1998-08-23 22:07:21 +00:00
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LIST OF KNOWN BUGS IN AM-UTILS OR OPERATING SYSTEMS
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(1) mips-sgi-irix*
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1999-11-05 11:42:30 +00:00
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[1A] known to have flaky NFS V.3 and TCP. Amd tends to hang or spin
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1998-08-23 22:07:21 +00:00
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infinitely after a few hours or days of use. Users must install recommended
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patches from vendor. Patches help, but not all the time. Otherwise avoid
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using NFS V.3 and TCP on these systems, by setting
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/defaults opts:=vers=2,proto=udp
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[1B] yp_all() leaks a file descriptor. Eventually amd runs out of file
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descriptors and hangs. Am-utils circumvents this by using its own version
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1999-11-05 11:42:30 +00:00
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of yp_all which uses udp and iterates over NIS maps. The latter isn't as
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1998-08-23 22:07:21 +00:00
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reliable as yp_all() which uses TCP, but it is better than hanging.
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1999-09-23 05:15:28 +00:00
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(I have some reports that older version of hpux-9, with older libc, also
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leak file descriptors.)
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2003-09-02 15:27:38 +00:00
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[1C] SGI's MIPSpro C compiler on IRIX 6 has the unfortunate habit of
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creating code specificially for the machine it runs on. The ABI and ISA
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used depend very much on the OS version and compiler release used. This
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means that the resulting amd binary won't run on machines different from
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the build host, particularly older ones. Older versions of am-utils
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enforced the O32 ABI when compiling with cc to work around this, but this
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ABI is deprecated in favor of the N32 ABI now, so we use -n32 -mips3 to
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ensure that the binaries run on every host capable of running IRIX 6 at
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all. If this is not appropriate for you, configure with something like
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CC='cc -64' instead to get the desired ABI and ISA.
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1998-08-23 22:07:21 +00:00
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(2) alpha-unknown-linux-gnu (RedHat Linux 4.2)
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2003-09-02 15:27:38 +00:00
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hasmntopt(mnt, opt) can go into an infinite loop if opt is any substring
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1998-08-23 22:07:21 +00:00
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of mnt->mnt_opts. Redhat 5.0 does not have this libc bug. Here is an
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example program:
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <mntent.h>
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main()
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{
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struct mntent mnt;
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char *cp;
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mnt.mnt_opts = "intr,rw,port=1023,timeo=8,foo=br,retrans=110,indirect,map=/usr/local/AMD/etc/amd.proj,boo";
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cp = hasmntopt(&mnt, "ro");
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printf("cp = %s\n", cp);
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exit(0);
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}
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1999-09-15 02:50:52 +00:00
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It is possible that sufficiently newer version of libc for RH4.2 fix this
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problem.
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1998-08-23 22:07:21 +00:00
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(3) mips-dec-ultrix4.3
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Rainer Orth <ro@TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE> reports
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1999-09-15 02:50:52 +00:00
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[3A] One needs the Kernel Config Files (UDTBIN430) subset installed to
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compile am-utils, otherwise essential header files (net/if.h, net/route.h,
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rpcsvc/mount.h, rpcsvc/yp_prot.h, rpcsvc/ypclnt.h, sys/proc.h) are
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missing.
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[3B] It's probably impossible to build am-utils with DEC C on Ultrix V4.3.
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This compiler is pseudo-ANSI only. Maybe the new ANSI C compiler in V4.3A
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and beyond will do. I successfully used gcc 2.8.1.
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[3C] You need to build against a recent libhesiod (I used 3.0.2) and
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libresolv/lib44bsd (I used BIND 4.9.5-P1). The resolver routines in
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libc seem to cause random memory corruption. It is necessary to specify
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LIBS=-l44bsd. lib44bsd is a helper library of libresolv used to supply
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functions like strdup which are missing on the host system. This isn't
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currently autoconfiscated.
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[3D] You need to configure with CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/sh5 /bin/sh5 buildall;
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/bin/sh cannot handle the shell functions used in buildall and is both
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buggy and slow.
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[3E] At least the gcc 2.7.0 fixincludes-mangled <sys/utsname.h> needs a
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1998-08-23 22:07:21 +00:00
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forward declaration of struct utsname to avoid lots of gcc warnings:
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RCS file: RCS/utsname.h,v
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retrieving revision 1.1
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diff -u -r1.1 utsname.h
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--- utsname.h 1995/06/19 13:07:01 1.1
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+++ utsname.h 1998/01/27 12:34:26
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@@ -59,6 +59,7 @@
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#ifdef KERNEL
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#include "../h/limits.h"
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#else /* user mode */
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+struct utsname;
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extern int uname _PARAMS((struct utsname *));
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#endif
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#define __SYS_NMLN 32
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(4) powerpc-ibm-aix4.2.1.0
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[4A] "Randall S. Winchester" <rsw@Glue.umd.edu> reports that for amd to
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start, you need to kill and restart rpc.mountd and possibly also make sure
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that nfsd is running. Normally these are not required.
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[4B] "Stefan Vogel" <vogel@physik.unizh.ch> reports that if your amq
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executable dump core unexpectedly, then it may be a bug in gcc 2.7.x.
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Upgrade to gcc 2.8.x or use IBM's xlC compiler.
