usually a sign that there was 239 somebody else puts on airs, it _really_ rubs us the wrong way. You may 269 First off, while you may or may not get screaming teenage girls (or
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/spi/ |
D | spi-summary | 22 device, so those three signal wires may be connected to several chips 31 - SPI may be used for request/response style device protocols, as with 34 - It may also be used to stream data in either direction (half duplex), 37 - Some devices may use eight bit words. Others may use different word 60 course they won't handle full duplex transfers. You may find such 109 clock edge. The chipselect may have made it become available. 142 Controller drivers ... controllers may be built into System-On-Chip 144 These drivers touch hardware registers and may use DMA. 200 devices, and the controller may need some platform_data in order to 247 * production boards may already have done this, but [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/power/ |
D | devices.txt | 36 leave the low-power state. This feature may be enabled or disabled 38 drivers the ioctl interface used by ethtool may also be used for this 39 purpose); enabling it may cost some power usage, but let the whole 43 Devices may also be put into low-power states while the system is 48 device is on, it may be necessary to carry out some bus-specific 50 states at run time may require special handling during system-wide power 62 have been put into low-power states (at runtime), the effect may be very similar 69 drivers are no longer accepted. A given bus or platform may have different 195 wakeup" used by runtime power management, although it may be supported by the 198 they should be put into the full-power state. Those interrupts may or may not [all …]
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D | notifiers.txt | 4 There are some operations that subsystems or drivers may want to carry out 8 For example, device drivers may want to upload firmware to their devices after 11 points). The solution may be to load the firmware into memory before processes 13 A suspend/hibernation notifier may be used for this purpose.
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D | basic-pm-debugging.txt | 108 or resume its device (in the latter case the system may hang or become unstable 122 unloaded all modules. In that case, you may want to look in your kernel 124 with these drivers compiled as modules). You may also try to use some special 133 work (of course, this only may be an issue on SMP systems) and the problem 143 A failure of any of the "platform", "processors" or "core" tests may cause your 145 indicates a serious problem that very well may be related to the hardware, but 174 kernel messages using the serial console. This may provide you with some 176 it may be possible to use a FireWire port for debugging with firescope 195 Among other things, the testing with the help of /sys/power/pm_test may allow 200 it does not work "out of the box", you may need to boot it with [all …]
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D | charger-manager.txt | 6 and where each battery may have multiple chargers attached and the userland 13 the system may need multiple instances of Charger Manager. 21 A system may have multiple chargers (or power sources) and some of 22 they may be activated at the same time. Each charger may have its 30 we may need to monitor the battery health by looking at the ambient or 42 requires tasks other than cm_suspend_again, it may implement its own 101 feature, the platform_suspend_ops may directly refer to cm_suspend_again
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D | freezing-of-tasks.txt | 43 calling try_to_freeze(). The main loop of a freezable kernel thread may look 90 Kernel threads are not freezable by default. However, a kernel thread may clear 111 may cause something like this to happen, they have to be freezable. 124 process running on a second CPU while we are suspending devices may, for 141 So in practice, the 'at all' may become a 'why freeze kernel threads?' and 144 Still, there are kernel threads that may want to be freezable. For example, if 160 may notice that the number of CPUs has changed and may start to work incorrectly 167 First of all, the freezing of kernel threads may be tricky if they depend one 171 may be undesirable. That's why kernel threads are not freezable by default. 198 A driver must have all firmwares it may need in RAM before suspend() is called.
