by sizeof(wchar_t) to get the number of wide characters it contains.
Remove the !hardway micro-optimisation from the CT_INT case to avoid
having to fix it for wide characters.
is made an array of two, to explicitly avoid stack corruption due to
null-terminating (which is doesn't actually happen due to stack alignment
padding).
Submitted by: Ed Moy <emoy@apple.com>
Obtained from: Apple Computer, Inc.
Create a private, single underscore, version of pthread_mutex_unlock for libc.
pthread_mutex_lock already has one. These versions are different from the
ones that applications will link against because they block all signals
from the time a call to lock the mutex is made until it is successfully
unlocked.
system by specifying the file system ID instead of a path. Use this
by default in umount(8). This avoids the need to perform any vnode
operations to look up the mount point, so it makes it possible to
unmount a file system whose root vnode cannot be looked up (e.g.
due to a dead NFS server, or a file system that has become detached
from the hierarchy because an underlying file system was unmounted).
It also provides an unambiguous way to specify which file system is
to be unmunted.
Since the ability to unmount using a path name is retained only for
compatibility, that case now just uses a simple string comparison
of the supplied path against f_mntonname of each mounted file system.
Discussed on: freebsd-arch
mdoc help from: ru
a thread receives a spurious wakeup from sigtimedwait(), so make sure
that the call to the queueing code is called only once before entering
the loop (not in the loop). This should fix some fatal errors people
are seeing with messages stating the thread is already on the mutex queue.
These errors may still be triggered from signal handlers; however, since
that part of the code is not locked down yet.
The old buffer was not being initialized and a later str*() op on
it would cause a crash if it wasn't initialized by a previous
call to setproctitle(3) with an actual string.
Noticed by: Ashley Penney <ashp@unloved.org>
to clarify which system call accepts which arguments. Previously
the manual page gave the impression that calling unmount() with
flags of (MNT_FORCE | MNT_UPDATE | MNT_RDONLY) would downgrade a
read-write mount to read-only, which is clearly untrue; to do that,
these flags should be passed to mount() instead.
not spinlock_t. Spinlock_t and the associated functions and macros may
require blocking signals in order for async-safe libc functions to behave
appropriately in libthr. This is undesriable for libthr internal locking.
So, this is the first step in completely separating libthr from libc's
locking primitives.
Three new macros should be used for internal libthr locking from now on:
THR_LOCK, THR_TRYLOCK, THR_UNLOCK.
and the disabling of signals. What we are really interested in is
keeping track of recursive disabling of signals. We should not
be recursively acquiring thread locks. Any such situations should
be reorganized to not require a recursive lock.
Separating the two out also allows us to block signals independent of
acquiring thread locks. This will be needed in libthr in the near future when
we put the pieces together to protect libc functions that use pthread mutexes
and low level locks.
Change execvp to be a wrapper around execvP. This is necessary for some
of the /rescue pieces. It may also be more generally applicable as well.
Submitted by: Tim Kientzle <kientzle@acm.org>
Approved by: Silence on arch@
implementation and the new improved one. We now precompute the
signal set passed to sigtimedwait, using an inverted set when
necessary for compatibility with older kernels.
exit function has invalidated the need for _spin[un]lock_pthread().
The _spin[un]lock() functions can now dereference curthread without
the danger that the ldtentry containing the pointer to the thread
has been cleared out from under them.