* [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64
@ 2006-04-29 18:30 Mikael Pettersson
2006-04-29 20:36 ` Jeff Garzik
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Mikael Pettersson @ 2006-04-29 18:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: discuss; +Cc: linux-input, linux-kernel
I have a pair of Athlon64 machines that dual-boot 32-bit and
64-bit kernels. One annoying difference between the kernels
is that the PC Speaker driver (CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR=y) only
works in the 32-bit kernels. In the 64-bit kernels it remains
inactive and doesn't even generate any boot-time initialisation
or error messages.
Today I debugged that issue, and found that the PC Speaker
driver's ->probe() routine doesn't even get called in the
64-bit kernels. The reason for that is that the arch code
apparently has to explictly add a "pcspkr" platform device
in order for the driver core to call the ->probe() routine.
arch/i386/kernel/setup.c unconditionally adds a "pcspkr"
device, but the x86_64 kernel has no code at all related to
the PC Speaker.
The patch below copies the relevant code from i386 to x86_64,
which makes the PC Speaker work for me on x86_64.
Is there a better way to do this? ACPI?
/Mikael
diff -rupN linux-2.6.17-rc3/arch/x86_64/kernel/setup.c linux-2.6.17-rc3.x86_64-pcspkr/arch/x86_64/kernel/setup.c
--- linux-2.6.17-rc3/arch/x86_64/kernel/setup.c 2006-04-28 20:54:10.000000000 +0200
+++ linux-2.6.17-rc3.x86_64-pcspkr/arch/x86_64/kernel/setup.c 2006-04-29 18:42:08.000000000 +0200
@@ -1426,3 +1426,22 @@ struct seq_operations cpuinfo_op = {
.show = show_cpuinfo,
};
+#ifdef CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR
+#include <linux/platform_device.h>
+static __init int add_pcspkr(void)
+{
+ struct platform_device *pd;
+ int ret;
+
+ pd = platform_device_alloc("pcspkr", -1);
+ if (!pd)
+ return -ENOMEM;
+
+ ret = platform_device_add(pd);
+ if (ret)
+ platform_device_put(pd);
+
+ return ret;
+}
+device_initcall(add_pcspkr);
+#endif
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread* Re: [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-04-29 18:30 [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 Mikael Pettersson @ 2006-04-29 20:36 ` Jeff Garzik 2006-04-29 21:00 ` Matthieu CASTET 2006-04-30 8:46 ` [discuss] " Andi Kleen 2 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Jeff Garzik @ 2006-04-29 20:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Mikael Pettersson; +Cc: discuss, linux-input, linux-kernel, Andrew Morton Mikael Pettersson wrote: > I have a pair of Athlon64 machines that dual-boot 32-bit and > 64-bit kernels. One annoying difference between the kernels > is that the PC Speaker driver (CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR=y) only > works in the 32-bit kernels. In the 64-bit kernels it remains > inactive and doesn't even generate any boot-time initialisation > or error messages. > > Today I debugged that issue, and found that the PC Speaker > driver's ->probe() routine doesn't even get called in the > 64-bit kernels. The reason for that is that the arch code > apparently has to explictly add a "pcspkr" platform device > in order for the driver core to call the ->probe() routine. > arch/i386/kernel/setup.c unconditionally adds a "pcspkr" > device, but the x86_64 kernel has no code at all related to > the PC Speaker. Wow, thanks. I was wondering why my PC speaker didn't seem to work. And here I was, blaming Fedora... Jeff ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-04-29 18:30 [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 Mikael Pettersson 2006-04-29 20:36 ` Jeff Garzik @ 2006-04-29 21:00 ` Matthieu CASTET 2006-04-30 