knew what it was supposed to be used for and wrstuden gave a go-ahead
* while rototilling, convert file systems which went easily to
use VFS_PROTOS() instead of manually prototyping the methods
instead of the result from getcwd(). The works around locking
panics caused by namei calling VOP_READLINK while holding on to a
directory lock and getcwd() trying to acquire that lock. The real
fix would be to get rid of getcwd() calls within VOPs (not locking
safe), but that's not a viable option in the netbsd-4 timeframe.
Suggestion for workaround from David Holland.
fs code is a kernel buffer, pass though the length of the buffer as well.
Since the length of the userspace buffer isn'it (yet) passed through the mount
system call, add a field to the vfsops structure containing the default length.
Split sys_mount() for calls from compat code.
Ride one of the recent kernel version changes - old fs LKMs will load, but
sys_mount() will reject any attempt to use them.
vmspace information fails.
Return the nice value properly to userland via the /proc/<pid>/stat entry.
Use vm sizes from vmspace, rather than rusage structs, for the same
reasons as mentioned previously - see the comment in
kvm_proc.c::kvm_getproc2() about rusage values and zombie processes.
+ in /proc/<pid>/statm emulation, use the memory values from vmspace,
rather than struct rusage, since the rusage values appear to be 0 for
all processes except zombies. cf dsl's comment in
kvm_proc.c::kvm_getproc2()
+ in /proc/<pid>/stat, instead of returning the tv_sec value, return the
number of ticks we've had (roughly equivalent to the Linux jiffies).
Calculate these values from the tv_usec values.
Also:
+ enclose CPU_INFO_ITERATOR and CPU_INFO_FOREACH usage in #ifdef
MULTIPROCESSOR, at the request of Nick Hudson
Together, these changes allow htop to work on NetBSD.
/proc/stat
/proc/loadavg and
/proc/<pid>/statm.
These are only present when -o linux is specified as a mount option
to procfs.
Factor out some common code so that it can be used by a number of
functions.
XXX The values returned in the statm emulation need to be verified.
write the whole map in one shot so that we don't have to deal with the
map changing under us. Fixes the linux emulated jdk-1.6 where it was
losing the last map entry and could not find the stack on startup.
- Drop the target's vm_map lock before calling uiomove(). We could
deadlock if inspecting /proc/curproc/map.
- If the vm_map might have changed, restart the operation, but give
up after 250 retries if the map keeps changing. XXX This is not
ideal.
P_*/L_* naming convention, and rename the in-kernel flags to avoid
conflict. (P_ -> PK_, L_ -> LW_ ). Add back the (now unused) LSDEAD
constant.
Restores source compatibility with pre-newlock2 tools like ps or top.
Reviewed by Andrew Doran.
process we're trying to get information about through procfs, not
the caller of lookup.
fixes 'ls -l /proc/*/file' panic, which would occur when trying to
lookup "file" for a kernel thread, which doesn't have p->p_textvp.
The suspension helpers are now put into file system specific operations.
This means every file system not supporting these helpers cannot be suspended
and therefore snapshots are no longer possible.
Implemented for file systems of type ffs.
The new API is enabled on a kernel option NEWVNGATE. This option is
not enabled by default in any kernel config.
Presented and discussed on tech-kern with much input from
Bill Studenmund <wrstuden@netbsd.org> and YAMAMOTO Takashi <yamt@netbsd.org>.
Welcome to 4.99.9 (new vfs op vfs_suspendctl).
- Make procfs_control() in procfs_ctl.c static,
- Add an argument to the above, 'pfs', for the pfsnode,
- Add another request type to KAUTH_PROCESS_CANPROCFS named
KAUTH_REQ_PROCESS_CANPROCFS_CTL (and update documentation),
- Use the above combination in a call to kauth_authorize_process().
- LOCKPARENT is no longer relevant for lookup(), relookup() or VOP_LOOKUP().
these now always return the parent vnode locked. namei() works as before.
lookup() and various other paths no longer acquire vnode locks in the
wrong order via vrele(). fixes PR 32535.
as a nice side effect, path lookup is also up to 25% faster.
- the above allows us to get rid of PDIRUNLOCK.
- also get rid of WANTPARENT (just use LOCKPARENT and unlock it).
- remove an assumption in layer_node_find() that all file systems implement
a recursive VOP_LOCK() (unionfs doesn't).
- require that all file systems supply vfs_vptofh and vfs_fhtovp routines.
fill in eopnotsupp() for file systems that don't support being exported
and remove the checks for NULL. (layerfs calls these without checking.)
- in union_lookup1(), don't change refcounts in the ISDOTDOT case, just
adjust which vnode is locked. fixes PR 33374.
