Pull scheduler updates from Ingo Molnar:
"Scheduler Kconfig space updates:
- Further consolidate configurable preemption modes (Peter Zijlstra)
Reduce the number of architectures that are allowed to offer
PREEMPT_NONE and PREEMPT_VOLUNTARY, reducing the number of
preemption models from four to just two: 'full' and 'lazy' on
up-to-date architectures (arm64, loongarch, powerpc, riscv, s390,
x86).
None and voluntary are only available as legacy features on
platforms that don't implement lazy preemption yet, or which don't
even support preemption.
The goal is to eventually remove cond_resched() and voluntary
preemption altogether.
RSEQ based 'scheduler time slice extension' support (Thomas Gleixner
and Peter Zijlstra):
This allows a thread to request a time slice extension when it enters
a critical section to avoid contention on a resource when the thread
is scheduled out inside of the critical section.
- Add fields and constants for time slice extension
- Provide static branch for time slice extensions
- Add statistics for time slice extensions
- Add prctl() to enable time slice extensions
- Implement sys_rseq_slice_yield()
- Implement syscall entry work for time slice extensions
- Implement time slice extension enforcement timer
- Reset slice extension when scheduled
- Implement rseq_grant_slice_extension()
- entry: Hook up rseq time slice extension
- selftests: Implement time slice extension test
- Allow registering RSEQ with slice extension
- Move slice_ext_nsec to debugfs
- Lower default slice extension
- selftests/rseq: Add rseq slice histogram script
Scheduler performance/scalability improvements:
- Update rq->avg_idle when a task is moved to an idle CPU, which
improves the scalability of various workloads (Shubhang Kaushik)
- Reorder fields in 'struct rq' for better caching (Blake Jones)
- Fair scheduler SMP NOHZ balancing code speedups (Shrikanth Hegde):
- Move checking for nohz cpus after time check
- Change likelyhood of nohz.nr_cpus
- Remove nohz.nr_cpus and use weight of cpumask instead
- Avoid false sharing for sched_clock_irqtime (Wangyang Guo)
- Cleanups (Yury Norov):
- Drop useless cpumask_empty() in find_energy_efficient_cpu()
- Simplify task_numa_find_cpu()
- Use cpumask_weight_and() in sched_balance_find_dst_group()
DL scheduler updates:
- Add a deadline server for sched_ext tasks (by Andrea Righi and Joel
Fernandes, with fixes by Peter Zijlstra)
RT scheduler updates:
- Skip currently executing CPU in rto_next_cpu() (Chen Jinghuang)
Entry code updates and performance improvements (Jinjie Ruan)
This is part of the scheduler tree in this cycle due to inter-
dependencies with the RSEQ based time slice extension work:
- Remove unused syscall argument from syscall_trace_enter()
- Rework syscall_exit_to_user_mode_work() for architecture reuse
- Add arch_ptrace_report_syscall_entry/exit()
- Inline syscall_exit_work() and syscall_trace_enter()
Scheduler core updates (Peter Zijlstra):
- Rework sched_class::wakeup_preempt() and rq_modified_*()
- Avoid rq->lock bouncing in sched_balance_newidle()
- Rename rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain() =>
rcu_dereference_sched_domain()
- <linux/compiler_types.h>: Add the __signed_scalar_typeof() helper
Fair scheduler updates/refactoring (Peter Zijlstra and Ingo Molnar):
- Fold the sched_avg update
- Change rcu_dereference_check_sched_domain() to rcu-sched
- Switch to rcu_dereference_all()
- Remove superfluous rcu_read_lock()
- Limit hrtick work
- Join two #ifdef CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED blocks
- Clean up comments in 'struct cfs_rq'
- Separate se->vlag from se->vprot
- Rename cfs_rq::avg_load to cfs_rq::sum_weight
- Rename cfs_rq::avg_vruntime to ::sum_w_vruntime & helper functions
- Introduce and use the vruntime_cmp() and vruntime_op() wrappers for
wrapped-signed aritmetics
- Sort out 'blocked_load*' namespace noise
Scheduler debugging code updates:
- Export hidden tracepoints to modules (Gabriele Monaco)
- Convert copy_from_user() + kstrtouint() to kstrtouint_from_user()
(Fushuai Wang)
- Add assertions to QUEUE_CLASS (Peter Zijlstra)
- hrtimer: Fix tracing oddity (Thomas Gleixner)
Misc fixes and cleanups:
- Re-evaluate scheduling when migrating queued tasks out of throttled
cgroups (Zicheng Qu)
- Remove task_struct->faults_disabled_mapping (Christoph Hellwig)
- Fix math notation errors in avg_vruntime comment (Zhan Xusheng)
- sched/cpufreq: Use %pe format for PTR_ERR() printing
(zenghongling)"
* tag 'sched-core-2026-02-09' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: (64 commits)
sched: Re-evaluate scheduling when migrating queued tasks out of throttled cgroups
sched/cpufreq: Use %pe format for PTR_ERR() printing
sched/rt: Skip currently executing CPU in rto_next_cpu()
sched/clock: Avoid false sharing for sched_clock_irqtime
selftests/sched_ext: Add test for DL server total_bw consistency
selftests/sched_ext: Add test for sched_ext dl_server
sched/debug: Fix dl_server (re)start conditions
sched/debug: Add support to change sched_ext server params
sched_ext: Add a DL server for sched_ext tasks
sched/debug: Stop and start server based on if it was active
sched/debug: Fix updating of ppos on server write ops
sched/deadline: Clear the defer params
entry: Inline syscall_exit_work() and syscall_trace_enter()
entry: Add arch_ptrace_report_syscall_entry/exit()
entry: Rework syscall_exit_to_user_mode_work() for architecture reuse
entry: Remove unused syscall argument from syscall_trace_enter()
sched: remove task_struct->faults_disabled_mapping
sched: Update rq->avg_idle when a task is moved to an idle CPU
selftests/rseq: Add rseq slice histogram script
hrtimer: Fix trace oddity
...
Pull locking updates from Ingo Molnar:
"Lock debugging:
- Implement compiler-driven static analysis locking context checking,
using the upcoming Clang 22 compiler's context analysis features
(Marco Elver)
We removed Sparse context analysis support, because prior to
removal even a defconfig kernel produced 1,700+ context tracking
Sparse warnings, the overwhelming majority of which are false
positives. On an allmodconfig kernel the number of false positive
context tracking Sparse warnings grows to over 5,200... On the plus
side of the balance actual locking bugs found by Sparse context
analysis is also rather ... sparse: I found only 3 such commits in
the last 3 years. So the rate of false positives and the
maintenance overhead is rather high and there appears to be no
active policy in place to achieve a zero-warnings baseline to move
the annotations & fixers to developers who introduce new code.