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D | states.txt | 10 /sys/power/state file. Those strings may be "mem", "standby", "freeze" and 67 Additional operations may take place depending on the platform capabilities. In 79 system from it. This may be the case on other platforms too. 105 Once memory state is written to disk, the system may either enter a 106 low-power state (like ACPI S4), or it may simply power down. Powering
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/scsi/ |
D | qlogicfas.txt | 32 may take a while. 42 It may be a good idea to enable RESET_AT_START, especially if the 43 devices may not have been just powered up, or if you are restarting 44 after a crash, since they may be busy trying to complete the last 46 if you have reliable hardware and connections it may be more useful to
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D | osst.txt | 35 devices. If those are not present, you may create them by calling 58 depending on your choice during kernel config. You may still need to create 61 To load your module, you may use the command 66 If you want to have the module autoloaded on access to /dev/osst, you may 71 You may find it convenient to create a symbolic link 82 You may use the OnStream tape driver with your standard backup software, 83 which may be tar, cpio, amanda, arkeia, BRU, Lone Tar, ... 86 supported and you may try the mt (or mt_st) program to jump between 106 guarantees the block size of 32k. (Otherwise you may pass the -b64 option to 110 On a fast machine, you may profit from software data compression (z flag for [all …]
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D | LICENSE.qla4xxx | 5 You may modify and redistribute the device driver code under the 74 a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed 90 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's 98 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and 99 you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. 101 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion 119 a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under 145 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, 183 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program 203 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further [all …]
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D | LICENSE.qla2xxx | 5 You may modify and redistribute the device driver code under the 75 a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed 91 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's 99 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and 100 you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. 102 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion 120 a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under 146 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, 184 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program 204 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mips/cavium/ |
D | ciu.txt | 13 the CIU and may have a value of 0 or 1. The second cell is the bit 14 within the bank and may have a value between 0 and 63.
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D | ciu2.txt | 13 the CIU and may have a value between 0 and 63. The second cell is 14 the bit within the bank and may also have a value between 0 and 63.
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/linux-4.1.27/lib/ |
D | Kconfig.kmemcheck | 23 The kernel may be started with kmemcheck=0 or kmemcheck=1 to disable 60 other faults. The queue will be emptied as soon as a tasklet may 82 thrown away afterwards. This may of course also hide some real 92 This may also hide some real bugs.
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/net/ |
D | LICENSE.SRC | 5 Director, National Security Agency. This software may be used 15 expected. Although updates may occur, no commitment exists.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/ |
D | gpmi-nand.txt | 26 the software may chooses an implementation-defined 36 turned on may not be accessible by the BootROM 39 The device tree may optionally contain sub-nodes describing partitions of the
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D | fsl-upm-nand.txt | 15 - gpios : may specify optional GPIOs connected to the Ready-Not-Busy pins 22 Each flash chip described may optionally contain additional sub-nodes
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/staging/iio/Documentation/ |
D | ring.txt | 4 a buffer may supply and how it is specified within IIO. For more 35 The primary buffer reading function. Note that it may well not return 46 Set the number of complete scans that may be held by the buffer.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/arm/ |
D | memory.txt | 16 this document may reserve more VM space over time. 81 Please note that mappings which collide with the above areas may result 82 in a non-bootable kernel, or may cause the kernel to (eventually) panic 85 Since future CPUs may impact the kernel mapping layout, user programs
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D | Booting | 33 this in a machine dependent manner. (It may use internal algorithms 34 to automatically locate and size all RAM, or it may use knowledge of 89 The ATAG_CORE tag may or may not be empty. An empty ATAG_CORE tag 160 The zImage may also be placed in system RAM and called there. The 199 Instruction cache may be on or off.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/netlabel/ |
