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Merge commit 'Merge branch 'drm-fixes' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~airlied/linux'

This backmerges Linus' merge commit of the latest drm-fixes pull:

commit 549f3a1218ba18fcde11ef0e22b07e6365645788
Merge: 42577ca 058ca4a
Author: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Date:   Tue Jul 23 15:47:08 2013 -0700

    Merge branch 'drm-fixes' of git://people.freedesktop.org/~airlied/linux

We've accrued a few too many conflicts, but the real reason is that I
want to merge the 100% solution for Haswell concurrent registers
writes into drm-intel-next. But that depends upon the 90% bandaid
merged into -fixes:

commit a7cd1b8fea2f341b626b255d9898a5ca5fabbf0a
Author: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Date:   Fri Jul 19 20:36:51 2013 +0100

    drm/i915: Serialize almost all register access

Also, we can roll up on accrued conflicts.

Usually I'd backmerge a tagged -rc, but I want to get this done before
heading off to vacations next week ;-)

Conflicts:
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_dma.c
	drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c

v2: For added hilarity we have a init sequence conflict around the
gt_lock, so need to move that one, too. Spotted by Jani Nikula.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Vetter <daniel.vetter@ffwll.ch>
Daniel Vetter 12 years ago
parent
commit
cb54b53ada
100 changed files with 2218 additions and 672 deletions
  1. 2 0
      Documentation/00-INDEX
  2. 7 0
      Documentation/ABI/stable/sysfs-driver-ib_srp
  3. 7 3
      Documentation/ABI/stable/sysfs-module
  4. 81 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget
  5. 8 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-acm
  6. 16 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-ecm
  7. 14 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-eem
  8. 15 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-ncm
  9. 9 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-obex
  10. 8 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-phonet
  11. 14 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-rndis
  12. 9 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-serial
  13. 14 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-subset
  14. 58 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-acpi
  15. 27 5
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-event_source-devices-events
  16. 6 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-event_source-devices-format
  17. 45 45
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-iio
  18. 1 4
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-pci
  19. 27 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-usb
  20. 20 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-devfreq
  21. 79 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-pwm
  22. 19 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-uwb_rc-wusbhc
  23. 7 7
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-devices-edac
  24. 20 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-devices-online
  25. 1 1
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-devices-sun
  26. 15 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-devices-system-cpu
  27. 38 1
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-hid-wiimote
  28. 21 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-intel-rapid-start
  29. 17 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-xen-blkback
  30. 10 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-xen-blkfront
  31. 10 0
      Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-acpi
  32. 2 1
      Documentation/CodingStyle
  33. 5 8
      Documentation/DocBook/80211.tmpl
  34. 2 2
      Documentation/DocBook/device-drivers.tmpl
  35. 3 3
      Documentation/DocBook/drm.tmpl
  36. 13 0
      Documentation/DocBook/genericirq.tmpl
  37. 6 1
      Documentation/DocBook/kernel-locking.tmpl
  38. 1 1
      Documentation/DocBook/media/dvb/frontend.xml
  39. 12 2
      Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/compat.xml
  40. 1 1
      Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/controls.xml
  41. 1 1
      Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/pixfmt-nv12mt.xml
  42. 9 2
      Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/v4l2.xml
  43. 0 271
      Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/vidioc-dbg-g-chip-ident.xml
  44. 2 18
      Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/vidioc-dbg-g-chip-info.xml
  45. 12 52
      Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/vidioc-dbg-g-register.xml
  46. 2 1
      Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/vidioc-querystd.xml
  47. 1 1
      Documentation/DocBook/writing_usb_driver.tmpl
  48. 1 1
      Documentation/HOWTO
  49. 0 6
      Documentation/RCU/checklist.txt
  50. 0 6
      Documentation/RCU/torture.txt
  51. 4 96
      Documentation/RCU/trace.txt
  52. 7 15
      Documentation/RCU/whatisRCU.txt
  53. 1 1
      Documentation/SubmitChecklist
  54. 2 2
      Documentation/accounting/getdelays.c
  55. 7 2
      Documentation/acpi/apei/einj.txt
  56. 395 0
      Documentation/acpi/namespace.txt
  57. 106 0
      Documentation/acpi/video_extension.txt
  58. 1 1
      Documentation/arm/IXP4xx
  59. 33 0
      Documentation/arm/sti/overview.txt
  60. 12 0
      Documentation/arm/sti/stih415-overview.txt
  61. 12 0
      Documentation/arm/sti/stih416-overview.txt
  62. 16 7
      Documentation/arm/sunxi/README
  63. 7 0
      Documentation/arm64/memory.txt
  64. 29 18
      Documentation/bcache.txt
  65. 1 1
      Documentation/block/queue-sysfs.txt
  66. 15 14
      Documentation/cgroups/blkio-controller.txt
  67. 1 1
      Documentation/cgroups/cpusets.txt
  68. 6 7
      Documentation/cgroups/memory.txt
  69. 1 1
      Documentation/clk.txt
  70. 39 24
      Documentation/coccinelle.txt
  71. 14 14
      Documentation/console/console.txt
  72. 2 8
      Documentation/cpu-freq/cpu-drivers.txt
  73. 8 6
      Documentation/cpu-hotplug.txt
  74. 0 1
      Documentation/crypto/async-tx-api.txt
  75. 1 1
      Documentation/device-mapper/cache.txt
  76. 2 0
      Documentation/device-mapper/dm-raid.txt
  77. 126 0
      Documentation/device-mapper/switch.txt
  78. 1 2
      Documentation/devices.txt
  79. 172 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/cci.txt
  80. 24 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/global_timer.txt
  81. 10 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/keystone/keystone.txt
  82. 3 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/l2cc.txt
  83. 14 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/nspire.txt
  84. 3 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/omap/omap.txt
  85. 19 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/rtsm-dcscb.txt
  86. 3 3
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/samsung/interrupt-combiner.txt
  87. 1 1
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/spear/shirq.txt
  88. 5 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/ste-nomadik.txt
  89. 46 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/ste-u300.txt
  90. 5 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/ata/ahci-platform.txt
  91. 19 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/ata/atmel-at91_cf.txt
  92. 49 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/bus/imx-weim.txt
  93. 0 1
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/bus/ti-gpmc.txt
  94. 7 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/altr_socfpga.txt
  95. 64 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/clk-exynos-audss.txt
  96. 2 1
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/exynos4-clock.txt
  97. 201 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/exynos5420-clock.txt
  98. 13 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/imx5-clock.txt
  99. 1 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/imx6q-clock.txt
  100. 10 0
      Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/imx6sl-clock.txt

+ 2 - 0
Documentation/00-INDEX

@@ -187,6 +187,8 @@ firmware_class/
 	- request_firmware() hotplug interface info.
 flexible-arrays.txt
 	- how to make use of flexible sized arrays in linux
+fmc/
+	- information about the FMC bus abstraction
 frv/
 	- Fujitsu FR-V Linux documentation.
 futex-requeue-pi.txt

+ 7 - 0
Documentation/ABI/stable/sysfs-driver-ib_srp

@@ -54,6 +54,13 @@ Description:	Interface for making ib_srp connect to a new target.
 		  ib_srp. Specifying a value that exceeds cmd_sg_entries is
 		  only safe with partial memory descriptor list support enabled
 		  (allow_ext_sg=1).
+		* comp_vector, a number in the range 0..n-1 specifying the
+		  MSI-X completion vector. Some HCA's allocate multiple (n)
+		  MSI-X vectors per HCA port. If the IRQ affinity masks of
+		  these interrupts have been configured such that each MSI-X
+		  interrupt is handled by a different CPU then the comp_vector
+		  parameter can be used to spread the SRP completion workload
+		  over multiple CPU's.
 
 What:		/sys/class/infiniband_srp/srp-<hca>-<port_number>/ibdev
 Date:		January 2, 2006

+ 7 - 3
Documentation/ABI/stable/sysfs-module

@@ -4,9 +4,13 @@ Description:
 
 	/sys/module/MODULENAME
 		The name of the module that is in the kernel.  This
-		module name will show up either if the module is built
-		directly into the kernel, or if it is loaded as a
-		dynamic module.
+		module name will always show up if the module is loaded as a
+		dynamic module.  If it is built directly into the kernel, it
+		will only show up if it has a version or at least one
+		parameter.
+
+		Note: The conditions of creation in the built-in case are not
+		by design and may be removed in the future.
 
 	/sys/module/MODULENAME/parameters
 		This directory contains individual files that are each

+ 81 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget

@@ -0,0 +1,81 @@
+What:		/config/usb-gadget
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		This group contains sub-groups corresponding to created
+		USB gadgets.
+
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+
+		The attributes of a gadget:
+
+		UDC		- bind a gadget to UDC/unbind a gadget;
+				write UDC's name found in /sys/class/udc/*
+				to bind a gadget, empty string "" to unbind.
+
+		bDeviceClass	- USB device class code
+		bDeviceSubClass	- USB device subclass code
+		bDeviceProtocol	- USB device protocol code
+		bMaxPacketSize0	- maximum endpoint 0 packet size
+		bcdDevice	- bcd device release number
+		bcdUSB		- bcd USB specification version number
+		idProduct	- product ID
+		idVendor	- vendor ID
+
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/configs
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		This group contains a USB gadget's configurations
+
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/configs/config
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		The attributes of a configuration:
+
+		bmAttributes	- configuration characteristics
+		MaxPower	- maximum power consumption from the bus
+
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/configs/config/strings
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		This group contains subdirectories for language-specific
+		strings for this configuration.
+
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/configs/config/strings/language
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		The attributes:
+
+		configuration	- configuration description
+
+
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/functions
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		This group contains functions available to this USB gadget.
+
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/strings
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		This group contains subdirectories for language-specific
+		strings for this gadget.
+
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/strings/language
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		The attributes:
+
+		serialnumber	- gadget's serial number (string)
+		product		- gadget's product description
+		manufacturer	- gadget's manufacturer description
+

+ 8 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-acm

@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/functions/acm.name
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+
+		This item contains just one readonly attribute: port_num.
+		It contains the port number of the /dev/ttyGS<n> device
+		associated with acm function's instance "name".

+ 16 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-ecm

@@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/functions/ecm.name
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		The attributes:
+
+		ifname		- network device interface name associated with
+				this function instance
+		qmult		- queue length multiplier for high and
+				super speed
+		host_addr	- MAC address of host's end of this
+				Ethernet over USB link
+		dev_addr	- MAC address of device's end of this
+				Ethernet over USB link
+
+

+ 14 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-eem

@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/functions/eem.name
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		The attributes:
+
+		ifname		- network device interface name associated with
+				this function instance
+		qmult		- queue length multiplier for high and
+				super speed
+		host_addr	- MAC address of host's end of this
+				Ethernet over USB link
+		dev_addr	- MAC address of device's end of this
+				Ethernet over USB link

+ 15 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-ncm

@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/functions/ncm.name
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		The attributes:
+
+		ifname		- network device interface name associated with
+				this function instance
+		qmult		- queue length multiplier for high and
+				super speed
+		host_addr	- MAC address of host's end of this
+				Ethernet over USB link
+		dev_addr	- MAC address of device's end of this
+				Ethernet over USB link
+

+ 9 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-obex

@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/functions/obex.name
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+
+		This item contains just one readonly attribute: port_num.
+		It contains the port number of the /dev/ttyGS<n> device
+		associated with obex function's instance "name".
+

+ 8 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-phonet

@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/functions/phonet.name
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+
+		This item contains just one readonly attribute: ifname.
+		It contains the network interface name assigned during
+		network device registration.

+ 14 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-rndis

@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/functions/rndis.name
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		The attributes:
+
+		ifname		- network device interface name associated with
+				this function instance
+		qmult		- queue length multiplier for high and
+				super speed
+		host_addr	- MAC address of host's end of this
+				Ethernet over USB link
+		dev_addr	- MAC address of device's end of this
+				Ethernet over USB link

+ 9 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-serial

@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/functions/gser.name
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+
+		This item contains just one readonly attribute: port_num.
+		It contains the port number of the /dev/ttyGS<n> device
+		associated with gser function's instance "name".
+

+ 14 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/configfs-usb-gadget-subset

@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
+What:		/config/usb-gadget/gadget/functions/geth.name
+Date:		Jun 2013
+KenelVersion:	3.11
+Description:
+		The attributes:
+
+		ifname		- network device interface name associated with
+				this function instance
+		qmult		- queue length multiplier for high and
+				super speed
+		host_addr	- MAC address of host's end of this
+				Ethernet over USB link
+		dev_addr	- MAC address of device's end of this
+				Ethernet over USB link

+ 58 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-acpi

@@ -0,0 +1,58 @@
+What:		/sys/bus/acpi/devices/.../path
+Date:		December 2006
+Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@rjwysocki.net>
+Description:
+		This attribute indicates the full path of ACPI namespace
+		object associated with the device object.  For example,
+		\_SB_.PCI0.
+		This file is not present for device objects representing
+		fixed ACPI hardware features (like power and sleep
+		buttons).
+
+What:		/sys/bus/acpi/devices/.../modalias
+Date:		July 2007
+Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@rjwysocki.net>
+Description:
+		This attribute indicates the PNP IDs of the device object.
+		That is acpi:HHHHHHHH:[CCCCCCC:].  Where each HHHHHHHH or
+		CCCCCCCC contains device object's PNPID (_HID or _CID).
+
+What:		/sys/bus/acpi/devices/.../hid
+Date:		April 2005
+Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@rjwysocki.net>
+Description:
+		This attribute indicates the hardware ID (_HID) of the
+		device object.  For example, PNP0103.
+		This file is present for device objects having the _HID
+		control method.
+
+What:		/sys/bus/acpi/devices/.../description
+Date:		October 2012
+Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@rjwysocki.net>
+Description:
+		This attribute contains the output of the device object's
+		_STR control method, if present.
+
+What:		/sys/bus/acpi/devices/.../adr
+Date:		October 2012
+Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@rjwysocki.net>
+Description:
+		This attribute contains the output of the device object's
+		_ADR control method, which is present for ACPI device
+		objects representing devices having standard enumeration
+		algorithms, such as PCI.
+
+What:		/sys/bus/acpi/devices/.../uid
+Date:		October 2012
+Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@rjwysocki.net>
+Description:
+		This attribute contains the output of the device object's
+		_UID control method, if present.
+
+What:		/sys/bus/acpi/devices/.../eject
+Date:		December 2006
+Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@rjwysocki.net>
+Description:
+		Writing 1 to this attribute will trigger hot removal of
+		this device object.  This file exists for every device
+		object that has _EJ0 method.

+ 27 - 5
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-event_source-devices-events

@@ -27,14 +27,36 @@ Description:	Generic performance monitoring events
 		"basename".
 
 
-What: 		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_LD_MISS_L1
-		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_LD_REF_L1
-		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CYC
+What: 		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_1PLUS_PPC_CMPL
 		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_BRU_FIN
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_BR_MPRED
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_BRU
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_DCACHE_MISS
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_DFU
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_DIV
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_ERAT_MISS
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_FXU
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_IFU
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_LSU
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_REJECT
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_SCALAR
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_SCALAR_LONG
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_STORE
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_THRD
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_VECTOR
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL_VECTOR_LONG
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CYC
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_GCT_NOSLOT_BR_MPRED
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_GCT_NOSLOT_BR_MPRED_IC_MISS
 		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_GCT_NOSLOT_CYC
-		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_BRU_MPRED
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_GCT_NOSLOT_IC_MISS
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_GRP_CMPL
 		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_INST_CMPL
-		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_CMPLU_STALL
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_LD_MISS_L1
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_LD_REF_L1
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_RUN_CYC
+		/sys/devices/cpu/events/PM_RUN_INST_CMPL
 
 Date:		2013/01/08
 

+ 6 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-event_source-devices-format

@@ -9,6 +9,12 @@ Description:
 		we want to export, so that userspace can deal with sane
 		name/value pairs.
 
+		Userspace must be prepared for the possibility that attributes
+		define overlapping bit ranges. For example:
+			attr1 = 'config:0-23'
+			attr2 = 'config:0-7'
+			attr3 = 'config:12-35'
+
 		Example: 'config1:1,6-10,44'
 		Defines contents of attribute that occupies bits 1,6-10,44 of
 		perf_event_attr::config1.

+ 45 - 45
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-iio

@@ -690,45 +690,45 @@ Description:
 		Actually start the buffer capture up.  Will start trigger
 		if first device and appropriate.
 
-What:		/sys/bus/iio/devices/iio:deviceX/buffer/scan_elements
+What:		/sys/bus/iio/devices/iio:deviceX/scan_elements
 KernelVersion:	2.6.37
 Contact:	linux-iio@vger.kernel.org
 Description:
 		Directory containing interfaces for elements that will be
 		captured for a single triggered sample set in the buffer.
 
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_accel_x_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_accel_y_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_accel_z_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_anglvel_x_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_anglvel_y_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_anglvel_z_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_magn_x_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_magn_y_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_magn_z_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_timestamp_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_voltageY_supply_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_voltageY_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_voltageY-voltageZ_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_incli_x_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_incli_y_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_pressureY_en
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_pressure_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_accel_x_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_accel_y_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_accel_z_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_anglvel_x_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_anglvel_y_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_anglvel_z_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_magn_x_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_magn_y_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_magn_z_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_timestamp_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_voltageY_supply_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_voltageY_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_voltageY-voltageZ_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_incli_x_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_incli_y_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_pressureY_en
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_pressure_en
 KernelVersion:	2.6.37
 Contact:	linux-iio@vger.kernel.org
 Description:
 		Scan element control for triggered data capture.
 
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_accel_type
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_anglvel_type
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_magn_type
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_incli_type
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_voltageY_type
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_voltage_type
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_voltageY_supply_type
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_timestamp_type
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_pressureY_type
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_pressure_type
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_accel_type
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_anglvel_type
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_magn_type
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_incli_type
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_voltageY_type
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_voltage_type
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_voltageY_supply_type
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_timestamp_type
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_pressureY_type
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_pressure_type
 KernelVersion:	2.6.37
 Contact:	linux-iio@vger.kernel.org
 Description:
@@ -752,29 +752,29 @@ Description:
 		For other storage combinations this attribute will be extended
 		appropriately.
 
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_accel_type_available
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_accel_type_available
 KernelVersion:	2.6.37
 Contact:	linux-iio@vger.kernel.org
 Description:
 		If the type parameter can take one of a small set of values,
 		this attribute lists them.
 
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_voltageY_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_voltageY_supply_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_accel_x_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_accel_y_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_accel_z_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_anglvel_x_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_anglvel_y_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_anglvel_z_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_magn_x_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_magn_y_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_magn_z_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_incli_x_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_incli_y_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_timestamp_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_pressureY_index
-What:		/sys/.../buffer/scan_elements/in_pressure_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_voltageY_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_voltageY_supply_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_accel_x_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_accel_y_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_accel_z_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_anglvel_x_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_anglvel_y_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_anglvel_z_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_magn_x_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_magn_y_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_magn_z_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_incli_x_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_incli_y_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_timestamp_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_pressureY_index
+What:		/sys/.../iio:deviceX/scan_elements/in_pressure_index
 KernelVersion:	2.6.37
 Contact:	linux-iio@vger.kernel.org
 Description:

+ 1 - 4
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-pci

@@ -64,7 +64,6 @@ Description:
 		Writing a non-zero value to this attribute will
 		force a rescan of all PCI buses in the system, and
 		re-discover previously removed devices.
-		Depends on CONFIG_HOTPLUG.
 