8:50 ` [discuss] " Andi Kleen 2006-04-30 8:46 ` [discuss] " Andi Kleen 2 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Matthieu CASTET @ 2006-04-29 21:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-kernel; +Cc: discuss Hi, Le Sat, 29 Apr 2006 20:30:10 +0200, Mikael Pettersson a écrit : > > Is there a better way to do this? ACPI? > Yes, I believe using PNP layer (that use ACPI with pnpacpi) with PNP0800 will be cleaner. Matthieu ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [discuss] Re: [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-04-29 21:00 ` Matthieu CASTET @ 2006-04-30 8:50 ` Andi Kleen 2006-05-02 17:37 ` matthieu castet 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Andi Kleen @ 2006-04-30 8:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: discuss; +Cc: Matthieu CASTET, linux-kernel, linux-acpi On Saturday 29 April 2006 23:00, Matthieu CASTET wrote: > Hi, > > Le Sat, 29 Apr 2006 20:30:10 +0200, Mikael Pettersson a écrit : > > > > > > Is there a better way to do this? ACPI? > > > Yes, I believe using PNP layer (that use ACPI with pnpacpi) with PNP0800 > will be cleaner. Please do a patch then. -Andi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [discuss] Re: [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-04-30 8:50 ` [discuss] " Andi Kleen @ 2006-05-02 17:37 ` matthieu castet 2006-05-02 17:50 ` Andi Kleen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: matthieu castet @ 2006-05-02 17:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andi Kleen; +Cc: discuss, linux-kernel, linux-acpi [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 454 bytes --] Hi, Andi Kleen wrote: > On Saturday 29 April 2006 23:00, Matthieu CASTET wrote: > >>Hi, >> >>Le Sat, 29 Apr 2006 20:30:10 +0200, Mikael Pettersson a écrit : >> >> >> >>>Is there a better way to do this? ACPI? >>> >> >>Yes, I believe using PNP layer (that use ACPI with pnpacpi) with PNP0800 >>will be cleaner. > > > Please do a patch then. > Is something like that is acceptable ? Matthieu Signed-off-by: Matthieu CASTET <castet.matthieu@free.fr> [-- Attachment #2: pcspkr_pnp.diff --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 4712 bytes --] --- linux.old/drivers/input/misc/pcspkr.c 2006-04-30 18:16:09.000000000 +0200 +++ linux/drivers/input/misc/pcspkr.c 2006-05-02 19:35:09.000000000 +0200 @@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ #include <linux/init.h> #include <linux/input.h> #include <linux/platform_device.h> +#include <linux/pnp.h> #include <asm/8253pit.h> #include <asm/io.h> @@ -26,6 +27,7 @@ static struct platform_device *pcspkr_platform_device; static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(i8253_beep_lock); +static int pnp_registered; static int pcspkr_event(struct input_dev *dev, unsigned int type, unsigned int code, int value) { @@ -64,7 +66,7 @@ return 0; } -static int __devinit pcspkr_probe(struct platform_device *dev) +static int __devinit pcspkr_probe(struct device *dev, struct input_dev **pcspkr_dev_pointer) { struct input_dev *pcspkr_dev; int err; @@ -79,7 +81,7 @@ pcspkr_dev->id.vendor = 0x001f; pcspkr_dev->id.product = 0x0001; pcspkr_dev->id.version = 0x0100; - pcspkr_dev->cdev.dev = &dev->dev; + pcspkr_dev->cdev.dev = dev; pcspkr_dev->evbit[0] = BIT(EV_SND); pcspkr_dev->sndbit[0] = BIT(SND_BELL) | BIT(SND_TONE); @@ -90,32 +92,48 @@ input_free_device(pcspkr_dev); return err; } + *pcspkr_dev_pointer = pcspkr_dev; - platform_set_drvdata(dev, pcspkr_dev); + return 0; +} + +static int __devexit pcspkr_remove(struct input_dev *pcspkr_dev) +{ + input_unregister_device(pcspkr_dev); + /* turn off the speaker */ + pcspkr_event(NULL, EV_SND, SND_BELL, 0); return 0; } -static int __devexit