D | draft-ietf-cipso-ipsecurity-01.txt | 18 Groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as 22 Internet Drafts may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents 82 mapping to hosts within the authority's domain. These mappings may be 124 corresponding ASCII representations. Non-related groups of systems may 136 have their own unique mappings. For example, one group of systems may 137 use the number 5 to represent Unclassified while another group may use the 158 identifiers are greater than 127 are defined by the DOI authority and may 182 restrictions specified in this document may increase to use the full area 348 octets. Up to 15 categories may be represented by this tag. Valid values 413 label. This tag may contain a maximum of 7 category pairs. The bottom [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/pci/ |
D | pci.txt | 12 driver implementation may support the following properties: 19 may be assigned to root buses behind different host bridges. The domain
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/thermal/ |
D | thermal.txt | 15 - thermal sensors: devices which may be used to take temperature 17 - cooling devices: devices which may be used to dissipate heat. 29 nodes providing temperature data to thermal zones. Thermal sensor devices may 180 device in temperature ranges that may damage the silicon structures and 314 case on SoC designs with several internal IPs that may need different thermal 315 requirements, and thus may have their own sensor to monitor or detect internal 340 /* each zone within the SoC may have its own trips */ 354 /* each zone within the SoC may have its own cooling */ 367 /* each zone within the SoC may have its own trips */ 381 /* each zone within the SoC may have its own cooling */ [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/filesystems/ |
D | Locking | 25 rename_lock ->d_lock may block rcu-walk 73 all may block 89 permission: no (may not block if called in rcu-walk mode) 131 All may block [not true, see below] 171 may block 208 All except set_page_dirty and freepage may block 232 may be called from the request handler (/dev/loop). 241 "sync". These are quite different operations and the behaviour may differ 257 This may also be done to avoid internal deadlocks, but rarely. 296 written. The address_space implementation may write more (or less) pages [all …]
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D | dax.txt | 36 of bytes that can be contiguously accessed at that offset. It may also 46 These block devices may be used for inspiration: 69 The get_block() callback passed to the DAX functions may return 74 These filesystems may be used for inspiration:
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/mtd/spi-nor/ |
D | Kconfig | 15 on the usage this feature may provide performance gain in comparison 21 Please note that some tools/drivers/filesystems may not work with
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/regulator/ |
D | regulator.txt | 5 - regulator-min-microvolt: smallest voltage consumers may set 6 - regulator-max-microvolt: largest voltage consumers may set 8 - regulator-min-microamp: smallest current consumers may set 9 - regulator-max-microamp: largest current consumers may set
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/sound/alsa/ |
D | compress_offload.txt | 34 - separation between byte counts and time. Compressed formats may have 36 may vary from frame-to-frame. As a result, it is not possible to 45 may also provide support for a limited number of audio encoders and 46 decoders embedded in firmware, or may support more choices through 55 AAC, some implementations may support AAC multichannel but HE-AAC 56 stereo. Likewise WMA10 level M3 may require too much memory and cpu 107 the number of channels supported may depend on a specific profile. If 108 the capabilities were exposed with a single descriptor, it may happen 109 that a specific combination of profiles/channels/formats may not be 202 are lost during transmission. This may be added in the future.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/driver-model/ |
D | driver.txt | 10 Device drivers are statically allocated structures. Though there may 19 also initialize the devclass field (when it arrives), so it may obtain 74 Some may find the syntax of embedded struct initialization awkward or 93 lock. These fields are assumed to be valid at all times and may be 115 Once the object has been registered, it may access the common fields of 163 A driver's probe() may return a negative errno value to indicate that 169 remove is called to unbind a driver from a device. This may be
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D | porting.txt | 57 The bus type may be unregistered (if the bus driver may be compiled 65 Other code may wish to reference the bus type, so declare it in a 151 Optionally, the bus driver may set the device's name and release 178 (There may be other code that is currently referencing the device 229 of operations that the driver model core may call. 338 Instead, a bus may supply a method in struct bus_type that does the 386 A bus driver may also supply additional parameters for userspace to 405 An internal list that the bus uses may be removed, in favor of using 417 it. An internal list of drivers that the bus driver maintains may 420 The drivers may be iterated over, like devices:
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/linux-4.1.27/tools/perf/scripts/perl/Perf-Trace-Util/ |
D | README | 9 that scripts may want to use. Context.pm contains the Perl->C 54 at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available. 56 Alternatively, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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/linux-4.1.27/arch/alpha/lib/ |
D | memchr.S | 104 # searched. $16 may not be aligned. 121 # last quad may or may not be partial).
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D | ev6-memchr.S | 123 # searched. $16 may not be aligned. 139 # last quad may or may not be partial).