 What:		/sys/bus/pci/devices/.../msi_irqs/
 Date:		September, 2011
@@ -90,7 +89,6 @@ Contact:	Linux PCI developers <linux-pci@vger.kernel.org>
 Description:
 		Writing a non-zero value to this attribute will
 		hot-remove the PCI device and any of its children.
-		Depends on CONFIG_HOTPLUG.
 
 What:		/sys/bus/pci/devices/.../pci_bus/.../rescan
 Date:		May 2011
@@ -99,7 +97,7 @@ Description:
 		Writing a non-zero value to this attribute will
 		force a rescan of the bus and all child buses,
 		and re-discover devices removed earlier from this
-		part of the device tree.  Depends on CONFIG_HOTPLUG.
+		part of the device tree.
 
 What:		/sys/bus/pci/devices/.../rescan
 Date:		January 2009
@@ -109,7 +107,6 @@ Description:
 		force a rescan of the device's parent bus and all
 		child buses, and re-discover devices removed earlier
 		from this part of the device tree.
-		Depends on CONFIG_HOTPLUG.
 
 What:		/sys/bus/pci/devices/.../reset
 Date:		July 2009

+ 27 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-usb

@@ -236,3 +236,30 @@ Description:
 		This attribute is to expose these information to user space.
 		The file will read "hotplug", "wired" and "not used" if the
 		information is available, and "unknown" otherwise.
+
+What:		/sys/bus/usb/devices/.../power/usb2_lpm_l1_timeout
+Date:		May 2013
+Contact:	Mathias Nyman <mathias.nyman@linux.intel.com>
+Description:
+		USB 2.0 devices may support hardware link power management (LPM)
+		L1 sleep state. The usb2_lpm_l1_timeout attribute allows
+		tuning the timeout for L1 inactivity timer (LPM timer), e.g.
+		needed inactivity time before host requests the device to go to L1 sleep.
+		Useful for power management tuning.
+		Supported values are 0 - 65535 microseconds.
+
+What:		/sys/bus/usb/devices/.../power/usb2_lpm_besl
+Date:		May 2013
+Contact:	Mathias Nyman <mathias.nyman@linux.intel.com>
+Description:
+		USB 2.0 devices that support hardware link power management (LPM)
+		L1 sleep state now use a best effort service latency value (BESL) to
+		indicate the best effort to resumption of service to the device after the
+		initiation of the resume event.
+		If the device does not have a preferred besl value then the host can select
+		one instead. This usb2_lpm_besl attribute allows to tune the host selected besl
+		value in order to tune power saving and service latency.
+
+		Supported values are 0 - 15.
+		More information on how besl values map to microseconds can be found in
+		USB 2.0 ECN Errata for Link Power Management, section 4.10)

+ 20 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-devfreq

@@ -78,3 +78,23 @@ Contact:	Nishanth Menon <nm@ti.com>
 Description:
 		The /sys/class/devfreq/.../available_governors shows
 		currently available governors in the system.
+
+What:		/sys/class/devfreq/.../min_freq
+Date:		January 2013
+Contact:	MyungJoo Ham <myungjoo.ham@samsung.com>
+Description:
+		The /sys/class/devfreq/.../min_freq shows and stores
+		the minimum frequency requested by users. It is 0 if
+		the user does not care. min_freq overrides the
+		frequency requested by governors.
+
+What:		/sys/class/devfreq/.../max_freq
+Date:		January 2013
+Contact:	MyungJoo Ham <myungjoo.ham@samsung.com>
+Description:
+		The /sys/class/devfreq/.../max_freq shows and stores
+		the maximum frequency requested by users. It is 0 if
+		the user does not care. max_freq overrides the
+		frequency requested by governors and min_freq.
+		The max_freq overrides min_freq because max_freq may be
+		used to throttle devices to avoid overheating.

+ 79 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-pwm

@@ -0,0 +1,79 @@
+What:		/sys/class/pwm/
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
+Description:
+		The pwm/ class sub-directory belongs to the Generic PWM
+		Framework and provides a sysfs interface for using PWM
+		channels.
+
+What:		/sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
+Description:
+		A /sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN directory is created for each
+		probed PWM controller/chip where N is the base of the
+		PWM chip.
+
+What:		/sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/npwm
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
+Description:
+		The number of PWM channels supported by the PWM chip.
+
+What:		/sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/export
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
+Description:
+		Exports a PWM channel from the PWM chip for sysfs control.
+		Value is between 0 and /sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/npwm - 1.
+
+What:		/sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/unexport
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
+Description:
+		Unexports a PWM channel.
+
+What:		/sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/pwmX
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
+Description:
+		A /sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/pwmX directory is created for
+		each exported PWM channel where X is the exported PWM
+		channel number.
+
+What:		/sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/pwmX/period
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
+Description:
+		Sets the PWM signal period in nanoseconds.
+
+What:		/sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/pwmX/duty_cycle
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
+Description:
+		Sets the PWM signal duty cycle in nanoseconds.
+
+What:		/sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/pwmX/polarity
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
+Description:
+		Sets the output polarity of the PWM signal to "normal" or
+		"inversed".
+
+What:		/sys/class/pwm/pwmchipN/pwmX/enable
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	H Hartley Sweeten <hsweeten@visionengravers.com>
+Description:
+		Enable/disable the PWM signal.
+		0 is disabled
+		1 is enabled

+ 19 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-uwb_rc-wusbhc

@@ -36,3 +36,22 @@ Description:
 
                 Refer to [ECMA-368] section 10.3.1.1 for the value to
                 use.
+
+What:           /sys/class/uwb_rc/uwbN/wusbhc/wusb_dnts
+Date:           June 2013
+KernelVersion:  3.11
+Contact:        Thomas Pugliese <thomas.pugliese@gmail.com>
+Description:
+                The device notification time slot (DNTS) count and inverval in
+                milliseconds that the WUSB host should use.  This controls how
+                often the devices will have the opportunity to send
+                notifications to the host.
+
+What:           /sys/class/uwb_rc/uwbN/wusbhc/wusb_retry_count
+Date:           June 2013
+KernelVersion:  3.11
+Contact:        Thomas Pugliese <thomas.pugliese@gmail.com>
+Description:
+                The number of retries that the WUSB host should attempt
+                before reporting an error for a bus transaction.  The range of
+                valid values is [0..15], where 0 indicates infinite retries.

+ 7 - 7
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-devices-edac

@@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ Description:	Read/Write attribute file that controls memory scrubbing.
 
 What:		/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc*/max_location
 Date:		April 2012
-Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@redhat.com>
+Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <m.chehab@samsung.com>
 		linux-edac@vger.kernel.org
 Description:	This attribute file displays the information about the last
 		available memory slot in this memory controller. It is used by
@@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ Description:	This attribute file displays the information about the last
 
 What:		/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc*/(dimm|rank)*/size
 Date:		April 2012
-Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@redhat.com>
+Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <m.chehab@samsung.com>
 		linux-edac@vger.kernel.org
 Description:	This attribute file will display the size of dimm or rank.
 		For dimm*/size, this is the size, in MB of the DIMM memory
@@ -96,14 +96,14 @@ Description:	This attribute file will display the size of dimm or rank.
 
 What:		/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc*/(dimm|rank)*/dimm_dev_type
 Date:		April 2012
-Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@redhat.com>
+Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <m.chehab@samsung.com>
 		linux-edac@vger.kernel.org
 Description:	This attribute file will display what type of DRAM device is
 		being utilized on this DIMM (x1, x2, x4, x8, ...).
 
 What:		/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc*/(dimm|rank)*/dimm_edac_mode
 Date:		April 2012
-Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@redhat.com>
+Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <m.chehab@samsung.com>
 		linux-edac@vger.kernel.org
 Description:	This attribute file will display what type of Error detection
 		and correction is being utilized. For example: S4ECD4ED would
@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ Description:	This attribute file will display what type of Error detection
 
 What:		/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc*/(dimm|rank)*/dimm_label
 Date:		April 2012
-Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@redhat.com>
+Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <m.chehab@samsung.com>
 		linux-edac@vger.kernel.org
 Description:	This control file allows this DIMM to have a label assigned
 		to it. With this label in the module, when errors occur
@@ -126,14 +126,14 @@ Description:	This control file allows this DIMM to have a label assigned
 
 What:		/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc*/(dimm|rank)*/dimm_location
 Date:		April 2012
-Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@redhat.com>
+Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <m.chehab@samsung.com>
 		linux-edac@vger.kernel.org
 Description:	This attribute file will display the location (csrow/channel,
 		branch/channel/slot or channel/slot) of the dimm or rank.
 
 What:		/sys/devices/system/edac/mc/mc*/(dimm|rank)*/dimm_mem_type
 Date:		April 2012
-Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@redhat.com>
+Contact:	Mauro Carvalho Chehab <m.chehab@samsung.com>
 		linux-edac@vger.kernel.org
 Description:	This attribute file will display what type of memory is
 		currently on this csrow. Normally, either buffered or

+ 20 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-devices-online

@@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
+What:		/sys/devices/.../online
+Date:		April 2013
+Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
+Description:
+		The /sys/devices/.../online attribute is only present for
+		devices whose bus types provide .online() and .offline()
+		callbacks.  The number read from it (0 or 1) reflects the value
+		of the device's 'offline' field.  If that number is 1 and '0'
+		(or 'n', or 'N') is written to this file, the device bus type's
+		.offline() callback is executed for the device and (if
+		successful) its 'offline' field is updated accordingly.  In
+		turn, if that number is 0 and '1' (or 'y', or 'Y') is written to
+		this file, the device bus type's .online() callback is executed
+		for the device and (if successful) its 'offline' field is
+		updated as appropriate.
+
+		After a successful execution of the bus type's .offline()
+		callback the device cannot be used for any purpose until either
+		it is removed (i.e. device_del() is called for it), or its bus
+		type's .online() is exeucted successfully.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-devices-sun

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-Whatt:		/sys/devices/.../sun
+What:		/sys/devices/.../sun
 Date:		October 2012
 Contact:	Yasuaki Ishimatsu <isimatu.yasuaki@jp.fujitsu.com>
 Description:

+ 15 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-devices-system-cpu

@@ -144,6 +144,21 @@ Description:	Discover and change clock speed of CPUs
 		to learn how to control the knobs.
 
 
+What:		/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu#/cpufreq/freqdomain_cpus
+Date:		June 2013
+Contact:	cpufreq@vger.kernel.org
+Description:	Discover CPUs in the same CPU frequency coordination domain
+
+		freqdomain_cpus is the list of CPUs (online+offline) that share
+		the same clock/freq domain (possibly at the hardware level).
+		That information may be hidden from the cpufreq core and the
+		value of related_cpus may be different from freqdomain_cpus. This
+		attribute is useful for user space DVFS controllers to get better
+		power/performance results for platforms using acpi-cpufreq.
+
+		This file is only present if the acpi-cpufreq driver is in use.
+
+
 What:		/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cache/index3/cache_disable_{0,1}
 Date:		August 2008
 KernelVersion:	2.6.27

+ 38 - 1
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-hid-wiimote

@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ Description:	Make it possible to set/get current led state. Reading from it
 What:		/sys/bus/hid/drivers/wiimote/<dev>/extension
 Date:		August 2011
 KernelVersion:	3.2
-Contact:	David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@googlemail.com>
+Contact:	David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>
 Description:	This file contains the currently connected and initialized
 		extensions. It can be one of: none, motionp, nunchuck, classic,
 		motionp+nunchuck, motionp+classic
@@ -20,3 +20,40 @@ Description:	This file contains the currently connected and initialized
 		the official Nintendo Nunchuck extension and classic is the
 		Nintendo Classic Controller extension. The motionp extension can
 		be combined with the other two.
+		Starting with kernel-version 3.11 Motion Plus hotplugging is
+		supported and if detected, it's no longer reported as static
+		extension. You will get uevent notifications for the motion-plus
+		device then.
+
+What:		/sys/bus/hid/drivers/wiimote/<dev>/devtype
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>
+Description:	While a device is initialized by the wiimote driver, we perform
+		a device detection and signal a "change" uevent after it is
+		done. This file shows the detected device type. "pending" means
+		that the detection is still ongoing, "unknown" means, that the
+		device couldn't be detected or loaded. "generic" means, that the
+		device couldn't be detected but supports basic Wii Remote
+		features and can be used.
+		Other strings for each device-type are available and may be
+		added if new device-specific detections are added.
+		Currently supported are:
+			gen10: First Wii Remote generation
+			gen20: Second Wii Remote Plus generation (builtin MP)
+			balanceboard: Wii Balance Board
+
+What:		/sys/bus/hid/drivers/wiimote/<dev>/bboard_calib
+Date:		May 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>
+Description:	This attribute is only provided if the device was detected as a
+		balance board. It provides a single line with 3 calibration
+		values for all 4 sensors. The values are separated by colons and
+		are each 2 bytes long (encoded as 4 digit hexadecimal value).
+		First, 0kg values for all 4 sensors are written, followed by the
+		17kg values for all 4 sensors and last the 34kg values for all 4
+		sensors.
+		Calibration data is already applied by the kernel to all input
+		values but may be used by user-space to perform other
+		transformations.

+ 21 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-intel-rapid-start

@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
+What:		/sys/bus/acpi/intel-rapid-start/wakeup_events
+Date:		July 2, 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	Matthew Garrett <mjg59@srcf.ucam.org>
+Description:	An integer representing a set of wakeup events as follows:
+		1: Wake to enter hibernation when the wakeup timer expires
+		2: Wake to enter hibernation when the battery reaches a
+		critical level
+
+		These values are ORed together. For example, a value of 3
+		indicates that the system will wake to enter hibernation when
+		either the wakeup timer expires or the battery reaches a
+		critical level.
+
+What:		/sys/bus/acpi/intel-rapid-start/wakeup_time
+Date:		July 2, 2013
+KernelVersion:	3.11
+Contact:	Matthew Garrett <mjg59@srcf.ucam.org>
+Description:	An integer representing the length of time the system will
+		remain asleep before waking up to enter hibernation.
+		This value is in minutes.

+ 17 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-xen-blkback

@@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
+What:           /sys/module/xen_blkback/parameters/max_buffer_pages
+Date:           March 2013
+KernelVersion:  3.11
+Contact:        Roger Pau Monné <roger.pau@citrix.com>
+Description:
+                Maximum number of free pages to keep in each block
+                backend buffer.
+
+What:           /sys/module/xen_blkback/parameters/max_persistent_grants
+Date:           March 2013
+KernelVersion:  3.11
+Contact:        Roger Pau Monné <roger.pau@citrix.com>
+Description:
+                Maximum number of grants to map persistently in
+                blkback. If the frontend tries to use more than
+                max_persistent_grants, the LRU kicks in and starts
+                removing 5% of max_persistent_grants every 100ms.

+ 10 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-xen-blkfront

@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
+What:           /sys/module/xen_blkfront/parameters/max
+Date:           June 2013
+KernelVersion:  3.11
+Contact:        Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk <konrad.wilk@oracle.com>
+Description:
+                Maximum number of segments that the frontend will negotiate
+                with the backend for indirect descriptors. The default value
+                is 32 - higher value means more potential throughput but more
+                memory usage. The backend picks the minimum of the frontend
+                and its default backend value.

+ 10 - 0
Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-acpi

@@ -44,6 +44,16 @@ Description:
 		or 0 (unset).  Attempts to write any other values to it will
 		cause -EINVAL to be returned.
 
+What:		/sys/firmware/acpi/hotplug/force_remove
+Date:		May 2013
+Contact:	Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
+Description:
+		The number in this file (0 or 1) determines whether (1) or not
+		(0) the ACPI subsystem will allow devices to be hot-removed even
+		if they cannot be put offline gracefully (from the kernel's
+		viewpoint).  That number can be changed by writing a boolean
+		value to this file.
+
 What:		/sys/firmware/acpi/interrupts/
 Date:		February 2008
 Contact:	Len Brown <lenb@kernel.org>

+ 2 - 1
Documentation/CodingStyle

@@ -389,7 +389,8 @@ Albeit deprecated by some people, the equivalent of the goto statement is
 used frequently by compilers in form of the unconditional jump instruction.
 
 The goto statement comes in handy when a function exits from multiple
-locations and some common work such as cleanup has to be done.
+locations and some common work such as cleanup has to be done.  If there is no
+cleanup needed then just return directly.
 
