It was EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(), however IBM's GPFS is not GPL.

- the GPFS team contributed to the testing and development of
  invaldiate_mmap_range().

- GPFS was developed under AIX and was ported to Linux, and hence meets
  Linus's "some binary modules are OK" exemption.

- The export makes sense: clustering filesystems need it for shootdowns to
  ensure cache coherency.



 25-akpm/mm/memory.c |    2 +-
 1 files changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff -puN mm/memory.c~invalidate_mmap_range-non-gpl-export mm/memory.c
--- 25/mm/memory.c~invalidate_mmap_range-non-gpl-export	Mon Nov 24 11:33:19 2003
+++ 25-akpm/mm/memory.c	Mon Nov 24 11:33:34 2003
@@ -1164,7 +1164,7 @@ void invalidate_mmap_range(struct addres
 		invalidate_mmap_range_list(&mapping->i_mmap_shared, hba, hlen);
 	up(&mapping->i_shared_sem);
 }
-EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(invalidate_mmap_range);
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(invalidate_mmap_range);
 
 /*
  * Handle all mappings that got truncated by a "truncate()"

_