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/staging/ |
D | Kconfig | 9 development, may or may not work, and may contain userspace
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/prctl/ |
D | seccomp_filter.txt | 25 call interposition frameworks. BPF programs may not dereference 47 CONFIG_HAVE_ARCH_SECCOMP_FILTER, then filters may be added as below: 76 additional filters may be layered on which will increase evaluation 84 A seccomp filter may return any of the following values. If multiple 158 the system call numbers may vary based on the specific invocation. If 160 the filters may be abused. Always check the arch value! 204 but the syscall may not be changed to another system call using the 205 orig_rax register. It may only be changed to -1 order to skip the 217 condition: future kernels may improve vsyscall emulation and current
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/isdn/mISDN/ |
D | Kconfig | 18 This module may be used for special applications that require 21 decryption. It may use hardware features if available.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/ |
D | cavium-octeon-gpio.txt | 15 controller, many of its pins may be configured as an interrupt 20 triggering protocol and may have one of four values:
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/s390/ |
D | 3270.txt | 17 You may have 3270s in-house and not know it. If you're using the 54 You may generate both 3270 and 3215 console support, or one or the 200 and more output will appear. You may hit ENTER with nothing typed in 205 You may change the scrolling timeout value. For example, the following 211 Other things you may do when the log area fills up are: hit PA2 to 219 PA1 causes a SIGINT to the currently running application. You may do 225 PF3 causes an EOF to be received as input by the application. You may 228 No PF key is preassigned to cause a job suspension, but you may cause a 229 job suspension by typing "^Z" and hitting ENTER. You may wish to 241 may hit PF10 again for the next-most-recent command, and so on. A [all …]
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D | DASD | 8 below. Thus you may have up to 64 DASD devices in your system. 10 The kernel parameter 'dasd=from-to,...' may be issued arbitrary times 43 labels, VTOCs etc. The ioctl may take a 'struct format_data *' or 63 but may be sure that you can reuse your data after introduction of a
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/mn10300/ |
D | ABI.txt | 64 in which the callee may store the first two arguments. 85 The values in certain registers may be clobbered by the callee, and other 99 Certain ordinary registers may carry special usage for the compiler: 109 The kernel may use a slightly different ABI internally.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/mmc/ |
D | mmc-async-req.txt | 26 preparation may cost even more. As long as these slower preparations are run 48 post_req() -- that the host driver may implement in order to move work 50 In the DMA case pre_req() may do dma_map_sg() and prepare the DMA 59 request. The host driver may optimize for this scenario to minimize
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/linux-4.1.27/net/l2tp/ |
D | Kconfig | 20 tunnels. One IP tunnel may carry thousands of individual PPP 40 Support for l2tp directory in debugfs filesystem. This may be 79 userspace L2TPv3 daemons may create L2TP/IP tunnel sockets 101 L2TP ethernet pseudowire instance. Standard Linux tools may
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/hwmon/ |
D | submitting-patches | 53 through Lindent. Lindent is not perfect, and you may have to do some minor 67 may save a line or so in the source, it obfuscates the code and makes code 68 review more difficult. It may also result in code which is more complicated 105 chip may offer, it should at least support all limits and alarms. 110 a presumably new chip may simply have been relabeled.
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D | adm9240 | 58 each two seconds. User-space may read sysfs interface faster than the 109 - resolution of the low speed limit may be reduced 113 * fan speed may be displayed as zero until the auto fan clock divider 155 The ADM9240 provides an internal open drain on this line, and may output 176 that alarm bits may be cleared on read, user-space may latch alarms and
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D | pmbus-core | 24 set a status error flag, and some devices may simply hang up. 98 negative error code if not. The chip driver may return -ENODATA or any other 115 - Supported chip functionality can be provided to the core driver. This may be 131 specific command, but that a standard PMBus command may exist. Any other 151 Chip drivers may provide pointers to the following functions in struct 157 <page> may be -1, which means "current page". 171 <page> may be -1, which means "current page". 184 PMBus registers. Chip drivers may also use direct I2C commands. If direct I2C 208 selects page first. <page> may be -1, which means "current page". 213 selects page first. <page> may be -1, which means "current page".