Clang context analysis is more complete and more aggressive in
trying to find bugs, at least in principle. Plus it has a different
model to enabling it: it's enabled subsystem by subsystem, which
results in zero warnings on all relevant kernel builds (as far as
our testing managed to cover it). Which allowed us to enable it by
default, similar to other compiler warnings, with the expectation
that there are no warnings going forward. This enforces a
zero-warnings baseline on clang-22+ builds (Which are still limited
in distribution, admittedly)
Hopefully the Clang approach can lead to a more maintainable
zero-warnings status quo and policy, with more and more subsystems
and drivers enabling the feature. Context tracking can be enabled
for all kernel code via WARN_CONTEXT_ANALYSIS_ALL=y (default
disabled), but this will generate a lot of false positives.
( Having said that, Sparse support could still be added back,
if anyone is interested - the removal patch is still
relatively straightforward to revert at this stage. )
Rust integration updates: (Alice Ryhl, Fujita Tomonori, Boqun Feng)
- Add support for Atomic<i8/i16/bool> and replace most Rust native
AtomicBool usages with Atomic<bool>
- Clean up LockClassKey and improve its documentation
- Add missing Send and Sync trait implementation for SetOnce
- Make ARef Unpin as it is supposed to be
- Add __rust_helper to a few Rust helpers as a preparation for
helper LTO
- Inline various lock related functions to avoid additional function
calls
WW mutexes:
- Extend ww_mutex tests and other test-ww_mutex updates (John
Stultz)
Misc fixes and cleanups:
- rcu: Mark lockdep_assert_rcu_helper() __always_inline (Arnd
Bergmann)
- locking/local_lock: Include more missing headers (Peter Zijlstra)
- seqlock: fix scoped_seqlock_read kernel-doc (Randy Dunlap)
- rust: sync: Replace `kernel::c_str!` with C-Strings (Tamir
Duberstein)"
* tag 'locking-core-2026-02-08' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: (90 commits)
locking/rwlock: Fix write_trylock_irqsave() with CONFIG_INLINE_WRITE_TRYLOCK
rcu: Mark lockdep_assert_rcu_helper() __always_inline
compiler-context-analysis: Remove __assume_ctx_lock from initializers
tomoyo: Use scoped init guard
crypto: Use scoped init guard
kcov: Use scoped init guard
compiler-context-analysis: Introduce scoped init guards
cleanup: Make __DEFINE_LOCK_GUARD handle commas in initializers
seqlock: fix scoped_seqlock_read kernel-doc
tools: Update context analysis macros in compiler_types.h
rust: sync: Replace `kernel::c_str!` with C-Strings
rust: sync: Inline various lock related methods
rust: helpers: Move #define __rust_helper out of atomic.c
rust: wait: Add __rust_helper to helpers
rust: time: Add __rust_helper to helpers
rust: task: Add __rust_helper to helpers
rust: sync: Add __rust_helper to helpers
rust: refcount: Add __rust_helper to helpers
rust: rcu: Add __rust_helper to helpers
rust: processor: Add __rust_helper to helpers
...
Pull rust updates from Miguel Ojeda:
"Toolchain and infrastructure:
- Add '__rust_helper' annotation to the C helpers
This is needed to inline these helpers into Rust code
- Remove imports available via the prelude, treewide
This was possible thanks to a new lint in Klint that Gary has
implemented -- more Klint-related changes, including initial
upstream support, are coming
- Deduplicate pin-init flags
'kernel' crate:
- Add support for calling a function exactly once with the new
'do_once_lite!' macro (and 'OnceLite' type)
Based on this, add 'pr_*_once!' macros to print only once
- Add 'impl_flags!' macro for defining common bitflags operations:
impl_flags!(
/// Represents multiple permissions.
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Default, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)]
pub struct Permissions(u32);
/// Represents a single permission.
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)]
pub enum Permission {
/// Read permission.
Read = 1 << 0,
/// Write permission.
Write = 1 << 1,
/// Execute permission.
Execute = 1 << 2,
}
);
let mut f: Permissions = Permission::Read | Permission::Write;
assert!(f.contains(Permission::Read));
assert!(!f.contains(Permission::Execute));
f |= Permission::Execute;
assert!(f.contains(Permission::Execute));
let f2: Permissions = Permission::Write | Permission::Execute;
assert!((f ^ f2).contains(Permission::Read));
assert!(!(f ^ f2).contains(Permission::Write));
- 'bug' module: support 'CONFIG_DEBUG_BUGVERBOSE_DETAILED' in the
'warn_on!' macro in order to show the evaluated condition alongside
the file path:
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: [val == 1] linux/samples/rust/rust_minimal.rs:27 at ...
Modules linked in: rust_minimal(+)
- Add safety module with 'unsafe_precondition_assert!' macro,
currently a wrapper for 'debug_assert!', intended to mark the
validation of safety preconditions where possible:
/// # Safety
///
/// The caller must ensure that `index` is less than `N`.
unsafe fn set_unchecked(&mut self, index: usize, value: T) {
unsafe_precondition_assert!(
index < N,
"set_unchecked() requires index ({index}) < N ({N})"
);
...
}
- Add instructions to 'build_assert!' documentation requesting to
always inline functions when used with function arguments
- 'ptr' module: replace 'build_assert!' with a 'const' one
- 'rbtree' module: reduce unsafe blocks on pointer derefs
- 'transmute' module: implement 'FromBytes' and 'AsBytes' for
inhabited ZSTs, and use it in Nova
- More treewide replacements of 'c_str!' with C string literals
'macros' crate:
- Rewrite most procedural macros ('module!', 'concat_idents!',
'#[export]', '#[vtable]', '#[kunit_tests]') to use the 'syn'
parsing library which we introduced last cycle, with better
diagnostics
This also allows to support '#[cfg]' properly in the '#[vtable]'
macro, to support arbitrary types in 'module!' macro (not just an
identifier) and to remove several custom parsing helpers we had
- Use 'quote!' from the recently vendored 'quote' library and remove
our custom one
The vendored one also allows us to avoid quoting '"' and '{}'
inside the template anymore and editors can now highlight it. In
addition, it improves robustness as it eliminates the need for
string quoting and escaping
- Use 'pin_init::zeroed()' to simplify KUnit code
'pin-init' crate:
- Rewrite all procedural macros ('[pin_]init!', '#[pin_data]',
'#[pinned_drop]', 'derive([Maybe]Zeroable)') to use the 'syn'
parsing library which we introduced last cycle, with better
diagnostics
- Implement 'InPlaceWrite' for '&'static mut MaybeUninit<T>'. This
enables users to use external allocation mechanisms such as
'static_cell'
- Support tuple structs in 'derive([Maybe]Zeroable)'
- Support attributes on fields in '[pin_]init!' (such as
'#[cfg(...)]')
- Add a '#[default_error(<type>)]' attribute to '[pin_]init!' to
override the default error (when no '? Error' is specified)
- Support packed structs in '[pin_]init!' with
'#[disable_initialized_field_access]'
- Remove 'try_[pin_]init!' in favor of merging their feature with
'[pin_]init!'. Update the kernel's own 'try_[pin_]init!' macros to
use the 'default_error' attribute
- Correct 'T: Sized' bounds to 'T: ?Sized' in the generated
'PinnedDrop' check by '#[pin_data]'
Documentation:
- Conclude the Rust experiment
MAINTAINERS:
- Add "RUST [RUST-ANALYZER]" entry for the rust-analyzer support.