 The rationale is:
 

+ 5 - 8
Documentation/DocBook/80211.tmpl

@@ -127,14 +127,11 @@
 !Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_ibss_params
 !Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_connect_params
 !Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_pmksa
-!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_send_rx_auth
-!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_send_auth_timeout
-!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_send_rx_assoc
-!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_send_assoc_timeout
-!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_send_deauth
-!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h __cfg80211_send_deauth
-!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_send_disassoc
-!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h __cfg80211_send_disassoc
+!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_rx_mlme_mgmt
+!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_auth_timeout
+!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_rx_assoc_resp
+!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_assoc_timeout
+!Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_tx_mlme_mgmt
 !Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_ibss_joined
 !Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_connect_result
 !Finclude/net/cfg80211.h cfg80211_roamed

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/DocBook/device-drivers.tmpl

@@ -299,10 +299,10 @@ KAO -->
      </sect1>
      <sect1><title>Frame Buffer Fonts</title>
         <para>
-           Refer to the file drivers/video/console/fonts.c for more information.
+           Refer to the file lib/fonts/fonts.c for more information.
         </para>
 <!-- FIXME: Removed for now since no structured comments in source
-X!Idrivers/video/console/fonts.c
+X!Ilib/fonts/fonts.c
 -->
      </sect1>
   </chapter>

+ 3 - 3
Documentation/DocBook/drm.tmpl

@@ -456,7 +456,7 @@ char *date;</synopsis>
       The DRM core includes two memory managers, namely Translation Table Maps
       (TTM) and Graphics Execution Manager (GEM). TTM was the first DRM memory
       manager to be developed and tried to be a one-size-fits-them all
-      solution. It provides a single userspace API to accomodate the need of
+      solution. It provides a single userspace API to accommodate the need of
       all hardware, supporting both Unified Memory Architecture (UMA) devices
       and devices with dedicated video RAM (i.e. most discrete video cards).
       This resulted in a large, complex piece of code that turned out to be
@@ -723,7 +723,7 @@ char *date;</synopsis>
         <para>
           Similar to global names, GEM file descriptors are also used to share GEM
           objects across processes. They offer additional security: as file
-          descriptors must be explictly sent over UNIX domain sockets to be shared
+          descriptors must be explicitly sent over UNIX domain sockets to be shared
           between applications, they can't be guessed like the globally unique GEM
           names.
         </para>
@@ -1176,7 +1176,7 @@ int max_width, max_height;</synopsis>
           </para>
           <para>
             The <methodname>page_flip</methodname> operation schedules a page flip.
-            Once any pending rendering targetting the new frame buffer has
+            Once any pending rendering targeting the new frame buffer has
             completed, the CRTC will be reprogrammed to display that frame buffer
             after the next vertical refresh. The operation must return immediately
             without waiting for rendering or page flip to complete and must block

+ 13 - 0
Documentation/DocBook/genericirq.tmpl

@@ -464,6 +464,19 @@ if (desc->irq_data.chip->irq_eoi)
 	protected via desc->lock, by the generic layer.
      </para>
   </chapter>
+
+  <chapter id="genericchip">
+     <title>Generic interrupt chip</title>
+     <para>
+       To avoid copies of identical implementations of irq chips the
+       core provides a configurable generic interrupt chip
+       implementation. Developers should check carefuly whether the
+       generic chip fits their needs before implementing the same
+       functionality slightly different themself.
+     </para>
+!Ekernel/irq/generic-chip.c
+  </chapter>
+
   <chapter id="structs">
      <title>Structures</title>
      <para>

+ 6 - 1
Documentation/DocBook/kernel-locking.tmpl

@@ -1955,12 +1955,17 @@ machines due to caching.
    </sect1>
   </chapter>
 
-  <chapter id="apiref">
+  <chapter id="apiref-mutex">
    <title>Mutex API reference</title>
 !Iinclude/linux/mutex.h
 !Ekernel/mutex.c
   </chapter>
 
+  <chapter id="apiref-futex">
+   <title>Futex API reference</title>
+!Ikernel/futex.c
+  </chapter>
+
   <chapter id="references">
    <title>Further reading</title>
 

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/DocBook/media/dvb/frontend.xml

@@ -233,7 +233,7 @@ typedef enum fe_status {
 <entry align="char">The frontend FEC inner coding (Viterbi, LDPC or other inner code) is stable</entry>
 </row><row>
 <entry align="char">FE_HAS_SYNC</entry>
-<entry align="char">Syncronization bytes was found</entry>
+<entry align="char">Synchronization bytes was found</entry>
 </row><row>
 <entry align="char">FE_HAS_LOCK</entry>
 <entry align="char">The DVB were locked and everything is working</entry>

+ 12 - 2
Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/compat.xml

@@ -2254,7 +2254,7 @@ video encoding.</para>
       <orderedlist>
 	<listitem>
 	  <para>The <constant>VIDIOC_G_CHIP_IDENT</constant> ioctl was renamed
-to <constant>VIDIOC_G_CHIP_IDENT_OLD</constant> and &VIDIOC-DBG-G-CHIP-IDENT;
+to <constant>VIDIOC_G_CHIP_IDENT_OLD</constant> and <constant>VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_IDENT</constant>
 was introduced in its place. The old struct <structname>v4l2_chip_ident</structname>
 was renamed to <structname id="v4l2-chip-ident-old">v4l2_chip_ident_old</structname>.</para>
 	</listitem>
@@ -2513,6 +2513,16 @@ that used it. It was originally scheduled for removal in 2.6.35.
       </orderedlist>
     </section>
 
+    <section>
+      <title>V4L2 in Linux 3.11</title>
+      <orderedlist>
+        <listitem>
+	  <para>Remove obsolete <constant>VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_IDENT</constant> ioctl.
+	  </para>
+        </listitem>
+      </orderedlist>
+    </section>
+
     <section id="other">
       <title>Relation of V4L2 to other Linux multimedia APIs</title>
 
@@ -2596,7 +2606,7 @@ and may change in the future.</para>
 ioctls.</para>
         </listitem>
         <listitem>
-	  <para>&VIDIOC-DBG-G-CHIP-IDENT; ioctl.</para>
+	  <para>&VIDIOC-DBG-G-CHIP-INFO; ioctl.</para>
         </listitem>
         <listitem>
 	  <para>&VIDIOC-ENUM-DV-TIMINGS;, &VIDIOC-QUERY-DV-TIMINGS; and

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/controls.xml

@@ -3147,7 +3147,7 @@ giving priority to the center of the metered area.</entry>
 		  <entry>A multi-zone metering. The light intensity is measured
 in several points of the frame and the the results are combined. The
 algorithm of the zones selection and their significance in calculating the
-final value is device dependant.</entry>
+final value is device dependent.</entry>
 		</row>
 	      </tbody>
 	    </entrytbl>

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/pixfmt-nv12mt.xml

@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ into 64x32 macroblocks. The CbCr plane has the same width, in bytes, as the Y
 plane (and the image), but is half as tall in pixels. The chroma plane is also
 grouped into 64x32 macroblocks.</para>
 	<para>Width of the buffer has to be aligned to the multiple of 128, and
-height alignment is 32. Every four adjactent buffers - two horizontally and two
+height alignment is 32. Every four adjacent buffers - two horizontally and two
 vertically are grouped together and are located in memory in Z or flipped Z
 order. </para>
 	<para>Layout of macroblocks in memory is presented in the following

+ 9 - 2
Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/v4l2.xml

@@ -140,6 +140,14 @@ structs, ioctls) must be noted in more detail in the history chapter
 (compat.xml), along with the possible impact on existing drivers and
 applications. -->
 
+      <revision>
+	<revnumber>3.11</revnumber>
+	<date>2013-05-26</date>
+	<authorinitials>hv</authorinitials>
+	<revremark>Remove obsolete VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_IDENT ioctl.
+	</revremark>
+      </revision>
+
       <revision>
 	<revnumber>3.10</revnumber>
 	<date>2013-03-25</date>
@@ -493,7 +501,7 @@ and discussions on the V4L mailing list.</revremark>
 </partinfo>
 
 <title>Video for Linux Two API Specification</title>
- <subtitle>Revision 3.10</subtitle>
+ <subtitle>Revision 3.11</subtitle>
 
   <chapter id="common">
     &sub-common;
@@ -547,7 +555,6 @@ and discussions on the V4L mailing list.</revremark>
     <!-- All ioctls go here. -->
     &sub-create-bufs;
     &sub-cropcap;
-    &sub-dbg-g-chip-ident;
     &sub-dbg-g-chip-info;
     &sub-dbg-g-register;
     &sub-decoder-cmd;

+ 0 - 271
Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/vidioc-dbg-g-chip-ident.xml

@@ -1,271 +0,0 @@
-<refentry id="vidioc-dbg-g-chip-ident">
-  <refmeta>
-    <refentrytitle>ioctl VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_IDENT</refentrytitle>
-    &manvol;
-  </refmeta>
-
-  <refnamediv>
-    <refname>VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_IDENT</refname>
-    <refpurpose>Identify the chips on a TV card</refpurpose>
-  </refnamediv>
-
-  <refsynopsisdiv>
-    <funcsynopsis>
-      <funcprototype>
-	<funcdef>int <function>ioctl</function></funcdef>
-	<paramdef>int <parameter>fd</parameter></paramdef>
-	<paramdef>int <parameter>request</parameter></paramdef>
-	<paramdef>struct v4l2_dbg_chip_ident
-*<parameter>argp</parameter></paramdef>
-      </funcprototype>
-    </funcsynopsis>
-  </refsynopsisdiv>
-
-  <refsect1>
-    <title>Arguments</title>
-
-    <variablelist>
-      <varlistentry>
-	<term><parameter>fd</parameter></term>
-	<listitem>
-	  <para>&fd;</para>
-	</listitem>
-      </varlistentry>
-      <varlistentry>
-	<term><parameter>request</parameter></term>
-	<listitem>
-	  <para>VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_IDENT</para>
-	</listitem>
-      </varlistentry>
-      <varlistentry>
-	<term><parameter>argp</parameter></term>
-	<listitem>
-	  <para></para>
-	</listitem>
-      </varlistentry>
-    </variablelist>
-  </refsect1>
-
-  <refsect1>
-    <title>Description</title>
-
-    <note>
-      <title>Experimental</title>
-
-      <para>This is an <link
-linkend="experimental">experimental</link> interface and may change in
-the future.</para>
-    </note>
-
-    <para>For driver debugging purposes this ioctl allows test
-applications to query the driver about the chips present on the TV
-card. Regular applications must not use it. When you found a chip
-specific bug, please contact the linux-media mailing list (&v4l-ml;)
-so it can be fixed.</para>
-
-    <para>To query the driver applications must initialize the
-<structfield>match.type</structfield> and
-<structfield>match.addr</structfield> or <structfield>match.name</structfield>
-fields of a &v4l2-dbg-chip-ident;
-and call <constant>VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_IDENT</constant> with a pointer to
-this structure. On success the driver stores information about the
-selected chip in the <structfield>ident</structfield> and
-<structfield>revision</structfield> fields. On failure the structure
-remains unchanged.</para>
-
-    <para>When <structfield>match.type</structfield> is
-<constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_HOST</constant>,
-<structfield>match.addr</structfield> selects the nth non-&i2c; chip
-on the TV card. You can enumerate all chips by starting at zero and
-incrementing <structfield>match.addr</structfield> by one until
-<constant>VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_IDENT</constant> fails with an &EINVAL;.
-The number zero always selects the host chip, &eg; the chip connected
-to the PCI or USB bus.</para>
-
-    <para>When <structfield>match.type</structfield> is
-<constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_I2C_DRIVER</constant>,
-<structfield>match.name</structfield> contains the I2C driver name.
-For instance
-<constant>"saa7127"</constant> will match any chip
-supported by the saa7127 driver, regardless of its &i2c; bus address.
-When multiple chips supported by the same driver are present, the
-ioctl will return <constant>V4L2_IDENT_AMBIGUOUS</constant> in the
-<structfield>ident</structfield> field.</para>
-
-    <para>When <structfield>match.type</structfield> is
-<constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_I2C_ADDR</constant>,
-<structfield>match.addr</structfield> selects a chip by its 7 bit
-&i2c; bus address.</para>
-
-    <para>When <structfield>match.type</structfield> is
-<constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_AC97</constant>,
-<structfield>match.addr</structfield> selects the nth AC97 chip
-on the TV card. You can enumerate all chips by starting at zero and
-incrementing <structfield>match.addr</structfield> by one until
-<constant>VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_IDENT</constant> fails with an &EINVAL;.</para>
-
-    <para>On success, the <structfield>ident</structfield> field will
-contain a chip ID from the Linux
-<filename>media/v4l2-chip-ident.h</filename> header file, and the
-<structfield>revision</structfield> field will contain a driver
-specific value, or zero if no particular revision is associated with
-this chip.</para>
-
-    <para>When the driver could not identify the selected chip,
-<structfield>ident</structfield> will contain
-<constant>V4L2_IDENT_UNKNOWN</constant>. When no chip matched
-the ioctl will succeed but the
-<structfield>ident</structfield> field will contain
-<constant>V4L2_IDENT_NONE</constant>. If multiple chips matched,
-<structfield>ident</structfield> will contain
-<constant>V4L2_IDENT_AMBIGUOUS</constant>. In all these cases the
-<structfield>revision</structfield> field remains unchanged.</para>
-
-    <para>This ioctl is optional, not all drivers may support it. It
-was introduced in Linux 2.6.21, but the API was changed to the
-one described here in 2.6.29.</para>
-
-    <para>We recommended the <application>v4l2-dbg</application>
-utility over calling this ioctl directly. It is available from the
-LinuxTV v4l-dvb repository; see <ulink
-url="http://linuxtv.org/repo/">http://linuxtv.org/repo/</ulink> for
-access instructions.</para>
-
-    <!-- Note for convenience vidioc-dbg-g-register.sgml
-	 contains a duplicate of this table. -->
-    <table pgwide="1" frame="none" id="ident-v4l2-dbg-match">
-      <title>struct <structname>v4l2_dbg_match</structname></title>
-      <tgroup cols="4">
-	&cs-ustr;
-	<tbody valign="top">
-	  <row>
-	    <entry>__u32</entry>
-	    <entry><structfield>type</structfield></entry>
-	    <entry>See <xref linkend="ident-chip-match-types" /> for a list of
-possible types.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry>union</entry>
-	    <entry>(anonymous)</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry></entry>
-	    <entry>__u32</entry>
-	    <entry><structfield>addr</structfield></entry>
-	    <entry>Match a chip by this number, interpreted according
-to the <structfield>type</structfield> field.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry></entry>
-	    <entry>char</entry>
-	    <entry><structfield>name[32]</structfield></entry>
-	    <entry>Match a chip by this name, interpreted according
-to the <structfield>type</structfield> field.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	</tbody>
-      </tgroup>
-    </table>
-
-    <table pgwide="1" frame="none" id="v4l2-dbg-chip-ident">
-      <title>struct <structname>v4l2_dbg_chip_ident</structname></title>
-      <tgroup cols="3">
-	&cs-str;
-	<tbody valign="top">
-	  <row>
-	    <entry>struct v4l2_dbg_match</entry>
-	    <entry><structfield>match</structfield></entry>
-	    <entry>How to match the chip, see <xref linkend="ident-v4l2-dbg-match" />.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry>__u32</entry>
-	    <entry><structfield>ident</structfield></entry>
-	    <entry>A chip identifier as defined in the Linux
-<filename>media/v4l2-chip-ident.h</filename> header file, or one of
-the values from <xref linkend="chip-ids" />.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry>__u32</entry>
-	    <entry><structfield>revision</structfield></entry>
-	    <entry>A chip revision, chip and driver specific.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	</tbody>
-      </tgroup>
-    </table>
-
-    <!-- Note for convenience vidioc-dbg-g-register.sgml
-	 contains a duplicate of this table. -->
-    <table pgwide="1" frame="none" id="ident-chip-match-types">
-      <title>Chip Match Types</title>
-      <tgroup cols="3">
-	&cs-def;
-	<tbody valign="top">
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_BRIDGE</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>0</entry>
-	    <entry>Match the nth chip on the card, zero for the
-	    bridge chip. Does not match sub-devices.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_I2C_DRIVER</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>1</entry>
-	    <entry>Match an &i2c; chip by its driver name.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_I2C_ADDR</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>2</entry>
-	    <entry>Match a chip by its 7 bit &i2c; bus address.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_AC97</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>3</entry>
-	    <entry>Match the nth anciliary AC97 chip.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_SUBDEV</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>4</entry>
-	    <entry>Match the nth sub-device. Can't be used with this ioctl.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	</tbody>
-      </tgroup>
-    </table>
-
-    <!-- This is an anonymous enum in media/v4l2-chip-ident.h. -->
-    <table pgwide="1" frame="none" id="chip-ids">
-      <title>Chip Identifiers</title>
-      <tgroup cols="3">
-	&cs-def;
-	<tbody valign="top">
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_IDENT_NONE</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>0</entry>
-	    <entry>No chip matched.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_IDENT_AMBIGUOUS</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>1</entry>
-	    <entry>Multiple chips matched.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_IDENT_UNKNOWN</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>2</entry>
-	    <entry>A chip is present at this address, but the driver
-could not identify it.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	</tbody>
-      </tgroup>
-    </table>
-  </refsect1>
-
-  <refsect1>
-    &return-value;
-
-    <variablelist>
-      <varlistentry>
-	<term><errorcode>EINVAL</errorcode></term>
-	<listitem>
-	  <para>The <structfield>match_type</structfield> is invalid.</para>
-	</listitem>
-      </varlistentry>
-     </variablelist>
-  </refsect1>
-</refentry>

+ 2 - 18
Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/vidioc-dbg-g-chip-info.xml

@@ -73,8 +73,7 @@ fields of a &v4l2-dbg-chip-info;
 and call <constant>VIDIOC_DBG_G_CHIP_INFO</constant> with a pointer to
 this structure. On success the driver stores information about the
 selected chip in the <structfield>name</structfield> and
-<structfield>flags</structfield> fields. On failure the structure
-remains unchanged.</para>
+<structfield>flags</structfield> fields.</para>
 
     <para>When <structfield>match.type</structfield> is
 <constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_BRIDGE</constant>,
@@ -132,7 +131,7 @@ to the <structfield>type</structfield> field.</entry>
 	    <entry>char</entry>
 	    <entry><structfield>name[32]</structfield></entry>
 	    <entry>Match a chip by this name, interpreted according
-to the <structfield>type</structfield> field.</entry>
+to the <structfield>type</structfield> field. Currently unused.</entry>
 	  </row>
 	</tbody>
       </tgroup>
@@ -182,21 +181,6 @@ is set, then the driver supports reading registers from the device. If
 	    <entry>Match the nth chip on the card, zero for the
 	    bridge chip. Does not match sub-devices.</entry>
 	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_I2C_DRIVER</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>1</entry>
-	    <entry>Match an &i2c; chip by its driver name. Can't be used with this ioctl.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_I2C_ADDR</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>2</entry>
-	    <entry>Match a chip by its 7 bit &i2c; bus address. Can't be used with this ioctl.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_AC97</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>3</entry>
-	    <entry>Match the nth anciliary AC97 chip. Can't be used with this ioctl.</entry>
-	  </row>
 	  <row>
 	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_SUBDEV</constant></entry>
 	    <entry>4</entry>

+ 12 - 52
Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/vidioc-dbg-g-register.xml

@@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ compiled with the <constant>CONFIG_VIDEO_ADV_DEBUG</constant> option
 to enable these ioctls.</para>
 
     <para>To write a register applications must initialize all fields
-of a &v4l2-dbg-register; and call
+of a &v4l2-dbg-register; except for <structfield>size</structfield> and call
 <constant>VIDIOC_DBG_S_REGISTER</constant> with a pointer to this
 structure. The <structfield>match.type</structfield> and
 <structfield>match.addr</structfield> or <structfield>match.name</structfield>
@@ -91,8 +91,8 @@ written into the register.</para>
 <structfield>reg</structfield> fields, and call
 <constant>VIDIOC_DBG_G_REGISTER</constant> with a pointer to this
 structure. On success the driver stores the register value in the
-<structfield>val</structfield> field. On failure the structure remains
-unchanged.</para>
+<structfield>val</structfield> field and the size (in bytes) of the
+value in <structfield>size</structfield>.</para>
 
     <para>When <structfield>match.type</structfield> is
 <constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_BRIDGE</constant>,
@@ -101,40 +101,10 @@ on the TV card.  The number zero always selects the host chip, &eg; the
 chip connected to the PCI or USB bus. You can find out which chips are
 present with the &VIDIOC-DBG-G-CHIP-INFO; ioctl.</para>
 
