| /linux/Documentation/arch/arm/ |
| H A D | setup.rst | 7 for most ARM Linux architectures. 61 based machines. May be used differently by different architectures. 65 different architectures. 69 architectures. 102 then a value of 50 Mhz is the default on 21285 architectures.
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| /linux/virt/kvm/ |
| H A D | Kconfig | 22 # Only strongly ordered architectures can select this, as it doesn't 30 # Weakly ordered architectures can only select this, advertising 36 # Allow enabling both the dirty bitmap and dirty ring. Only architectures
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| /linux/Documentation/ABI/stable/ |
| H A D | vdso | 7 On some architectures, when the kernel loads any userspace program it 31 ABI of those symbols is considered stable. It may vary across architectures, 36 The maintainers of the other vDSO-using architectures should confirm
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| /linux/Documentation/livepatch/ |
| H A D | reliable-stacktrace.rst | 20 debugging are unsound for livepatching. Livepatching depends on architectures 30 'arch_stack_walk_reliable', and other architectures must implement 56 architectures may need to verify that code has been compiled in a manner 71 The unwinding process varies across architectures, their respective procedure 73 details that architectures should consider. 89 architectures verify that a stacktrace ends at an expected location, e.g. 116 trace, it is strongly recommended that architectures positively identify code 140 For some architectures this may change at runtime as a result of dynamic 219 It is recommended that architectures unwind cases where return_to_handler has 220 not yet been returned to, but architectures are not required to unwind from the [all …]
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| /linux/tools/testing/selftests/nolibc/ |
| H A D | run-tests.sh | 41 Run nolibc testsuite for multiple architectures with crosstools 44 $0 [options] <architectures> 46 Known architectures:
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| /linux/Documentation/rust/ |
| H A D | arch-support.rst | 7 which limits the supported architectures that can be targeted. In addition, 12 Below is a general summary of architectures that currently work. Level of
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| /linux/Documentation/core-api/ |
| H A D | unaligned-memory-access.rst | 13 Linux runs on a wide variety of architectures which have varying behaviour 46 In reality, only a few architectures require natural alignment on all sizes 47 of memory access. However, we must consider ALL supported architectures; 59 - Some architectures are able to perform unaligned memory accesses 61 - Some architectures raise processor exceptions when unaligned accesses 64 - Some architectures raise processor exceptions when unaligned accesses 67 - Some architectures are not capable of unaligned memory access, but will 246 On architectures that require aligned loads, networking requires that the IP 249 architectures this constant has the value 2 because the normal ethernet 258 unnecessary on architectures that can do unaligned accesses, the code can be
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| /linux/Documentation/ |
| H A D | atomic_t.txt | 152 are time critical and can, (typically) on LL/SC architectures, be more 201 These helper barriers exist because architectures have varying implicit 202 ordering on their SMP atomic primitives. For example our TSO architectures 326 indefinitely. However, this is not evident on LL/SC architectures, because 357 to fail on some architectures, let alone whatever the compiler makes of the C 361 Even native CAS architectures can fail to provide forward progress for their 365 to a failed CAS in order to ensure some progress. Affected architectures are
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| /linux/fs/resctrl/ |
| H A D | Kconfig | 7 Some architectures provide hardware facilities to group tasks and 21 On architectures where this can be disabled independently, it is
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| /linux/Documentation/arch/powerpc/ |
| H A D | elf_hwcaps.rst | 148 supporting later architectures DO NOT set this feature. 161 supporting later architectures also set this feature. 183 supporting later architectures also set this feature. 210 supporting later architectures also set this feature. 229 supporting later architectures also set this feature.
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| /linux/Documentation/mm/ |
| H A D | numa.rst | 49 architectures. As with physical cells, software nodes may contain 0 or more 55 For some architectures, such as x86, Linux will "hide" any node representing a 58 these architectures, one cannot assume that all CPUs that Linux associates with 61 In addition, for some architectures, again x86 is an example, Linux supports 117 On architectures that do not hide memoryless nodes, Linux will include only 145 architectures transparently, kernel subsystems can use the numa_mem_id()
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| /linux/drivers/gpu/drm/amd/display/ |
| H A D | Kconfig | 22 ARM64 || LOONGARCH || RISCV) architectures built with Clang (all released 24 would cause an immediate kernel panic on most architectures. We'll revert
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| /linux/Documentation/bpf/ |
| H A D | bpf_design_QA.rst | 34 with two most used architectures x64 and arm64 (and takes into 35 consideration important quirks of other architectures) and 37 convention of the linux kernel on those architectures. 135 impossible to make generic and efficient across CPU architectures. 145 A: Because architectures like sparc have register windows and in general 146 there are enough subtle differences between architectures, so naive 167 CPU architectures and 32-bit HW accelerators. Can true 32-bit registers 174 programs for 32-bit architectures. 181 (a mov32 variant). This means that for architectures without zext hardware
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| /linux/kernel/configs/ |
| H A D | nopm.config | 13 # ARM/ARM64 architectures that select PM unconditionally
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| /linux/arch/ |
| H A D | Kconfig | 21 # Selected by architectures that need custom DMA operations for e.g. legacy 200 Some architectures require 64 bit accesses to be 64 bit 203 architectures which can do 64 bit accesses, as well as 64 bit 204 architectures without unaligned access. 216 Some architectures are unable to perform unaligned accesses 246 on architectures that don't have such instructions. 357 # Select if the architectures provides the arch_dma_clear_uncached symbol 396 All new 32-bit architectures should have 64-bit off_t type on 398 is the requirement for modern ABIs. Some existing architectures 400 architectures explicitly. [all …]
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| /linux/Documentation/features/ |
| H A D | arch-support.txt | 4 support matrix, for all upstream Linux architectures.
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| /linux/lib/vdso/ |
| H A D | Kconfig | 25 Selected by architectures that support vDSO getrandom().
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| /linux/arch/microblaze/ |
| H A D | Kconfig | 54 microblaze architectures can be configured for either little or 105 On some architectures there is currently no way for the boot loader 106 to pass arguments to the kernel. For these architectures, you should
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| /linux/sound/parisc/ |
| H A D | Kconfig | 9 Support for GSC sound devices on PA-RISC architectures.
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| /linux/Documentation/userspace-api/ioctl/ |
| H A D | ioctl-decoding.rst | 7 Most architectures use this generic format, but check
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| /linux/sound/mips/ |
| H A D | Kconfig | 9 Support for sound devices of MIPS architectures.
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| /linux/Documentation/admin-guide/ |
| H A D | cputopology.rst | 6 to /proc/cpuinfo output of some architectures. They reside in 36 To be consistent on all architectures, include/linux/topology.h
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| /linux/Documentation/arch/arm/omap/ |
| H A D | omap_pm.rst | 23 - allow drivers which are shared with other architectures (e.g., 28 architectures. 77 omap_pm_set_max_dev_wakeup_lat(), etc. Other architectures which do
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| /linux/sound/sh/ |
| H A D | Kconfig | 9 Support for sound devices specific to SUPERH architectures.
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| /linux/sound/arm/ |
| H A D | Kconfig | 9 Support for sound devices specific to ARM architectures.
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