Displaying 9 results from an estimated 9 matches for "smpt_init".
2013 Jul 25
0
[PATCH 1/5] Intel MIC Host Driver for X100 family.
...p Aperture BAR\n");
+ rc = -EIO;
+ goto unmap_mmio;
+ }
+
+ mdev->ops->init(mdev);
+ mdev->intr_ops->intr_init(mdev);
+ rc = mic_setup_interrupts(mdev);
+ if (rc) {
+ dev_err(&pdev->dev, "mic_setup_interrupts failed %d\n", rc);
+ goto unmap_aper;
+ }
+ rc = mic_smpt_init(mdev);
+ if (rc) {
+ dev_err(&pdev->dev, "smpt_init failed %d\n", rc);
+ goto free_interrupts;
+ }
+
+ pci_set_drvdata(pdev, mdev);
+
+ mdev->dev = device_create(g_mic.mic_class, &pdev->dev,
+ MKDEV(MAJOR(g_mic.dev), mdev->id), NULL, "%s", mdev->name);...
2013 Aug 08
10
[PATCH v2 0/7] Enable Drivers for Intel MIC X100 Coprocessors.
ChangeLog:
=========
v1 => v2:
a) License wording cleanup, sysfs ABI documentation, patch 1 refactoring
into 3 smaller patches and function renames, as per feedback from
Greg Kroah-Hartman.
b) Use VRINGH infrastructure for accessing virtio rings from the host
in patch 5, as per feedback from Michael S. Tsirkin.
v1: Initial post @ https://lkml.org/lkml/2013/7/24/810
Description:
2013 Aug 08
10
[PATCH v2 0/7] Enable Drivers for Intel MIC X100 Coprocessors.
ChangeLog:
=========
v1 => v2:
a) License wording cleanup, sysfs ABI documentation, patch 1 refactoring
into 3 smaller patches and function renames, as per feedback from
Greg Kroah-Hartman.
b) Use VRINGH infrastructure for accessing virtio rings from the host
in patch 5, as per feedback from Michael S. Tsirkin.
v1: Initial post @ https://lkml.org/lkml/2013/7/24/810
Description:
2013 Aug 21
10
[PATCH v3 0/7] Enable Drivers for Intel MIC X100 Coprocessors.
ChangeLog:
=========
v2 => v3:
a) Patch 1 data structure cleanups, header file include cleanups,
IDA interface reuse and switching to device_create_with_groups(..)
as per feedback from Greg Kroah-Hartman.
b) Patch 7 signal documentation, sleep workaround removal and sysfs
access API cleanups as per feedback from Michael S. Tsirkin.
v1 => v2: @ http://lwn.net/Articles/563131/
a)
2013 Aug 21
10
[PATCH v3 0/7] Enable Drivers for Intel MIC X100 Coprocessors.
ChangeLog:
=========
v2 => v3:
a) Patch 1 data structure cleanups, header file include cleanups,
IDA interface reuse and switching to device_create_with_groups(..)
as per feedback from Greg Kroah-Hartman.
b) Patch 7 signal documentation, sleep workaround removal and sysfs
access API cleanups as per feedback from Michael S. Tsirkin.
v1 => v2: @ http://lwn.net/Articles/563131/
a)
2013 Sep 05
16
[PATCH RESEND v3 0/7] Enable Drivers for Intel MIC X100 Coprocessors.
ChangeLog:
=========
v2 => v3:
a) Patch 1 data structure cleanups, header file include cleanups,
IDA interface reuse and switching to device_create_with_groups(..)
as per feedback from Greg Kroah-Hartman.
b) Patch 7 signal documentation, sleep workaround removal and sysfs
access API cleanups as per feedback from Michael S. Tsirkin.
v1 => v2: @ http://lwn.net/Articles/563131/
a)
2013 Sep 05
16
[PATCH RESEND v3 0/7] Enable Drivers for Intel MIC X100 Coprocessors.
ChangeLog:
=========
v2 => v3:
a) Patch 1 data structure cleanups, header file include cleanups,
IDA interface reuse and switching to device_create_with_groups(..)
as per feedback from Greg Kroah-Hartman.
b) Patch 7 signal documentation, sleep workaround removal and sysfs
access API cleanups as per feedback from Michael S. Tsirkin.
v1 => v2: @ http://lwn.net/Articles/563131/
a)
2013 Jul 25
16
[PATCH 0/5] Enable Drivers for Intel MIC X100 Coprocessors.
An Intel MIC X100 device is a PCIe form factor add-in coprocessor
card based on the Intel Many Integrated Core (MIC) architecture
that runs a Linux OS. It is a PCIe endpoint in a platform and therefore
implements the three required standard address spaces i.e. configuration,
memory and I/O. The host OS loads a device driver as is typical for
PCIe devices. The card itself runs a bootstrap after
2013 Jul 25
16
[PATCH 0/5] Enable Drivers for Intel MIC X100 Coprocessors.
An Intel MIC X100 device is a PCIe form factor add-in coprocessor
card based on the Intel Many Integrated Core (MIC) architecture
that runs a Linux OS. It is a PCIe endpoint in a platform and therefore
implements the three required standard address spaces i.e. configuration,
memory and I/O. The host OS loads a device driver as is typical for
PCIe devices. The card itself runs a bootstrap after