after making test(1) a sh(1) builtin; sh(1) coredumps when you run
something like this:
sh -c 'test ! `true 1`'
The cause is that the test(1) code totally depends on the presence of
two extra cells at the end of argv that are filled with NULL's. The
reason why the bug hasn't been exposed would be because the C startup
code kindly prepares argv with some extra zeroed cells for a program.
I know this is not the best fix, but since there are argv++'s without
boundary checks everywhere, I'd rather patch it up like this
(preparing a copy of argv with extra NULL's) for the moment.
MFC after: 3 days
o Old-style K&R declarations have been converted to new C89 style
o register has been removed
o prototype for main() has been removed (gcc3 makes it an error)
o int main(int argc, char *argv[]) is the preferred main definition.
o Attempt to not break style(9) conformance for declarations more than
they already are.
o Change
int
foo() {
...
to
int
foo(void)
{
...
o Old-style K&R declarations have been converted to new C89 style
o register has been removed
o prototype for main() has been removed (gcc3 makes it an error)
o int main(int argc, char *argv[]) is the preferred main definition.
o Attempt to not break style(9) conformance for declarations more than
they already are.
o Old-style K&R declarations have been converted to new C89 style
o register has been removed
o prototype for main() has been removed (gcc3 makes it an error)
o int main(int argc, char *argv[]) is the preferred main definition.
o Attempt to not break style(9) conformance for declarations more than
they already are.
o gc some #ifdef sun ... #endif code
Approved by: arch@, new style(9)
o Old-style K&R declarations have been converted to new C89 style
o register has been removed
o prototype for main() has been removed (gcc3 makes it an error)
o int main(int argc, char *argv[]) is the preferred main definition.
o Attempt to not break style(9) conformance for declarations more than
they already are.
Approved by: arch@, new style(9)
o __P has been reoved
o Old-style K&R declarations have been converted to new C89 style
o register has been removed
o prototype for main() has been removed (gcc3 makes it an error)
o int main(int argc, char *argv[]) is the preferred main definition.
o Attempt to not break style(9) conformance for declarations more than
they already are.
Approved by: arch@, new style(9)
o __P has been reoved
o Old-style K&R declarations have been converted to new C89 style
o register has been removed
o prototype for main() has been removed (gcc3 makes it an error)
o int main(int argc, char *argv[]) is the preferred main definition.
o Attempt to not break style(9) conformance for declarations more than
they already are.
Approved by: arch@, new style(9)
Fixed setting of WARNS in rev.1.16. Options should normally be set using
using "?=", not using "=", so that the setting is easy to override on the
command line, and setting WARNS to 0 should not be an exception.
file sizes to be displayed with unit suffixes; Byte, Kilobyte,
Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte and Petabyte in order to reduce the
number of digits to three or less.
Submitted by: nik
are now defined using the characters a-h and A-H for the bold
variants. The old way using 0-7 for the colours still works, but
prints a message asking the user to switch.
PR: bin/27374
circumstances. This is a reworked version of the same fix, that does
not have this defect, and which fixes some style bugs at the same time.
Bug reported and fix reviewed by: bde
(which somehow now seems to be the default for compiling -current).
This error popped up while doing a PicoBSD cross-compile on a 4.3-ish system,
it may well be that there are other apps which have similar problems,
but I did not spot them as they are not included in my picobsd config.
Whether adding prototypes for main() is the correct solution or not
I have no idea, a request to -current on the matter went basically
unanswered. Those who have better ideas are welcome to back this out
and replace it with the correct fix.
of the recent WARNS commits. The idea is:
1) FreeBSD id tags should follow vendor tags.
2) Vendor tags should not be compiled (though copyrights probably should).
3) There should be no blank line between including cdefs and __FBSDIF.
o explicitly check return values and variables against a value
o return x; -> return (x);
o fix inconsistent sysexits usage by nuking it (partially
suggested by bde)
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
group ACL entry in relation to the existing group and mask
ACL entries.
o Move the explanation of multiple ACL entries on the command
line to the ACL ENTRIES section.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
used so often that it's worth keeping it as a builtin.
Now that all the printf invocations from within the system startup
scripts, we can safely remove it.