-    <para>When <structfield>match.type</structfield> is
-<constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_I2C_DRIVER</constant>,
-<structfield>match.name</structfield> contains the I2C driver name.
-For instance
-<constant>"saa7127"</constant> will match any chip
-supported by the saa7127 driver, regardless of its &i2c; bus address.
-When multiple chips supported by the same driver are present, the
-effect of these ioctls is undefined. Again with the
-&VIDIOC-DBG-G-CHIP-INFO; ioctl you can find out which &i2c; chips are
-present.</para>
-
-    <para>When <structfield>match.type</structfield> is
-<constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_I2C_ADDR</constant>,
-<structfield>match.addr</structfield> selects a chip by its 7 bit &i2c;
-bus address.</para>
-
-    <para>When <structfield>match.type</structfield> is
-<constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_AC97</constant>,
-<structfield>match.addr</structfield> selects the nth AC97 chip
-on the TV card.</para>
-
     <para>When <structfield>match.type</structfield> is
 <constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_SUBDEV</constant>,
 <structfield>match.addr</structfield> selects the nth sub-device.</para>
 
-    <note>
-      <title>Success not guaranteed</title>
-
-      <para>Due to a flaw in the Linux &i2c; bus driver these ioctls may
-return successfully without actually reading or writing a register. To
-catch the most likely failure we recommend a &VIDIOC-DBG-G-CHIP-INFO;
-call confirming the presence of the selected &i2c; chip.</para>
-    </note>
-
     <para>These ioctls are optional, not all drivers may support them.
 However when a driver supports these ioctls it must also support
 &VIDIOC-DBG-G-CHIP-INFO;. Conversely it may support
@@ -150,7 +120,7 @@ LinuxTV v4l-dvb repository; see <ulink
 url="http://linuxtv.org/repo/">http://linuxtv.org/repo/</ulink> for
 access instructions.</para>
 
-    <!-- Note for convenience vidioc-dbg-g-chip-ident.sgml
+    <!-- Note for convenience vidioc-dbg-g-chip-info.sgml
 	 contains a duplicate of this table. -->
     <table pgwide="1" frame="none" id="v4l2-dbg-match">
       <title>struct <structname>v4l2_dbg_match</structname></title>
@@ -160,7 +130,7 @@ access instructions.</para>
 	  <row>
 	    <entry>__u32</entry>
 	    <entry><structfield>type</structfield></entry>
-	    <entry>See <xref linkend="ident-chip-match-types" /> for a list of
+	    <entry>See <xref linkend="chip-match-types" /> for a list of
 possible types.</entry>
 	  </row>
 	  <row>
@@ -179,7 +149,7 @@ to the <structfield>type</structfield> field.</entry>
 	    <entry>char</entry>
 	    <entry><structfield>name[32]</structfield></entry>
 	    <entry>Match a chip by this name, interpreted according
-to the <structfield>type</structfield> field.</entry>
+to the <structfield>type</structfield> field. Currently unused.</entry>
 	  </row>
 	</tbody>
       </tgroup>
@@ -198,6 +168,11 @@ to the <structfield>type</structfield> field.</entry>
 	    <entry><structfield>match</structfield></entry>
 	    <entry>How to match the chip, see <xref linkend="v4l2-dbg-match" />.</entry>
 	  </row>
+	  <row>
+	    <entry>__u32</entry>
+	    <entry><structfield>size</structfield></entry>
+	    <entry>The register size in bytes.</entry>
+	  </row>
 	  <row>
 	    <entry>__u64</entry>
 	    <entry><structfield>reg</structfield></entry>
@@ -213,7 +188,7 @@ register.</entry>
       </tgroup>
     </table>
 
-    <!-- Note for convenience vidioc-dbg-g-chip-ident.sgml
+    <!-- Note for convenience vidioc-dbg-g-chip-info.sgml
 	 contains a duplicate of this table. -->
     <table pgwide="1" frame="none" id="chip-match-types">
       <title>Chip Match Types</title>
@@ -226,21 +201,6 @@ register.</entry>
 	    <entry>Match the nth chip on the card, zero for the
 	    bridge chip. Does not match sub-devices.</entry>
 	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_I2C_DRIVER</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>1</entry>
-	    <entry>Match an &i2c; chip by its driver name.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_I2C_ADDR</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>2</entry>
-	    <entry>Match a chip by its 7 bit &i2c; bus address.</entry>
-	  </row>
-	  <row>
-	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_AC97</constant></entry>
-	    <entry>3</entry>
-	    <entry>Match the nth anciliary AC97 chip.</entry>
-	  </row>
 	  <row>
 	    <entry><constant>V4L2_CHIP_MATCH_SUBDEV</constant></entry>
 	    <entry>4</entry>

+ 2 - 1
Documentation/DocBook/media/v4l/vidioc-querystd.xml

@@ -54,7 +54,8 @@ standard automatically. To do so, applications call <constant>
 VIDIOC_QUERYSTD</constant> with a pointer to a &v4l2-std-id; type. The
 driver stores here a set of candidates, this can be a single flag or a
 set of supported standards if for example the hardware can only
-distinguish between 50 and 60 Hz systems. When detection is not
+distinguish between 50 and 60 Hz systems. If no signal was detected,
+then the driver will return V4L2_STD_UNKNOWN. When detection is not
 possible or fails, the set must contain all standards supported by the
 current video input or output.</para>
 

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/DocBook/writing_usb_driver.tmpl

@@ -83,7 +83,7 @@
   </para>
   <para>
       Because each different protocol causes a new driver to be created, I have
-      written a generic USB driver skeleton, modeled after the pci-skeleton.c
+      written a generic USB driver skeleton, modelled after the pci-skeleton.c
       file in the kernel source tree upon which many PCI network drivers have
       been based. This USB skeleton can be found at drivers/usb/usb-skeleton.c
       in the kernel source tree. In this article I will walk through the basics

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/HOWTO

@@ -112,7 +112,7 @@ required reading:
 
     Other excellent descriptions of how to create patches properly are:
 	"The Perfect Patch"
-		http://userweb.kernel.org/~akpm/stuff/tpp.txt
+		http://kerneltrap.org/node/3737
 	"Linux kernel patch submission format"
 		http://linux.yyz.us/patch-format.html
 

+ 0 - 6
Documentation/RCU/checklist.txt

@@ -354,12 +354,6 @@ over a rather long period of time, but improvements are always welcome!
 	using RCU rather than SRCU, because RCU is almost always faster
 	and easier to use than is SRCU.
 
-	If you need to enter your read-side critical section in a
-	hardirq or exception handler, and then exit that same read-side
-	critical section in the task that was interrupted, then you need
-	to srcu_read_lock_raw() and srcu_read_unlock_raw(), which avoid
-	the lockdep checking that would otherwise this practice illegal.
-
 	Also unlike other forms of RCU, explicit initialization
 	and cleanup is required via init_srcu_struct() and
 	cleanup_srcu_struct().	These are passed a "struct srcu_struct"

+ 0 - 6
Documentation/RCU/torture.txt

@@ -182,12 +182,6 @@ torture_type	The type of RCU to test, with string values as follows:
 		"srcu_expedited": srcu_read_lock(), srcu_read_unlock() and
 			synchronize_srcu_expedited().
 
-		"srcu_raw": srcu_read_lock_raw(), srcu_read_unlock_raw(),
-			and call_srcu().
-
-		"srcu_raw_sync": srcu_read_lock_raw(), srcu_read_unlock_raw(),
-			and synchronize_srcu().
-
 		"sched": preempt_disable(), preempt_enable(), and
 			call_rcu_sched().
 

+ 4 - 96
Documentation/RCU/trace.txt

@@ -530,113 +530,21 @@ o	"nos" counts the number of times we balked for other
 	reasons, e.g., the grace period ended first.
 
 
-CONFIG_TINY_RCU and CONFIG_TINY_PREEMPT_RCU debugfs Files and Formats
+CONFIG_TINY_RCU debugfs Files and Formats
 
 These implementations of RCU provides a single debugfs file under the
 top-level directory RCU, namely rcu/rcudata, which displays fields in
-rcu_bh_ctrlblk, rcu_sched_ctrlblk and, for CONFIG_TINY_PREEMPT_RCU,
-rcu_preempt_ctrlblk.
+rcu_bh_ctrlblk and rcu_sched_ctrlblk.
 
 The output of "cat rcu/rcudata" is as follows:
 
-rcu_preempt: qlen=24 gp=1097669 g197/p197/c197 tasks=...
-             ttb=. btg=no ntb=184 neb=0 nnb=183 j=01f7 bt=0274
-             normal balk: nt=1097669 gt=0 bt=371 b=0 ny=25073378 nos=0
-             exp balk: bt=0 nos=0
 rcu_sched: qlen: 0
 rcu_bh: qlen: 0
 
-This is split into rcu_preempt, rcu_sched, and rcu_bh sections, with the
-rcu_preempt section appearing only in CONFIG_TINY_PREEMPT_RCU builds.
-The last three lines of the rcu_preempt section appear only in
-CONFIG_RCU_BOOST kernel builds.  The fields are as follows:
+This is split into rcu_sched and rcu_bh sections.  The field is as
+follows:
 
 o	"qlen" is the number of RCU callbacks currently waiting either
 	for an RCU grace period or waiting to be invoked.  This is the
 	only field present for rcu_sched and rcu_bh, due to the
 	short-circuiting of grace period in those two cases.
-
-o	"gp" is the number of grace periods that have completed.
-
-o	"g197/p197/c197" displays the grace-period state, with the
-	"g" number being the number of grace periods that have started
-	(mod 256), the "p" number being the number of grace periods
-	that the CPU has responded to (also mod 256), and the "c"
-	number being the number of grace periods that have completed
-	(once again mode 256).
-
-	Why have both "gp" and "g"?  Because the data flowing into
-	"gp" is only present in a CONFIG_RCU_TRACE kernel.
-
-o	"tasks" is a set of bits.  The first bit is "T" if there are
-	currently tasks that have recently blocked within an RCU
-	read-side critical section, the second bit is "N" if any of the
-	aforementioned tasks are blocking the current RCU grace period,
-	and the third bit is "E" if any of the aforementioned tasks are
-	blocking the current expedited grace period.  Each bit is "."
-	if the corresponding condition does not hold.
-
-o	"ttb" is a single bit.  It is "B" if any of the blocked tasks
-	need to be priority boosted and "." otherwise.
-
-o	"btg" indicates whether boosting has been carried out during
-	the current grace period, with "exp" indicating that boosting
-	is in progress for an expedited grace period, "no" indicating
-	that boosting has not yet started for a normal grace period,
-	"begun" indicating that boosting has bebug for a normal grace
-	period, and "done" indicating that boosting has completed for
-	a normal grace period.
-
-o	"ntb" is the total number of tasks subjected to RCU priority boosting
-	periods since boot.
-
-o	"neb" is the number of expedited grace periods that have had
-	to resort to RCU priority boosting since boot.
-
-o	"nnb" is the number of normal grace periods that have had
-	to resort to RCU priority boosting since boot.
-
-o	"j" is the low-order 16 bits of the jiffies counter in hexadecimal.
-
-o	"bt" is the low-order 16 bits of the value that the jiffies counter
-	will have at the next time that boosting is scheduled to begin.
-
-o	In the line beginning with "normal balk", the fields are as follows:
-
-	o	"nt" is the number of times that the system balked from
-		boosting because there were no blocked tasks to boost.
-		Note that the system will balk from boosting even if the
-		grace period is overdue when the currently running task
-		is looping within an RCU read-side critical section.
-		There is no point in boosting in this case, because
-		boosting a running task won't make it run any faster.
-
-	o	"gt" is the number of times that the system balked
-		from boosting because, although there were blocked tasks,
-		none of them were preventing the current grace period
-		from completing.
-
-	o	"bt" is the number of times that the system balked
-		from boosting because boosting was already in progress.
-
-	o	"b" is the number of times that the system balked from
-		boosting because boosting had already completed for
-		the grace period in question.
-
-	o	"ny" is the number of times that the system balked from
-		boosting because it was not yet time to start boosting
-		the grace period in question.
-
-	o	"nos" is the number of times that the system balked from
-		boosting for inexplicable ("not otherwise specified")
-		reasons.  This can actually happen due to races involving
-		increments of the jiffies counter.
-
-o	In the line beginning with "exp balk", the fields are as follows:
-
-	o	"bt" is the number of times that the system balked from
-		boosting because there were no blocked tasks to boost.
-
-	o	"nos" is the number of times that the system balked from
-		 boosting for inexplicable ("not otherwise specified")
-		 reasons.

+ 7 - 15
Documentation/RCU/whatisRCU.txt

@@ -842,9 +842,7 @@ SRCU:	Critical sections	Grace period		Barrier
 
 	srcu_read_lock		synchronize_srcu	srcu_barrier
 	srcu_read_unlock	call_srcu
-	srcu_read_lock_raw	synchronize_srcu_expedited
-	srcu_read_unlock_raw
-	srcu_dereference
+	srcu_dereference	synchronize_srcu_expedited
 
 SRCU:	Initialization/cleanup
 	init_srcu_struct
@@ -865,38 +863,32 @@ list can be helpful:
 
 a.	Will readers need to block?  If so, you need SRCU.
 
-b.	Is it necessary to start a read-side critical section in a
-	hardirq handler or exception handler, and then to complete
-	this read-side critical section in the task that was
-	interrupted?  If so, you need SRCU's srcu_read_lock_raw() and
-	srcu_read_unlock_raw() primitives.
-
-c.	What about the -rt patchset?  If readers would need to block
+b.	What about the -rt patchset?  If readers would need to block
 	in an non-rt kernel, you need SRCU.  If readers would block
 	in a -rt kernel, but not in a non-rt kernel, SRCU is not
 	necessary.
 
-d.	Do you need to treat NMI handlers, hardirq handlers,
+c.	Do you need to treat NMI handlers, hardirq handlers,
 	and code segments with preemption disabled (whether
 	via preempt_disable(), local_irq_save(), local_bh_disable(),
 	or some other mechanism) as if they were explicit RCU readers?
 	If so, RCU-sched is the only choice that will work for you.
 
-e.	Do you need RCU grace periods to complete even in the face
+d.	Do you need RCU grace periods to complete even in the face
 	of softirq monopolization of one or more of the CPUs?  For
 	example, is your code subject to network-based denial-of-service
 	attacks?  If so, you need RCU-bh.
 
-f.	Is your workload too update-intensive for normal use of
+e.	Is your workload too update-intensive for normal use of
 	RCU, but inappropriate for other synchronization mechanisms?
 	If so, consider SLAB_DESTROY_BY_RCU.  But please be careful!
 
-g.	Do you need read-side critical sections that are respected
+f.	Do you need read-side critical sections that are respected
 	even though they are in the middle of the idle loop, during
 	user-mode execution, or on an offlined CPU?  If so, SRCU is the
 	only choice that will work for you.
 
-h.	Otherwise, use RCU.
+g.	Otherwise, use RCU.
 
 Of course, this all assumes that you have determined that RCU is in fact
 the right tool for your job.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/SubmitChecklist

@@ -105,5 +105,5 @@ kernel patches.
     same time, just various/random combinations of them]:
 
     CONFIG_SMP, CONFIG_SYSFS, CONFIG_PROC_FS, CONFIG_INPUT, CONFIG_PCI,
-    CONFIG_BLOCK, CONFIG_PM, CONFIG_HOTPLUG, CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ,
+    CONFIG_BLOCK, CONFIG_PM, CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ,
     CONFIG_NET, CONFIG_INET=n (but latter with CONFIG_NET=y)

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/accounting/getdelays.c

@@ -272,7 +272,7 @@ int main(int argc, char *argv[])
 	char *logfile = NULL;
 	int loop = 0;
 	int containerset = 0;
-	char containerpath[1024];
+	char *containerpath = NULL;
 	int cfd = 0;
 	int forking = 0;
 	sigset_t sigset;
@@ -299,7 +299,7 @@ int main(int argc, char *argv[])
 			break;
 		case 'C':
 			containerset = 1;
-			strncpy(containerpath, optarg, strlen(optarg) + 1);
+			containerpath = optarg;
 			break;
 		case 'w':
 			logfile = strdup(optarg);

+ 7 - 2
Documentation/acpi/apei/einj.txt

@@ -47,11 +47,16 @@ directory apei/einj. The following files are provided.
 
 - param1
   This file is used to set the first error parameter value. Effect of
-  parameter depends on error_type specified.
+  parameter depends on error_type specified. For example, if error
+  type is memory related type, the param1 should be a valid physical
+  memory address.
 
 - param2
   This file is used to set the second error parameter value. Effect of
-  parameter depends on error_type specified.
+  parameter depends on error_type specified. For example, if error
+  type is memory related type, the param2 should be a physical memory
+  address mask. Linux requires page or narrower granularity, say,
+  0xfffffffffffff000.
 
