#!-line had multiple whitespace characters after the interpreter name, and
it did not have any options, then the code would do nasty things trying to
process a (non-existent) option-string which "ended before it began"...
Submitted by: Morten Johansen
Approved by: re (dwhite)
are actually caused by a buf with both VNCLEAN and VNDIRTY set. In
the traces it is clear that the buf is removed from the dirty queue while
it is actually on the clean queue which leaves the tail pointer set.
Assert that both flags are not set in buf_vlist_add and buf_vlist_remove.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
Approved by: re (blanket vfs)
cache_zap() to clear the v_dd pointers when a directory vnode is forcibly
discarded. For this to work, all vnodes with v_dd pointers to a directory
must also have name cache entries linked via v_cache_dst to that dvp
otherwise we could not find them at cache_purge() time. The following
code snipit could break this guarantee by unlinking a directory before
fetching it's dotdot. The dotdot lookup would initialize the v_dd field
of the unlinked directory which could never be cleared. To fix this
we don't initialize v_dd for orphaned vnodes.
printf("rmdir: %d\n", rmdir("../foo")); /* foo is cwd */
printf("chdir: %d\n", chdir(".."));
printf("%s\n", getwd(NULL));
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
Discovered by: kkenn
Approved by: re (blanket vfs)
ref while we're calling vgone(). This prevents transient refs from
re-adding us to the free list. Previously, a vfree() triggered via
vinvalbuf() getting rid of all of a vnode's pages could place a partially
destructed vnode on the free list where vtryrecycle() could find it. The
first call to vtryrecycle would hang up on the vnode lock, but when it
failed it would place a now dead vnode onto the free list, and another
call to vtryrecycle() would free an already free vnode. There were many
complications of having a zero ref count while freeing which can now go
away.
- Change vdropl() to release the interlock before returning. All callers
now respect this, so vdropl() directly frees VI_DOOMED vnodes once the
last ref is dropped. This means that we'll never have VI_DOOMED vnodes
on the free list.
- Seperate v_incr_usecount() into v_incr_usecount(), v_decr_usecount() and
v_decr_useonly(). The incr/decr split is so that incr usecount can
return with the interlock still held while decr drops the interlock so
it can call vdropl() which will potentially free the vnode. The calling
function can't drop the lock of an already free'd node. v_decr_useonly()
drops a usecount without droping the hold count. This is done so the
usecount reaches zero in vput() before we recycle, however the holdcount
is still 1 which prevents any new references from placing the vnode
back on the free list.
- Fix vnlrureclaim() to vhold the vnode since it doesn't do a vget(). We
wouldn't want vnlrureclaim() to bump the usecount since this has
different semantics. Also change vnlrureclaim() to do a NOWAIT on the
vn_lock. When this function runs we're usually in a desperate situation
and we wouldn't want to wait for any specific vnode to be released.
- Fix a bunch of misc comments to reflect the new behavior.
- Add vhold() and vdrop() to vflush() for the same reasons that we do in
vlrureclaim(). Previously we held no reference and a vnode could have
been freed while we were waiting on the lock.
- Get rid of vlruvp() and vfreehead(). Neither are used. vlruvp() should
really be rethought before it's reintroduced.
- vgonel() always returns with the vnode locked now and never puts the
vnode back on a free list. The vnode will be freed as soon as the last
reference is released.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
Debugging help from: Kris Kennaway, Peter Holm
Approved by: re (blanket vfs)
of the clean and dirty lists. This is in an attempt to catch the wrong
bufobj problem sooner.
- In vgonel() don't acquire an extra reference in the active case, the
vnode lock and VI_DOOMED protect us from recursively cleaning.
- Also in vgonel() clean up some stale comments.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
Approved by: re (blanket vfs)
used to ensure that we weren't exiting the syscall with a lock still
held. This wasn't safe, however, because we'd already executed a vput()
and on a loaded system the vnode may have been free'd by the time we
assert. This functionality is also handled by the td_locks assert in
userret, which doesn't tell you what the syscall was, but will at least
panic before you deadlock.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
Discovred by: Peter Holm
Approved by: re (blanket vfs)
anyway and it's not used outside of vfs_subr.c.
- Change vgonel() to accept a parameter which determines whether or not
we'll put the vnode on the free list when we're done.
- Use the new vgonel() parameter rather than VI_DOOMED to signal our
intentions in vtryrecycle().
- In vgonel() return if VI_DOOMED is already set, this vnode has already
been reclaimed.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
most of the code to deal with them has been dead for sometime. Simplify
the code by doing an insert sort hinted by the current head position.
Met with apathy by: arch@
I introduce a very small race here (some file system can be mounted or
unmounted between 'count' calculation and file systems list creation),
but it is harmless.
Found by: FreeBSD Kernel Stress Test Suite: http://www.holm.cc/stress/
Reported by: Peter Holm <peter@holm.cc>
It can be used to panic the kernel by giving too big value.
Fix it by moving allocation and size verification into kern_getfsstat().
This even simplifies kern_getfsstat() consumers, but destroys symmetry -
memory is allocated inside kern_getfsstat(), but has to be freed by the
caller.
Found by: FreeBSD Kernel Stress Test Suite: http://www.holm.cc/stress/
Reported by: Peter Holm <peter@holm.cc>
o getsockopt(SO_ACCEPTFILTER) always returns success on listen socket
even we didn't install accept filter on the socket.
o Fix these bugs and add regression tests for them.