Tamir and Jesung will take care of it. They have both been active
around it for a while. The new tree will flow through the Rust one
- Add Gary as maintainer for "RUST [PIN-INIT]"
- Update Boqun and Tamir emails to their kernel.org accounts
And a few other cleanups and improvements"
* tag 'rust-6.20-7.0' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/ojeda/linux: (59 commits)
rust: safety: introduce `unsafe_precondition_assert!` macro
rust: add `impl_flags!` macro for defining common bitflag operations
rust: print: Add pr_*_once macros
rust: bug: Support DEBUG_BUGVERBOSE_DETAILED option
rust: print: Add support for calling a function exactly once
rust: kbuild: deduplicate pin-init flags
gpu: nova-core: remove imports available via prelude
rust: clk: replace `kernel::c_str!` with C-Strings
MAINTAINERS: Update my email address to @kernel.org
rust: macros: support `#[cfg]` properly in `#[vtable]` macro.
rust: kunit: use `pin_init::zeroed` instead of custom null value
rust: macros: rearrange `#[doc(hidden)]` in `module!` macro
rust: macros: allow arbitrary types to be used in `module!` macro
rust: macros: convert `#[kunit_tests]` macro to use `syn`
rust: macros: convert `concat_idents!` to use `syn`
rust: macros: convert `#[export]` to use `syn`
rust: macros: use `quote!` for `module!` macro
rust: macros: use `syn` to parse `module!` macro
rust: macros: convert `#[vtable]` macro to use `syn`
rust: macros: use `quote!` from vendored crate
...
Pull bpf updates from Alexei Starovoitov:
- Support associating BPF program with struct_ops (Amery Hung)
- Switch BPF local storage to rqspinlock and remove recursion detection
counters which were causing false positives (Amery Hung)
- Fix live registers marking for indirect jumps (Anton Protopopov)
- Introduce execution context detection BPF helpers (Changwoo Min)
- Improve verifier precision for 32bit sign extension pattern
(Cupertino Miranda)
- Optimize BTF type lookup by sorting vmlinux BTF and doing binary
search (Donglin Peng)
- Allow states pruning for misc/invalid slots in iterator loops (Eduard
Zingerman)
- In preparation for ASAN support in BPF arenas teach libbpf to move
global BPF variables to the end of the region and enable arena kfuncs
while holding locks (Emil Tsalapatis)
- Introduce support for implicit arguments in kfuncs and migrate a
number of them to new API. This is a prerequisite for cgroup
sub-schedulers in sched-ext (Ihor Solodrai)
- Fix incorrect copied_seq calculation in sockmap (Jiayuan Chen)
- Fix ORC stack unwind from kprobe_multi (Jiri Olsa)
- Speed up fentry attach by using single ftrace direct ops in BPF
trampolines (Jiri Olsa)
- Require frozen map for calculating map hash (KP Singh)
- Fix lock entry creation in TAS fallback in rqspinlock (Kumar
Kartikeya Dwivedi)
- Allow user space to select cpu in lookup/update operations on per-cpu
array and hash maps (Leon Hwang)
- Make kfuncs return trusted pointers by default (Matt Bobrowski)
- Introduce "fsession" support where single BPF program is executed
upon entry and exit from traced kernel function (Menglong Dong)
- Allow bpf_timer and bpf_wq use in all programs types (Mykyta
Yatsenko, Andrii Nakryiko, Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi, Alexei
Starovoitov)
- Make KF_TRUSTED_ARGS the default for all kfuncs and clean up their
definition across the tree (Puranjay Mohan)
- Allow BPF arena calls from non-sleepable context (Puranjay Mohan)
- Improve register id comparison logic in the verifier and extend
linked registers with negative offsets (Puranjay Mohan)
- In preparation for BPF-OOM introduce kfuncs to access memcg events
(Roman Gushchin)
- Use CFI compatible destructor kfunc type (Sami Tolvanen)
- Add bitwise tracking for BPF_END in the verifier (Tianci Cao)
- Add range tracking for BPF_DIV and BPF_MOD in the verifier (Yazhou
Tang)
- Make BPF selftests work with 64k page size (Yonghong Song)
* tag 'bpf-next-7.0' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bpf/bpf-next: (268 commits)
selftests/bpf: Fix outdated test on storage->smap
selftests/bpf: Choose another percpu variable in bpf for btf_dump test
selftests/bpf: Remove test_task_storage_map_stress_lookup
selftests/bpf: Update task_local_storage/task_storage_nodeadlock test
selftests/bpf: Update task_local_storage/recursion test
selftests/bpf: Update sk_storage_omem_uncharge test
bpf: Switch to bpf_selem_unlink_nofail in bpf_local_storage_{map_free, destroy}
bpf: Support lockless unlink when freeing map or local storage
bpf: Prepare for bpf_selem_unlink_nofail()
bpf: Remove unused percpu counter from bpf_local_storage_map_free
bpf: Remove cgroup local storage percpu counter
bpf: Remove task local storage percpu counter
bpf: Change local_storage->lock and b->lock to rqspinlock
bpf: Convert bpf_selem_unlink to failable
bpf: Convert bpf_selem_link_map to failable
bpf: Convert bpf_selem_unlink_map to failable
bpf: Select bpf_local_storage_map_bucket based on bpf_local_storage
selftests/xsk: fix number of Tx frags in invalid packet
selftests/xsk: properly handle batch ending in the middle of a packet
bpf: Prevent reentrance into call_rcu_tasks_trace()
...
Pull module updates from Sami Tolvanen:
"Module signing:
- Remove SHA-1 support for signing modules.
SHA-1 is no longer considered secure for signatures due to
vulnerabilities that can lead to hash collisions. None of the major
distributions use SHA-1 anymore, and the kernel has defaulted to
SHA-512 since v6.11.
Note that loading SHA-1 signed modules is still supported.
- Update scripts/sign-file to use only the OpenSSL CMS API for
signing.
As SHA-1 support is gone, we can drop the legacy PKCS#7 API which
was limited to SHA-1. This also cleans up support for legacy
OpenSSL versions.
Cleanups and fixes:
- Use system_dfl_wq instead of the per-cpu system_wq following the
ongoing workqueue API refactoring.
- Avoid open-coded kvrealloc() in module decompression logic by using
the standard helper.
- Improve section annotations by replacing the custom __modinit with
__init_or_module and removing several unused __INIT*_OR_MODULE
macros.
- Fix kernel-doc warnings in include/linux/moduleparam.h.
- Ensure set_module_sig_enforced is only declared when module signing
is enabled.
- Fix gendwarfksyms build failures on 32-bit hosts.
