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field, so it was possible for a filesystem marked clean by fsck_ffs to cause kernel crashes later when mounted. This could occur when fsck_ffs was used to repair a badly corrupted filesystem. As pointed out by bde, it is not sufficient to restrict di_size to just the superblock fs_maxfilesize limit. The use of 32-bit logical block numbers (both in fsck and the kernel) induces another file size limit which is usually lower than fs_maxfilesize. Also, the old 4.3BSD filesystem does not have fs_maxfilesize initialised. Following this change, fsck_ffs will enforce exactly the same file size limits as are used by the kernel. PR: kern/15065 Discussed with: bde Reviewed by: bde, mckusick |
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.. | ||
SMM.doc | ||
dir.c | ||
fsck_ffs.8 | ||
fsck.h | ||
fsutil.c | ||
inode.c | ||
main.c | ||
Makefile | ||
pass1.c | ||
pass1b.c | ||
pass2.c | ||
pass3.c | ||
pass4.c | ||
pass5.c | ||
preen.c | ||
setup.c | ||
utilities.c |