pcspkr_remove(struct platform_device *dev) +static int __devinit pcspkr_probe_platform(struct platform_device *dev) +{ + struct input_dev *pcspkr_dev; + int err; + err = pcspkr_probe(&dev->dev, &pcspkr_dev); + if (err == 0) + platform_set_drvdata(dev, pcspkr_dev); + return err; +} + +static int __devexit pcspkr_remove_platform(struct platform_device *dev) { struct input_dev *pcspkr_dev = platform_get_drvdata(dev); - input_unregister_device(pcspkr_dev); + pcspkr_remove(pcspkr_dev); platform_set_drvdata(dev, NULL); - /* turn off the speaker */ - pcspkr_event(NULL, EV_SND, SND_BELL, 0); return 0; } -static int pcspkr_suspend(struct platform_device *dev, pm_message_t state) +static int pcspkr_suspend_platform(struct platform_device *dev, pm_message_t state) { pcspkr_event(NULL, EV_SND, SND_BELL, 0); return 0; } -static void pcspkr_shutdown(struct platform_device *dev) +static void pcspkr_shutdown_platform(struct platform_device *dev) { /* turn off the speaker */ pcspkr_event(NULL, EV_SND, SND_BELL, 0); @@ -126,17 +144,80 @@ .name = "pcspkr", .owner = THIS_MODULE, }, - .probe = pcspkr_probe, - .remove = __devexit_p(pcspkr_remove), - .suspend = pcspkr_suspend, - .shutdown = pcspkr_shutdown, + .probe = pcspkr_probe_platform, + .remove = __devexit_p(pcspkr_remove_platform), + .suspend = pcspkr_suspend_platform, + .shutdown = pcspkr_shutdown_platform, +}; + +#ifdef CONFIG_PNP +static struct pnp_device_id pcspkr_pnpids[] = { + { .id = "PNP0800" }, + { .id = "" } +}; + +MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(pnp, pcspkr_pnpids); + +static int __devinit pcspkr_pnp_probe(struct pnp_dev *pnp_dev, + const struct pnp_device_id *id) +{ + struct input_dev *pcspkr_dev; + int err; + err = pcspkr_probe(&pnp_dev->dev, &pcspkr_dev); + if (err == 0) { + pnp_set_drvdata(pnp_dev, pcspkr_dev); + pnp_registered++; + } + return err; +} + +static void __devexit pcspkr_pnp_remove(struct pnp_dev *dev) +{ + struct input_dev *pcspkr_dev = (struct input_dev *)pnp_get_drvdata(dev); + + pcspkr_remove(pcspkr_dev); + pnp_set_drvdata(dev, NULL); + + return; +} + +#ifdef CONFIG_PM +static int pcspkr_suspend_pnp(struct pnp_dev *pdev, pm_message_t state) +{ + pcspkr_event(NULL, EV_SND, SND_BELL, 0); + + return 0; +} +#endif + +static struct pnp_driver pcspkr_pnp_driver = { + .name = "pcspkr", + .id_table = pcspkr_pnpids, + .probe = pcspkr_pnp_probe, + .remove = __devexit_p(pcspkr_pnp_remove), +#ifdef CONFIG_PM + .suspend = pcspkr_suspend_pnp, +#endif }; +#else +static struct pnp_driver pcspkr_pnp_driver; +#endif static int __init pcspkr_init(void) { int err; + err = pnp_register_driver(&pcspkr_pnp_driver); + if (err < 0) + pnp_registered = 0; + if (err == 0 && pnp_registered == 0) + pnp_unregister_driver(&pcspkr_pnp_driver); + + if (pnp_registered) + return 0; + + /* Try platform driver if pnp failed or found nothing */ err = platform_driver_register(&pcspkr_platform_driver); if (err) return err; @@ -163,6 +244,10 @@ static void __exit pcspkr_exit(void) { + if (pnp_registered) { + pnp_unregister_driver(&pcspkr_pnp_driver); + return; + } platform_device_unregister(pcspkr_platform_device); platform_driver_unregister(&pcspkr_platform_driver); } ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [discuss] Re: [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-05-02 17:37 ` matthieu castet @ 2006-05-02 17:50 ` Andi Kleen 2006-05-02 20:33 ` matthieu castet 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Andi Kleen @ 2006-05-02 17:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: discuss; +Cc: matthieu castet, linux-kernel, linux-acpi On Tuesday 02 May 2006 19:37, matthieu castet wrote: > Hi, > > Andi Kleen wrote: > > On Saturday 29 April 2006 23:00, Matthieu CASTET