Urged by: sheldonh :)
No MFC is planned so far because it may break compatibility and
violate POLA.
binary size increase is 3,784 bytes (about 0.6%).
I don't drop the printf builtin while I'm here because some /etc/rc.*
scripts seem to use it before mounting /usr where printf(1) resides.
Reviewed by: arch (sheldonh)
Inspired by: NetBSD, ksh
Clued by: ume (on how the printf builtin is used)
setvar() and passed to setvareq(). When the VTEXTFIXED flag is set,
that copy is never freed, causing a memory leak.
PR: 31533
Submitted by: maxim@macomnet.ru
characters. Use quad conversion functions rather then long conversion
where appropriate to handle the available range. Mainly fixes time_t
but there was also a st_size ulong conversion in there that has to be
quad or cpio cannot be used to copy files > 2G.
MFC after: 1 day
Restore the code that avoided closing and reopening
stdin. This is also required by POSIX. As a bonus,
enable multiple stdin reads with the -benstv flags,
by resetting the EOF condition on stdin.
value CTLARI since this might break expansion of arithmetic expressions.
Don't access memory below start of stackblock.
Problem analyzed by hunt@iprg.nokia.com, slightly different patch applied.
PR: 24443
Submitted by: hunt@iprg.nokia.com
Note ALL MODULES MUST BE RECOMPILED
make the kernel aware that there are smaller units of scheduling than the
process. (but only allow one thread per process at this time).
This is functionally equivalent to teh previousl -current except
that there is a thread associated with each process.
Sorry john! (your next MFC will be a doosie!)
Reviewed by: peter@freebsd.org, dillon@freebsd.org
X-MFC after: ha ha ha ha
This file could be removed as the alpha changes have been incorporated into
the base release. However, it is probably best to leave this here since there
are additional FreeBSD architectures in the pipeline that should be added.
fseek -> fseeko
ftell -> ftello
NOTE: that fseek/ftell not works for >long offsets per POSIX:
[EOVERFLOW] For fseek( ), the resulting file offset would be a value which
cannot be represented correctly in an object of type long.
[EOVERFLOW] For ftell ( ), the current file offset cannot be represented
correctly in an object of type long.
Avoid using parenthesis enclosure macros (.Pq and .Po/.Pc) with plain text.
Not only this slows down the mdoc(7) processing significantly, but it also
has an undesired (in this case) effect of disabling hyphenation within the
entire enclosed block.
o Add consts where appropriate.
o Rename some variables that were shadowing global declarations.
o Remove register storage-classes.
o Make errmsg a const, so we can just set error messages instead
of using sprintf/strcpy.
o Set WARNS=2
Reviewed by: bde, des
which is also called from handle_hup(), uses stdio(3). Furthermore,
this means that calling exit(3) (via quit()) there is required to
flush the buffer write_file() was working on.
Submitted by: bde
signal. Fix it by adding an explicit call to summary() in terminate()
(it was previously called implicitly by exit() because summary() was
registered with atexit()). summary() is supposed to be signal-safe--
it handles SIGINFO almost exclusively--so this should be safe.
Submitted by: bde
the !(pflag && setfile()) case for regular files unless the copy is
owned by the same user and group. These bits have already been lost
(or never gained) in the correct way. The code didn't actually lose
the bits; it depended on them being lost already (apparently in all
cases) and attempted to gain them as necessary, but it often gained
them (and sometimes collateral bits) when wrong:
- pflag && setfile() == 0 case (i.e., for a successful cp -p):
setfile() copies all the attributes as correctly as possible (as
specified by POSIX), and we sometimes messed up the up the mode by
setting it again. Also, if the file is immutable, then setting the
mode again gave spurious errors (PR 20646).
- !pflag case. If the target is created, POSIX requires it to not
have the set[ug]id bits, but we sometimes copied them from the source.
If the target already exists, POSIX requires its mode to be unchanged,
but we sometimes copied the whole mode from the source.
PR: 20646
MFC after: 4 weeks
errexit (-e) processing. This solves a problem where 'make clean' would
fail with an unspecified error in certain automake-generated makefiles.
Reviewed by: no objections from -hackers...
