device file and the mount point. This prevents the "unexpected recursive
lock" panic from happening.
This is a temporary fix. A kernel fix would be much much more ugly than
this, and still wouldn't be the "right" way to fix it. After some
of Terry's file system rework is installed, it will be possible to
properly fix this problem in a clean manner. Until then,
this change should prevent use from getting a problem report
on this every month or so (and I just noticed that someone in
one of the freebsd news groups was complaining about this problem, too).
spit out two error lines for a bogus filesystem type, e.g:
root@time-> mount -t foo /dev/sd0a /mnt
mount: exec /sbin/mount_foo for /mnt: No such file or directory
mount: exec /usr/sbin/mount_foo for /mnt: No such file or directory
But I would submit that if you're even going to scan multiple directories
for a mount_foo (which I actually think is somewhat bogus - if it's not
in /sbin, you're probably in big trouble anyway), you should emit an error
for each one. I got multiple complaints (in addition to the PR) that the
existing behavior was very confusing.
This solves the problem of being unable to use shared libraries with dots
in their names before the ".so.<version>" code.
This should be brought into -stable.
There are more changes from Paul that look like they should be included,
but they change the format of the hints file, so I'm not going to bring them
in now (but we should in the future).
Obtained from: pk@netbsd.org
and an unknown uid/gid is found in the file system. This is useful
if you wind up with a file in your file system that has a uid
that is extremely large, since quotacheck will wind up running
a very very long time due to it not handling large gaps in uids
very well (this is a problem that should be addressed some day).
Update the man page to reflect that fact the the -v flag now prints
some additional diagnostic messages.
stub lockd.
This implements just the protocol, but does not interact with the kernel.
It says "Yes!" to all requests. This is useful if you have people using
tools that do locking for no reason (eg: some PC NFS systems running some
Microsoft products) and will happily report they couldn't lock the file
and merrily proceed anyway. Running this will not change the reliability of
sharing files, it'll just keep it out of everybody's face.
Corrected some bogus cross references to man pages that we don't/won't
have and either deleted them, or found a more appropriate man page
that we do have. Various other minor changes to silence manck.
Manck is currently down to about 200 lines of errors, down from
the 500 - 600+ when I started all this.
required information from the driver, and produce a virgin disklabel
for it. The latter might be further edited with `disklabel -e' to
satisfy the user's need.
The magic sequence is:
disklabel -r -w sdX auto
disklabel -e sdX
left to do (e.g. it doesn't yet run on systems with aliased addresses)
but this should work for simple configurations.
I don't plan to enable the rdisc directory in the sbin/ makefile until
I get feedback on this and add the missing features, so please, if you
have routers that perform router discovery, or if your FreeBSD box is
itself a router, give this a try.
I discovered that when asking for the IFLIST via sysctl(), if you
specify only AF_INET address, it actually gives you only AF_INET..
(suprise, suprise..!)
Now, it should "do the right thing" in just about all cases... The only
problem, is that "the right thing" isn't exactly clear in all cases.