trustworthy for vnode-backed objects.
- Restore the old behavior of vm_object_page_remove() when the end
of the given range is zero. Add a comment to vm_object_page_remove()
regarding this behavior.
Reported by: iedowse
double free of a mbuf occurs and cause an immediate panic, rather
than allowing free list corruption to occur.
This code is trapped under INVARIANTS, so it should not cause any
change in default performance.
Reviewed by: a bunch of people on -net
MFC after: 1 week
fini routines instead of in fork() and wait(). This has the nice side
benefit that the proc lock of any process on the allproc list is always
valid and sched_lock doesn't have to be used to test against PRS_NEW
anymore.
uptime. Where necessary, convert it back to Unix time by adding boottime
to it. This fixes a potential problem in the accounting code, which would
compute the elapsed time incorrectly if the Unix time was stepped during
the lifetime of the process.
- Eliminate an odd, special-case feature:
if start == end == 0 then all pages are removed. Only one caller
used this feature and that caller can trivially pass the object's
size.
- Assert that the vm_object is locked on entry; don't bother testing
for a NULL vm_object.
- Style: Fix lines that are longer than 80 characters.
- Mark the ktrace() and utrace() syscalls as being MP safe.
- Validate the facs argument to ktrace() prior to doing any vnode
operations or acquiring any locks.
- Share lock the proctree lock over the entire section that calls
ktrsetchildren() and ktrops(). We already did this for process groups.
Doing it for the process case closes a small race where a process might
go away after we look it up. As a result of this, ktrstchildren() now
just asserts that the proctree lock is locked rather than acquiring the
lock itself.
- Add some missing comments to #else and #endif.
syscall return values should be cleared. The system calls
getcontext() and swapcontext() want to return 0 on success
but these contexts can be switched to at a later time so
the return values need to be cleared in the saved register
sets. Other callers of get_mcontext() would normally want
the context without clearing the return values.
Remove the i386-specific context saving from the KSE code.
get_mcontext() is not i386-specific any more.
Fix a bad pointer in the alpha get_mcontext() code. The
context was being bcopy()'d from &td->tf_frame, but tf_frame
is itself a pointer, so the thread was being copied instead.
Spotted by jake.
Glanced at by: jake
Reviewed by: bde (months ago)
Instead of applying the adjustment to processes with a start time of 1,
apply it to all processes with a start time of less than 3600.
None of this would be necessary if the start times were recorded in ticks
instead of seconds and microseconds.
don't include the kernel stacks of swapped-out threads in the page count,
but do include the alternate kernel stack. jhb provided some helpful
comments on this.
PR: 49102
- Add a parameter to vm_pageout_flush() that tells vm_pageout_flush()
whether its caller has locked the vm_object. (This is a temporary
measure to bootstrap vm_object locking.)
whose p_stats->p_start has the magic value 1, replace it with boottime.
Some users were apparently confused by the fact that ps(1) reported a
start time in early 1970 for system processes.
do all the various sigstack dances, unlock the proc lock, and finally do
the copyout. This more closely resembles the behavior of
kern_sigaltstack() and closes a small race.
- Remove Giant from osigstack as it is no longer needed.
rename them appropriately. Protect both flags with both the proc lock
and the sched_lock.
- Protect p_profthreads with the proc lock.
- Remove Giant from profil(2).
- For the 4BSD scheduler, this means that all callers of the static
function resetpriority() now always hold sched_lock, so don't lock
sched_lock explicitly in that function.
kg_nice is now protected by both. Being protected by both means that
other places in the kernel that want to read kg_nice only need one of the
two locks.