MFC after: 2 weeks
``chown -h owner symlink'' did not set the symlink's owner
if the file the symlink points to already had that owner:
# ls -l alink afile
-rw-r--r-- 1 nobody ru 0 May 31 14:14 afile
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root ru 5 May 31 14:14 alink -> afile
# ./chown -h -v nobody alink
# ls -l alink afile
-rw-r--r-- 1 nobody ru 0 May 31 14:14 afile
lrwxr-xr-x 1 root ru 5 May 31 14:14 alink -> afile
Similarly for chgrp(1) and chmod(1).
in okname() in util.c and second, returning != 0 when you do have an
error from okname in two places in rcp.c.
Thanks to Garrett for the POSIX defintion of valid login and group names.
PR: bin/25757
MFC after: 3 weeks
error caused by the -1 being on the wrong side of the comparison.
This would not cause an overflow, as near as I can tell, because we
truncate later anyway. We'd just fail to get a diagnostic for 1024
and 1025 byte file names.
This is required by symlink(7), ``Commands not traversing a file tree''
subsection, third paragraph:
: It is important to realize that this rule includes commands which may
: optionally traverse file trees, e.g. the command ``chown file'' is
: included in this rule, while the command ``chown -R file'' is not.
For chown(8) and chgrp(1), this is also is compliance with the latest
POSIX 1003.1-200x draft.
MFC after: 1 week
and remove the setgid operator bit from the installed binary: if you want
to view free disk space on an unmounted device, you should have read
permissions to access it.
Reviewed by: phk
are:
* Implement cpio compatibility mode when pax is invoked as cpio
* Extend tar compatibility mode to cover many of the GNU tar single-letter
options (bzip2 mode, aka -y/-j is not present in OpenBSD). When
invoked as tar, pax is now full-featured enough for use by the ports
collection to extract distfiles and create packages.
* Many bug fixes to the operation of pax and the tar compatibility modes
* Code fixes for things like correct string buffer termination.
I tried to preserve existing FreeBSD fixes to this utility; please let me
know if I have inadvertently spammed something.
and compress) to pax when used in tar mode (invoked as 'tar') for
compatibility with GNU tar.
bzip2 functionality for further GNU tar compatibility will be added at a
later date.
Note in the manpage that -z is non-standard.
Obtained from: OpenBSD
Reviewed by: -hackers
MFC after: 2 weeks
required by POSIX.1e. This maintains the current 'struct acl'
in the kernel while providing the generic external acl_t
interface required to complete the ACL editing library.
o Add the acl_get_entry() function.
o Convert the existing ACL utilities, getfacl and setfacl, to
fully make use of the ACL editing library.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
now compile/work on any POSIX.1e-compliant implementation (also tested
against the current Linux patches).
Review by: rwatson
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
: LC_TIME This variable shall determine the format and
: contents of date and time strings when the -v
: option is specified.
Developers took this wrong. LC_TIME specifies the locale
name, not the ``format'' argument of strftime().
Oops:
pax -w -f /tmp/foo /dev/null
LC_TIME=de_DE.ISO_8859-1 pax -v -f /tmp/foo
When a child is receiving SIGSTOP, eval continues with the next
command. While that is correct for the interactive case (Control-Z
and you get the prompt back), it is wrong for a shellscript, which
just continues with the next command, never again waiting for the
stopped child. Noted when childs from cronjobs were stopped, just to
make more processes (by wosch).
The fix is not to return from a job wait when the wait returned for a
stopped child while in non-interactive mode. This bahaviour seems to
be what bash2 and ksh implement. I tested for correct behaviour for
finnaly killing the child with and without forgrounding it first.
When not foregrouding before killing, the shell continues with the
script, which is what the other shells do as well.
Reviewed by: Silence on -current
This makes "mkdir /nonexistant/foo" complain that /nonexistant
doesn't exist rather than /nonexistant/foo which doesn't make much
sense.
Submitted (in a different form) by: W.H.Scholten <whs@xs4all.nl>
no longer contains kernel specific data structures, but rather
only scalar values and structures that are already part of the
kernel/user interface, specifically rusage and rtprio. It no
longer contains proc, session, pcred, ucred, procsig, vmspace,
pstats, mtx, sigiolst, klist, callout, pasleep, or mdproc. If
any of these changed in size, ps, w, fstat, gcore, systat, and
top would all stop working. The new structure has over 200 bytes
of unassigned space for future values to be added, yet is nearly
100 bytes smaller per entry than the structure that it replaced.