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D | asc7621 | 32 sheet says 10-bits of resolution, although you may find the lower bits 43 outputs or inputs and may be used as general purpose I/O or as alarm 47 temperature may be mapped to any zone, which has a default assignment 56 Both remote diode temperature readings may be given an offset value such 58 PWM may be offset for system calibration purposes. 70 may be used. These characteristics are in registers 04h to 07h.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/development-process/ |
D | 3.Early-stage | 73 - It may well be that the problem is addressed by the kernel in ways which 82 - There may be elements of the proposed solution which will not be 87 problem; they may have ideas for a better solution, and may be willing 128 relevant subsystem and the environment may be more supportive. 133 MAINTAINERS file may, in fact, not be the person who is actually acting in 151 using the more aggressive options as you may end up including developers 192 Some readers may be thinking at this point that their kernel work is 195 mailing list may not be a viable option. In cases like this, it is worth 201 experienced kernel developers may choose to proceed in an open-loop manner
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D | 6.Followthrough | 31 Many of the changes you may be asked to make - from coding style tweaks 97 in mind, of course, that he may not agree with you either. 106 things. In particular, there may be more than one tree - one, perhaps, 122 What may also happen at this point, depending on the nature of your patch, 140 may be a new round of comments from developers who had not been aware of 141 the patch before. It may be tempting to ignore them, since there is no 161 After any regressions have been dealt with, there may be other, ordinary 169 And don't forget that there are other milestones which may also create bug 182 One day, you may open your mail client and see that somebody has mailed you 198 On very rare occasion, you may see something completely different: another
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/crypto/ |
D | asymmetric-keys.txt | 39 A data parser may interpret the data blob as containing the bits representing a 40 key, or it may interpret it as a reference to a key held somewhere else in the 53 partial match. The key type may also use other criteria to refer to a key. 154 The function may also return -ENOTSUPP if an unsupported public-key algorithm 213 given -ENOTSUPP. The subtype may do anything it likes to implement an 223 check it each time it wanted to use it. Further, the contents of the blob may 225 dates) and may contain useful data about the key (identifiers, capabilities). 227 Also, the blob may represent a pointer to some hardware containing the key 302 The key's fingerprint string may be partially matched upon. For a 311 Parsers may not have the same name. The names are otherwise only used for
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/linux-4.1.27/tools/usb/usbip/ |
D | COPYING | 63 a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed 79 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's 87 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and 88 you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. 90 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion 108 a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under 134 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, 172 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program 192 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further 204 may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/staging/rtl8192e/ |
D | license | 67 placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed under the 83 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's source code 90 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and you 91 may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. 93 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion of it, 111 users may redistribute the program under these conditions, and 137 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, under 175 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program except as 195 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further restrictions 205 any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/staging/rtl8192u/ |
D | copying | 63 a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed 79 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's 87 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and 88 you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. 90 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion 108 a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under 134 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, 172 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program 192 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further 204 may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/ |
D | COPYING | 79 a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed 95 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's 103 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and 104 you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. 106 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion 124 a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under 150 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, 188 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program 208 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further 220 may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent [all …]
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D | REPORTING-BUGS | 28 generic linux-kernel mailing list (LKML) may cause your bug report to be 139 bug reports. That may include running new tests, applying patches, 154 they may not be able to address your bug in a day, a week, or two weeks. 155 If they don't answer your email, they may be on vacation, or at a Linux 161 kernel, and they may not work on the weekends. Maintainers are scattered 162 around the world, and they may not work in your time zone. Unless you
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/reset/ |
D | st,sti-picophyreset.txt | 9 However, when asserted it may not be possible to access the hardware's 11 may no longer be valid.
