they both happen before pipe backing allocation occurs. Previously,
a pipe memory shortage would cause a panic due to a KNOTE call
on an uninitialized si_note.
Reported by: Peter Holm
MFC after: 1 week
for the vast majority of our cards. However, they are critically
needed to distinguish different fe based PC Cards (the FMV-182 from
the 182A) which need to be treated differently (the ethernet address
is loaded not from the standard CIS-based ethernet tuples, but from
differing locations in attribute space based on the version string in
CIS3. This should have no impact for other users of this function.
for libarchive error messages. Mostly, this
avoids a portability headache related to
copying va_list arguments (some FreeBSD 5
platforms require va_copy; FreeBSD 4 doesn't
support va_copy at all). It also dramatically reduces the
size of libarchive for embedded applications:
a minimal "untar" program using libarchive can now be
under 64k statically linked (as opposed to ~100k
using library *printf() functions).
MFC after: 14 days
unhappiness lately.
As far as I can tell, no files that have made it safely to disk
have been endangered, but stuff in transit has been in peril.
Pointy hat: phk
- Introduce the amr_io_lock to control access to command queues, bio queues,
and the hardware.
- Eliminate the taskqueue and do all completion processing in the ithread.
- Assign a static slot number to each command instead of doing a linear
search for free slots each time a command is needed.
- Modify the interrupt handler to more closely match what Linux does, for
safety.
and BBO is BO's backing object. Now, suppose that O and BO are being
collapsed. Furthermore, suppose that BO has been marked dead
(OBJ_DEAD) by vm_object_backing_scan() and that either
vm_object_backing_scan() has been forced to sleep due to encountering
a busy page or vm_object_collapse() has been forced to sleep due to
memory allocation in the swap pager. If vm_object_deallocate() is
then called on BBO and BO is BBO's only shadow object,
vm_object_deallocate() will collapse BO and BBO. In doing so, it adds
a necessary temporary reference to BO. If this collapse also sleeps
and the prior collapse resumes first, the temporary reference will
cause vm_object_collapse to panic with the message "backing_object %p
was somehow re-referenced during collapse!"
Resolve this race by changing vm_object_deallocate() such that it
doesn't collapse BO and BBO if BO is marked dead. Once O and BO are
collapsed, vm_object_collapse() will attempt to collapse O and BBO.
So, vm_object_deallocate() on BBO need do nothing.
Reported by: Peter Holm on 20050107
URL: http://www.holm.cc/stress/log/cons102.html
In collaboration with: tegge@
Candidate for RELENG_4 and RELENG_5
MFC after: 2 weeks
Without this fix, when ACLs are set via tunefs(8) on the root file system,
they are removed on boot when 'mount -a' is called, because mount(8)
called for the root file system always add MNT_UPDATE flag and MNT_UPDATE
flag isn't perfect.
Now, one cannot remove ACLs stored in superblock (configured with tunefs(8))
via 'mount -a' nor 'mount -u -o noacls <file system>', but it is still
possible to mount file system which doesn't have ACLs in superblock via
'mount -o acls <file system>' or /etc/fstab's 'acls' option.
Reported by: Lech Lorens/pl.comp.os.bsd
Discussed with: phk, rwatson
Reviewed by: rwatson
MFC after: 2 weeks