Submitted by: Igor Sysoev [1]
Reviewed by: alfred
MFC after: 2 weeks
events could be added to cover other interesting details.
- Add some VNASSERTs to discover places where we access vnodes after
they have been uma_zfree'd before we try to free them again.
- Add a few more VNASSERTs to vdestroy() to be certain that the vnode is
really unused.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems, Inc.
atomic write request, it can fill the buffer cache with the entirety
of that write in order to handle retries. However, it never drops
the vnode lock, or else it wouldn't be atomic, so it ends up waiting
indefinitely for more buf memory that cannot be gotten as it has it
all, and it waits in an uncancellable state.
To fix this, hibufspace is exported and scaled to a reasonable
fraction. This is used as the limit of how much of an atomic write
request by the NFS client will be handled asynchronously. If the
request is larger than this, it will be turned into a synchronous
request which won't deadlock the system. It's possible this value is
far off from what is required by some, so it shall be tunable as soon
as mount_nfs(8) learns of the new field.
The slowdown between an asynchronous and a synchronous write on NFS
appears to be on the order of 2x-4x.
General nod by: gad
MFC after: 2 weeks
More testing: wes
PR: kern/79208
well worth the bloat.
- Change the formatting of 'show ktr' slightly to accommodate the
additional field. Remove a tab from the verbose output and place the
actual trace data after a : so it is more easy to understand which
part is the event and which is part of the record.
struct ifnet or the layer 2 common structure it was embedded in have
been replaced with a struct ifnet pointer to be filled by a call to the
new function, if_alloc(). The layer 2 common structure is also allocated
via if_alloc() based on the interface type. It is hung off the new
struct ifnet member, if_l2com.
This change removes the size of these structures from the kernel ABI and
will allow us to better manage them as interfaces come and go.
Other changes of note:
- Struct arpcom is no longer referenced in normal interface code.
Instead the Ethernet address is accessed via the IFP2ENADDR() macro.
To enforce this ac_enaddr has been renamed to _ac_enaddr.
- The second argument to ether_ifattach is now always the mac address
from driver private storage rather than sometimes being ac_enaddr.
Reviewed by: sobomax, sam
UFS by:
- Making the pre and post hooks for the VOP functions work even when
DEBUG_VFS_LOCKS is not defined.
- Moving the KNOTE activations into the corresponding VOP hooks.
- Creating a MNTK_NOKNOTE flag for the mnt_kern_flag field of struct
mount that permits filesystems to disable the new behavior.
- Creating a default VOP_KQFILTER function: vfs_kqfilter()
My benchmarks have not revealed any performance degradation.
Reviewed by: jeff, bde
Approved by: rwatson, jmg (kqueue changes), grehan (mentor)
- Implement sampling modes and logging support in hwpmc(4).
- Separate MI and MD parts of hwpmc(4) and allow sharing of
PMC implementations across different architectures.
Add support for P4 (EMT64) style PMCs to the amd64 code.
- New pmcstat(8) options: -E (exit time counts) -W (counts
every context switch), -R (print log file).
- pmc(3) API changes, improve our ability to keep ABI compatibility
in the future. Add more 'alias' names for commonly used events.
- bug fixes & documentation.
and extend its functionality:
value policy
0 show all mount-points without any restrictions
1 show only mount-points below jail's chroot and show only part of the
mount-point's path (if jail's chroot directory is /jails/foo and
mount-point is /jails/foo/usr/home only /usr/home will be shown)
2 show only mount-point where jail's chroot directory is placed.
Default value is 2.
Discussed with: rwatson
security.bsd.see_other_uids is set to 0, etc.
One can check if invisible process is active, by doing:
# ktrace -p <pid>
If ktrace returns 'Operation not permitted' the process is alive and
if returns 'No such process' there is no such process.
MFC after: 1 week
milliseconds due to what is essentially n^2 algorithmic complexity. This
change makes the algorithm N*2 instead. This heavy processing manifested
itself as skipping in audio and video playback due to the long scheduling
latencies and contention on giant by pcm.
- flushbufqueues() is now responsible for flushing multiple buffers
rather than one at a time. This allows us to save our progress in the
list by using a sentinal. We must do the numdirtywakeup() and
waitrunningbufspace() here now rather than in buf_daemon().
- Also add a uio_yield() after we have processed the list once for bufs
without deps and again for bufs with deps. This is to release Giant
and allow any other giant locked code to proceed.
Tested by: Many users on current@
Revealed by: schedgraph traces sent by Emil Mikulic & Anthony Ginepro
list on fork() if the process doesn't actually have references to any
semaphores. This avoids extra work, as well as potentially asking to
allocate storage for 0 references.
Found by: avatar
MFC after: 1 week
points to convert _sema() to _sem() for consistency purposes with
respect to the other semaphore-related entry points:
mac_init_sysv_sema() -> mac_init_sysv_sem()
mac_destroy_sysv_sem() -> mac_destroy_sysv_sem()
mac_create_sysv_sema() -> mac_create_sysv_sem()
mac_cleanup_sysv_sema() -> mac_cleanup_sysv_sem()
Congruent changes are made to the policy interface to support this.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: SPAWAR, SPARTA
as this happens via thread_switchout(). I don't particularly like the
structure of the code here. We twice call out to thread code when
a thread is voluntarily switching. Once to thread_switchout() and once
to slot_fill(), while sched_4BSD does even more work which is redundant
to select another thread to use our remaining slice. This should be
simplified in the future, but for now I'm only going to fix the bug not
the bad design.