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D | st,sti-softreset.txt | 10 However, when asserted it may not be possible to access the hardware's 12 may no longer be valid.
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D | st,sti-powerdown.txt | 11 However, when asserted it may not be possible to access the hardware's 13 may no longer be valid.
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/linux-4.1.27/security/tomoyo/ |
D | Kconfig | 13 Required userspace tools and further information may be 39 If you don't need audit logs, you may set this value to 0. 75 option. For example, if you pass init=/bin/systemd option, you may
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/scheduler/ |
D | sched-arch.txt | 9 locked. This is usually not a problem unless switch_to may need to 29 threads need only ever query need_resched, and may never set or 51 although it may be reasonable to do some background work or enter
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/device-mapper/ |
D | dm-log.txt | 5 A region (or portion of the address space) of the disk may be 10 the legs of the mirror and may not reach the legs at the same time. 33 will not survive a reboot or crash, but there may be a small boost in
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D | thin-provisioning.txt | 17 with depth. Fragmentation may still be an issue, however, in some 79 snapshots which are recording large amounts of change, you may find you 88 You may reload a pool's table, indeed this is how the pool is resized 106 may want to use a value such as 1024 (512KB). People doing lots of 107 snapshotting may want a smaller value such as 128 (64KB). If you are 129 a volatile write cache. If power is lost you may lose some recent 137 Once the pool's metadata device is repaired it may be resized, which 143 completion may have already been acknowledged to upper IO layers 215 Of course, you may write to the thin device and take internal snapshots 315 defaults to 60 seconds but may be disabled using a value of 0.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/serial/ |
D | moxa-smartio | 79 In Moxa's Web sites, you may always find latest driver at http://www.moxa.com/. 82 or built-in into kernel (Static driver). You may refer to following 123 You may need to adjust IRQ usage in BIOS to avoid from IRQ conflict 136 The driver file may be obtained from ftp, CD-ROM or floppy disk. The 156 You may find all the driver and utilities files in /moxa/mxser. 253 will activate the module driver. You may run "lsmod" to check 260 3.4.4 For the above description, you may manually execute 322 install any ISA boards, you may skip to next portion. 402 If major number 30 and 35 had been occupied, you may have to select 407 In /proc/devices, you may find all the major numbers occupied [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/arch/avr32/boards/hammerhead/ |
D | Kconfig | 16 This enables LCD support for the Hammerhead board. You may 26 This enables Sound support for the Hammerhead board. You may
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/ABI/ |
D | README | 7 different subdirectories in this location. Interfaces may change levels 49 Contact: Primary contact for this interface (may be a mailing list) 63 Interfaces in stable may move to obsolete, as long as the proper 66 Interfaces may be removed from obsolete and the kernel as long as the
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/linux-4.1.27/arch/um/ |
D | Kconfig.char | 32 lines to host portals. They may be accessed with 'telnet <host> 33 <port number>'. Any number of consoles and serial lines may be 87 It is safe to leave this unchanged, although you may wish to change 99 It is safe to leave this unchanged, although you may wish to change
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/video4linux/bttv/ |
D | README.quirks | 55 internal arbiter may still logical-or the two requests. However, once 63 not allow the other request to hold REQ asserted. The decision lock may 65 idle (FRAME and IRDY). The arbiter decision may then continue 72 A small percentage of core logic devices may start a bus transaction
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/linux-4.1.27/arch/xtensa/ |
D | Kconfig | 240 This syscall is deprecated. It may have issues when called with 253 This syscall is deprecated. It may have issues when called with 360 Device binding to host file may be changed at runtime via proc 370 Kernel/module parameter 'simdisk_count' may be used to change this 371 value at runtime. More file names (but no more than 10) may be 436 There's a 2x16 LCD on most of XTFPGA boards, kernel may output 437 progress messages there during bootup/shutdown. It may be useful 450 the correct address. Wrong address here may lead to hardware lockup. 457 LCD may be connected with 4- or 8-bit interface, 8-bit access may