 - notrigger
   The EINJ mechanism is a two step process. First inject the error, then

+ 395 - 0
Documentation/acpi/namespace.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,395 @@
+ACPI Device Tree - Representation of ACPI Namespace
+
+Copyright (C) 2013, Intel Corporation
+Author: Lv Zheng <lv.zheng@intel.com>
+
+
+Abstract:
+
+The Linux ACPI subsystem converts ACPI namespace objects into a Linux
+device tree under the /sys/devices/LNXSYSTEM:00 and updates it upon
+receiving ACPI hotplug notification events.  For each device object in this
+hierarchy there is a corresponding symbolic link in the
+/sys/bus/acpi/devices.
+This document illustrates the structure of the ACPI device tree.
+
+
+Credit:
+
+Thanks for the help from Zhang Rui <rui.zhang@intel.com> and Rafael J.
+Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>.
+
+
+1. ACPI Definition Blocks
+
+   The ACPI firmware sets up RSDP (Root System Description Pointer) in the
+   system memory address space pointing to the XSDT (Extended System
+   Description Table).  The XSDT always points to the FADT (Fixed ACPI
+   Description Table) using its first entry, the data within the FADT
+   includes various fixed-length entries that describe fixed ACPI features
+   of the hardware.  The FADT contains a pointer to the DSDT
+   (Differentiated System Descripition Table).  The XSDT also contains
+   entries pointing to possibly multiple SSDTs (Secondary System
+   Description Table).
+
+   The DSDT and SSDT data is organized in data structures called definition
+   blocks that contain definitions of various objects, including ACPI
+   control methods, encoded in AML (ACPI Machine Language).  The data block
+   of the DSDT along with the contents of SSDTs represents a hierarchical
+   data structure called the ACPI namespace whose topology reflects the
+   structure of the underlying hardware platform.
+
+   The relationships between ACPI System Definition Tables described above
+   are illustrated in the following diagram.
+
+     +---------+    +-------+    +--------+    +------------------------+
+     |  RSDP   | +->| XSDT  | +->|  FADT  |    |  +-------------------+ |
+     +---------+ |  +-------+ |  +--------+  +-|->|       DSDT        | |
+     | Pointer | |  | Entry |-+  | ...... |  | |  +-------------------+ |
+     +---------+ |  +-------+    | X_DSDT |--+ |  | Definition Blocks | |
+     | Pointer |-+  | ..... |    | ...... |    |  +-------------------+ |
+     +---------+    +-------+    +--------+    |  +-------------------+ |
+                    | Entry |------------------|->|       SSDT        | |
+                    +- - - -+                  |  +-------------------| |
+                    | Entry | - - - - - - - -+ |  | Definition Blocks | |
+                    +- - - -+                | |  +-------------------+ |
+                                             | |  +- - - - - - - - - -+ |
+                                             +-|->|       SSDT        | |
+                                               |  +-------------------+ |
+                                               |  | Definition Blocks | |
+                                               |  +- - - - - - - - - -+ |
+                                               +------------------------+
+                                                           |
+                                              OSPM Loading |
+                                                          \|/
+                                                    +----------------+
+                                                    | ACPI Namespace |
+                                                    +----------------+
+
+                     Figure 1. ACPI Definition Blocks
+
+   NOTE: RSDP can also contain a pointer to the RSDT (Root System
+         Description Table).  Platforms provide RSDT to enable
+         compatibility with ACPI 1.0 operating systems.  The OS is expected
+         to use XSDT, if present.
+
+
+2. Example ACPI Namespace
+
+   All definition blocks are loaded into a single namespace.  The namespace
+   is a hierarchy of objects identified by names and paths.
+   The following naming conventions apply to object names in the ACPI
+   namespace:
+   1. All names are 32 bits long.
+   2. The first byte of a name must be one of 'A' - 'Z', '_'.
+   3. Each of the remaining bytes of a name must be one of 'A' - 'Z', '0'
+      - '9', '_'.
+   4. Names starting with '_' are reserved by the ACPI specification.
+   5. The '\' symbol represents the root of the namespace (i.e. names
+      prepended with '\' are relative to the namespace root).
+   6. The '^' symbol represents the parent of the current namespace node
+      (i.e. names prepended with '^' are relative to the parent of the
+      current namespace node).
+
+   The figure below shows an example ACPI namespace.
+
+   +------+
+   | \    |                     Root
+   +------+
+     |
+     | +------+
+     +-| _PR  |                 Scope(_PR): the processor namespace
+     | +------+
+     |   |
+     |   | +------+
+     |   +-| CPU0 |             Processor(CPU0): the first processor
+     |     +------+
+     |
+     | +------+
+     +-| _SB  |                 Scope(_SB): the system bus namespace
+     | +------+
+     |   |
+     |   | +------+
+     |   +-| LID0 |             Device(LID0); the lid device
+     |   | +------+
+     |   |   |
+     |   |   | +------+
+     |   |   +-| _HID |         Name(_HID, "PNP0C0D"): the hardware ID
+     |   |   | +------+
+     |   |   |
+     |   |   | +------+
+     |   |   +-| _STA |         Method(_STA): the status control method
+     |   |     +------+
+     |   |
+     |   | +------+
+     |   +-| PCI0 |             Device(PCI0); the PCI root bridge
+     |     +------+
+     |       |
+     |       | +------+
+     |       +-| _HID |         Name(_HID, "PNP0A08"): the hardware ID
+     |       | +------+
+     |       |
+     |       | +------+
+     |       +-| _CID |         Name(_CID, "PNP0A03"): the compatible ID
+     |       | +------+
+     |       |
+     |       | +------+
+     |       +-| RP03 |         Scope(RP03): the PCI0 power scope
+     |       | +------+
+     |       |   |
+     |       |   | +------+
+     |       |   +-| PXP3 |     PowerResource(PXP3): the PCI0 power resource
+     |       |     +------+
+     |       |
+     |       | +------+
+     |       +-| GFX0 |         Device(GFX0): the graphics adapter
+     |         +------+
+     |           |
+     |           | +------+
+     |           +-| _ADR |     Name(_ADR, 0x00020000): the PCI bus address
+     |           | +------+
+     |           |
+     |           | +------+
+     |           +-| DD01 |     Device(DD01): the LCD output device
+     |             +------+
+     |               |
+     |               | +------+
+     |               +-| _BCL | Method(_BCL): the backlight control method
+     |                 +------+
+     |
+     | +------+
+     +-| _TZ  |                 Scope(_TZ): the thermal zone namespace
+     | +------+
+     |   |
+     |   | +------+
+     |   +-| FN00 |             PowerResource(FN00): the FAN0 power resource
+     |   | +------+
+     |   |
+     |   | +------+
+     |   +-| FAN0 |             Device(FAN0): the FAN0 cooling device
+     |   | +------+
+     |   |   |
+     |   |   | +------+
+     |   |   +-| _HID |         Name(_HID, "PNP0A0B"): the hardware ID
+     |   |     +------+
+     |   |
+     |   | +------+
+     |   +-| TZ00 |             ThermalZone(TZ00); the FAN thermal zone
+     |     +------+
+     |
+     | +------+
+     +-| _GPE |                 Scope(_GPE): the GPE namespace
+       +------+
+
+                     Figure 2. Example ACPI Namespace
+
+
+3. Linux ACPI Device Objects
+
+   The Linux kernel's core ACPI subsystem creates struct acpi_device
+   objects for ACPI namespace objects representing devices, power resources
+   processors, thermal zones.  Those objects are exported to user space via
+   sysfs as directories in the subtree under /sys/devices/LNXSYSTM:00.  The
+   format of their names is <bus_id:instance>, where 'bus_id' refers to the
+   ACPI namespace representation of the given object and 'instance' is used
+   for distinguishing different object of the same 'bus_id' (it is
+   two-digit decimal representation of an unsigned integer).
+
+   The value of 'bus_id' depends on the type of the object whose name it is
+   part of as listed in the table below.
+
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                |   | Object/Feature  | Table | bus_id   |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | N | Root            | xSDT  | LNXSYSTM |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | N | Device          | xSDT  | _HID     |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | N | Processor       | xSDT  | LNXCPU   |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | N | ThermalZone     | xSDT  | LNXTHERM |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | N | PowerResource   | xSDT  | LNXPOWER |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | N | Other Devices   | xSDT  | device   |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | F | PWR_BUTTON      | FADT  | LNXPWRBN |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | F | SLP_BUTTON      | FADT  | LNXSLPBN |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | M | Video Extension | xSDT  | LNXVIDEO |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | M | ATA Controller  | xSDT  | LNXIOBAY |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+                | M | Docking Station | xSDT  | LNXDOCK  |
+                +---+-----------------+-------+----------+
+
+                 Table 1. ACPI Namespace Objects Mapping
+
+   The following rules apply when creating struct acpi_device objects on
+   the basis of the contents of ACPI System Description Tables (as
+   indicated by the letter in the first column and the notation in the
+   second column of the table above):
+   N:
+      The object's source is an ACPI namespace node (as indicated by the
+      named object's type in the second column).  In that case the object's
+      directory in sysfs will contain the 'path' attribute whose value is
+      the full path to the node from the namespace root.
+      struct acpi_device objects are created for the ACPI namespace nodes
+      whose _STA control methods return PRESENT or FUNCTIONING.  The power
+      resource nodes or nodes without _STA are assumed to be both PRESENT
+      and FUNCTIONING.
+   F:
+      The struct acpi_device object is created for a fixed hardware
+      feature (as indicated by the fixed feature flag's name in the second
+      column), so its sysfs directory will not contain the 'path'
+      attribute.
+   M:
+      The struct acpi_device object is created for an ACPI namespace node
+      with specific control methods (as indicated by the ACPI defined
+      device's type in the second column).  The 'path' attribute containing
+      its namespace path will be present in its sysfs directory.  For
+      example, if the _BCL method is present for an ACPI namespace node, a
+      struct acpi_device object with LNXVIDEO 'bus_id' will be created for
+      it.
+
+   The third column of the above table indicates which ACPI System
+   Description Tables contain information used for the creation of the
+   struct acpi_device objects represented by the given row (xSDT means DSDT
+   or SSDT).
+
+   The forth column of the above table indicates the 'bus_id' generation
+   rule of the struct acpi_device object:
+   _HID:
+      _HID in the last column of the table means that the object's bus_id
+      is derived from the _HID/_CID identification objects present under
+      the corresponding ACPI namespace node. The object's sysfs directory
+      will then contain the 'hid' and 'modalias' attributes that can be
+      used to retrieve the _HID and _CIDs of that object.
+   LNXxxxxx:
+      The 'modalias' attribute is also present for struct acpi_device
+      objects having bus_id of the "LNXxxxxx" form (pseudo devices), in
+      which cases it contains the bus_id string itself.
+   device:
+      'device' in the last column of the table indicates that the object's
+      bus_id cannot be determined from _HID/_CID of the corresponding
+      ACPI namespace node, although that object represents a device (for
+      example, it may be a PCI device with _ADR defined and without _HID
+      or _CID).  In that case the string 'device' will be used as the
+      object's bus_id.
+
+
+4. Linux ACPI Physical Device Glue
+
+   ACPI device (i.e. struct acpi_device) objects may be linked to other
+   objects in the Linux' device hierarchy that represent "physical" devices
+   (for example, devices on the PCI bus).  If that happens, it means that
+   the ACPI device object is a "companion" of a device otherwise
+   represented in a different way and is used (1) to provide configuration
+   information on that device which cannot be obtained by other means and
+   (2) to do specific things to the device with the help of its ACPI
+   control methods.  One ACPI device object may be linked this way to
+   multiple "physical" devices.
+
+   If an ACPI device object is linked to a "physical" device, its sysfs
+   directory contains the "physical_node" symbolic link to the sysfs
+   directory of the target device object.  In turn, the target device's
+   sysfs directory will then contain the "firmware_node" symbolic link to
+   the sysfs directory of the companion ACPI device object.
+   The linking mechanism relies on device identification provided by the
+   ACPI namespace.  For example, if there's an ACPI namespace object
+   representing a PCI device (i.e. a device object under an ACPI namespace
+   object representing a PCI bridge) whose _ADR returns 0x00020000 and the
+   bus number of the parent PCI bridge is 0, the sysfs directory
+   representing the struct acpi_device object created for that ACPI
+   namespace object will contain the 'physical_node' symbolic link to the
+   /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:02:0/ sysfs directory of the
+   corresponding PCI device.
+
+   The linking mechanism is generally bus-specific.  The core of its
+   implementation is located in the drivers/acpi/glue.c file, but there are
+   complementary parts depending on the bus types in question located
+   elsewhere.  For example, the PCI-specific part of it is located in
+   drivers/pci/pci-acpi.c.
+
+
+5. Example Linux ACPI Device Tree
+
+   The sysfs hierarchy of struct acpi_device objects corresponding to the
+   example ACPI namespace illustrated in Figure 2 with the addition of
+   fixed PWR_BUTTON/SLP_BUTTON devices is shown below.
+
+   +--------------+---+-----------------+
+   | LNXSYSTEM:00 | \ | acpi:LNXSYSTEM: |
+   +--------------+---+-----------------+
+     |
+     | +-------------+-----+----------------+
+     +-| LNXPWRBN:00 | N/A | acpi:LNXPWRBN: |
+     | +-------------+-----+----------------+
+     |
+     | +-------------+-----+----------------+
+     +-| LNXSLPBN:00 | N/A | acpi:LNXSLPBN: |
+     | +-------------+-----+----------------+
+     |
+     | +-----------+------------+--------------+
+     +-| LNXCPU:00 | \_PR_.CPU0 | acpi:LNXCPU: |
+     | +-----------+------------+--------------+
+     |
+     | +-------------+-------+----------------+
+     +-| LNXSYBUS:00 | \_SB_ | acpi:LNXSYBUS: |
+     | +-------------+-------+----------------+
+     |   |
+     |   | +- - - - - - - +- - - - - - +- - - - - - - -+
+     |   +-| * PNP0C0D:00 | \_SB_.LID0 | acpi:PNP0C0D: |
+     |   | +- - - - - - - +- - - - - - +- - - - - - - -+
+     |   |
+     |   | +------------+------------+-----------------------+
+     |   +-| PNP0A08:00 | \_SB_.PCI0 | acpi:PNP0A08:PNP0A03: |
+     |     +------------+------------+-----------------------+
+     |       |
+     |       | +-----------+-----------------+-----+
+     |       +-| device:00 | \_SB_.PCI0.RP03 | N/A |
+     |       | +-----------+-----------------+-----+
+     |       |   |
+     |       |   | +-------------+----------------------+----------------+
+     |       |   +-| LNXPOWER:00 | \_SB_.PCI0.RP03.PXP3 | acpi:LNXPOWER: |
+     |       |     +-------------+----------------------+----------------+
+     |       |
+     |       | +-------------+-----------------+----------------+
+     |       +-| LNXVIDEO:00 | \_SB_.PCI0.GFX0 | acpi:LNXVIDEO: |
+     |         +-------------+-----------------+----------------+
+     |           |
+     |           | +-----------+-----------------+-----+
+     |           +-| device:01 | \_SB_.PCI0.DD01 | N/A |
+     |             +-----------+-----------------+-----+
+     |
+     | +-------------+-------+----------------+
+     +-| LNXSYBUS:01 | \_TZ_ | acpi:LNXSYBUS: |
+       +-------------+-------+----------------+
+         |
+         | +-------------+------------+----------------+
+         +-| LNXPOWER:0a | \_TZ_.FN00 | acpi:LNXPOWER: |
+         | +-------------+------------+----------------+
+         |
+         | +------------+------------+---------------+
+         +-| PNP0C0B:00 | \_TZ_.FAN0 | acpi:PNP0C0B: |
+         | +------------+------------+---------------+
+         |
+         | +-------------+------------+----------------+
+         +-| LNXTHERM:00 | \_TZ_.TZ00 | acpi:LNXTHERM: |
+           +-------------+------------+----------------+
+
+                  Figure 3. Example Linux ACPI Device Tree
+
+   NOTE: Each node is represented as "object/path/modalias", where:
+         1. 'object' is the name of the object's directory in sysfs.
+         2. 'path' is the ACPI namespace path of the corresponding
+            ACPI namespace object, as returned by the object's 'path'
+            sysfs attribute.
+         3. 'modalias' is the value of the object's 'modalias' sysfs
+            attribute (as described earlier in this document).
+   NOTE: N/A indicates the device object does not have the 'path' or the
+         'modalias' attribute.
+   NOTE: The PNP0C0D device listed above is highlighted (marked by "*")
+         to indicate it will be created only when its _STA methods return
+         PRESENT or FUNCTIONING.

+ 106 - 0
Documentation/acpi/video_extension.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,106 @@
+ACPI video extensions
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This driver implement the ACPI Extensions For Display Adapters for
+integrated graphics devices on motherboard, as specified in ACPI 2.0
+Specification, Appendix B, allowing to perform some basic control like
+defining the video POST device, retrieving EDID information or to
+setup a video output, etc.  Note that this is an ref. implementation
+only.  It may or may not work for your integrated video device.
+
+The ACPI video driver does 3 things regarding backlight control:
+
+1 Export a sysfs interface for user space to control backlight level
+
+If the ACPI table has a video device, and acpi_backlight=vendor kernel
+command line is not present, the driver will register a backlight device
+and set the required backlight operation structure for it for the sysfs
+interface control. For every registered class device, there will be a
+directory named acpi_videoX under /sys/class/backlight.
+
+The backlight sysfs interface has a standard definition here:
+Documentation/ABI/stable/sysfs-class-backlight.
+
+And what ACPI video driver does is:
+actual_brightness: on read, control method _BQC will be evaluated to
+get the brightness level the firmware thinks it is at;
+bl_power: not implemented, will set the current brightness instead;
+brightness: on write, control method _BCM will run to set the requested
+brightness level;
+max_brightness: Derived from the _BCL package(see below);
+type: firmware
+
+Note that ACPI video backlight driver will always use index for
+brightness, actual_brightness and max_brightness. So if we have
+the following _BCL package:
+
+Method (_BCL, 0, NotSerialized)
+{
+	Return (Package (0x0C)
+	{
+		0x64,
+		0x32,
+		0x0A,
+		0x14,
+		0x1E,
+		0x28,
+		0x32,
+		0x3C,
+		0x46,
+		0x50,
+		0x5A,
+		0x64
+	})
+}
+
+The first two levels are for when laptop are on AC or on battery and are
+not used by Linux currently. The remaining 10 levels are supported levels
+that we can choose from. The applicable index values are from 0 (that
+corresponds to the 0x0A brightness value) to 9 (that corresponds to the
+0x64 brightness value) inclusive. Each of those index values is regarded
+as a "brightness level" indicator. Thus from the user space perspective
+the range of available brightness levels is from 0 to 9 (max_brightness)
+inclusive.
+
+2 Notify user space about hotkey event
+
+There are generally two cases for hotkey event reporting:
+i) For some laptops, when user presses the hotkey, a scancode will be
+   generated and sent to user space through the input device created by
+   the keyboard driver as a key type input event, with proper remap, the
+   following key code will appear to user space:
+
+	EV_KEY, KEY_BRIGHTNESSUP
+	EV_KEY, KEY_BRIGHTNESSDOWN
+	etc.
+
+For this case, ACPI video driver does not need to do anything(actually,
+it doesn't even know this happened).
+
+ii) For some laptops, the press of the hotkey will not generate the
+    scancode, instead, firmware will notify the video device ACPI node
+    about the event. The event value is defined in the ACPI spec. ACPI
+    video driver will generate an key type input event according to the
+    notify value it received and send the event to user space through the
+    input device it created:
+
+	event		keycode
+	0x86		KEY_BRIGHTNESSUP
+	0x87		KEY_BRIGHTNESSDOWN
+	etc.
+
+so this would lead to the same effect as case i) now.
+
+Once user space tool receives this event, it can modify the backlight
+level through the sysfs interface.
+
+3 Change backlight level in the kernel
+
+This works for machines covered by case ii) in Section 2. Once the driver
+received a notification, it will set the backlight level accordingly. This does
+not affect the sending of event to user space, they are always sent to user
+space regardless of whether or not the video module controls the backlight level
+directly. This behaviour can be controlled through the brightness_switch_enabled
+module parameter as documented in kernel-parameters.txt. It is recommended to
+disable this behaviour once a GUI environment starts up and wants to have full
+control of the backlight level.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/arm/IXP4xx

@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ Linux currently supports the following features on the IXP4xx chips:
 - Timers (watchdog, OS)
 
 The following components of the chips are not supported by Linux and
-require the use of Intel's proprietary CSR softare:
+require the use of Intel's proprietary CSR software:
 
 - USB device interface
 - Network interfaces (HSS, Utopia, NPEs, etc)

+ 33 - 0
Documentation/arm/sti/overview.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
+			STi ARM Linux Overview
+			==========================
+
+Introduction
+------------
+
+  The ST Microelectronics Multimedia and Application Processors range of
+  CortexA9 System-on-Chip are supported by the 'STi' platform of
+  ARM Linux. Currently STiH415, STiH416 SOCs are supported with both
+  B2000 and B2020 Reference boards.
+
+
+  configuration
+  -------------
+
+  A generic configuration is provided for both STiH415/416, and can be used as the
+  default by
+	make stih41x_defconfig
+
+  Layout
+  ------
+  All the files for multiple machine families (STiH415, STiH416, and STiG125)
+  are located in the platform code contained in arch/arm/mach-sti
+
+  There is a generic board board-dt.c in the mach folder which support
+  Flattened Device Tree, which means, It works with any compatible board with
+  Device Trees.
+
+
+  Document Author
+  ---------------
+
+  Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandagatla@st.com>, (c) 2013 ST Microelectronics

+ 12 - 0
Documentation/arm/sti/stih415-overview.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
+			STiH415 Overview
+			================
+
+Introduction
+------------
+
+    The STiH415 is the next generation of HD, AVC set-top box processors
+    for satellite, cable, terrestrial and IP-STB markets.
+
+    Features
+    - ARM Cortex-A9 1.0 GHz, dual-core CPU
+    - SATA2x2,USB 2.0x3, PCIe, Gbit Ethernet MACx2

+ 12 - 0
Documentation/arm/sti/stih416-overview.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
+			STiH416 Overview
+			================
+
+Introduction
+------------
+
+    The STiH416 is the next generation of HD, AVC set-top box processors
+    for satellite, cable, terrestrial and IP-STB markets.
+
+    Features
+    - ARM Cortex-A9 1.2 GHz dual core CPU
+    - SATA2x2,USB 2.0x3, PCIe, Gbit Ethernet MACx2

+ 16 - 7
Documentation/arm/sunxi/README

@@ -3,17 +3,26 @@ ARM Allwinner SoCs
 
 This document lists all the ARM Allwinner SoCs that are currently
 supported in mainline by the Linux kernel. This document will also
-provide links to documentation and or datasheet for these SoCs.
+provide links to documentation and/or datasheet for these SoCs.
 