MAINTAINERS:
- Update the module subsystem entry to reflect the maintainer
rotation and update the git repository link"
* tag 'modules-7.0-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/modules/linux:
modules: moduleparam.h: fix kernel-doc comments
module: Only declare set_module_sig_enforced when CONFIG_MODULE_SIG=y
module/decompress: Avoid open-coded kvrealloc()
gendwarfksyms: Fix build on 32-bit hosts
sign-file: Use only the OpenSSL CMS API for signing
module: Remove SHA-1 support for module signing
module: replace use of system_wq with system_dfl_wq
params: Replace __modinit with __init_or_module
module: Remove unused __INIT*_OR_MODULE macros
MAINTAINERS: Update module subsystem maintainers and repository
Pull keys update from David Howells:
"This adds support for ML-DSA signatures in X.509 certificates and
PKCS#7/CMS messages, thereby allowing this algorithm to be used for
signing modules, kexec'able binaries, wifi regulatory data, etc..
This requires OpenSSL-3.5 at a minimum and preferably OpenSSL-4 (so
that it can avoid the use of CMS signedAttrs - but that version is not
cut yet). certs/Kconfig does a check to hide the signing options if
OpenSSL does not list the algorithm as being available"
* tag 'keys-next-20260206' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/dhowells/linux-fs:
pkcs7: Change a pr_warn() to pr_warn_once()
pkcs7: Allow authenticatedAttributes for ML-DSA
modsign: Enable ML-DSA module signing
pkcs7, x509: Add ML-DSA support
pkcs7: Allow the signing algo to do whatever digestion it wants itself
pkcs7, x509: Rename ->digest to ->m
x509: Separately calculate sha256 for blacklist
crypto: Add ML-DSA crypto_sig support
Pull kmalloc_obj updates from Kees Cook:
"Introduce the kmalloc_obj* family of APIs for switching to type-based
kmalloc allocations, away from purely size-based allocations.
Discussed on lkml, with you, and at Linux Plumbers. It's been in -next
for the entire dev cycle.
Before the merge window closes, I'd like to send the treewide
change (generated from the Coccinelle script included here), which
mechanically converts almost 20k callsites from kmalloc* to
kmalloc_obj*:
8007 files changed, 19980 insertions(+), 20838 deletions(-)
This change needed fixes for mismatched types (since now the return
type from allocations is a pointer to the requested type, not "void
*"), and I've been fixing these over the last 4 releases.
These fixes have mostly been trivial mismatches with const qualifiers
or accidentally identical sizes (e.g. same object size: "struct kvec"
vs "struct iovec", or differing pointers to pointers), but I did catch
one case of too-small allocation.
Summary:
- Introduce kmalloc_obj*() family of type-based allocator APIs
- checkpatch: Suggest kmalloc_obj family for sizeof allocations
- coccinelle: Add kmalloc_objs conversion script"
* tag 'kmalloc_obj-v7.0-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kees/linux:
coccinelle: Add kmalloc_objs conversion script
slab: Introduce kmalloc_flex() and family
compiler_types: Introduce __flex_counter() and family
checkpatch: Suggest kmalloc_obj family for sizeof allocations
slab: Introduce kmalloc_obj() and family
Pull crypto library updates from Eric Biggers:
- Add support for verifying ML-DSA signatures.
ML-DSA (Module-Lattice-Based Digital Signature Algorithm) is a
recently-standardized post-quantum (quantum-resistant) signature
algorithm. It was known as Dilithium pre-standardization.
The first use case in the kernel will be module signing. But there
are also other users of RSA and ECDSA signatures in the kernel that
might want to upgrade to ML-DSA eventually.
- Improve the AES library:
- Make the AES key expansion and single block encryption and
decryption functions use the architecture-optimized AES code.
Enable these optimizations by default.
- Support preparing an AES key for encryption-only, using about
half as much memory as a bidirectional key.
- Replace the existing two generic implementations of AES with a
single one.
- Simplify how Adiantum message hashing is implemented. Remove the
"nhpoly1305" crypto_shash in favor of direct lib/crypto/ support for
NH hashing, and enable optimizations by default.
* tag 'libcrypto-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/ebiggers/linux: (53 commits)
lib/crypto: mldsa: Clarify the documentation for mldsa_verify() slightly
lib/crypto: aes: Drop 'volatile' from aes_sbox and aes_inv_sbox
lib/crypto: aes: Remove old AES en/decryption functions
lib/crypto: aesgcm: Use new AES library API
lib/crypto: aescfb: Use new AES library API
crypto: omap - Use new AES library API
crypto: inside-secure - Use new AES library API
crypto: drbg - Use new AES library API
crypto: crypto4xx - Use new AES library API
crypto: chelsio - Use new AES library API
crypto: ccp - Use new AES library API
crypto: x86/aes-gcm - Use new AES library API
crypto: arm64/ghash - Use new AES library API
crypto: arm/ghash - Use new AES library API
staging: rtl8723bs: core: Use new AES library API
net: phy: mscc: macsec: Use new AES library API
chelsio: Use new AES library API
Bluetooth: SMP: Use new AES library API
crypto: x86/aes - Remove the superseded AES-NI crypto_cipher
lib/crypto: x86/aes: Add AES-NI optimization
...
Pull documentation updates from Jonathan Corbet:
"A slightly calmer cycle for docs this time around, though there is
still a fair amount going on, including:
- Some signs of life on the long-moribund Japanese translation
- Documentation on policies around the use of generative tools for
patch submissions, and a separate document intended for consumption
by generative tools
- The completion of the move of the documentation tools to
tools/docs. For now we're leaving a /scripts/kernel-doc symlink
behind to avoid breaking scripts
- Ongoing build-system work includes the incorporation of
documentation in Python code, better support for documenting
variables, and lots of improvements and fixes
- Automatic linking of man-page references -- cat(1), for example --
to the online pages in the HTML build
...and the usual array of typo fixes and such"
* tag 'docs-7.0' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/docs/linux: (107 commits)
doc: development-process: add notice on testing
tools: sphinx-build-wrapper: improve its help message
docs: sphinx-build-wrapper: allow -v override -q
docs: kdoc: Fix pdfdocs build for tools
docs: ja_JP: process: translate 'Obtain a current source tree'
docs: fix 're-use' -> 'reuse' in documentation
docs: ioctl-number: fix a typo in ioctl-number.rst
docs: filesystems: ensure proc pid substitutable is complete
docs: automarkup.py: Skip common English words as C identifiers
Documentation: use a source-read extension for the index link boilerplate
docs: parse_features: make documentation more consistent
docs: add parse_features module documentation
docs: jobserver: do some documentation improvements
docs: add jobserver module documentation
docs: kabi: helpers: add documentation for each "enum" value
docs: kabi: helpers: add helper for debug bits 7 and 8
docs: kabi: system_symbols: end docstring phrases with a dot
docs: python: abi_regex: do some improvements at documentation
docs: python: abi_parser: do some improvements at documentation
docs: add kabi modules documentation
...
