The MCE tolerance levels control whether we panic on a machine check or do something else like generating a signal and logging error information. This is controlled by the mce=<level> command line parameter. However, if panic_on_oops is set, it will force a panic for such an MCE even though the user didn't want to. So don't check panic_on_oops in the severity grading anymore. One of the use cases for that is recovery from uncorrectable errors with mce=2. [ Boris: rewrite commit message. ] Signed-off-by: Yinghai Lu <yinghai.lu@oracle.com> Acked-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com> Cc: linux-edac <linux-edac@vger.kernel.org> Cc: x86-ml <x86@kernel.org> Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20160916202325.4972-1-yinghai@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Borislav Petkov <bp@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> |
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Makefile | ||
mce_amd.c | ||
mce_intel.c | ||
mce-apei.c | ||
mce-genpool.c | ||
mce-inject.c | ||
mce-internal.h | ||
mce-severity.c | ||
mce.c | ||
p5.c | ||
therm_throt.c | ||
threshold.c | ||
winchip.c |