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1998-11-14 03:11:37 +00:00
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1999-01-13 19:23:16 +00:00
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[C] Do not link amd with libnsl. It is buggy and causes amd to core dump
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in strlen inside strdup inside svc_register().
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1998-11-14 03:11:37 +00:00
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2003-09-02 15:27:38 +00:00
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(5) *-linux-rh51 (RedHat Linux 5.1)
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1998-11-14 03:11:37 +00:00
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There's a UDP file descriptor leak in libnsl in RedHat Linux 5.1. This
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library part of glibc2. Am-utils currently declares redhat 5.1 systems as
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having a "broken yp_all" and using an internal, slower, leak-free version.
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The leak is known to the glibc maintainers and a fix from them is due soon,
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but it is not yet in the glibc-2.0.7-19 RPM.
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(6) rs6000-ibm-aix4.1.x
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A bug in libc results in an amq binary that doesn't work; amq -v dumps core
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in xdr_string. There is no known fix (source code or vendor patch) at this
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2004-07-06 12:55:44 +00:00
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time. (Please let am-utils@am-utils.org know if you know of a fix.)
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1999-11-05 11:42:30 +00:00
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(7) *-aix4.3.2.0
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2001-09-02 17:19:13 +00:00
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The plock() function will pre-reserve all of the memory up to the maximum
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listed in the ulimit. If the ulimit is infinite, plock() will try to take
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all of the system's memory, and fail with ENOMEM (Not Enough Space).
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Normally ulimit may be set to a few gigs of max memory usage, but even that
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is too much; Amd doesn't need more than a few megs of resident memory size
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(depending on the particular usage, number of maps, etc.) Solution: lower
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your ulimit before starting amd. This can be done inside the ctl-amd
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script, but be careful not to limit it too low. Alternatively, don't use
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plock on aix-4.3: set it to plock=no in amd.conf (which is the default if
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you do nothing).
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2003-09-02 15:27:38 +00:00
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(8) *-linux (systems using glibc 2.1, such as RedHat-6.x)
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2001-09-02 17:19:13 +00:00
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2003-09-02 15:27:38 +00:00
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There's a UDP file descriptor leak in the NIS routines in glibc, especially
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2001-09-02 17:19:13 +00:00
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those that do yp_bind. Until this is bug fixed, do not set nis_domain in
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amd.conf, but let the system pick up the default domain name as set by your
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system. That would avoid using the buggy yp_bind routines in libc.
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2003-09-02 15:27:38 +00:00
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(9) *-linux (SuSE systems using unfsd)
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2001-09-02 17:19:13 +00:00
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2003-09-02 15:27:38 +00:00
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The user-level nfsd (2.2beta44) on older SuSE Linux systems (and possibly
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others) dies with a SEGV when amd tries to contact it for access to a volume
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that does not exist, or one for which there is no permission to mount.
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2001-09-02 17:19:13 +00:00
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(10) *-*-hpux11
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If you're using NFSv3, you must install HP patches PHNE_20344 and
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PHNE_20371. If you don't, and you try to use amd with NFSv3 over TCP, your
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kernel will panic.
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2003-09-02 15:27:38 +00:00
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2001-09-02 17:19:13 +00:00
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(11) *-linux* (any system using a 2.2.18+ kernel)
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The Linux kernels don't support Amd's direct mounts very well, leading to
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erratic behavior: shares that don't get remounted after the first timeout,
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inability to restart Amd because its mount points cannot be unmounted,
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etc. There are some kernel patches on the am-utils Web site, which solve
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2003-09-02 15:27:38 +00:00
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these problems. See http://www.am-utils.org/patches/.
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UPDATE: kernels 2.4.10 and later completely disallow the direct mount hack,
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so direct mounts are simply not possible on those Linux kernels.
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(12) *-aix5.1.0.0 and *-hpux9*
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/bin/sh is broken and fails to run the configure script properly. You need
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to use /bin/ksh instead. The buildall script will do it for you; if for some
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reason you need to run configure directly, run it using 'ksh configure'
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instead of just 'configure'.
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[12A] *-aix5.1.*
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Apparently there is an NFS client side bug in vmount() which causes amd to
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hang when it starts (and tries to NFS-mount itself). According to IBM
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engineers, this has to do with partial support code for IPv6: the NFS kernel
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code doesn't appear to recognize the sin_family of the amd vmount(),
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although amd does the right thing. The bug appears to have been fixed in
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AIX 5.2. No known fix/patch is available for AIX 5.1 as of now (1/25/2003).
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(13) *-linux and *-darwin6.0
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Certain linux kernels (2.4.18+ are fine, 2.4.10- are probably bad, those in
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between have not been tested) have a bug which causes them to reconnect
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broken NFS/TCP connections using unprivileged ports (greater than 1024),
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unlike the initial connections which do originate from privileged
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ports. This can upset quite a few NFS servers and causes accesses to the
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mounted shares to fail with "Operation not permitted" (EPERM).
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The darwin (MacOS X) kernel defaults to using unprivileged ports, but that
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can be changed by setting the resvport mount flag (which amd sets by
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default). Nonetheless, if a TCP connection breaks, under certain unclear
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circumstances the kernel might "forget" about that flag and start using
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unprivileged ports, causing the same EPERM error above.
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2001-09-02 17:19:13 +00:00
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2003-09-02 15:27:38 +00:00
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Erez & Ion.
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1999-11-05 11:42:30 +00:00
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