The duplication is caused by the fact that imgact_elf.c is included
by both imgact_elf32.c and imgact_elf64.c and both are compiled by
default on ia64. Consequently, we have two seperate copies of the
elf_legacy_coredump variable due to them being declared static, and
two entries for the same sysctl in the linker set, both referencing
the unique copy of the elf_legacy_coredump variable. Since the second
sysctl cannot be registered, one of the elf_legacy_coredump variables
can not be tuned (if ordering still holds, it's the ELF64 related one).
The only solution is to create two different sysctl variables, just
like the elf<32|64>_trace sysctl variables. This unfortunately is an
(user) interface change, but unavoidable. Thus, on ELF32 platforms
the sysctl variable is called elf32_legacy_coredump and on ELF64
platforms it is called elf64_legacy_coredump. Platforms that have
both ELF formats have both sysctl variables.
These variables should probably be retired sooner rather than later.
skipping read-only pages, which can result in valuable non-text-related
data not getting dumped, the ELF loader and the dynamic loader now mark
read-only text pages NOCORE and the coredump code only checks (primarily) for
complete inaccessibility of the page or NOCORE being set.
Certain applications which map large amounts of read-only data will
produce much larger cores. A new sysctl has been added,
debug.elf_legacy_coredump, which will revert to the old behavior.
This commit represents collaborative work by all parties involved.
The PR contains a program demonstrating the problem.
PR: kern/45994
Submitted by: "Peter Edwards" <pmedwards@eircom.net>, Archie Cobbs <archie@dellroad.org>
Reviewed by: jdp, dillon
MFC after: 7 days
_KERNEL scope from "src/sys/sys/mchain.h".
Replace each occurrence of the above in _KERNEL scope with the
appropriate macro from the set of hto(be|le)(16|32|64) and
(be|le)toh(16|32|64) from "src/sys/sys/endian.h".
Tested by: tjr
Requested by: comment marked with XXX
resource starvation we clean-up as much of the vmspace structure as we
can when the last process using it exits. The rest of the structure
is cleaned up when it is reaped. But since exit1() decrements the ref
count it is possible for a double-free to occur if someone else, such as
the process swapout code, references and then dereferences the structure.
Additionally, the final cleanup of the structure should not occur until
the last process referencing it is reaped.
This commit solves the problem by introducing a secondary reference count,
calling 'vm_exitingcnt'. The normal reference count is decremented on exit
and vm_exitingcnt is incremented. vm_exitingcnt is decremented when the
process is reaped. When both vm_exitingcnt and vm_refcnt are 0, the
structure is freed for real.
MFC after: 3 weeks
they may be the only viable ones to flush. Thus it will now wait for
an inode lock if the other alternatives will result in rollbacks (and
immediate redirtying of the buffer). If only buffers with rollbacks
are available, one will be flushed, but then the buffer daemon will
wait briefly before proceeding. Failing to wait briefly effectively
deadlocks a uniprocessor since every other process writing to that
filesystem will wait for the buffer daemon to clean up which takes
close enough to forever to feel like a deadlock.
Reported by: Archie Cobbs <archie@dellroad.org>
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
Approved by: re
These call uma_large_malloc() and uma_large_free() which require Giant.
Fixes panic when descriptor table is larger than KMEM_ZMAX bytes
noticed by kkenn.
Reviewed by: jhb
unused. Replace it with a dm_mount back-pointer to the struct mount
that the devfs_mount is associated with. Export that pointer to MAC
Framework entry points, where all current policies don't use the
pointer. This permits the SEBSD port of SELinux's FLASK/TE to compile
out-of-the-box on 5.0-CURRENT with full file system labeling support.
Approved by: re (murray)
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
converting from individual vnode locks to the snapshot
lock, be sure to pass any waiting processes along to the
new lock as well. This transfer is done by a new function
in the lock manager, transferlockers(from_lock, to_lock);
Thanks to Lamont Granquist <lamont@scriptkiddie.org> for
his help in pounding on snapshots beyond all reason and
finding this deadlock.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
1) Record all device events when devctl is enabled, rather than just when
devd has devctl open. This is necessary to prevent races between when
a device arrives, and when devd starts.
2) Add hw.bus.devctl_disable to disable devctl, this can also be set as a
tunable.
3) Fix async support. Reset nonblocking and async_td in open. remove
async flags.
4) Free all memory when devctl is disabled.
Approved by: re (blanket)
on this.
o Update the `cur' pointer in the cluster loop in m_getm() to avoid
incorrect truncation and leaked mbufs.
Reviewed by: bmilekic
Approved by: re
create an ABI that encodes offsets and sizes of structures into client
drivers. The functions isolate the ABI from changes to the resource
structure. Since these are used very rarely (once at startup), the
speed penalty will be down in the noise.
Also, add r_rid to the structure so that clients can save the 'rid' of
the resource in the struct resource, plus accessor functions. Future
additions to newbus will make use of this to present a simplified
interface for resource specification.
Approved by: re (jhb)
Reviewed by: jhb, jake
problem was a locked directory vnode), do not give the process a chance
to sleep in state "stopevent" (depends on the S_EXEC bit being set in
p_stops) until most resources have been released again.
Approved by: re
instead of panicing. Also, perform some of the simpler sanity checks on
the fds before acquiring the filedesc lock.
Approved by: re
Reported by: Dan Nelson <dan@emsphone.com> and others