is possible to boot a kernel with an empty in-core MFS image, and have
it load the image from floppy directly. This is admittedly a hack and
would be better replaced by a self-loading ram-disk.
What was happening, was that the main mfs loop was sleeping, and when it was
being awoken by a wakeup when it was supposed to process some IO requests.
The problem was that if it was being woken out of the tsleep() by a signal
at shutdown, it was going straight into dounmount() without servicing any
pending IO requests, causing dounmount() to fail because there were busy
buffers (and they could not be "processed" because the processing loop was
trying to unmount rather than dispatching into mfs_doio()).
This (dare I say it :-) appears to be a layering problem....
it 1138 times (:-() in casts and a few more times in declarations.
This change is null for the i386.
The type has to be `typedef int vop_t(void *)' and not `typedef
int vop_t()' because `gcc -Wstrict-prototypes' warns about the
latter. Since vnode op functions are called with args of different
(struct pointer) types, neither of these function types is any use
for type checking of the arg, so it would be preferable not to use
the complete function type, especially since using the complete
type requires adding 1138 casts to avoid compiler warnings and
another 40+ casts to reverse the function pointer conversions before
calling the functions.
Submitted by: terry (terry lambert)
This is a composite of 3 patch sets submitted by terry.
they are:
New low-level init code that supports loadbal modules better
some cleanups in the namei code to help terry in 16-bit character support
some changes to the mount-root code to make it a little more
modular..
NOTE: mounting root off cdrom or NFS MIGHT be broken as I haven't been able
to test those cases..
certainly mounting root of disk still works just fine..
mfs should work but is untested. (tomorrows task)
The low level init stuff includes a total rewrite of init_main.c
to make it possible for new modules to have an init phase by simply
adding an entry to a TEXT_SET (or is it DATA_SET) list. thus a new module can
be added to the kernel without editing any other files other than the
'files' file.
These changes solve the problem in a general way by moving the
initialization out of the individual fs_mountroot's and into swaponvp().
Submitted by: Poul-Henning Kamp
- Delete redundant declarations.
- Add -Wredundant-declarations to Makefile.i386 so they don't come back.
- Delete sloppy COMMON-style declarations of uninitialized data in
header files.
- Add a few prototypes.
- Clean up warnings resulting from the above.
NB: ioconf.c will still generate a redundant-declaration warning, which
is unavoidable unless somebody volunteers to make `config' smarter.