The init_task code can be the same for both mmu and non-mmu targets.
None of the alignment carried out in the the current init_task code
is necessary. The linker script takes care of aligning the init_thread
structure to a THREAD SIZE boundary, and that is all we need.
So use the init_task.c code for all target types, that makes m68k
code consistent with what most other architectures do.
Signed-off-by: Greg Ungerer <gerg@uclinux.org>
Acked-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org>
extra-$(CONFIG_SUN3) := sun3-head.o
extra-y += vmlinux.lds
-obj-y := entry.o irq.o m68k_ksyms.o module.o process.o ptrace.o setup.o \
- signal.o sys_m68k.o syscalltable.o time.o traps.o
+obj-y := entry.o init_task.o irq.o m68k_ksyms.o module.o process.o ptrace.o
+obj-y += setup.o signal.o sys_m68k.o syscalltable.o time.o traps.o
obj-$(CONFIG_MMU) += ints.o vectors.o
ifndef CONFIG_MMU_SUN3
obj-y += dma.o
endif
-ifndef CONFIG_MMU
-obj-y += init_task.o
-endif
*
* All other task structs will be allocated on slabs in fork.c
*/
-__asm__(".align 4");
struct task_struct init_task = INIT_TASK(init_task);
EXPORT_SYMBOL(init_task);
/*
* Initial thread structure.
*
- * We need to make sure that this is 8192-byte aligned due to the
+ * We need to make sure that this is THREAD size aligned due to the
* way process stacks are handled. This is done by having a special
* "init_task" linker map entry..
*/
#include <asm/setup.h>
#include <asm/pgtable.h>
-/*
- * Initial task/thread structure. Make this a per-architecture thing,
- * because different architectures tend to have different
- * alignment requirements and potentially different initial
- * setup.
- */
-static struct signal_struct init_signals = INIT_SIGNALS(init_signals);
-static struct sighand_struct init_sighand = INIT_SIGHAND(init_sighand);
-union thread_union init_thread_union __init_task_data
- __attribute__((aligned(THREAD_SIZE))) =
- { INIT_THREAD_INFO(init_task) };
-
-/* initial task structure */
-struct task_struct init_task = INIT_TASK(init_task);
-
-EXPORT_SYMBOL(init_task);
asmlinkage void ret_from_fork(void);