SIGCHLD handler is SIG_IGN. This is a reimplementation of the
problematic revision 1.131 of kern_exit.c. To avoid accessing process
UPAGES, we set a new procsig flag when the SIGCHLD handler is SIG_IGN
and use that instead.
Otherwise we fall back to using the static hints the next time around.
We still have the leftover fallback code there which meant that we skipped
the use_hints checking on the second and subsequent calls. Also, be a bit
more careful about walking off the end of the envp array.
I've extracted this from a larger diff. I hope I didn't miss anything...
of a socket. This avoids lock order reversal caused by locking a
process in pgsigio().
sowakeup() and the callers of it (sowwakeup, soisconnected, etc.) now
require sigio_lock to be locked. Provide sowwakeup_locked(),
soisconnected_locked(), and so on in case where we have to modify a
socket and wake up a process atomically.
by other bits of code, split struct timecounter into two.
struct timecounter contains just the bits which pertains to the hardware
counter and the reading of it.
struct timehands (as in "the hands on a clock") contains all the ugly bit
fidling stuff. Statically compile ten timehands.
This commit is the functional part. A later cosmetic patch will rename
various variables and fieldnames.
timeout loop.
Limit the rate at which we wind the timecounters to approx 1000 Hz.
This limits the precision of the get{bin,nano,micro}[up]time(9)
functions to roughly a millisecond.
timecounter will be used starting at the next second, which is
good enough for sysctl purposes. If better adjustment is needed
the NTP PLL should be used.
LRU fashion when the listen queue fills up. Previously, there was
no mechanism to kick out old sockets, leading to an easy DoS of
daemons using accept filtering.
Reviewed by: alfred
MFC after: 3 days
- malformed environment strings (ones without an '=') were not rejected.
There shouldn't be any of these, but when the static environment is
empty it always begins with one of these; this one should be considered
as the terminator after the end of the environment, but it isn't.
- the comparison of the name being looked up with the name in the
environment was fuzzy -- only the characters up to the length of the
latter were compared, so _getenv_static("foobar") matched "foo=..."
in the environment and everything matched "" in the empty environment.
MFC after: 3 days
#!bin/sh
# Original version of this by Michael Reifenberger
# <root@nihil.plaut.de>.
mdconfig -d -u 11 >/dev/null 2>&1
dd if=/dev/zero of=zz bs=1m count=1
while :
do
mdconfig -a -t vnode -f zz -u 11
fdisk -f - -iv /dev/md11 <<EOF1
g c1 h64 s32
p 1 165 0 2048
a 1
EOF1
mdconfig -d -u 11
done
Garbage pointers in __si_u were not cleared by destroy_dev(). Not
clearing si_disk made the above fatal because the disk layer uses
si_disk as a flag to indicate that the dev_t has been completely
initialized. disk_destroy() clears si_disk for the parent dev_t
but doesn't get called for children.
Not fixed:
- setting the undocumented sysctl debug.free_devt should cause more
complete destruction of the dev_t including clearing of __si_u, but
actually causes the above to panic a little earlier.
- the loop leaks 10 memory allocations per iteration (4 DEVFS, 2 devbuf
and 4 dev_t).
Reviewed by: timeout by MAINTAINER after 3 months
the symbol index defined by the relocation. The elf_lookup() support
function is to be used by elf_reloc() when symbol lookups need to be
done. The elf_lookup() function operates on the symbol index and
will do a symbol name based lookup when such is required, otherwise
it uses the symbol index directly. This solves the problem seen on
ia64 where the symbol hash table does not contain local symbols and
a symbol name based lookup would fail for those symbols.
Don't pass the symbol name to elf_reloc(), as it isn't used any more.
civilized way which doesn't cause grief.
The problem is that it is not generally safe to cast a "struct bio
*" to a "struct buf *". Things like ccd, vinum, ata-raid and GEOM
constructs bio's which are not entrails of a struct buf.
Also, curthread may or may not have anything to do with the I/O request
at hand.
The correct solution can either be to tag struct bio's with a
priority derived from the requesting threads nice and have disksort
act on this field, this wouldn't address the "silly-seek syndrome"
where two equal processes bang the diskheads from one edge to the
other of the disk repeatedly.
Alternatively, and probably better: a sleep should be introduced
either at the time the I/O is requested or at the time it is completed
where we can be sure to sleep in the right thread.
The sleep also needs to be in constant timeunits, 1/hz can be practicaly
any sub-second size, at high HZ the current code practically doesn't
do anything.
the DT_PLTGOT value. On ia64 this is the value of GP. We need this
to construct function descriptors, but the elf file structure is
not exported to MD code.
Note that the name of the function is based on the meaning that
DT_PLTGOT has on ia64. This may differ on other architectures. As
such, link_elf_get_gp() has a high level of MD to it. Renaming the
function to describe what DT_* value is returned makes it generic,
but also makes the MD code less clear and if we only need this on
ia64, then a general name for a specific function doesn't help.
In short: I don't know what is "right" at this time, so I'll go
with what I have.
in various extattr_*() calls to match the rest of the file. Originally,
these bits at the end looked more like style(9). This patch was submitted
by green by way of the TrustedBSD MAC tree, and I fixed a few problems
with it on the way through. Someone with more time on their hands should
convert the entire file to style(9); this commit is for diff reduction
purposes.
Submitted by: green
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
constructing a struct aio and invoking VOP_READ() directly. This cleans
up the code a little, but also has the advantage of making sure almost
all vnode read/write access in the kernel goes through the helper
function, meaning that instrumentation of that helper function can impact
almost all relevant read/write operations. In this case, it permits us
to put MAC hooks into vn_rdwr() and not modify uipc_syscalls.c (yet).
In general, if helper vn_*() functions exist, they should be used in
preference to direct VOP's in system call service code.
Submitted by: green
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
needed in the current code, in the MAC tree, create_init() relies on the
ability to modify the credentials present for initproc, and should not
perform that modification on a shared credential. Pro-active diff
reduction against MAC changes that are in the queue; also facilitates
other work, including the capabilities implementation.
Submitted by: green
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
environment needed at boot time to a dynamic subsystem when VM is
up. The dynamic kernel environment is protected by an sx lock.
This adds some new functions to manipulate the kernel environment :
freeenv(), setenv(), unsetenv() and testenv(). freeenv() has to be
called after every getenv() when you have finished using the string.
testenv() only tests if an environment variable is present, and
doesn't require a freeenv() call. setenv() and unsetenv() are self
explanatory.
The kenv(2) syscall exports these new functionalities to userland,
mainly for kenv(1).
Reviewed by: peter
where some client operations might be unexpectedly cancelled during
an unsuccessful non-forced unmount attempt. This causes problems
for amd(8), because it periodically attempts a non-forced unmount
to check if the filesystem is still in use.
Fix this by adding a new mountpoint flag MNTK_UNMOUNTF that is set
only during the operation of a forced unmount. Use this instead of
MNTK_UNMOUNT to trigger the cancellation of hung NFS operations.
Also correct a problem where dounmount() might inadvertently clear
the MNTK_UNMOUNT flag.
Reported by: simokawa
MFC after: 1 week
- Use temporary variables to hold a pointer to a pgrp while we dink with it
while not holding either the associated proc lock or proctree_lock. It
is in theory possible that p->p_pgrp could change out from under us.