 SunXi family
 ------------
+  Linux kernel mach directory: arch/arm/mach-sunxi
 
   Flavors:
-        Allwinner A10 (sun4i)
-                Datasheet       : http://dl.linux-sunxi.org/A10/A10%20Datasheet%20-%20v1.21%20%282012-04-06%29.pdf
+    * ARM Cortex-A8 based SoCs
+      - Allwinner A10 (sun4i)
+        + Datasheet
+	  http://dl.linux-sunxi.org/A10/A10%20Datasheet%20-%20v1.21%20%282012-04-06%29.pdf
+	+ User Manual
+	  http://dl.linux-sunxi.org/A10/A10%20User%20Manual%20-%20v1.20%20%282012-04-09%2c%20DECRYPTED%29.pdf
 
-        Allwinner A13 (sun5i)
-                Datasheet       : http://dl.linux-sunxi.org/A13/A13%20Datasheet%20-%20v1.12%20%282012-03-29%29.pdf
+      - Allwinner A10s (sun5i)
+        + Datasheet
+          http://dl.linux-sunxi.org/A10s/A10s%20Datasheet%20-%20v1.20%20%282012-03-27%29.pdf
 
-  Core: Cortex A8
-  Linux kernel mach directory: arch/arm/mach-sunxi
+      - Allwinner A13 (sun5i)
+        + Datasheet
+	  http://dl.linux-sunxi.org/A13/A13%20Datasheet%20-%20v1.12%20%282012-03-29%29.pdf
+        + User Manual
+	  http://dl.linux-sunxi.org/A13/A13%20User%20Manual%20-%20v1.2%20%282013-08-08%29.pdf

+ 7 - 0
Documentation/arm64/memory.txt

@@ -73,3 +73,10 @@ Translation table lookup with 64KB pages:
  |                 |    +--------------------------> [41:29] L2 index (only 38:29 used)
  |                 +-------------------------------> [47:42] L1 index (not used)
  +-------------------------------------------------> [63] TTBR0/1
+
+When using KVM, the hypervisor maps kernel pages in EL2, at a fixed
+offset from the kernel VA (top 24bits of the kernel VA set to zero):
+
+Start			End			Size		Use
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+0000004000000000	0000007fffffffff	 256GB		kernel objects mapped in HYP

+ 29 - 18
Documentation/bcache.txt

@@ -46,29 +46,33 @@ you format your backing devices and cache device at the same time, you won't
 have to manually attach:
   make-bcache -B /dev/sda /dev/sdb -C /dev/sdc
 
-To make bcache devices known to the kernel, echo them to /sys/fs/bcache/register:
+bcache-tools now ships udev rules, and bcache devices are known to the kernel
+immediately.  Without udev, you can manually register devices like this:
 
   echo /dev/sdb > /sys/fs/bcache/register
   echo /dev/sdc > /sys/fs/bcache/register
 
-To register your bcache devices automatically, you could add something like
-this to an init script:
+Registering the backing device makes the bcache device show up in /dev; you can
+now format it and use it as normal. But the first time using a new bcache
+device, it'll be running in passthrough mode until you attach it to a cache.
+See the section on attaching.
 
-  echo /dev/sd* > /sys/fs/bcache/register_quiet
+The devices show up as:
 
-It'll look for bcache superblocks and ignore everything that doesn't have one.
+  /dev/bcache<N>
 
-Registering the backing device makes the bcache show up in /dev; you can now
-format it and use it as normal. But the first time using a new bcache device,
-it'll be running in passthrough mode until you attach it to a cache. See the
-section on attaching.
+As well as (with udev):
 
-The devices show up at /dev/bcacheN, and can be controlled via sysfs from
-/sys/block/bcacheN/bcache:
+  /dev/bcache/by-uuid/<uuid>
+  /dev/bcache/by-label/<label>
+
+To get started:
 
   mkfs.ext4 /dev/bcache0
   mount /dev/bcache0 /mnt
 
+You can control bcache devices through sysfs at /sys/block/bcache<N>/bcache .
+
 Cache devices are managed as sets; multiple caches per set isn't supported yet
 but will allow for mirroring of metadata and dirty data in the future. Your new
 cache set shows up as /sys/fs/bcache/<UUID>
@@ -80,11 +84,11 @@ must be attached to your cache set to enable caching. Attaching a backing
 device to a cache set is done thusly, with the UUID of the cache set in
 /sys/fs/bcache:
 
-  echo <UUID> > /sys/block/bcache0/bcache/attach
+  echo <CSET-UUID> > /sys/block/bcache0/bcache/attach
 
 This only has to be done once. The next time you reboot, just reregister all
 your bcache devices. If a backing device has data in a cache somewhere, the
-/dev/bcache# device won't be created until the cache shows up - particularly
+/dev/bcache<N> device won't be created until the cache shows up - particularly
 important if you have writeback caching turned on.
 
 If you're booting up and your cache device is gone and never coming back, you
@@ -181,7 +185,7 @@ want for getting the best possible numbers when benchmarking.
 
    In practice this isn't an issue because as soon as a write comes along it'll
    cause the btree node to be split, and you need almost no write traffic for
-   this to not show up enough to be noticable (especially since bcache's btree
+   this to not show up enough to be noticeable (especially since bcache's btree
    nodes are huge and index large regions of the device). But when you're
    benchmarking, if you're trying to warm the cache by reading a bunch of data
    and there's no other traffic - that can be a problem.
@@ -191,6 +195,9 @@ want for getting the best possible numbers when benchmarking.
 
 SYSFS - BACKING DEVICE:
 
+Available at /sys/block/<bdev>/bcache, /sys/block/bcache*/bcache and
+(if attached) /sys/fs/bcache/<cset-uuid>/bdev*
+
 attach
   Echo the UUID of a cache set to this file to enable caching.
 
@@ -222,7 +229,7 @@ running
   it's in passthrough mode or caching).
 
 sequential_cutoff
-  A sequential IO will bypass the cache once it passes this threshhold; the
+  A sequential IO will bypass the cache once it passes this threshold; the
   most recent 128 IOs are tracked so sequential IO can be detected even when
   it isn't all done at once.
 
@@ -296,10 +303,12 @@ cache_miss_collisions
   since the synchronization for cache misses was rewritten)
 
 cache_readaheads
-  Count of times readahead occured.
+  Count of times readahead occurred.
 
 SYSFS - CACHE SET:
 
+Available at /sys/fs/bcache/<cset-uuid>
+
 average_key_size
   Average data per key in the btree.
 
@@ -362,7 +371,7 @@ unregister
 SYSFS - CACHE SET INTERNAL:
 
 This directory also exposes timings for a number of internal operations, with
-separate files for average duration, average frequency, last occurence and max
+separate files for average duration, average frequency, last occurrence and max
 duration: garbage collection, btree read, btree node sorts and btree splits.
 
 active_journal_entries
@@ -390,6 +399,8 @@ trigger_gc
 
 SYSFS - CACHE DEVICE:
 
+Available at /sys/block/<cdev>/bcache
+
 block_size
   Minimum granularity of writes - should match hardware sector size.
 
@@ -417,7 +428,7 @@ freelist_percent
   space.
 
 io_errors
-  Number of errors that have occured, decayed by io_error_halflife.
+  Number of errors that have occurred, decayed by io_error_halflife.
 
 metadata_written
   Sum of all non data writes (btree writes and all other metadata).

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/block/queue-sysfs.txt

@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ To avoid priority inversion through request starvation, a request
 queue maintains a separate request pool per each cgroup when
 CONFIG_BLK_CGROUP is enabled, and this parameter applies to each such
 per-block-cgroup request pool.  IOW, if there are N block cgroups,
-each request queue may have upto N request pools, each independently
+each request queue may have up to N request pools, each independently
 regulated by nr_requests.
 
 optimal_io_size (RO)

+ 15 - 14
Documentation/cgroups/blkio-controller.txt

@@ -94,11 +94,13 @@ Throttling/Upper Limit policy
 
 Hierarchical Cgroups
 ====================
-- Currently only CFQ supports hierarchical groups. For throttling,
-  cgroup interface does allow creation of hierarchical cgroups and
-  internally it treats them as flat hierarchy.
 
-  If somebody created a hierarchy like as follows.
+Both CFQ and throttling implement hierarchy support; however,
+throttling's hierarchy support is enabled iff "sane_behavior" is
+enabled from cgroup side, which currently is a development option and
+not publicly available.
+
+If somebody created a hierarchy like as follows.
 
 			root
 			/  \
@@ -106,21 +108,20 @@ Hierarchical Cgroups
 			|
 		     test3
 
-  CFQ will handle the hierarchy correctly but and throttling will
-  practically treat all groups at same level. For details on CFQ
-  hierarchy support, refer to Documentation/block/cfq-iosched.txt.
-  Throttling will treat the hierarchy as if it looks like the
-  following.
+CFQ by default and throttling with "sane_behavior" will handle the
+hierarchy correctly.  For details on CFQ hierarchy support, refer to
+Documentation/block/cfq-iosched.txt.  For throttling, all limits apply
+to the whole subtree while all statistics are local to the IOs
+directly generated by tasks in that cgroup.
+
+Throttling without "sane_behavior" enabled from cgroup side will
+practically treat all groups at same level as if it looks like the
+following.
 
 				pivot
 			     /  /   \  \
 			root  test1 test2  test3
 
-  Nesting cgroups, while allowed, isn't officially supported and blkio
-  genereates warning when cgroups nest. Once throttling implements
-  hierarchy support, hierarchy will be supported and the warning will
-  be removed.
-
 Various user visible config options
 ===================================
 CONFIG_BLK_CGROUP

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/cgroups/cpusets.txt

@@ -373,7 +373,7 @@ can become very uneven.
 1.7 What is sched_load_balance ?
 --------------------------------
 
-The kernel scheduler (kernel/sched.c) automatically load balances
+The kernel scheduler (kernel/sched/core.c) automatically load balances
 tasks.  If one CPU is underutilized, kernel code running on that
 CPU will look for tasks on other more overloaded CPUs and move those
 tasks to itself, within the constraints of such placement mechanisms

+ 6 - 7
Documentation/cgroups/memory.txt

@@ -304,7 +304,7 @@ kernel memory, we prevent new processes from being created when the kernel
 memory usage is too high.
 
 * slab pages: pages allocated by the SLAB or SLUB allocator are tracked. A copy
-of each kmem_cache is created everytime the cache is touched by the first time
+of each kmem_cache is created every time the cache is touched by the first time
 from inside the memcg. The creation is done lazily, so some objects can still be
 skipped while the cache is being created. All objects in a slab page should
 belong to the same memcg. This only fails to hold when a task is migrated to a
@@ -490,10 +490,10 @@ pgpgin		- # of charging events to the memory cgroup. The charging
 pgpgout		- # of uncharging events to the memory cgroup. The uncharging
 		event happens each time a page is unaccounted from the cgroup.
 swap		- # of bytes of swap usage
-inactive_anon	- # of bytes of anonymous memory and swap cache memory on
+inactive_anon	- # of bytes of anonymous and swap cache memory on inactive
 		LRU list.
 active_anon	- # of bytes of anonymous and swap cache memory on active
-		inactive LRU list.
+		LRU list.
 inactive_file	- # of bytes of file-backed memory on inactive LRU list.
 active_file	- # of bytes of file-backed memory on active LRU list.
 unevictable	- # of bytes of memory that cannot be reclaimed (mlocked etc).
@@ -834,10 +834,9 @@ Test:
 
 12. TODO
 
-1. Add support for accounting huge pages (as a separate controller)
-2. Make per-cgroup scanner reclaim not-shared pages first
-3. Teach controller to account for shared-pages
-4. Start reclamation in the background when the limit is
+1. Make per-cgroup scanner reclaim not-shared pages first
+2. Teach controller to account for shared-pages
+3. Start reclamation in the background when the limit is
    not yet hit but the usage is getting closer
 
 Summary

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/clk.txt

@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ hardware-specific bits for the hypothetical "foo" hardware.
 
 Tying the two halves of this interface together is struct clk_hw, which
 is defined in struct clk_foo and pointed to within struct clk.  This
-allows easy for navigation between the two discrete halves of the common
+allows for easy navigation between the two discrete halves of the common
 clock interface.
 
 	Part 2 - common data structures and api

+ 39 - 24
Documentation/coccinelle.txt

@@ -6,15 +6,17 @@ Copyright 2010 Gilles Muller <Gilles.Muller@lip6.fr>
  Getting Coccinelle
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
-The semantic patches included in the kernel use the 'virtual rule'
-feature which was introduced in Coccinelle version 0.1.11.
+The semantic patches included in the kernel use features and options
+which are provided by Coccinelle version 1.0.0-rc11 and above.
+Using earlier versions will fail as the option names used by
+the Coccinelle files and coccicheck have been updated.
 
-Coccinelle (>=0.2.0) is available through the package manager
+Coccinelle is available through the package manager
 of many distributions, e.g. :
 
- - Debian (>=squeeze)
- - Fedora (>=13)
- - Ubuntu (>=10.04 Lucid Lynx)
+ - Debian
+ - Fedora
+ - Ubuntu
  - OpenSUSE
  - Arch Linux
  - NetBSD
@@ -36,11 +38,6 @@ as a regular user, and install it with
 
         sudo make install
 
-The semantic patches in the kernel will work best with Coccinelle version
-0.2.4 or later.  Using earlier versions may incur some parse errors in the
-semantic patch code, but any results that are obtained should still be
-correct.
-
  Using Coccinelle on the Linux kernel
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
@@ -48,7 +45,7 @@ A Coccinelle-specific target is defined in the top level
 Makefile. This target is named 'coccicheck' and calls the 'coccicheck'
 front-end in the 'scripts' directory.
 
-Four modes are defined: patch, report, context, and org. The mode to
+Four basic modes are defined: patch, report, context, and org. The mode to
 use is specified by setting the MODE variable with 'MODE=<mode>'.
 
 'patch' proposes a fix, when possible.
@@ -62,18 +59,24 @@ diff-like style.Lines of interest are indicated with '-'.
 'org' generates a report in the Org mode format of Emacs.
 
 Note that not all semantic patches implement all modes. For easy use
-of Coccinelle, the default mode is "chain" which tries the previous
-modes in the order above until one succeeds.
+of Coccinelle, the default mode is "report".
+
+Two other modes provide some common combinations of these modes.
 
-To make a report for every semantic patch, run the following command:
+'chain' tries the previous modes in the order above until one succeeds.
 
-	make coccicheck MODE=report
+'rep+ctxt' runs successively the report mode and the context mode.
+	   It should be used with the C option (described later)
+	   which checks the code on a file basis.
 
-NB: The 'report' mode is the default one.
+Examples:
+	To make a report for every semantic patch, run the following command:
 
-To produce patches, run:
+		make coccicheck MODE=report
 
-	make coccicheck MODE=patch
+	To produce patches, run:
+
+		make coccicheck MODE=patch
 
 
 The coccicheck target applies every semantic patch available in the
@@ -91,6 +94,11 @@ To enable verbose messages set the V= variable, for example:
 
    make coccicheck MODE=report V=1
 
+By default, coccicheck tries to run as parallel as possible. To change
+the parallelism, set the J= variable. For example, to run across 4 CPUs:
+
+   make coccicheck MODE=report J=4
+
 
  Using Coccinelle with a single semantic patch
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -124,26 +132,33 @@ To check only newly edited code, use the value 2 for the C flag, i.e.
 
     make C=2 CHECK="scripts/coccicheck"
 
+In these modes, which works on a file basis, there is no information
+about semantic patches displayed, and no commit message proposed.
+
 This runs every semantic patch in scripts/coccinelle by default. The
 COCCI variable may additionally be used to only apply a single
 semantic patch as shown in the previous section.
 
-The "chain" mode is the default. You can select another one with the
+The "report" mode is the default. You can select another one with the
 MODE variable explained above.
 
-In this mode, there is no information about semantic patches
-displayed, and no commit message proposed.
-
  Additional flags
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 Additional flags can be passed to spatch through the SPFLAGS
 variable.
 
-    make SPFLAGS=--use_glimpse coccicheck
+    make SPFLAGS=--use-glimpse coccicheck
+    make SPFLAGS=--use-idutils coccicheck
 
 See spatch --help to learn more about spatch options.
 
+Note that the '--use-glimpse' and '--use-idutils' options
+require external tools for indexing the code. None of them is
+thus active by default. However, by indexing the code with
+one of these tools, and according to the cocci file used,
+spatch could proceed the entire code base more quickly.
+
  Proposing new semantic patches
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

+ 14 - 14
Documentation/console/console.txt

@@ -12,20 +12,20 @@ The second type has to be explicitly loaded and unloaded. This will be called
 any time with each driver sharing the console with other drivers including
 the system driver. However, modular drivers cannot take over the console
 that is currently occupied by another modular driver. (Exception: Drivers that
-call take_over_console() will succeed in the takeover regardless of the type
+call do_take_over_console() will succeed in the takeover regardless of the type
 of driver occupying the consoles.) They can only take over the console that is
 occupied by the system driver. In the same token, if the modular driver is
 released by the console, the system driver will take over.
 