wrote: > > > >>Hi, > >> > >>Le Sat, 29 Apr 2006 20:30:10 +0200, Mikael Pettersson a écrit : > >> > >> > >> > >>>Is there a better way to do this? ACPI? > >>> > >> > >>Yes, I believe using PNP layer (that use ACPI with pnpacpi) with PNP0800 > >>will be cleaner. > > > > > > Please do a patch then. > > > Is something like that is acceptable ? Does it work? Also I have no idea if all x86 systems report the PC speaker in ACPI - a small survey of that would be probably a good idea. I guess just most of them reporting it would be reasonable. -Andi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [discuss] Re: [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-05-02 17:50 ` Andi Kleen @ 2006-05-02 20:33 ` matthieu castet 2006-05-02 20:35 ` Andi Kleen 2006-05-02 20:54 ` Andi Kleen 0 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: matthieu castet @ 2006-05-02 20:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andi Kleen; +Cc: discuss, linux-kernel, linux-acpi Andi Kleen wrote: > Does it work? > of course (at least on x86) ! > Also I have no idea if all x86 systems report the PC speaker in ACPI - a small > survey of that would be probably a good idea. I guess just most of them reporting it would be > reasonable. That's why I keep the platform driver : the logic is try with ACPI in order to discover if there is a speaker. If we failed, let's try the platform driver. Matthieu PS : even system without ACPI should report the speaker with pnpbios. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [discuss] Re: [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-05-02 20:33 ` matthieu castet @ 2006-05-02 20:35 ` Andi Kleen 2006-05-02 20:54 ` Andi Kleen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Andi Kleen @ 2006-05-02 20:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: matthieu castet; +Cc: discuss, linux-kernel, linux-acpi On Tuesday 02 May 2006 22:33, matthieu castet wrote: > Andi Kleen wrote: > > > Does it work? > > > of course (at least on x86) ! > > > Also I have no idea if all x86 systems report the PC speaker in ACPI - a small > > survey of that would be probably a good idea. I guess just most of them reporting it would be > > reasonable. > That's why I keep the platform driver : > the logic is try with ACPI in order to discover if there is a speaker. > If we failed, let's try the platform driver. Ok - you mean just keeping the old code for that as fallback That makes sense. > Matthieu > > PS : even system without ACPI should report the speaker with pnpbios. PNP BIOS doesn't work on 64bit. -Andi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [discuss] Re: [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-05-02 20:33 ` matthieu castet 2006-05-02 20:35 ` Andi Kleen @ 2006-05-02 20:54 ` Andi Kleen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Andi Kleen @ 2006-05-02 20:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: discuss; +Cc: matthieu castet, linux-kernel, linux-acpi On Tuesday 02 May 2006 22:33, matthieu castet wrote: > > Also I have no idea if all x86 systems report the PC speaker in ACPI - a small > > survey of that would be probably a good idea. I guess just most of them reporting it would be > > reasonable. > That's why I keep the platform driver : > the logic is try with ACPI in order to discover if there is a speaker. > If we failed, let's try the platform driver. The patch doesn't apply to 2.6.17rc3-git2. For what tree did you do it? Also can you please include a full changelog in the patch? Thanks, -Andi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [discuss] [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-04-29 18:30 [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 