These old symbols are meaningless now that we have memory type
support implemented. The entire memory type field needs to be
modified rather than just a few bits twiddled.
Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk>
#define L_PTE_PRESENT (1 << 0)
#define L_PTE_FILE (1 << 1) /* only when !PRESENT */
#define L_PTE_YOUNG (1 << 1)
-#define L_PTE_BUFFERABLE (1 << 2) /* obsolete, matches PTE */
-#define L_PTE_CACHEABLE (1 << 3) /* obsolete, matches PTE */
#define L_PTE_DIRTY (1 << 6)
#define L_PTE_WRITE (1 << 7)
#define L_PTE_USER (1 << 8)
#if L_PTE_SHARED != PTE_EXT_SHARED
#error PTE shared bit mismatch
#endif
-#if L_PTE_BUFFERABLE != PTE_BUFFERABLE
-#error PTE bufferable bit mismatch
-#endif
-#if L_PTE_CACHEABLE != PTE_CACHEABLE
-#error PTE cacheable bit mismatch
-#endif
#if (L_PTE_EXEC+L_PTE_USER+L_PTE_WRITE+L_PTE_DIRTY+L_PTE_YOUNG+\
L_PTE_FILE+L_PTE_PRESENT) > L_PTE_SHARED
#error Invalid Linux PTE bit settings