 Modular drivers, from the programmer's point of view, has to call:
 
-	 take_over_console() - load and bind driver to console layer
-	 give_up_console() - unbind and unload driver
+	 do_take_over_console() - load and bind driver to console layer
+	 give_up_console() - unload driver, it will only work if driver is fully unbond
 
 In newer kernels, the following are also available:
 
-	 register_con_driver()
-	 unregister_con_driver()
+	 do_register_con_driver()
+	 do_unregister_con_driver()
 
 If sysfs is enabled, the contents of /sys/class/vtconsole can be
 examined. This shows the console backends currently registered by the
@@ -94,12 +94,12 @@ for more details).
 Notes for developers:
 =====================
 
-take_over_console() is now broken up into:
+do_take_over_console() is now broken up into:
 
-     register_con_driver()
-     bind_con_driver() - private function
+     do_register_con_driver()
+     do_bind_con_driver() - private function
 
-give_up_console() is a wrapper to unregister_con_driver(), and a driver must
+give_up_console() is a wrapper to do_unregister_con_driver(), and a driver must
 be fully unbound for this call to succeed. con_is_bound() will check if the
 driver is bound or not.
 
@@ -109,10 +109,10 @@ Guidelines for console driver writers:
 In order for binding to and unbinding from the console to properly work,
 console drivers must follow these guidelines:
 
-1. All drivers, except system drivers, must call either register_con_driver()
-   or take_over_console(). register_con_driver() will just add the driver to
+1. All drivers, except system drivers, must call either do_register_con_driver()
+   or do_take_over_console(). do_register_con_driver() will just add the driver to
    the console's internal list. It won't take over the
-   console. take_over_console(), as it name implies, will also take over (or
+   console. do_take_over_console(), as it name implies, will also take over (or
    bind to) the console.
 
 2. All resources allocated during con->con_init() must be released in
@@ -128,10 +128,10 @@ console drivers must follow these guidelines:
    rebind the driver to the console arrives.
 
 4. Upon exit of the driver, ensure that the driver is totally unbound. If the
-   condition is satisfied, then the driver must call unregister_con_driver()
+   condition is satisfied, then the driver must call do_unregister_con_driver()
    or give_up_console().
 
-5. unregister_con_driver() can also be called on conditions which make it
+5. do_unregister_con_driver() can also be called on conditions which make it
    impossible for the driver to service console requests.  This can happen
    with the framebuffer console that suddenly lost all of its drivers.
 

+ 2 - 8
Documentation/cpu-freq/cpu-drivers.txt

@@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ As most cpufreq processors only allow for being set to a few specific
 frequencies, a "frequency table" with some functions might assist in
 some work of the processor driver. Such a "frequency table" consists
 of an array of struct cpufreq_frequency_table entries, with any value in
-"index" you want to use, and the corresponding frequency in
+"driver_data" you want to use, and the corresponding frequency in
 "frequency". At the end of the table, you need to add a
 cpufreq_frequency_table entry with frequency set to CPUFREQ_TABLE_END. And
 if you want to skip one entry in the table, set the frequency to 
@@ -214,10 +214,4 @@ int cpufreq_frequency_table_target(struct cpufreq_policy *policy,
 is the corresponding frequency table helper for the ->target
 stage. Just pass the values to this function, and the unsigned int
 index returns the number of the frequency table entry which contains
-the frequency the CPU shall be set to. PLEASE NOTE: This is not the
-"index" which is in this cpufreq_table_entry.index, but instead
-cpufreq_table[index]. So, the new frequency is
-cpufreq_table[index].frequency, and the value you stored into the
-frequency table "index" field is
-cpufreq_table[index].index.
-
+the frequency the CPU shall be set to.

+ 8 - 6
Documentation/cpu-hotplug.txt

@@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ A: When doing make defconfig, Enable CPU hotplug support
 
    "Processor type and Features" -> Support for Hotpluggable CPUs
 
-Make sure that you have CONFIG_HOTPLUG, and CONFIG_SMP turned on as well.
+Make sure that you have CONFIG_SMP turned on as well.
 
 You would need to enable CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU for SMP suspend/resume support
 as well.
@@ -267,8 +267,8 @@ Q: If i have some kernel code that needs to be aware of CPU arrival and
 A: This is what you would need in your kernel code to receive notifications.
 
 	#include <linux/cpu.h>
-	static int __cpuinit foobar_cpu_callback(struct notifier_block *nfb,
-					    unsigned long action, void *hcpu)
+	static int foobar_cpu_callback(struct notifier_block *nfb,
+				       unsigned long action, void *hcpu)
 	{
 		unsigned int cpu = (unsigned long)hcpu;
 
@@ -285,7 +285,7 @@ A: This is what you would need in your kernel code to receive notifications.
 		return NOTIFY_OK;
 	}
 
-	static struct notifier_block __cpuinitdata foobar_cpu_notifer =
+	static struct notifier_block foobar_cpu_notifer =
 	{
 	   .notifier_call = foobar_cpu_callback,
 	};
@@ -370,8 +370,10 @@ A: There is no clear spec defined way from ACPI that can give us that
    CPUs in MADT as hotpluggable CPUS.  In the case there are no disabled CPUS
    we assume 1/2 the number of CPUs currently present can be hotplugged.
 
-   Caveat: Today's ACPI MADT can only provide 256 entries since the apicid field
-   in MADT is only 8 bits.
+   Caveat: ACPI MADT can only provide 256 entries in systems with only ACPI 2.0c
+   or earlier ACPI version supported, because the apicid field in MADT is only
+   8 bits. From ACPI 3.0, this limitation was removed since the apicid field
+   was extended to 32 bits with x2APIC introduced.
 
 User Space Notification
 

+ 0 - 1
Documentation/crypto/async-tx-api.txt

@@ -222,5 +222,4 @@ drivers/dma/: location for offload engine drivers
 include/linux/async_tx.h: core header file for the async_tx api
 crypto/async_tx/async_tx.c: async_tx interface to dmaengine and common code
 crypto/async_tx/async_memcpy.c: copy offload
-crypto/async_tx/async_memset.c: memory fill offload
 crypto/async_tx/async_xor.c: xor and xor zero sum offload

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/device-mapper/cache.txt

@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ Migration throttling
 
 Migrating data between the origin and cache device uses bandwidth.
 The user can set a throttle to prevent more than a certain amount of
-migration occuring at any one time.  Currently we're not taking any
+migration occurring at any one time.  Currently we're not taking any
 account of normal io traffic going to the devices.  More work needs
 doing here to avoid migrating during those peak io moments.
 

+ 2 - 0
Documentation/device-mapper/dm-raid.txt

@@ -222,3 +222,5 @@ Version History
 1.4.2   Add RAID10 "far" and "offset" algorithm support.
 1.5.0   Add message interface to allow manipulation of the sync_action.
 	New status (STATUSTYPE_INFO) fields: sync_action and mismatch_cnt.
+1.5.1   Add ability to restore transiently failed devices on resume.
+1.5.2   'mismatch_cnt' is zero unless [last_]sync_action is "check".

+ 126 - 0
Documentation/device-mapper/switch.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,126 @@
+dm-switch
+=========
+
+The device-mapper switch target creates a device that supports an
+arbitrary mapping of fixed-size regions of I/O across a fixed set of
+paths.  The path used for any specific region can be switched
+dynamically by sending the target a message.
+
+It maps I/O to underlying block devices efficiently when there is a large
+number of fixed-sized address regions but there is no simple pattern
+that would allow for a compact representation of the mapping such as
+dm-stripe.
+
+Background
+----------
+
+Dell EqualLogic and some other iSCSI storage arrays use a distributed
+frameless architecture.  In this architecture, the storage group
+consists of a number of distinct storage arrays ("members") each having
+independent controllers, disk storage and network adapters.  When a LUN
+is created it is spread across multiple members.  The details of the
+spreading are hidden from initiators connected to this storage system.
+The storage group exposes a single target discovery portal, no matter
+how many members are being used.  When iSCSI sessions are created, each
+session is connected to an eth port on a single member.  Data to a LUN
+can be sent on any iSCSI session, and if the blocks being accessed are
+stored on another member the I/O will be forwarded as required.  This
+forwarding is invisible to the initiator.  The storage layout is also
+dynamic, and the blocks stored on disk may be moved from member to
+member as needed to balance the load.
+
+This architecture simplifies the management and configuration of both
+the storage group and initiators.  In a multipathing configuration, it
+is possible to set up multiple iSCSI sessions to use multiple network
+interfaces on both the host and target to take advantage of the
+increased network bandwidth.  An initiator could use a simple round
+robin algorithm to send I/O across all paths and let the storage array
+members forward it as necessary, but there is a performance advantage to
+sending data directly to the correct member.
+
+A device-mapper table already lets you map different regions of a
+device onto different targets.  However in this architecture the LUN is
+spread with an address region size on the order of 10s of MBs, which
+means the resulting table could have more than a million entries and
+consume far too much memory.
+
+Using this device-mapper switch target we can now build a two-layer
+device hierarchy:
+
+    Upper Tier – Determine which array member the I/O should be sent to.
+    Lower Tier – Load balance amongst paths to a particular member.
+
+The lower tier consists of a single dm multipath device for each member.
+Each of these multipath devices contains the set of paths directly to
+the array member in one priority group, and leverages existing path
+selectors to load balance amongst these paths.  We also build a
+non-preferred priority group containing paths to other array members for
+failover reasons.
+
+The upper tier consists of a single dm-switch device.  This device uses
+a bitmap to look up the location of the I/O and choose the appropriate
+lower tier device to route the I/O.  By using a bitmap we are able to
+use 4 bits for each address range in a 16 member group (which is very
+large for us).  This is a much denser representation than the dm table
+b-tree can achieve.
+
+Construction Parameters
+=======================
+
+    <num_paths> <region_size> <num_optional_args> [<optional_args>...]
+    [<dev_path> <offset>]+
+
+<num_paths>
+    The number of paths across which to distribute the I/O.
+
+<region_size>
+    The number of 512-byte sectors in a region. Each region can be redirected
+    to any of the available paths.
+
+<num_optional_args>
+    The number of optional arguments. Currently, no optional arguments
+    are supported and so this must be zero.
+
+<dev_path>
+    The block device that represents a specific path to the device.
+
+<offset>
+    The offset of the start of data on the specific <dev_path> (in units
+    of 512-byte sectors). This number is added to the sector number when
+    forwarding the request to the specific path. Typically it is zero.
+
+Messages
+========
+
+set_region_mappings <index>:<path_nr> [<index>]:<path_nr> [<index>]:<path_nr>...
+
+Modify the region table by specifying which regions are redirected to
+which paths.
+
+<index>
+    The region number (region size was specified in constructor parameters).
+    If index is omitted, the next region (previous index + 1) is used.
+    Expressed in hexadecimal (WITHOUT any prefix like 0x).
+
+<path_nr>
+    The path number in the range 0 ... (<num_paths> - 1).
+    Expressed in hexadecimal (WITHOUT any prefix like 0x).
+
+Status
+======
+
+No status line is reported.
+
+Example
+=======
+
+Assume that you have volumes vg1/switch0 vg1/switch1 vg1/switch2 with
+the same size.
+
+Create a switch device with 64kB region size:
+    dmsetup create switch --table "0 `blockdev --getsize /dev/vg1/switch0`
+	switch 3 128 0 /dev/vg1/switch0 0 /dev/vg1/switch1 0 /dev/vg1/switch2 0"
+
+Set mappings for the first 7 entries to point to devices switch0, switch1,
+switch2, switch0, switch1, switch2, switch1:
+    dmsetup message switch 0 set_region_mappings 0:0 :1 :2 :0 :1 :2 :1

+ 1 - 2
Documentation/devices.txt

@@ -100,8 +100,7 @@ Your cooperation is appreciated.
 		 10 = /dev/aio		Asynchronous I/O notification interface
 		 11 = /dev/kmsg		Writes to this come out as printk's, reads
 					export the buffered printk records.
-		 12 = /dev/oldmem	Used by crashdump kernels to access
-					the memory of the kernel that crashed.
+		 12 = /dev/oldmem	OBSOLETE - replaced by /proc/vmcore
 
   1 block	RAM disk
 		  0 = /dev/ram0		First RAM disk

+ 172 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/cci.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,172 @@
+=======================================================
+ARM CCI cache coherent interconnect binding description
+=======================================================
+
+ARM multi-cluster systems maintain intra-cluster coherency through a
+cache coherent interconnect (CCI) that is capable of monitoring bus
+transactions and manage coherency, TLB invalidations and memory barriers.
+
+It allows snooping and distributed virtual memory message broadcast across
+clusters, through memory mapped interface, with a global control register
+space and multiple sets of interface control registers, one per slave
+interface.
+
+Bindings for the CCI node follow the ePAPR standard, available from:
+
+www.power.org/documentation/epapr-version-1-1/
+
+with the addition of the bindings described in this document which are
+specific to ARM.
+
+* CCI interconnect node
+
+	Description: Describes a CCI cache coherent Interconnect component
+
+	Node name must be "cci".
+	Node's parent must be the root node /, and the address space visible
+	through the CCI interconnect is the same as the one seen from the
+	root node (ie from CPUs perspective as per DT standard).
+	Every CCI node has to define the following properties:
+
+	- compatible
+		Usage: required
+		Value type: <string>
+		Definition: must be set to
+			    "arm,cci-400"
+
+	- reg
+		Usage: required
+		Value type: <prop-encoded-array>
+		Definition: A standard property. Specifies base physical
+			    address of CCI control registers common to all
+			    interfaces.
+
+	- ranges:
+		Usage: required
+		Value type: <prop-encoded-array>
+		Definition: A standard property. Follow rules in the ePAPR for
+			    hierarchical bus addressing. CCI interfaces
+			    addresses refer to the parent node addressing
+			    scheme to declare their register bases.
+
+	CCI interconnect node can define the following child nodes:
+
+	- CCI control interface nodes
+
+		Node name must be "slave-if".
+		Parent node must be CCI interconnect node.
+
+		A CCI control interface node must contain the following
+		properties:
+
+		- compatible
+			Usage: required
+			Value type: <string>
+			Definition: must be set to
+				    "arm,cci-400-ctrl-if"
+
+		- interface-type:
+			Usage: required
+			Value type: <string>
+			Definition: must be set to one of {"ace", "ace-lite"}
+				    depending on the interface type the node
+				    represents.
+
+		- reg:
+			Usage: required
+			Value type: <prop-encoded-array>
+			Definition: the base address and size of the
+				    corresponding interface programming
+				    registers.
+
+* CCI interconnect bus masters
+
+	Description: masters in the device tree connected to a CCI port
+		     (inclusive of CPUs and their cpu nodes).
+
+	A CCI interconnect bus master node must contain the following
+	properties:
+
+	- cci-control-port:
+		Usage: required
+		Value type: <phandle>
+		Definition: a phandle containing the CCI control interface node
+			    the master is connected to.
+
+Example:
+
+	cpus {
+		#size-cells = <0>;
+		#address-cells = <1>;
+
+		CPU0: cpu@0 {
+			device_type = "cpu";
+			compatible = "arm,cortex-a15";
+			cci-control-port = <&cci_control1>;
+			reg = <0x0>;
+		};
+
+		CPU1: cpu@1 {
+			device_type = "cpu";
+			compatible = "arm,cortex-a15";
+			cci-control-port = <&cci_control1>;
+			reg = <0x1>;
+		};
+
+		CPU2: cpu@100 {
+			device_type = "cpu";
+			compatible = "arm,cortex-a7";
+			cci-control-port = <&cci_control2>;
+			reg = <0x100>;
+		};
+
+		CPU3: cpu@101 {
+			device_type = "cpu";
+			compatible = "arm,cortex-a7";
+			cci-control-port = <&cci_control2>;
+			reg = <0x101>;
+		};
+
+	};
+
+	dma0: dma@3000000 {
+		compatible = "arm,pl330", "arm,primecell";
+		cci-control-port = <&cci_control0>;
+		reg = <0x0 0x3000000 0x0 0x1000>;
+		interrupts = <10>;
+		#dma-cells = <1>;
+		#dma-channels = <8>;
+		#dma-requests = <32>;
+	};
+
+	cci@2c090000 {
+		compatible = "arm,cci-400";
+		#address-cells = <1>;
+		#size-cells = <1>;
+		reg = <0x0 0x2c090000 0 0x1000>;
+		ranges = <0x0 0x0 0x2c090000 0x6000>;
+
+		cci_control0: slave-if@1000 {
+			compatible = "arm,cci-400-ctrl-if";
+			interface-type = "ace-lite";
+			reg = <0x1000 0x1000>;
+		};
+
+		cci_control1: slave-if@4000 {
+			compatible = "arm,cci-400-ctrl-if";
+			interface-type = "ace";
+			reg = <0x4000 0x1000>;
+		};
+
+		cci_control2: slave-if@5000 {
+			compatible = "arm,cci-400-ctrl-if";
+			interface-type = "ace";
+			reg = <0x5000 0x1000>;
+		};
+	};
+
+This CCI node corresponds to a CCI component whose control registers sits
+at address 0x000000002c090000.
+CCI slave interface @0x000000002c091000 is connected to dma controller dma0.
+CCI slave interface @0x000000002c094000 is connected to CPUs {CPU0, CPU1};
+CCI slave interface @0x000000002c095000 is connected to CPUs {CPU2, CPU3};

+ 24 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/global_timer.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
+
+* ARM Global Timer
+	Cortex-A9 are often associated with a per-core Global timer.
+
+** Timer node required properties:
+
+- compatible : Should be "arm,cortex-a9-global-timer"
+		Driver supports versions r2p0 and above.
+
+- interrupts : One interrupt to each core
+
+- reg : Specify the base address and the size of the GT timer
+	register window.
+
+- clocks : Should be phandle to a clock.
+
+Example:
+
+	timer@2c000600 {
+		compatible = "arm,cortex-a9-global-timer";
+		reg = <0x2c000600 0x20>;
+		interrupts = <1 13 0xf01>;
+		clocks = <&arm_periph_clk>;
+	};

+ 10 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/keystone/keystone.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
+TI Keystone Platforms Device Tree Bindings
+-----------------------------------------------
+
+Boards with Keystone2 based devices (TCI66xxK2H) SOC shall have the
+following properties.
+
+Required properties:
+ - compatible: All TI specific devices present in Keystone SOC should be in
+   the form "ti,keystone-*". Generic devices like gic, arch_timers, ns16550
+   type UART should use the specified compatible for those devices.

+ 3 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/l2cc.txt

@@ -16,6 +16,9 @@ Required properties:
      performs the same operation).
 	"marvell,"aurora-outer-cache: Marvell Controller designed to be
 	 compatible with the ARM one with outer cache mode.
+	"bcm,bcm11351-a2-pl310-cache": For Broadcom bcm11351 chipset where an
+	offset needs to be added to the address before passing down to the L2
+	cache controller
 - cache-unified : Specifies the cache is a unified cache.
 - cache-level : Should be set to 2 for a level 2 cache.
 - reg : Physical base address and size of cache controller's memory mapped

+ 14 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/nspire.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
+TI-NSPIRE calculators
+
+Required properties:
+- compatible: Compatible property value should contain "ti,nspire".
+	CX models should have "ti,nspire-cx"
+	Touchpad models should have "ti,nspire-tp"
+	Clickpad models should have "ti,nspire-clp"
+
+Example:
+
+/ {
+	model = "TI-NSPIRE CX";
+	compatible = "ti,nspire-cx";
+	...