This lets you resolve pathnames to their underlying physical path:
critter# realpath /sys/kern/subr_disk.c
/freebsd/src/sys/kern/subr_disk.c
Update the pwd man-page slightly.
- The ability to specify elements by volume tag instead of their actual
physical location. e.g., instead of:
chio move slot 3 slot 4
you would now use:
chio move voltag FOO slot 4
- The ability to return an element to its previous location, as specified
by the source element. e.g., instead of:
chio move drive 0 slot 4
you would now use:
chio return drive 0
or
chio return voltag FOO
These features will obviously only work with changers that support volume
tags and/or source element IDs. chio(1) should fail gracefully if the user
attempts to use these new features and the source element ID or volume tag
are not found.
PR: bin/21178
Submitted by: "C. Stephen Gunn" <csg@waterspout.com>
Reviewed by: ken
include:
* Mutual exclusion is used instead of spl*(). See mutex(9). (Note: The
alpha port is still in transition and currently uses both.)
* Per-CPU idle processes.
* Interrupts are run in their own separate kernel threads and can be
preempted (i386 only).
Partially contributed by: BSDi (BSD/OS)
Submissions by (at least): cp, dfr, dillon, grog, jake, jhb, sheldonh
Serious fix still needed, see discussion on -current
(Subject: /bin/sh dumps core with here-document of 8bit text)
Problem in this code originally spotted by
Jun Kuriyama <kuriyama@FreeBSD.org>
growstackblock() sometimes relocates a stack_block considered empty
without properly relocating stack marks referencing that block.
The first call to popstackmark() with the unrelocated stack mark
as argument then causes sh to abort.
Relocating the relevant stack marks seems to solve this problem.
The patch changes the semantics of popstackmark() somewhat. It can
only be called once after a call to setstackmark(), thus cmdloop() in
main.c needs an extra call to setstackmark().
PR: bin/19983
Submitted by: Tor.Egge@fast.no
Reviewed by: Gerald Pfeifer <pfeifer@dbai.tuwien.ac.at>
flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning
message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command
line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that
want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined
colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is
directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable
terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483
Beyond changes to the build system, this includes fixing up the sample
freebsd.mc configuration for changes in defaults and syntax, removing
outdated documentation, and updating the release notes.
in committers (Message-Id: <72836.964344168@axl.ops.uunet.co.za>).
Also cleaned up a .Pq macro which was causing problems previous
to the original update I made.
Reviewed by: sheldonh
Approved by: jkh
option already supported octal. Add a comment to the -r option
in the man page so it's a bit more specific.
Discrepancy brought to my attention by: sasdrq@unx.sas.com
Approved by: jkh
on different file systems.
PR: bin/12375
Submitted by: Takashi SHIRAI <shirai@nintendo.co.jp>
No response by: steve
No problem with: building 5-current world
* remove hard sentence breaks
* use of Fl with Ar if argument available
* Dq -> Sq where better
* Ql -> Dq and Ql -> Fa where better
* include sections to Xr macro
* It Ar .ss -> It Ar ss
fixes (very important in this case). Version 1.40 should be discarded.
This version includes the language diffs. To receive them, use
cvs diff [-u] -r 1.39 -r 1.41
usage of .Xr and removal of hard sentence breaks).
PR: 18880
Submitted by: Christian Weisgerber <naddy@unix-ag.uni-kl.de>
Obtained from: OpenBSD (in parts)
used to extract modified boot hints to make loader(8)-time changes
"sticky". It tries to use \ style quoting so that it can be used directly
with foo.conf files. It can also extract specific variables.
ps(1) should not be returning a success code (0), it should return an
error code (1). This was fixed on OpenBSD over 3 years ago.
PR: 19069
Submitted by: Jim Sloan <odinn@atlantabiker.net>
Reviewed by: rwatson
terminal emulator.
As pointed out by jhb, a more scalable solution would be preferable
when multiple applications in the base system begin linking against
libh.
Submitted by: Doug Barton <DougB@gorean.org>
mark up a sample invocation, since it is not a command internal to the
described utility.