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/block/ |
D | deadline-iosched.txt | 5 In particular, it will clarify the meaning of the exposed tunables that may be 66 may even know that it is a waste of time to spend any time attempting to 68 Front merges may still occur due to the cached last_merge hint, but since
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D | queue-sysfs.txt | 25 Devices that support discard functionality may have internal limits on 87 This controls how many requests may be allocated in the block layer for 88 read or write requests. Note that the total allocated number may be twice 96 each request queue may have up to N request pools, each independently
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/arm64/ |
D | booting.txt | 17 is passed to the Linux kernel. This may include secure monitor and 18 hypervisor code, or it may just be a handful of instructions for 37 this in a machine dependent manner. (It may use internal algorithms 38 to automatically locate and size all RAM, or it may use knowledge of 144 Instruction cache may be on or off. 150 operations must be configured and may be enabled. 162 domain on entry to the kernel. This may require IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED 201 contained in the reserved region. A wfe instruction may be inserted
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/filesystems/cifs/ |
D | README | 65 "net" may also be helpful since it may someday provide easier mount syntax for 89 2) an entry for the share in /etc/fstab indicating that a user may 111 the utility umount.cifs may be used. It may be invoked directly, or if 152 feature of most Linux filesystems which may require enabling via 162 Some administrators may want to change Samba's smb.conf "map archive" and 165 which may not be what you want, although if the CIFS Unix extensions are 168 may require specifying a mkdev function to Samba if you are not using 197 Before -o the option -v may be specified to make the mount.cifs 220 When using the mount helper mount.cifs, passwords may be specified via alternate 284 may want to restrict at the client as well. For those [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/namespaces/ |
D | compatibility-list.txt | 4 may have when creating tasks living in different namespaces. 25 within the namespace it was obtained in and may refer to some
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/bus/ |
D | brcm,bus-axi.txt | 17 The top-level axi bus may contain children representing attached cores 19 detected (e.g. IRQ numbers). Also some of the cores may be responsible
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D | renesas,bsc.txt | 9 While the BSC is a fairly simple memory-mapped bus, it may be part of a PM 10 domain, and may have a gateable functional clock.
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/power/regulator/ |
D | consumer.txt | 41 NOTE: The supply may already be enabled before regulator_enabled() is called. 42 This may happen if the consumer shares the regulator or the regulator has been 56 NOTE: This may not disable the supply if it's shared with other consumers. The 72 voltage along with frequency to save power, SD drivers may need to select the 102 change the current limit to vary the backlight brightness, USB drivers may want 156 Bespoke or tightly coupled drivers may want to directly control regulator
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpu/ |
D | st,stih4xx.txt | 16 number of clocks may depend of the SoC type. 34 number of clocks may depend of the SoC type. 68 number of clocks may depend of the SoC type. 81 number of clocks may depend of the SoC type. 94 number of clocks may depend of the SoC type. 108 number of clocks may depend of the SoC type.
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/linux-4.1.27/fs/jffs2/ |
D | README.Locking | 25 nodes to an inode may obsolete old ones, and by holding the alloc_sem 50 before calling a function which may need to allocate space. The 51 allocation may trigger garbage-collection, which may need to move a 87 may remove _obsolete_ nodes from the list while holding only the 129 been unlinked. Because reading from the flash may sleep, the
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/iommu/ |
D | iommu.txt | 48 This may also apply to multiple master IOMMU devices that do not allow the 52 - #iommu-cells = <1>: Multiple master IOMMU devices may need to be configured 57 be configured. The first cell of the address in this may contain the master 62 Note that these are merely examples and real-world use-cases may use different 84 not guarantee that the IOMMU is really disabled since the hardware may not
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/serial/ |
D | pl011.txt | 11 and may contain a second name named "sleep". The former 27 When present, may have one or two dma channels.