+ 3 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/omap/omap.txt

@@ -56,3 +56,6 @@ Boards:
 
 - OMAP5 EVM : Evaluation Module
   compatible = "ti,omap5-evm", "ti,omap5"
+
+- AM43x EPOS EVM
+  compatible = "ti,am43x-epos-evm", "ti,am4372", "ti,am43"

+ 19 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/rtsm-dcscb.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
+ARM Dual Cluster System Configuration Block
+-------------------------------------------
+
+The Dual Cluster System Configuration Block (DCSCB) provides basic
+functionality for controlling clocks, resets and configuration pins in
+the Dual Cluster System implemented by the Real-Time System Model (RTSM).
+
+Required properties:
+
+- compatible : should be "arm,rtsm,dcscb"
+
+- reg : physical base address and the size of the registers window
+
+Example:
+
+	dcscb@60000000 {
+		compatible = "arm,rtsm,dcscb";
+		reg = <0x60000000 0x1000>;
+	};

+ 3 - 3
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/samsung/interrupt-combiner.txt

@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ can combine interrupt sources as a group and provide a single interrupt request
 for the group. The interrupt request from each group are connected to a parent
 interrupt controller, such as GIC in case of Exynos4210.
 
-The interrupt combiner controller consists of multiple combiners. Upto eight
+The interrupt combiner controller consists of multiple combiners. Up to eight
 interrupt sources can be connected to a combiner. The combiner outputs one
 combined interrupt for its eight interrupt sources. The combined interrupt
 is usually connected to a parent interrupt controller.
@@ -14,8 +14,8 @@ A single node in the device tree is used to describe the interrupt combiner
 controller module (which includes multiple combiners). A combiner in the
 interrupt controller module shares config/control registers with other
 combiners. For example, a 32-bit interrupt enable/disable config register
-can accommodate upto 4 interrupt combiners (with each combiner supporting
-upto 8 interrupt sources).
+can accommodate up to 4 interrupt combiners (with each combiner supporting
+up to 8 interrupt sources).
 
 Required properties:
 - compatible: should be "samsung,exynos4210-combiner".

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/spear/shirq.txt

@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ A single node in the device tree is used to describe the shared
 interrupt multiplexor (one node for all groups). A group in the
 interrupt controller shares config/control registers with other groups.
 For example, a 32-bit interrupt enable/disable config register can
-accommodate upto 4 interrupt groups.
+accommodate up to 4 interrupt groups.
 
 Required properties:
   - compatible: should be, either of

+ 5 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/ste-nomadik.txt

@@ -3,6 +3,11 @@ ST-Ericsson Nomadik Device Tree Bindings
 For various board the "board" node may contain specific properties
 that pertain to this particular board, such as board-specific GPIOs.
 
+Required root node property: src
+- Nomadik System and reset controller used for basic chip control, clock
+  and reset line control.
+- compatible: must be "stericsson,nomadik,src"
+
 Boards with the Nomadik SoC include:
 
 S8815 "MiniKit" manufactured by Calao Systems:

+ 46 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/ste-u300.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,46 @@
+ST-Ericsson U300 Device Tree Bindings
+
+For various board the "board" node may contain specific properties
+that pertain to this particular board, such as board-specific GPIOs
+or board power regulator supplies.
+
+Required root node property:
+
+compatible="stericsson,u300";
+
+Required node: syscon
+This contains the system controller.
+- compatible: must be "stericsson,u300-syscon".
+- reg: the base address and size of the system controller.
+
+Boards with the U300 SoC include:
+
+S365 "Small Board U365":
+
+Required node: s365
+This contains the board-specific information.
+- compatible: must be "stericsson,s365".
+- vana15-supply: the regulator supplying the 1.5V to drive the
+  board.
+- syscon: a pointer to the syscon node so we can acccess the
+  syscon registers to set the board as self-powered.
+
+Example:
+
+/ {
+	model = "ST-Ericsson U300";
+	compatible = "stericsson,u300";
+	#address-cells = <1>;
+	#size-cells = <1>;
+
+	s365 {
+		compatible = "stericsson,s365";
+		vana15-supply = <&ab3100_ldo_d_reg>;
+		syscon = <&syscon>;
+	};
+
+	syscon: syscon@c0011000 {
+		compatible = "stericsson,u300-syscon";
+		reg = <0xc0011000 0x1000>;
+	};
+};

+ 5 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/ata/ahci-platform.txt

@@ -12,6 +12,11 @@ Optional properties:
 - calxeda,port-phys: phandle-combophy and lane assignment, which maps each
 			SATA port to a combophy and a lane within that
 			combophy
+- calxeda,sgpio-gpio: phandle-gpio bank, bit offset, and default on or off,
+			which indicates that the driver supports SGPIO
+			indicator lights using the indicated GPIOs
+- calxeda,led-order : a u32 array that map port numbers to offsets within the
+			SGPIO bitstream.
 - dma-coherent      : Present if dma operations are coherent
 
 Example:

+ 19 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/ata/atmel-at91_cf.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
+Atmel AT91RM9200 CompactFlash
+
+Required properties:
+- compatible : "atmel,at91rm9200-cf".
+- reg : should specify localbus address and size used.
+- gpios : specifies the gpio pins to control the CF device. Detect
+  and reset gpio's are mandatory while irq and vcc gpio's are
+  optional and may be set to 0 if not present.
+
+Example:
+compact-flash@50000000 {
+	compatible = "atmel,at91rm9200-cf";
+	reg = <0x50000000 0x30000000>;
+	gpios = <&pioC 13 0	/* irq */
+		 &pioC 15 0 	/* detect */
+		 0		/* vcc */
+		 &pioC  5 0	/* reset */
+		>;
+};

+ 49 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/bus/imx-weim.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
+Device tree bindings for i.MX Wireless External Interface Module (WEIM)
+
+The term "wireless" does not imply that the WEIM is literally an interface
+without wires. It simply means that this module was originally designed for
+wireless and mobile applications that use low-power technology.
+
+The actual devices are instantiated from the child nodes of a WEIM node.
+
+Required properties:
+
+ - compatible:		Should be set to "fsl,imx6q-weim"
+ - reg:			A resource specifier for the register space
+			(see the example below)
+ - clocks:		the clock, see the example below.
+ - #address-cells:	Must be set to 2 to allow memory address translation
+ - #size-cells:		Must be set to 1 to allow CS address passing
+ - ranges:		Must be set up to reflect the memory layout with four
+			integer values for each chip-select line in use:
+
+			   <cs-number> 0 <physical address of mapping> <size>
+
+Timing property for child nodes. It is mandatory, not optional.
+
+ - fsl,weim-cs-timing:	The timing array, contains 6 timing values for the
+			child node. We can get the CS index from the child
+			node's "reg" property. This property contains the values
+			for the registers EIM_CSnGCR1, EIM_CSnGCR2, EIM_CSnRCR1,
+			EIM_CSnRCR2, EIM_CSnWCR1, EIM_CSnWCR2 in this order.
+
+Example for an imx6q-sabreauto board, the NOR flash connected to the WEIM:
+
+	weim: weim@021b8000 {
+		compatible = "fsl,imx6q-weim";
+		reg = <0x021b8000 0x4000>;
+		clocks = <&clks 196>;
+		#address-cells = <2>;
+		#size-cells = <1>;
+		ranges = <0 0 0x08000000 0x08000000>;
+
+		nor@0,0 {
+			compatible = "cfi-flash";
+			reg = <0 0 0x02000000>;
+			#address-cells = <1>;
+			#size-cells = <1>;
+			bank-width = <2>;
+			fsl,weim-cs-timing = <0x00620081 0x00000001 0x1c022000
+					0x0000c000 0x1404a38e 0x00000000>;
+		};
+	};

+ 0 - 1
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/bus/ti-gpmc.txt

@@ -95,7 +95,6 @@ GPMC chip-select settings properties for child nodes. All are optional.
 - gpmc,burst-wrap	Enables wrap bursting
 - gpmc,burst-read	Enables read page/burst mode
 - gpmc,burst-write	Enables write page/burst mode
-- gpmc,device-nand	Device is NAND
 - gpmc,device-width	Total width of device(s) connected to a GPMC
 			chip-select in bytes. The GPMC supports 8-bit
 			and 16-bit devices and so this property must be

+ 7 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/altr_socfpga.txt

@@ -9,6 +9,9 @@ Required properties:
 	"altr,socfpga-pll-clock" - for a PLL clock
 	"altr,socfpga-perip-clock" - The peripheral clock divided from the
 		PLL clock.
+	"altr,socfpga-gate-clk" - Clocks that directly feed peripherals and
+		can get gated.
+
 - reg : shall be the control register offset from CLOCK_MANAGER's base for the clock.
 - clocks : shall be the input parent clock phandle for the clock. This is
 	either an oscillator or a pll output.
@@ -16,3 +19,7 @@ Required properties:
 
 Optional properties:
 - fixed-divider : If clocks have a fixed divider value, use this property.
+- clk-gate : For "socfpga-gate-clk", clk-gate contains the gating register
+        and the bit index.
+- div-reg : For "socfpga-gate-clk", div-reg contains the divider register, bit shift,
+        and width.

+ 64 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/clk-exynos-audss.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,64 @@
+* Samsung Audio Subsystem Clock Controller
+
+The Samsung Audio Subsystem clock controller generates and supplies clocks
+to Audio Subsystem block available in the S5PV210 and Exynos SoCs. The clock
+binding described here is applicable to all SoC's in Exynos family.
+
+Required Properties:
+
+- compatible: should be one of the following:
+  - "samsung,exynos4210-audss-clock" - controller compatible with all Exynos4 SoCs.
+  - "samsung,exynos5250-audss-clock" - controller compatible with all Exynos5 SoCs.
+
+- reg: physical base address and length of the controller's register set.
+
+- #clock-cells: should be 1.
+
+The following is the list of clocks generated by the controller. Each clock is
+assigned an identifier and client nodes use this identifier to specify the
+clock which they consume. Some of the clocks are available only on a particular
+Exynos4 SoC and this is specified where applicable.
+
+Provided clocks:
+
+Clock           ID      SoC (if specific)
+-----------------------------------------------
+
+mout_audss      0
+mout_i2s        1
+dout_srp        2
+dout_aud_bus    3
+dout_i2s        4
+srp_clk         5
+i2s_bus         6
+sclk_i2s        7
+pcm_bus         8
+sclk_pcm        9
+
+Example 1: An example of a clock controller node is listed below.
+
+clock_audss: audss-clock-controller@3810000 {
+	compatible = "samsung,exynos5250-audss-clock";
+	reg = <0x03810000 0x0C>;
+	#clock-cells = <1>;
+};
+
+Example 2: I2S controller node that consumes the clock generated by the clock
+           controller. Refer to the standard clock bindings for information
+           about 'clocks' and 'clock-names' property.
+
+i2s0: i2s@03830000 {
+	compatible = "samsung,i2s-v5";
+	reg = <0x03830000 0x100>;
+	dmas = <&pdma0 10
+		&pdma0 9
+		&pdma0 8>;
+	dma-names = "tx", "rx", "tx-sec";
+	clocks = <&clock_audss EXYNOS_I2S_BUS>,
+		<&clock_audss EXYNOS_I2S_BUS>,
+		<&clock_audss EXYNOS_SCLK_I2S>,
+		<&clock_audss EXYNOS_MOUT_AUDSS>,
+		<&clock_audss EXYNOS_MOUT_I2S>;
+	clock-names = "iis", "i2s_opclk0", "i2s_opclk1",
+	"mout_audss", "mout_i2s";
+};

+ 2 - 1
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/exynos4-clock.txt

@@ -102,6 +102,7 @@ Exynos4 SoC and this is specified where applicable.
   sclk_spi0_isp       174     Exynos4x12
   sclk_spi1_isp       175     Exynos4x12
   sclk_uart_isp       176     Exynos4x12
+  sclk_fimg2d         177
 
 	      [Peripheral Clock Gates]
 
@@ -129,7 +130,7 @@ Exynos4 SoC and this is specified where applicable.
   smmu_mfcl           274
   smmu_mfcr           275
   g3d                 276
-  g2d                 277     Exynos4210
+  g2d                 277
   rotator             278     Exynos4210
   mdma                279     Exynos4210
   smmu_g2d            280     Exynos4210

+ 201 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/exynos5420-clock.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,201 @@
+* Samsung Exynos5420 Clock Controller
+
+The Exynos5420 clock controller generates and supplies clock to various
+controllers within the Exynos5420 SoC.
+
+Required Properties:
+
+- comptible: should be one of the following.
+  - "samsung,exynos5420-clock" - controller compatible with Exynos5420 SoC.
+
+- reg: physical base address of the controller and length of memory mapped
+  region.
+
+- #clock-cells: should be 1.
+
+The following is the list of clocks generated by the controller. Each clock is
+assigned an identifier and client nodes use this identifier to specify the
+clock which they consume.
+
+
+       [Core Clocks]
+
+  Clock			ID
+  ----------------------------
+
+  fin_pll		1
+
+  [Clock Gate for Special Clocks]
+
+  Clock			ID
+  ----------------------------
+  sclk_uart0		128
+  sclk_uart1		129
+  sclk_uart2		130
+  sclk_uart3		131
+  sclk_mmc0		132
+  sclk_mmc1		133
+  sclk_mmc2		134
+  sclk_spi0		135
+  sclk_spi1		136
+  sclk_spi2		137
+  sclk_i2s1		138
+  sclk_i2s2		139
+  sclk_pcm1		140
+  sclk_pcm2		141
+  sclk_spdif		142
+  sclk_hdmi		143
+  sclk_pixel		144
+  sclk_dp1		145
+  sclk_mipi1		146
+  sclk_fimd1		147
+  sclk_maudio0		148
+  sclk_maupcm0		149
+  sclk_usbd300		150
+  sclk_usbd301		151
+  sclk_usbphy300	152
+  sclk_usbphy301	153
+  sclk_unipro		154
+  sclk_pwm		155
+  sclk_gscl_wa		156
+  sclk_gscl_wb		157
+
+   [Peripheral Clock Gates]
+
+  Clock			ID
+  ----------------------------
+
+  aclk66_peric		256
+  uart0			257
+  uart1			258
+  uart2			259
+  uart3			260
+  i2c0			261
+  i2c1			262
+  i2c2			263
+  i2c3			264
+  i2c4			265
+  i2c5			266
+  i2c6			267
+  i2c7			268
+  i2c_hdmi		269
+  tsadc			270
+  spi0			271
+  spi1			272
+  spi2			273
+  keyif			274
+  i2s1			275
+  i2s2			276
+  pcm1			277
+  pcm2			278
+  pwm			279
+  spdif			280
+  i2c8			281
+  i2c9			282
+  i2c10			283
+  aclk66_psgen		300
+  chipid		301
+  sysreg		302
+  tzpc0			303
+  tzpc1			304
+  tzpc2			305
+  tzpc3			306
+  tzpc4			307
+  tzpc5			308
+  tzpc6			309
+  tzpc7			310
+  tzpc8			311
+  tzpc9			312
+  hdmi_cec		313
+  seckey		314
+  mct			315
+  wdt			316
+  rtc			317
+  tmu			318
+  tmu_gpu		319
+  pclk66_gpio		330
+  aclk200_fsys2		350
+  mmc0			351
+  mmc1			352
+  mmc2			353
+  sromc			354
+  ufs			355
+  aclk200_fsys		360
+  tsi			361
+  pdma0			362
+  pdma1			363
+  rtic			364
+  usbh20		365
+  usbd300		366
+  usbd301		377
+  aclk400_mscl		380
+  mscl0			381
+  mscl1			382
+  mscl2			383
+  smmu_mscl0		384
+  smmu_mscl1		385
+  smmu_mscl2		386
+  aclk333		400
+  mfc			401
+  smmu_mfcl		402
+  smmu_mfcr		403
+  aclk200_disp1		410
+  dsim1			411
+  dp1			412
+  hdmi			413
+  aclk300_disp1		420
+  fimd1			421
+  smmu_fimd1		422
+  aclk166		430
+  mixer			431
+  aclk266		440
+  rotator		441
+  mdma1			442
+  smmu_rotator		443
+  smmu_mdma1		444
+  aclk300_jpeg		450
+  jpeg			451
+  jpeg2			452
+  smmu_jpeg		453
+  aclk300_gscl		460
+  smmu_gscl0		461
+  smmu_gscl1		462
+  gscl_wa		463
+  gscl_wb		464
+  gscl0			465
+  gscl1			466
+  clk_3aa		467
+  aclk266_g2d		470
+  sss			471
+  slim_sss		472
+  mdma0			473
+  aclk333_g2d		480
+  g2d			481
+  aclk333_432_gscl	490
+  smmu_3aa		491
+  smmu_fimcl0		492
+  smmu_fimcl1		493
+  smmu_fimcl3		494
+  fimc_lite3		495
+  aclk_g3d		500
+  g3d			501
+
+Example 1: An example of a clock controller node is listed below.
+
+	clock: clock-controller@0x10010000 {
+		compatible = "samsung,exynos5420-clock";
+		reg = <0x10010000 0x30000>;
+		#clock-cells = <1>;
+	};
+
+Example 2: UART controller node that consumes the clock generated by the clock
+	   controller. Refer to the standard clock bindings for information
+	   about 'clocks' and 'clock-names' property.
+
+	serial@13820000 {
+		compatible = "samsung,exynos4210-uart";
+		reg = <0x13820000 0x100>;
+		interrupts = <0 54 0>;
+		clocks = <&clock 259>, <&clock 130>;
+		clock-names = "uart", "clk_uart_baud0";
+	};

+ 13 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/imx5-clock.txt

@@ -184,6 +184,19 @@ clocks and IDs.
 	cko2			170
 	srtc_gate		171
 	pata_gate		172
+	sata_gate		173
+	spdif_xtal_sel		174
+	spdif0_sel		175
+	spdif1_sel		176
+	spdif0_pred		177
+	spdif0_podf		178
+	spdif1_pred		179
+	spdif1_podf		180
+	spdif0_com_sel		181
+	spdif1_com_sel		182
+	spdif0_gate		183
+	spdif1_gate		184
+	spdif_ipg_gate		185
 
 Examples (for mx53):
 

+ 1 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/imx6q-clock.txt

@@ -208,6 +208,7 @@ clocks and IDs.
 	pll4_post_div		193
 	pll5_post_div		194
 	pll5_video_div		195
+	eim_slow      		196
 
 Examples:
 

+ 10 - 0
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/clock/imx6sl-clock.txt

@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
+* Clock bindings for Freescale i.MX6 SoloLite
+
+Required properties:
+- compatible: Should be "fsl,imx6sl-ccm"
+- reg: Address and length of the register set
+- #clock-cells: Should be <1>
+
+The clock consumer should specify the desired clock by having the clock
+ID in its "clocks" phandle cell.  See include/dt-bindings/clock/imx6sl-clock.h
+for the full list of i.MX6 SoloLite clock IDs.

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