Do not use Ar (argument) to mark up something which is not an argument
to the utility or one of its internal commands.
the long -l output format with the last commit. Fix it
by replacing the "%b %e" strftime format with "%Ef".
Make a note in the manual page that the LANG environment
variable affects the running of ls.
Reviewed by: ache
representation of time and date") won't change in time. Instead
of hard coding the locations of the time elements and hoping that
they don't move use strftime to generate the desired formats in
the first place.
PR: bin/7826
Don't use curses functions, use tputs instead
Add ^C reaction - reset colors
Optimization - don't turn off colors after EACH file printed.
Fix wrong ctype macro arg type in LSCOLORS parsing
this is extremely inefficient, instead write them all down at the
beginning.
The correct sequence to switch colours off is to first use 'op' if
it exists, otherwise use 'oc'. If neither of these exist then we
shouldn't be doing colour with this terminal.
Reviewed by: ache
to manage the ANSI colour sequences. Colour support is disabled
unless the TERM environment variable references a valid termcap.
* Allow optional compilation of the colour support in the Makefile,
defaulting to yes. This allows us to switch it off for fixit
floppies and other mediums where space is an issue and the extra
bloat of statically linking with ncurses isn't acceptable.
* Display a warning if colour is requested with '-G' but support
for it isn't compiled in.
It is not switched on by default and must be enabled with the -G
flag. When using ls -G the output behaviour is modified with ANSI
colour sequences wrapped around filenames to help distinguish file
types. (Colours can be redefined in the LSCOLORS environment
variable as described in the manual page.)
Colour support is silently disabled (if switched on) if stdout
isn't a tty.
Based on: asami's colorls port.
PR: bin/18900 && ports/18616.
date is launched with the "u" argument. It now operates in the documented
manner.
Fix typo in date man page.
Submitted by: David McNett <nugget@slacker.com>
case), so that it doesn't clash with the ncurses function of the same
name when linking statically with -ltermcap.
The linker only complains when -static is used, and it is not clear
whether this is a bug.
PR: bin/18104
Submitted by: Anatoly Vorobey <mellon@pobox.com>
spaces reserved by the header files it includes.
mkinit.c still produces C code with redundant declarations, although
they are more harmless since they automatically derived from the right
places.
This gets rid of a bogus cast of NULL in setbuf().
Lets us know the buffer malloc failed.
Reworks the manpage a bit to make it more mdoc(7) compliant, adds
examples.
things get a bit out-of-phase when we step backwards 1 hour from
between 0:00 and 1:00 on the first of the month following the
transition into Summer time. This is probably actually a bug
in mktime().
PR: 10963
If mktime() fails and 68 < year < 138, assume that the reason is
because of Summer time and adjust up or down according to our
adjusting context by one hour. This assumes that all DSTs are
multiples of 1 hour.
PR: 6223, 17750
cases and broke the world in some cases.
Fixed some style bugs (the usual ones for DPADD and LDADD, misplacement
of DPADD and LDADD, and misplacement of $FreeBSD$).
operands. Can _YOU_ tell skip= and seek= apart with 100% accuracy
every time?
This also seems to make us option-for-option compatible with the
Solaris dd(1).
Approved by: jkh
Suggested by: peter
The description of -X option in csh(1) manpage uses a wording
that references the descriptions of -x, -v and -V. This might
be a little confusing. Changed this to a complete description
that does not reference other paragraphs.
PR: 16762
Submitted: Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@ceid.upatras.gr>
The first paragraph of "Argument list processing" says that an
argument of - will make csh be a login shell. However, running
csh with only a - as an argument fails with the error message.
csh(1) corrected to reflect this.
PR: 16754
Submitted by: Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@ceid.upatras.gr>
Three minor changes to the manpage of chmod(1).
1. At the description of -H option, I added that symlinks are
not followed _by default_ to show that links can be followed,
but the default chmod behavior is not to do so.
2. Moved a misplaced .Va file command up to the place it belongs.
3. Simplified the grammar that describes symbolic modes.
PR: 16749
Submitted by: Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@ceid.upatras.gr>
interface, and statically link them to the programs using them.
These functions, upon reflection and discussion, are too generically
named for a library interface with such specific functionality.
Also the api that they use, whilst ok for private use, isn't good
enough for a libc function.
