https://github.com/torvalds/linux
Revision 59294a01d7037f63fb8bf994af10ce63c618770a authored by Takashi Sakamoto on 10 March 2015, 12:54:35 UTC, committed by Takashi Iwai on 10 March 2015, 14:27:19 UTC
With previous commit, this module managed to leave the counting to each
drivers, but the isochronous resources functionality still increment/decrement
the count.

This commit purge such codes to leave the responsibility to each drivers.

Fix: c6f224dc20ad ('ALSA: firewire-lib: remove reference counting')
Signed-off-by: Takashi Sakamoto <o-takashi@sakamocchi.jp>
Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
1 parent 5b1274e
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Tip revision: 59294a01d7037f63fb8bf994af10ce63c618770a authored by Takashi Sakamoto on 10 March 2015, 12:54:35 UTC
ALSA: firewire-lib: leave unit reference counting completely
Tip revision: 59294a0
bad_memory.txt
March 2008
Jan-Simon Moeller, dl9pf@gmx.de


How to deal with bad memory e.g. reported by memtest86+ ?
#########################################################

There are three possibilities I know of:

1) Reinsert/swap the memory modules

2) Buy new modules (best!) or try to exchange the memory
   if you have spare-parts

3) Use BadRAM or memmap

This Howto is about number 3) .


BadRAM
######
BadRAM is the actively developed and available as kernel-patch
here:  http://rick.vanrein.org/linux/badram/

For more details see the BadRAM documentation.

memmap
######

memmap is already in the kernel and usable as kernel-parameter at
boot-time.  Its syntax is slightly strange and you may need to
calculate the values by yourself!

Syntax to exclude a memory area (see kernel-parameters.txt for details):
memmap=<size>$<address>

Example: memtest86+ reported here errors at address 0x18691458, 0x18698424 and
         some others. All had 0x1869xxxx in common, so I chose a pattern of
         0x18690000,0xffff0000.

With the numbers of the example above:
memmap=64K$0x18690000
 or
memmap=0x10000$0x18690000

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