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/linux-4.1.27/arch/arm/include/asm/ |
D | vfpmacros.h | 28 ldr \tmp, =elf_hwcap @ may not have MVFR regs 52 ldr \tmp, =elf_hwcap @ may not have MVFR regs
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/ |
D | nfsd-admin-interfaces.txt | 14 writing to nfsd/portlist; that write may be: 29 Between startup and shutdown, the number of threads may be adjusted up
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/powerpc/fsl/ |
D | msi-pic.txt | 4 - compatible : compatible list, may contain one or two entries 13 - reg : It may contain one or two regions. The first region should contain 42 This property may be used in virtualized environments where the hypervisor 92 In a virtualized environment, the hypervisor may need to create an IOMMU
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/cgroups/ |
D | devices.txt | 40 movement as people get some experience with this. We may just want 42 CAP_MKNOD. We may want to just refuse moving to a cgroup which 43 isn't a descendant of the current one. Or we may want to use 49 A cgroup may not be granted more permissions than the cgroup's
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/sysctl/ |
D | vm.txt | 77 root may not be able to log in to recover the system. 126 one of them may be specified at a time. When one sysctl is written it is 147 Note: dirty_bytes is the counterpart of dirty_ratio. Only one of them may be 201 To increase the number of objects freed by this operation, the user may run 211 objects, it may cost a significant amount of I/O and CPU to recreate the 215 You may see informational messages in your kernel log when this file is 374 may have. Memory map areas are used as a side-effect of calling 379 programs, particularly malloc debuggers, may consume lots of them, 454 and may not be fast. 527 you may be able to read ZONE_DMA as ZONE_DMA32...) [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/staging/speakup/ |
D | spkguide.txt | 28 this manual, but the user may need to be aware of the module 49 It is possible, however, that Speakup may have been compiled into the 60 the default one, then you may issue the following command at the boot 66 DoubleTalk LT at boot up. You may replace the ltlk synthesizer keyword 209 commands in a specific part of the alphabet, you may press the letter of 236 laptop. So you may choose which set of Speakup keys to use. Some 237 system administrators may have chosen to compile Speakup for a desktop 531 Depending on your situation, you may wish to echo none to the synth 632 Espeakup may already be available as a package for your distribution 683 distribution may also have a precompiled Speech Dispatcher package. [all …]
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/sound/alsa/soc/ |
D | jack.txt | 22 For example, a system may have a stereo headset jack with two reporting 44 of the endpoint may configured to be the opposite of the jack status if 62 Each jack may have multiple reporting mechanisms, though it will need at
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/linux-4.1.27/drivers/scsi/aic7xxx/ |
D | Kconfig.aic79xx | 28 a high number of commands per device may result in memory allocation 30 the default is set to 32. Higher values may result in higher performance 55 as the db v1 library. You may have to install additional packages
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/linux-4.1.27/Documentation/pcmcia/ |
D | driver-changes.txt | 5 automatically, though the driver may still override the settings 24 are reserved and may be used immediately -- until pcmcia_release_window() 31 are reserved, after calling pcmcia_request_configuration(), they may 43 Instead of the old pcmcia_request_irq() interface, drivers may now 49 - drivers still not capable of IRQF_SHARED (or not telling us so) may
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/linux-4.1.27/arch/powerpc/boot/dts/fsl/ |
D | qoriq-qman1.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | pq3-i2c-0.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | pq3-etsec2-grp2-2.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | qoriq-usb2-mph-0.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | qoriq-sata2-0.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | qoriq-gpio-2.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | qoriq-qman3.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | qonverge-usb2-dr-0.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | pq3-espi-0.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | pq3-i2c-1.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | pq3-sata2-1.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | t1042si-post.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | qoriq-espi-0.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | pq3-mpic-message-B.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | pq3-etsec1-timer-0.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | pq3-esdhc-0.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | pq3-etsec2-grp2-1.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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D | pq3-usb2-dr-1.dtsi | 14 * names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products 18 * ALTERNATIVELY, this software may be distributed under the terms of the
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