use that to inform about way to raise current limit when we reach maximum
number of processes, descriptors or vnodes
XXX hopefully I catched all users of tablefull()
- add a new global variable, doing_shutdown, which is nonzero if
vfs_shutdown() or panic() have been called.
- in panic, set RB_NOSYNC if doing_shutdown is already set on entry
so we don't reenter vfs_shutdown if we panic'ed there.
- in vfs_shutdown, don't use proc0's process for sys_sync unless
curproc is NULL.
- in lockmgr, attribute successful locks to proc0 if doing_shutdown
&& curproc==NULL, and panic if we can't get the lock right away; avoids the
spurious lockmgr DIAGNOSTIC panic from the ddb reboot command.
- in subr_pool, deal with curproc==NULL in the doing_shutdown case.
- in mfs_strategy, bitbucket writes if doing_shutdown, so we don't
wedge waiting for the mfs process.
- in ltsleep, treat ((curproc == NULL) && doing_shutdown) like the
panicstr case.
Appears to fix: kern/9239, kern/10187, kern/9367.
May also fix kern/10122.
db_stack_trace_print(__builtin_frame_address(0),...), to printf() the
stack trace to the message bufffer and console. Idea from SunOS/Solaris.
Useful when dumping fails.
locking primitive directly to lock it, since those will never attempt
to call printf() to display debugging information (and thus deadlock
on recursion into the kprintf_slock).
DDB_ONPANIC. Lets user ignore breaks but enter DDB on panic. Intended
for machines where debug on panic is useful, but DDB entry is not,
(public-access console, or terminal-servers which send spurious breaks)
Add new ddb hook, console_debugger(), which decides whether or not to
ignore console ddb requests. Console drivers should be updated to call
console_debugger(), not Debugger(), in response to serial-console
break or ddb keyboard sequence.
whenever the %: format is used on NetBSD/Alpha. Disable %: for __alpha__.
Note: the "correct" (but untested on other architectures) fix is to
change the wrong: kprintf(cp, oflags, tp, NULL, va_arg(ap, va_list));
to the right: kprintf(cp, oflags, tp, NULL, ap);
floating point stuff removed].
the new kprintf replaces the 3 different (and buggy) versions of
printf that were in the kernel before (kprintf, sprintf, and db_printf),
thus reducing duplicated code by 2/3's. this fixes (or adds) several
printf formats. examples:
%#x - previously only supported by db_printf [not printf/sprintf]
%8.8s - printf would print "000chuck" for "chuck" before
%5p - printf would print "0x 1" for value 1 before
XXX: new kprintf still supports several non-standard '%' formats that
are supposed to eventually be removed:
%: - passes an additional format string and argument list recursively
%b - used to decode error registers
%r - int, but print in radix "db_radix" [DDB only]
%z - 'signed hex' [DDB only]
%n - unsigned int, but print in radix "db_radix" [DDB only]
note that DDB's "%n" conflicts with standard "%n" which takes the
number of characters written so far and stores it into the integer
indicated by the "int *" pointer arg. yuck!
while here, add comments for each function explaining what it is
supposed to do.
msgbuf. Note that old 'dmesg' and 'syslogd' binaries will continue running,
though old 'dmesg' binaries will output a few bytes of junk at the start of
the buffer, and will miss a few bytes at the end of the buffer.
the format modifer. Reported by and suggested fix from Daniel G. Pouzzner
in PR #2633. Final fix is slightly different now that we support the %q
modifier. This fix also includes the equivalent fix for sprintf().
representing the names of those bits, prints them into a buffer
provided by the caller, and returns a pointer to that buffer.
Functionality is identical to that of the (non-standard) `%b' printf()
format, which will be deprecated.
Rename the non-exported function ksprintn() to ksnprintn(), and change
it to use a buffer provided by the caller, rather than at static
buffer.