Pull RCU updates from Boqun Feng:
- RCU Tasks Trace:
Re-implement RCU tasks trace in term of SRCU-fast, not only more than
500 lines of code are saved because of the reimplementation, a new
set of API, rcu_read_{,un}lock_tasks_trace(), becomes possible as
well. Compared to the previous rcu_read_{,un}lock_trace(), the new
API avoid the task_struct accesses thanks to the SRCU-fast semantics.
As a result, the old rcu_read{,un}lock_trace() API is now deprecated.
- RCU Torture Test:
- Multiple improvements on kvm-series.sh (parallel run and
progress showing metrics)
- Add context checks to rcu_torture_timer()
- Make config2csv.sh properly handle comments in .boot files
- Include commit discription in testid.txt
- Miscellaneous RCU changes:
- Reduce synchronize_rcu() latency by reporting GP kthread's
CPU QS early
- Use suitable gfp_flags for the init_srcu_struct_nodes()
- Fix rcu_read_unlock() deadloop due to softirq
- Correctly compute probability to invoke ->exp_current()
in rcutorture
- Make expedited RCU CPU stall warnings detect stall-end races
- RCU nocb:
- Remove unnecessary WakeOvfIsDeferred wake path and callback
overload handling
- Extract nocb_defer_wakeup_cancel() helper
* tag 'rcu.release.v7.0' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rcu/linux: (25 commits)
rcu/nocb: Extract nocb_defer_wakeup_cancel() helper
rcu/nocb: Remove dead callback overload handling
rcu/nocb: Remove unnecessary WakeOvfIsDeferred wake path
rcu: Reduce synchronize_rcu() latency by reporting GP kthread's CPU QS early
srcu: Use suitable gfp_flags for the init_srcu_struct_nodes()
rcu: Fix rcu_read_unlock() deadloop due to softirq
rcutorture: Correctly compute probability to invoke ->exp_current()
rcu: Make expedited RCU CPU stall warnings detect stall-end races
rcutorture: Add --kill-previous option to terminate previous kvm.sh runs
rcutorture: Prevent concurrent kvm.sh runs on same source tree
torture: Include commit discription in testid.txt
torture: Make config2csv.sh properly handle comments in .boot files
torture: Make kvm-series.sh give run numbers and totals
torture: Make kvm-series.sh give build numbers and totals
torture: Parallelize kvm-series.sh guest-OS execution
rcutorture: Add context checks to rcu_torture_timer()
rcutorture: Test rcu_tasks_trace_expedite_current()
srcu: Create an rcu_tasks_trace_expedite_current() function
checkpatch: Deprecate rcu_read_{,un}lock_trace()
rcu: Update Requirements.rst for RCU Tasks Trace
...
Pull objtool fixes from Ingo Molnar::
- Bump up the Clang minimum version requirements for livepatch
builds, due to Clang assembler section handling bugs causing
silent miscompilations
- Strip livepatching symbol artifacts from non-livepatch modules
- Fix livepatch build warnings when certain Clang LTO options
are enabled
- Fix livepatch build error when CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING_DEBUG=y
* tag 'objtool-urgent-2026-02-07' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip:
objtool/klp: Fix unexported static call key access for manually built livepatch modules
objtool/klp: Fix symbol correlation for orphaned local symbols
livepatch: Free klp_{object,func}_ext data after initialization
livepatch: Fix having __klp_objects relics in non-livepatch modules
livepatch/klp-build: Require Clang assembler >= 20
The klp_object_ext and klp_func_ext data, which are stored in the
__klp_objects and __klp_funcs sections, respectively, are not needed
after they are used to create the actual klp_object and klp_func
instances. This operation is implemented by the init function in
scripts/livepatch/init.c.
Prefix the two sections with ".init" so they are freed after the module
is initializated.
Signed-off-by: Petr Pavlu <petr.pavlu@suse.com>
Acked-by: Joe Lawrence <joe.lawrence@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Miroslav Benes <mbenes@suse.cz>
Reviewed-by: Aaron Tomlin <atomlin@atomlin.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123102825.3521961-3-petr.pavlu@suse.com
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
The linker script scripts/module.lds.S specifies that all input
__klp_objects sections should be consolidated into an output section of
the same name, and start/stop symbols should be created to enable
scripts/livepatch/init.c to locate this data.
This start/stop pattern is not ideal for modules because the symbols are
created even if no __klp_objects input sections are present.
Consequently, a dummy __klp_objects section also appears in the
resulting module. This unnecessarily pollutes non-livepatch modules.
Instead, since modules are relocatable files, the usual method for
locating consolidated data in a module is to read its section table.
This approach avoids the aforementioned problem.
The klp_modinfo already stores a copy of the entire section table with
the final addresses. Introduce a helper function that
scripts/livepatch/init.c can call to obtain the location of the
__klp_objects section from this data.
Fixes: dd590d4d57 ("objtool/klp: Introduce klp diff subcommand for diffing object files")
Signed-off-by: Petr Pavlu <petr.pavlu@suse.com>
Acked-by: Joe Lawrence <joe.lawrence@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Miroslav Benes <mbenes@suse.cz>
Reviewed-by: Aaron Tomlin <atomlin@atomlin.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123102825.3521961-2-petr.pavlu@suse.com
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Allow ML-DSA module signing to be enabled.
Note that OpenSSL's CMS_*() function suite does not, as of OpenSSL-3.6,
support the use of CMS_NOATTR with ML-DSA, so the prohibition against using
signedAttrs with module signing has to be removed. The selected digest
then applies only to the algorithm used to calculate the digest stored in
the messageDigest attribute. The OpenSSL development branch has patches
applied that fix this[1], but it appears that that will only be available
in OpenSSL-4.
[1] https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/28923
sign-file won't set CMS_NOATTR if openssl is earlier than v4, resulting in
the use of signed attributes.
The ML-DSA algorithm takes the raw data to be signed without regard to what
digest algorithm is specified in the CMS message. The CMS specified digest
algorithm is ignored unless signedAttrs are used; in such a case, only
SHA512 is permitted.
Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
cc: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org>
cc: Eric Biggers <ebiggers@kernel.org>
cc: Lukas Wunner <lukas@wunner.de>
cc: Ignat Korchagin <ignat@cloudflare.com>
cc: Stephan Mueller <smueller@chronox.de>
cc: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
cc: keyrings@vger.kernel.org
cc: linux-crypto@vger.kernel.org
Pull objtool fixes from Ingo Molnar:
- Fix a build error on ia32-x86_64 cross builds
- Replace locally open coded ALIGN_UP(), ALIGN_UP_POW2()
and MAX(), which, beyond being duplicates, the
ALIGN_UP_POW2() is also buggy
- Fix objtool klp-diff regression caused by a recent
change to the bug table format
- Fix klp-build vs CONFIG_MODULE_SRCVERSION_ALL build
failure
* tag 'objtool-urgent-2026-02-01' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip:
livepatch/klp-build: Fix klp-build vs CONFIG_MODULE_SRCVERSION_ALL
objtool/klp: Fix bug table handling for __WARN_printf()
objtool: Replace custom macros in elf.c with shared ones
objtool: Print bfd_vma as unsigned long long on ia32-x86_64 cross build
Pull Kbuild fixes from Nicolas Schier:
- Generate rpm-pkg debuginfo package manually, allowing signed kernel
modules in rpm package, again
- Fix permissions of modules.builtin.modinfo
- Do not run kernel-doc when building external modules
* tag 'kbuild-fixes-6.19-3' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kbuild/linux:
kbuild: Do not run kernel-doc when building external modules
kbuild: Fix permissions of modules.builtin.modinfo
kbuild: rpm-pkg: Generate debuginfo package manually
After commit 778b8ebe51 ("docs: Move the python libraries to
tools/lib/python"), building an external module with any value of W=
against the output of install-extmod-build fails with:
$ make -C /usr/lib/modules/6.19.0-rc7-00108-g4d310797262f/build M=$PWD W=1
make: Entering directory '/usr/lib/modules/6.19.0-rc7-00108-g4d310797262f/build'
make[1]: Entering directory '...'
CC [M] ...
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/lib/modules/6.19.0-rc7-00108-g4d310797262f/build/scripts/kernel-doc.py", line 339, in <module>
main()
~~~~^^
File "/usr/lib/modules/6.19.0-rc7-00108-g4d310797262f/build/scripts/kernel-doc.py", line 295, in main
from kdoc.kdoc_files import KernelFiles # pylint: disable=C0415
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'kdoc'
scripts/lib was included in the build directory from find_in_scripts but
after the move to tools/lib/python, it is no longer included, breaking
kernel-doc.py.
Commit eba6ffd126 ("docs: kdoc: move kernel-doc to tools/docs") breaks
this even further by moving kernel-doc outside of scripts as well, so it
cannot be found when called by cmd_checkdoc.
$ make -C /usr/lib/modules/6.19.0-rc7-next-20260130/build M=$PWD W=1
make: Entering directory '/usr/lib/modules/6.19.0-rc7-next-20260130/build'
make[1]: Entering directory '...'
CC [M] ...
python3: can't open file '/usr/lib/modules/6.19.0-rc7-next-20260130/build/tools/docs/kernel-doc': [Errno 2] No such file or directory
While kernel-doc could be useful for external modules, it is more useful
for in-tree documentation that will be build and included in htmldocs.
Rather than including it in install-extmod-build, just skip running
kernel-doc for the external module build.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: 778b8ebe51 ("docs: Move the python libraries to tools/lib/python")
Reported-by: Rong Zhang <i@rong.moe>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/20260129175321.415295-1-i@rong.moe/
Reviewed-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+huawei@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Nathan Chancellor <nathan@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@infradead.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260130-kbuild-skip-kernel-doc-extmod-v1-1-58443d60131a@kernel.org
Reviewed-by: Nicolas Schier <nsc@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Schier <nsc@kernel.org>
Pull Rust fixes from Miguel Ojeda:
"Toolchain and infrastructure:
- Trigger rebuilds of the newly added 'proc-macro2' crate (and its
dependencies) when the Rust compiler version changes
- Fix error in '.rsi' targets (macro expanding single targets) under
'O=' pointing to an external (not subdir) folder
- Fix off-by-one line number in 'rustdoc' KUnit tests
- Add '-fdiagnostics-show-context' to GCC flags skipped by 'bindgen'
- Clean objtool warning by adding one more 'noreturn' function
- Clean 'libpin_init_internal.{so,dylib}' in 'mrproper'
'kernel' crate:
- Fix build error when using expressions in formatting arguments
- Mark 'num::Bounded::__new()' as unsafe and clean documentation
accordingly
- Always inline functions using 'build_assert' with arguments
- Fix 'rusttest' build error providing the right 'isize_atomic_repr'
type for the host
'macros' crate:
- Fix 'rusttest' build error by ignoring example
rust-analyzer:
- Remove assertion that was not true for distributions like NixOS
- Add missing dependency edges and fix editions for 'quote' and
sysroot crates to provide correct IDE support
DRM Tyr:
- Fix build error by adding missing dependency on 'CONFIG_COMMON_CLK'
Plus clean a few typos in docs and comments"
* tag 'rust-fixes-6.19' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/ojeda/linux: (28 commits)
rust: num: bounded: clean __new documentation and comments
scripts: generate_rust_analyzer: fix resolution of #[pin_data] macros
drm/tyr: depend on `COMMON_CLK` to fix build error
rust: sync: atomic: Provide stub for `rusttest` 32-bit hosts
kbuild: rust: clean libpin_init_internal in mrproper
rust: proc-macro2: rebuild if the version text changes
rust: num: bounded: add missing comment for always inlined function
rust: sync: refcount: always inline functions using build_assert with arguments
rust: bits: always inline functions using build_assert with arguments
scripts: generate_rust_analyzer: compile sysroot with correct edition
scripts: generate_rust_analyzer: compile quote with correct edition
scripts: generate_rust_analyzer: quote: treat `core` and `std` as dependencies
scripts: generate_rust_analyzer: syn: treat `std` as a dependency
scripts: generate_rust_analyzer: remove sysroot assertion
rust: kbuild: give `--config-path` to `rustfmt` in `.rsi` target
scripts: generate_rust_analyzer: Add pin_init_internal deps
scripts: generate_rust_analyzer: Add pin_init -> compiler_builtins dep
scripts: generate_rust_analyzer: Add compiler_builtins -> core dep
rust: macros: ignore example with module parameters
rust: num: bounded: mark __new as unsafe
...
Some special sections specify their ELF section entsize, for example:
.pushsection section, "M", @progbits, 8
The entsize (8 in this example) is needed by objtool klp-diff for
extracting individual entries.
Clang assembler versions older than 20 silently ignore the above
construct and set entsize to 0, resulting in the following error:
.discard.annotate_data: missing special section entsize or annotations
Add a klp-build check to prevent the use of Clang assembler versions
prior to 20.
Fixes: 24ebfcd65a ("livepatch/klp-build: Introduce klp-build script for generating livepatch modules")
Reported-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/957fd52e375d0e2cfa3ac729160da995084a7f5e.1769562556.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Currently, modules.builtin.modinfo is created with executable permissions
(0755). This is because after commit 39cfd5b121 ("kbuild: extract
modules.builtin.modinfo from vmlinux.unstripped"), modules.builtin.modinfo
is extracted from vmlinux.unstripped using objcopy. When extracting
sections, objcopy inherits attributes from the source ELF file.
Since modules.builtin.modinfo is a data file and not an executable,
it should have regular file permissions (0644). The executable bit
can trigger warnings in Debian's Lintian tool.
Explicitly remove the executable bit after generation.
