Home
last modified time | relevance | path

Searched full:sensitive (Results 1 – 25 of 739) sorted by relevance

12345678910>>...30

/kernel/linux/linux-5.10/arch/arm/mach-omap1/
Dfpga.c123 * edge-sensitive; the touchscreen is level-sensitive. The edge-sensitive
125 * status register from the FPGA. The edge-sensitive interrupt inputs
155 * The touchscreen interrupt is level-sensitive, so in omap1510_fpga_init_irq()
163 * edge-sensitive, so we won't mask them. in omap1510_fpga_init_irq()
/kernel/linux/linux-6.6/drivers/irqchip/
Dqcom-pdc.c110 * Level sensitive active low LOW
111 * Rising edge sensitive NOT USED
112 * Falling edge sensitive LOW
113 * Dual Edge sensitive NOT USED
114 * Level sensitive active High HIGH
115 * Falling Edge sensitive NOT USED
116 * Rising edge sensitive HIGH
117 * Dual Edge sensitive HIGH
/kernel/linux/linux-5.10/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/
Dsnps,archs-idu-intc.txt21 4 = active high level-sensitive <<< DEFAULT
22 8 = NOT SUPPORTED (active low level-sensitive)
24 sensitive.
Dopen-pic.txt46 1 = active low level-sensitive
47 2 = active high level-sensitive
84 // Interrupt source '42' that is active high level-sensitive.
Dimg,pdc-intc.txt44 4 = active-high level-sensitive (required for perip irqs)
45 8 = active-low level-sensitive
102 // Interrupt source SysWake 0 that is active-low level-sensitive
Datmel,aic.txt16 4 = active high level-sensitive.
17 8 = active low level-sensitive.
/kernel/linux/linux-6.6/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/interrupt-controller/
Dsnps,archs-idu-intc.txt21 4 = active high level-sensitive <<< DEFAULT
22 8 = NOT SUPPORTED (active low level-sensitive)
24 sensitive.
Dopen-pic.txt46 1 = active low level-sensitive
47 2 = active high level-sensitive
84 // Interrupt source '42' that is active high level-sensitive.
Dimg,pdc-intc.txt44 4 = active-high level-sensitive (required for perip irqs)
45 8 = active-low level-sensitive
102 // Interrupt source SysWake 0 that is active-low level-sensitive
Datmel,aic.txt16 4 = active high level-sensitive.
17 8 = active low level-sensitive.
/kernel/linux/linux-5.10/drivers/irqchip/
Dqcom-pdc.c131 * Level sensitive active low LOW
132 * Rising edge sensitive NOT USED
133 * Falling edge sensitive LOW
134 * Dual Edge sensitive NOT USED
135 * Level sensitive active High HIGH
136 * Falling Edge sensitive NOT USED
137 * Rising edge sensitive HIGH
138 * Dual Edge sensitive HIGH
/kernel/linux/linux-6.6/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mfd/
Dallwinner,sun4i-a10-ts.yaml33 allwinner,tp-sensitive-adjust:
71 /* sensitive/noisy touch panel */
72 allwinner,tp-sensitive-adjust = <0>;
/kernel/linux/linux-5.10/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mfd/
Dallwinner,sun4i-a10-ts.yaml33 allwinner,tp-sensitive-adjust:
71 /* sensitive/noisy touch panel */
72 allwinner,tp-sensitive-adjust = <0>;
/kernel/linux/linux-6.6/Documentation/security/
Dself-protection.rst70 Function pointers and sensitive variables must not be writable
167 the kernel's preallocated stack space and into sensitive structures. Two
169 sensitive thread_info structure elsewhere, and adding a faulting memory
258 By performing a per-build randomization of the layout of sensitive
267 Since the locations of sensitive structures are the primary target for
270 addresses or other sensitive things like canary values).
275 Printing kernel addresses to userspace leaks sensitive information about
316 it should automatically censor sensitive values.
/kernel/linux/linux-5.10/Documentation/security/
Dself-protection.rst70 Function pointers and sensitive variables must not be writable
168 the kernel's preallocated stack space and into sensitive structures. Two
170 sensitive thread_info structure elsewhere, and adding a faulting memory
259 By performing a per-build randomization of the layout of sensitive
268 Since the locations of sensitive structures are the primary target for
271 addresses or other sensitive things like canary values).
276 Printing kernel addresses to userspace leaks sensitive information about
317 it should automatically censor sensitive values.
/kernel/linux/linux-5.10/Documentation/virt/kvm/devices/
Dxics.rst77 * Level sensitive flag, 1 bit
79 This bit is 1 for a level-sensitive interrupt source, or 0 for
80 edge-sensitive (or MSI).
/kernel/linux/linux-6.6/Documentation/virt/kvm/devices/
Dxics.rst77 * Level sensitive flag, 1 bit
79 This bit is 1 for a level-sensitive interrupt source, or 0 for
80 edge-sensitive (or MSI).
/kernel/linux/linux-5.10/drivers/gpu/drm/
Ddrm_vblank_work.c15 * Many DRM drivers need to program hardware in a time-sensitive manner, many
18 * simply do said time-sensitive programming in the driver's IRQ handler,
24 * doesn't need to be concerned with extremely time-sensitive programming,
26 * hardware may require that certain time-sensitive programming be handled
41 * time-sensitive hardware programming on time, even when the system is under
/kernel/linux/linux-6.6/drivers/gpu/drm/
Ddrm_vblank_work.c15 * Many DRM drivers need to program hardware in a time-sensitive manner, many
18 * simply do said time-sensitive programming in the driver's IRQ handler,
24 * doesn't need to be concerned with extremely time-sensitive programming,
26 * hardware may require that certain time-sensitive programming be handled
41 * time-sensitive hardware programming on time, even when the system is under
/kernel/linux/linux-6.6/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/
Dgpio-nmk.txt13 4 = active high level-sensitive.
14 8 = active low level-sensitive.
/kernel/linux/linux-5.10/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/gpio/
Dgpio-nmk.txt13 4 = active high level-sensitive.
14 8 = active low level-sensitive.
Dnvidia,tegra20-gpio.txt19 4 = active high level-sensitive.
20 8 = active low level-sensitive.
Dgpio-zynq.txt21 4 = active high level-sensitive.
22 8 = active low level-sensitive.
/kernel/linux/linux-5.10/tools/testing/selftests/tpm2/
Dtpm2.py553 sensitive = SensitiveCreate(user_auth=auth_value)
571 (len(auth_cmd), len(sensitive), len(public))
580 len(sensitive),
581 bytes(sensitive),
599 sensitive = SensitiveCreate(user_auth=auth_value, data=data)
609 (len(auth_cmd), len(sensitive), len(public))
618 len(sensitive),
619 bytes(sensitive),
/kernel/linux/linux-6.6/tools/testing/selftests/tpm2/
Dtpm2.py554 sensitive = SensitiveCreate(user_auth=auth_value)
572 (len(auth_cmd), len(sensitive), len(public))
581 len(sensitive),
582 bytes(sensitive),
600 sensitive = SensitiveCreate(user_auth=auth_value, data=data)
610 (len(auth_cmd), len(sensitive), len(public))
619 len(sensitive),
620 bytes(sensitive),

12345678910>>...30