Additionally there were complications with the build/install-world
process. It depends heavily upon xinstall, which got broken by
the change in api, and caused bootstrap problems and general mayhem.
There is work in progress to address future problems that may be
caused by changes in install-chain tools, and better names for
{g|s}etflags can be derived when some future program requires them.
For now the code has been left in src/lib/libc/gen (it started off
in src/bin/ls).
It's important to provide library functions for manipulating file
flag strings if we ever want this interface to be adopted outside
of the source tree, but now isn't necessarily the right moment
with 4.0-release just around the corner.
Approved: jkh
string to u_long and back using two functions, flags_to_string and
string_to_flags, which co-existed with 'ls'. As time has progressed
more and more other tools have used these private functions to
manipulate the file flags.
Recently I moved these functions from /usr/src/bin/ls to libutil,
but after some discussion with bde it's been decided that they
really ought to go in libc.
There are two already existing libc functions for manipulating file
modes: setmode and getmode. In keeping with these flags_to_string
has been renamed getflags and string_to_flags to setflags.
The manual page could probably be improved upon ;)
. add Xrs to hosts.equiv(5), auth.conf(5), services(5) to some pages
. sort Xrs in SEE ALSO sections
Patches based on PR: docs/15680
Submitted by: Christian Weisgerber <naddy@mips.rhein-neckar.de>
from the source attributed below. In particular, this removes a goto
inside a switch and replaces those horrendous ATOI macros with
something acceptable.
More clean-ups to come.
PR: bin/14151
Reported by: Christian Weisgerber <naddy@mips.rhein-neckar.de>
Obtained from: NetBSD
common way of setting the hostname. The man page already mentioned that
the hostname is set by /etc/rc.network, so this just explains where
/etc/rc.network gets the hostname from.
PR: docs/14319
Submitted by: rwatson
Reviewed by: cmc
respectively, in accordance with SUSv2.
This differs from the approach taken in NetBSD, but provides
less obscure error messages in at least the EISDIR case and
does not take up additional disk space for new binaries.
PR: 13071
PR: 13074
Requested by: James Howard <howardjp@wam.umd.edu>
Obtained from: parts of human readable code from OpenBSD
Reviewed by: obrien
add POSIX, byte and megabyte block size ouput flags
PR: 13579 (POSIX flag)
Submitted by: Mike Meyer <mwm@phone.net>
bfumerola for that pointer!) in GCC complaining about losing a const.
While I'm here, might as well mark in the Makefile that I'm the
${MAINTAINER}. It seems like that's what everyone's doing these days.
in that revision as well as things I broke in that revision. A note-
worthy instance of the latter case was the inversion of -E and -V in the
subsection on Commandline Editing.
Turn off setgid-kmem for /bin/ps, it's now quite functional without it.
ps no longer needs /dev/*mem or /proc. (It will still use some /proc
files if they are available for -e, but it's not required, so it'll
happily run in a jail or chroot).
The proc stats are now part of eproc (obtained via sysctl) and no longer
needs to beat up the u-page reading code and the problems with that.
This also has the side effect of disabling 'ps -e' for normal users
*EXCEPT* when looking at their own processes. ie: they can see
environments in processes with their uid, enforced by the ownership of
/proc/*/mem. Root can still see them all, as it can open all /proc/*/mem.
This fixes some nasty procfs problems for SMP, makes ps(1) run much faster,
and makes ps(1) even less dependent on /proc which will aid chroot and
jails alike.
To disable this facility and revert to previous behaviour:
sysctl -w kern.ps_arg_cache_limit=0
For full details see the current@FreeBSD.org mail-archives.
than two processes (got that? :-), the stdin fd of the middle
processes that has just been set up was accidetially closed. Don't do
this.
PR: bin/14527
be ignored by default by the df(1) program. This is used mostly to
avoid stat()-ing entries that do not represent "real" disk mount
points (such as those made by an automounter such as amd.) It is
also useful not to have to stat() these entries because it takes
longer to report them that for other file systems, being that these
mount points are served by a user-level file server and resulting in
several context switches. Worse, if the automounter is down
unexpectedly, a causal df(1) will hang in an interruptible way.
PR: kern/9764
Submitted by: Erez Zadok <ezk@cs.columbia.edu>