Mikael Pettersson 2006-04-29 20:36 ` Jeff Garzik 2006-04-29 21:00 ` Matthieu CASTET @ 2006-04-30 8:46 ` Andi Kleen 2006-04-30 14:32 ` Goswin von Brederlow 2006-05-01 7:09 ` Jan Engelhardt 2 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Andi Kleen @ 2006-04-30 8:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: discuss; +Cc: Mikael Pettersson, linux-input, linux-kernel, linux-acpi On Saturday 29 April 2006 20:30, Mikael Pettersson wrote: > I have a pair of Athlon64 machines that dual-boot 32-bit and > 64-bit kernels. One annoying difference between the kernels > is that the PC Speaker driver (CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR=y) only > works in the 32-bit kernels. Ah, I would consider this more a feature than a bug but ok :) > In the 64-bit kernels it remains > inactive and doesn't even generate any boot-time initialisation > or error messages. > > Today I debugged that issue, and found that the PC Speaker > driver's ->probe() routine doesn't even get called in the > 64-bit kernels. The reason for that is that the arch code > apparently has to explictly add a "pcspkr" platform device > in order for the driver core to call the ->probe() routine. > arch/i386/kernel/setup.c unconditionally adds a "pcspkr" > device, but the x86_64 kernel has no code at all related to > the PC Speaker. > > The patch below copies the relevant code from i386 to x86_64, > which makes the PC Speaker work for me on x86_64. Ok thanks. Applied. > Is there a better way to do this? ACPI? Maybe. ACPI folks, any opinion? -Andi (known to rip out the speaker cables in new machines) > > /Mikael > > diff -rupN linux-2.6.17-rc3/arch/x86_64/kernel/setup.c linux-2.6.17-rc3.x86_64-pcspkr/arch/x86_64/kernel/setup.c > --- linux-2.6.17-rc3/arch/x86_64/kernel/setup.c 2006-04-28 20:54:10.000000000 +0200 > +++ linux-2.6.17-rc3.x86_64-pcspkr/arch/x86_64/kernel/setup.c 2006-04-29 18:42:08.000000000 +0200 > @@ -1426,3 +1426,22 @@ struct seq_operations cpuinfo_op = { > .show = show_cpuinfo, > }; > > +#ifdef CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR > +#include <linux/platform_device.h> > +static __init int add_pcspkr(void) > +{ > + struct platform_device *pd; > + int ret; > + > + pd = platform_device_alloc("pcspkr", -1); > + if (!pd) > + return -ENOMEM; > + > + ret = platform_device_add(pd); > + if (ret) > + platform_device_put(pd); > + > + return ret; > +} > +device_initcall(add_pcspkr); > +#endif > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [discuss] [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-04-30 8:46 ` [discuss] " Andi Kleen @ 2006-04-30 14:32 ` Goswin von Brederlow 2006-04-30 16:29 ` Alistair John Strachan 2006-05-01 7:09 ` Jan Engelhardt 1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Goswin von Brederlow @ 2006-04-30 14:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andi Kleen Cc: discuss, Mikael Pettersson, linux-input, linux-kernel, linux-acpi Andi Kleen <ak@suse.de> writes: > On Saturday 29 April 2006 20:30, Mikael Pettersson wrote: >> I have a pair of Athlon64 machines that dual-boot 32-bit and >> 64-bit kernels. One annoying difference between the kernels >> is that the PC Speaker driver (CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR=y) only >> works in the 32-bit kernels. > > Ah, I would consider this more a feature than a bug but ok :) > >> In the 64-bit kernels it remains >> inactive and doesn't even generate any boot-time initialisation >> or error messages. That means that the system wouldn't beep on the console or when you call "beep", right? With 2.6.8 x86_64 that worked without problems. Since I updated to 2.6.15 the system is silent. Could it be that this is a recent problem? MfG