Fixes: 39cfd5b121 ("kbuild: extract modules.builtin.modinfo from vmlinux.unstripped")
Signed-off-by: Ethan Zuo <yuxuan.zuo@outlook.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/SY0P300MB0609F6916B24ADF65502940B9C91A@SY0P300MB0609.AUSP300.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Schier <nsc@kernel.org>
Pull pin-init updates from Benno Lossin:
"Added:
- Implement 'InPlaceWrite' for '&'static mut MaybeUninit<T>'. This
enables users to use external allocation mechanisms such as
'static_cell'.
- Add Gary Guo as a Maintainer.
Changed:
- Rewrote all proc-macros ('[pin_]init!', '#[pin_data]',
'#[pinned_drop]', 'derive([Maybe]Zeroable)'), using 'syn' with
better diagnostics.
- Support tuple structs in 'derive([Maybe]Zeroable)'.
- Support attributes on fields in '[pin_]init!' (such as
'#[cfg(...)]').
- Add a '#[default_error(<type>)]' attribute to '[pin_]init!' to
override the default error (when no '? Error' is specified).
- Support packed structs in '[pin_]init!' with
'#[disable_initialized_field_access]'.
Removed:
- Remove 'try_[pin_]init!' in favor of merging their feature
with '[pin_]init!'. Update the kernel's own 'try_[pin_]init!'
macros to use the 'default_error' attribute.
Fixed:
- Correct 'T: Sized' bounds to 'T: ?Sized' in the generated
'PinnedDrop' check by '#[pin_data]'."
* tag 'pin-init-v7.0' of https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux:
rust: pin-init: Implement `InPlaceWrite<T>` for `&'static mut MaybeUninit<T>`
MAINTAINERS: add Gary Guo to pin-init
rust: pin-init: internal: init: simplify Zeroable safety check
rust: pin-init: internal: init: add escape hatch for referencing initialized fields
rust: pin-init: internal: init: add support for attributes on initializer fields
rust: init: use `#[default_error(err)]` for the initializer macros
rust: pin-init: add `#[default_error(<type>)]` attribute to initializer macros
rust: pin-init: rewrite the initializer macros using `syn`
rust: pin-init: add `?Sized` bounds to traits in `#[pin_data]` macro
rust: pin-init: rewrite `#[pin_data]` using `syn`
rust: pin-init: rewrite the `#[pinned_drop]` attribute macro using `syn`
rust: pin-init: rewrite `derive(Zeroable)` and `derive(MaybeZeroable)` using `syn`
rust: pin-init: internal: add utility API for syn error handling
rust: pin-init: add `syn` dependency and remove `proc-macro[2]` and `quote` workarounds
rust: pin-init: allow the crate to refer to itself as `pin-init` in doc tests
rust: pin-init: remove `try_` versions of the initializer macros
When building a patch to a single-file kernel module with
CONFIG_MODULE_SRCVERSION_ALL enabled, the klp-build module link fails in
modpost:
Diffing objects
drivers/md/raid0.o: changed function: raid0_run
Building patch module: livepatch-0001-patch-raid0_run.ko
drivers/md/raid0.c: No such file or directory
...
The problem here is that klp-build copied drivers/md/.raid0.o.cmd to the
module build directory, but it didn't also copy over the input source
file listed in the .cmd file:
source_drivers/md/raid0.o := drivers/md/raid0.c
So modpost dies due to the missing .c file which is needed for
calculating checksums for CONFIG_MODULE_SRCVERSION_ALL.
Instead of copying the original .cmd file, just create an empty one.
Modpost only requires that it exists. The original object's build
dependencies are irrelevant for the frankenobjects used by klp-build.
Fixes: 24ebfcd65a ("livepatch/klp-build: Introduce klp-build script for generating livepatch modules")
Reported-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Tested-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/c41b6629e02775e4c1015259aa36065b3fe2f0f3.1769471792.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Pull tracing fixes from Steven Rostedt:
- Fix a crash with passing a stacktrace between synthetic events
A synthetic event is an event that combines two events into a single
event that can display fields from both events as well as the time
delta that took place between the events. It can also pass a
stacktrace from the first event so that it can be displayed by the
synthetic event (this is useful to get a stacktrace of a task
scheduling out when blocked and recording the time it was blocked
for).
A synthetic event can also connect an existing synthetic event to
another event. An issue was found that if the first synthetic event
had a stacktrace as one of its fields, and that stacktrace field was
passed to the new synthetic event to be displayed, it would crash the
kernel. This was due to the stacktrace not being saved as a
stacktrace but was still marked as one. When the stacktrace was read,
it would try to read an array but instead read the integer metadata
of the stacktrace and dereferenced a bad value.
Fix this by saving the stacktrace field as a stacktrace.
- Fix possible overflow in cmp_mod_entry() compare function
A binary search is used to find a module address and if the addresses
are greater than 2GB apart it could lead to truncation and cause a
bad search result. Use normal compares instead of a subtraction
between addresses to calculate the compare value.
- Fix output of entry arguments in function graph tracer
Depending on the configurations enabled, the entry can be two
different types that hold the argument array. The macro
FGRAPH_ENTRY_ARGS() is used to find the correct arguments from the
given type. One location was missed and still referenced the
arguments directly via entry->args and could produce the wrong value
depending on how the kernel was configured.
- Fix memory leak in scripts/tracepoint-update build tool
If the array fails to allocate, the memory for the values needs to be
freed and was not. Free the allocated values if the array failed to
allocate.
* tag 'trace-v6.19-rc6' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/trace/linux-trace:
scripts/tracepoint-update: Fix memory leak in add_string() on failure
function_graph: Fix args pointer mismatch in print_graph_retval()
tracing: Avoid possible signed 64-bit truncation
tracing: Fix crash on synthetic stacktrace field usage
When realloc() fails in add_string(), the function returns -1 but leaves
*vals pointing to the previously allocated memory. This can cause memory
leaks in callers like make_trace_array() that return on error without
freeing the partially built array.
Fix this by freeing *vals and setting it to NULL when realloc() fails.
This makes the error handling self-contained in add_string() so callers
don't need to handle cleanup on failure.
This bug is found by my static analysis tool and my code review.
Cc: Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org>
Cc: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Fixes: e30f8e61e2 ("tracing: Add a tracepoint verification check at build time")
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260119114542.1714405-1-geoffreyhe2@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Weigang He <geoffreyhe2@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (Google) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
Provide a new syscall which has the only purpose to yield the CPU after the
kernel granted a time slice extension.
sched_yield() is not suitable for that because it unconditionally
schedules, but the end of the time slice extension is not required to
schedule when the task was already preempted. This also allows to have a
strict check for termination to catch user space invoking random syscalls
including sched_yield() from a time slice extension region.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Acked-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20251215155708.929634896@linutronix.de
Some folks evidently have muscle memory expecting kernel-doc to be under
scripts/. Now that we have moved it to tools/docs, leave behind a symbolic
link to reduce the global profanity count.
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
There are some typos and English errors in the comments of kernel‑doc.py.
