22a9d64567
Right now, most of the kernel boot is strictly synchronous, such that various hardware delays are done sequentially. In order to make the kernel boot faster, this patch introduces infrastructure to allow doing some of the initialization steps asynchronously, which will hide significant portions of the hardware delays in practice. In order to not change device order and other similar observables, this patch does NOT do full parallel initialization. Rather, it operates more in the way an out of order CPU does; the work may be done out of order and asynchronous, but the observable effects (instruction retiring for the CPU) are still done in the original sequence. Signed-off-by: Arjan van de Ven <arjan@linux.intel.com> |
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.. | ||
Makefile | ||
autoprobe.c | ||
chip.c | ||
devres.c | ||
handle.c | ||
internals.h | ||
manage.c | ||
migration.c | ||
numa_migrate.c | ||
proc.c | ||
resend.c | ||
spurious.c |