Goswin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [discuss] [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-04-30 14:32 ` Goswin von Brederlow @ 2006-04-30 16:29 ` Alistair John Strachan 0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Alistair John Strachan @ 2006-04-30 16:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Goswin von Brederlow Cc: Andi Kleen, discuss, Mikael Pettersson, linux-input, linux-kernel, linux-acpi On Sunday 30 April 2006 15:32, Goswin von Brederlow wrote: > Andi Kleen <ak@suse.de> writes: > > On Saturday 29 April 2006 20:30, Mikael Pettersson wrote: > >> I have a pair of Athlon64 machines that dual-boot 32-bit and > >> 64-bit kernels. One annoying difference between the kernels > >> is that the PC Speaker driver (CONFIG_INPUT_PCSPKR=y) only > >> works in the 32-bit kernels. > > > > Ah, I would consider this more a feature than a bug but ok :) > > > >> In the 64-bit kernels it remains > >> inactive and doesn't even generate any boot-time initialisation > >> or error messages. > > That means that the system wouldn't beep on the console or when you > call "beep", right? > > With 2.6.8 x86_64 that worked without problems. Since I updated to > 2.6.15 the system is silent. > > Could it be that this is a recent problem? I think it's as described; the pcspkr driver changed in design around this time and needs to be plugged, now. It's probably exactly the same issue. -- Cheers, Alistair. Third year Computer Science undergraduate. 1F2 55 South Clerk Street, Edinburgh, UK. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [discuss] [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 2006-04-30 8:46 ` [discuss] " Andi Kleen 2006-04-30 14:32 ` Goswin von Brederlow @ 2006-05-01 7:09 ` Jan Engelhardt 1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Jan Engelhardt @ 2006-05-01 7:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andi Kleen Cc: discuss, Mikael Pettersson, linux-input, linux-kernel, linux-acpi >> Is there a better way to do this? ACPI? > >Maybe. ACPI folks, any opinion? > >-Andi (known to rip out the speaker cables in new machines) > Leave the cables, try this for ttyX: diff --fast -Ndpru linux-2.6.16-rc1-git3-SUSE20060124/drivers/char/vt.c linux-2.6-AS24/drivers/char/vt.c --- linux-2.6.16-rc1-git3-SUSE20060124/drivers/char/vt.c 2006-01-28 19:01:17.000000000 +0100 +++ linux-2.6-AS24/drivers/char/vt.c 2006-01-28 19:01:18.860985000 +0100 @@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ const struct consw *conswitchp; * Here is the default bell parameters: 750HZ, 1/8th of a second */ #define DEFAULT_BELL_PITCH 750 -#define DEFAULT_BELL_DURATION (HZ/8) +#define DEFAULT_BELL_DURATION 0 extern void vcs_make_devfs(struct tty_struct *tty); extern void vcs_remove_devfs(struct tty_struct *tty); #<<eof>> X seems silent by default for me, if not, you can configure it too. But ttyX always get reset to HZ/8 when you make a tty reset, which is why I put 0 as a default. Jan -- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2006-05-02 20:54 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 13+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2006-04-29 18:30 [RFC] make PC Speaker driver work on x86-64 Mikael Pettersson 2006-04-29 20:36 ` Jeff Garzik 2006-04-29 21:00 ` Matthieu CASTET 2006-04-30 8:50 ` [discuss] " Andi Kleen 2006-05-02 17:37 ` matthieu castet 2006-05-02 17:50 ` Andi Kleen 2006-05-02 20:33 ` matthieu castet 2006-05-02 20:35 ` Andi Kleen 2006-05-02 20:54 ` Andi Kleen 2006-04-30 8:46 ` [discuss] " Andi Kleen 2006-04-30 14:32 ` Goswin von Brederlow 2006-04-30 16:29 ` Alistair John Strachan 2006-05-01 7:09 ` Jan Engelhardt
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