Locate them with the help of an LLM (gpt‑oss 14B), executed locally
with this prompt:
review English grammar and syntax at the comments on the code below:
<cat scripts/kernel-doc.py>
While LLM worked fine for the task of doing an English grammar review
for strings, being able to distinguish them from the actual code, it
was not is perfect: some things required manual work to fix.
-
While here, replace:
"/**" with: ``/**``
As, if we ever rename this script to kernel_doc.py and add it to
Sphinx ext autodoc, we want to avoid this warning:
scripts/kernel_doc.py:docstring of kernel_doc:10: WARNING: Inline strong start-string without end-string. [docutils]
Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+huawei@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Message-ID: <ec08727f22ad35e6c58519c1f425f216f14b701c.1768823489.git.mchehab+huawei@kernel.org>
Fix the `generate_rust_analyzer.py` script to ensure that the
`rust-project.json` it produces includes `core` and `std` in the `deps`
field for the `quote` crate.
`quote` directly references items from both `core` and `std`, so
rust-analyzer should treat them as dependencies to provide correct IDE
support.
For example, the `::quote::ToTokens` trait is implemented for
`std::ffi::CString`. With `std` listed in the `deps` field,
rust-analyzer can show the expected autocomplete for the
`::quote::ToTokens` methods on `std::ffi::CString`.
Verified the explicit uses of `core` and `std` using:
grep -rnE 'core::|std::' rust/quote/
Fixes: 88de91cc1c ("rust: quote: enable support in kbuild")
Signed-off-by: Jesung Yang <y.j3ms.n@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tamir Duberstein <tamird@gmail.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/cef76fc1105481d219953c8552eb5eb07dac707a.1764062688.git.y.j3ms.n@gmail.com
[ Reworded title. - Miguel ]
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
Fix the `generate_rust_analyzer.py` script to ensure that the
`rust-project.json` it produces includes `std` in the `deps` field for
the `syn` crate.
`syn` directly references items from `std`, so rust-analyzer should
treat it as a dependency to provide correct IDE support.
For example, `syn::Punctuated` contains fields of type `Vec<..>` and
`Option<..>`, both of which come from the standard library prelude.
With `std` listed in the `deps` field, rust-analyzer can infer the types
of these fields instead of showing `{unknown}`.
Verified the explicit uses of `std` using:
grep -rn 'std::' rust/syn/
Fixes: 737401751a ("rust: syn: enable support in kbuild")
Signed-off-by: Jesung Yang <y.j3ms.n@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tamir Duberstein <tamird@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Tamir Duberstein <tamird@gmail.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/6dbdf6e1c1639ae381ca9ab7041f84728ffa2267.1764062688.git.y.j3ms.n@gmail.com
[ Reworded title. - Miguel ]
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
`rustfmt` is configured via the `.rustfmt.toml` file in the source tree,
and we apply `rustfmt` to the macro expanded sources generated by the
`.rsi` target.
However, under an `O=` pointing to an external folder (i.e. not just
a subdir), `rustfmt` will not find the file when checking the parent
folders. Since the edition is configured in this file, this can lead to
errors when it encounters newer syntax, e.g.
error: expected one of `!`, `.`, `::`, `;`, `?`, `where`, `{`, or an operator, found `"rust_minimal"`
--> samples/rust/rust_minimal.rsi:29:49
|
28 | impl ::kernel::ModuleMetadata for RustMinimal {
| - while parsing this item list starting here
29 | const NAME: &'static ::kernel::str::CStr = c"rust_minimal";
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ expected one of 8 possible tokens
30 | }
| - the item list ends here
|
= note: you may be trying to write a c-string literal
= note: c-string literals require Rust 2021 or later
= help: pass `--edition 2024` to `rustc`
= note: for more on editions, read https://doc.rust-lang.org/edition-guide
A workaround is to use `RUSTFMT=n`, which is documented in the `Makefile`
help for cases where macro expanded source may happen to break `rustfmt`
for other reasons, but this is not one of those cases.
One solution would be to pass `--edition`, but we want `rustfmt` to
use the entire configuration, even if currently we essentially use the
default configuration.
Thus explicitly give the path to the config file to `rustfmt` instead.
Reported-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Fixes: 2f7ab1267d ("Kbuild: add Rust support")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Reviewed-by: Nathan Chancellor <nathan@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Gary Guo <gary@garyguo.net>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260115183832.46595-1-ojeda@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
`syn` makes parsing Rust from proc-macros a lot simpler. `pin-init` has
not used `syn` up until now, because the we did not support it. That
changed in commit 54e3eae855 ("Merge patch series "`syn` support""),
so we can finally utilize the added ergonomics of parsing proc-macro
input with `syn`.
Previously we only had the `proc-macro` library available, whereas the
user-space version also used `proc-macro2` and `quote`. Now both are
available, so remove the workarounds.
Due to these changes, clippy emits warnings about unnecessary
`.to_string()` as `proc-macro2` provides an additional `PartialEq` impl
on `Ident`, so the warnings are fixed.
[ Adjusted wording from upstream version and added build system changes
for the kernel - Benno ]
Co-developed-by: Gary Guo <gary@garyguo.net>
Signed-off-by: Gary Guo <gary@garyguo.net>
Reviewed-by: Tamir Duberstein <tamird@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Andreas Hindborg <a.hindborg@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Benno Lossin <lossin@kernel.org>
Cross-merge BPF and other fixes after downstream PR.
No conflicts.
Adjacent:
Auto-merging MAINTAINERS
Auto-merging Makefile
Auto-merging kernel/bpf/verifier.c
Auto-merging kernel/sched/ext.c
Auto-merging mm/memcontrol.c
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
When running make nconfig with a static linking host toolchain,
the libraries are linked in an incorrect order,
resulting in errors similar to the following:
$ MAKEFLAGS='HOSTCC=cc\ -static' make nconfig
/usr/bin/ld: /usr/lib64/gcc/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/14.2.1/../../../../lib64/libpanel.a(p_new.o): in function `new_panel':
(.text+0x13): undefined reference to `_nc_panelhook_sp'
/usr/bin/ld: (.text+0x6c): undefined reference to `_nc_panelhook_sp'
Fixes: 1c5af5cf93 ("kconfig: refactor ncurses package checks for building mconf and nconf")
Signed-off-by: Arusekk <floss@arusekk.pl>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260110114808.22595-1-floss@arusekk.pl
[nsc: Added comment about library order]
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Schier <nsc@kernel.org>
The check-function-names.sh scripts invokes 'nm' directly and this can
be problematic during cross-compilation when the toolchain is different
from the system's default (e.g. LLVM=1).
scripts/check-function-names.sh: nm: not found
Let's prefer the ${NM} variable which is already set by kbuild. However,
still fallback to plain 'nm' to ensure the script is still usable when
called directly.
Fixes: 93863f3f85 ("kbuild: Check for functions with ambiguous -ffunction-sections section names")
Signed-off-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Nathan Chancellor <nathan@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20251218175824.3122690-1-cmllamas@google.com
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Schier <nsc@kernel.org>