- apply fixes for ufs_rename() from ufs_vnops.c rev. 1.61 to ext2fs_rename().
First, remove process_checkioperm() calls from MD code. Similar checks
using kauth(9) routines (on the process scope, using appropriate action)
are done in the callers.
Add secmodel back-end to handle each subsystem.
- struct timeval time is gone
time.tv_sec -> time_second
- struct timeval mono_time is gone
mono_time.tv_sec -> time_uptime
- access to time via
{get,}{micro,nano,bin}time()
get* versions are fast but less precise
- support NTP nanokernel implementation (NTP API 4)
- further reading:
Timecounter Paper: http://phk.freebsd.dk/pubs/timecounter.pdf
NTP Nanokernel: http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/ntp/html/kern.html
- use vmspace rather than proc or lwp where appropriate.
the latter is more natural to specify an address space.
(and less likely to be abused for random purposes.)
- fix a swdmover race.
directly to the directory containing the pid instead of pointing to
/proc/curproc, because some programs rely on calling readlink on /proc/self
to get the pid.
link points to the process's current working directory, and the root
link points to the process's root directory. What else would you
expect?
For directories that are out of reach (caller is in a chroot, target
process is in a different chroot, etc), the links point to "/"
instead.
- Remove all NFS related stuff from file system specific code.
- Drop the vfs_checkexp hook and generalize it in the new nfs_check_export
function, thus removing redundancy from all file systems.
- Move all NFS export-related stuff from kern/vfs_subr.c to the new
file sys/nfs/nfs_export.c. The former was becoming large and its code
is always compiled, regardless of the build options. Using the latter,
the code is only compiled in when NFSSERVER is enabled. While doing this,
also make some functions in nfs_subs.c conditional to NFSSERVER.
- Add a new command in nfssvc(2), called NFSSVC_SETEXPORTSLIST, that takes a
path and a set of export entries. At the moment it can only clear the
exports list or append entries, one by one, but it is done in a way that
allows setting the whole set of entries atomically in the future (see the
comment in mountd_set_exports_list or in doc/TODO).
- Change mountd(8) to use the nfssvc(2) system call instead of mount(2) so
that it becomes file system agnostic. In fact, all this whole thing was
done to remove a 'XXX' block from this utility!
- Change the mount*, newfs and fsck* userland utilities to not deal with NFS
exports initialization; done internally by the kernel when initializing
the NFS support for each file system.
- Implement an interface for VFS (called VFS hooks) so that several kernel
subsystems can run arbitrary code upon receipt of specific VFS events.
At the moment, this only provides support for unmount and is used to
destroy NFS exports lists from the file systems being unmounted, though it
has room for extension.
Thanks go to yamt@, chs@, thorpej@, wrstuden@ and others for their comments
and advice in the development of this patch.
current directory in curproc. Fix from Pedro Martelletto:
We cannot call vgone() from procfs_inactive() if we are coming from
vclean(). that's what's probably causing the deadlock.
into the "vfsops" link set.
- Use VFS_ATTACH() where vfsops are declared for individual file systems.
- In vfsinit(), traverse the "vfsops" link set, rather than vfs_list_initial[].
- Not enabled by default. Needs kernel option FFS_SNAPSHOT.
- Change parameters of ffs_blkfree.
- Let the copy-on-write functions return an error so spec_strategy
may fail if the copy-on-write fails.
- Change genfs_*lock*() to use vp->v_vnlock instead of &vp->v_lock.
- Add flag B_METAONLY to VOP_BALLOC to return indirect block buffer.
- Add a function ffs_checkfreefile needed for snapshot creation.
- Add special handling of snapshot files:
Snapshots may not be opened for writing and the attributes are read-only.
Use the mtime as the time this snapshot was taken.
Deny mtime updates for snapshot files.
- Add function transferlockers to transfer any waiting processes from
one lock to another.
- Add vfsop VFS_SNAPSHOT to take a snapshot and make it accessible through
a vnode.
- Add snapshot support to ls, fsck_ffs and dump.
Welcome to 2.0F.
Approved by: Jason R. Thorpe <thorpej@netbsd.org>
and tweak lkminit_*.c (where applicable) to call them, and to call
sysctl_teardown() when being unloaded.
This consists of (1) making setup functions not be static when being
compiled as lkms (change to sys/sysctl.h), (2) making prototypes
visible for the various setup functions in header files (changes to
various header files), and (3) making simple "load" and "unload"
functions in the actual lkminit stuff.
linux_sysctl.c also needs its root exposed (ie, made not static) for
this (when built as an lkm).
1. Checking for a negative uio_offset at the beginning. This really does
not affect us in most cases because we check that later too.
2. Checking for attempts to write to init sooner and in all cases.
kernel and ran for a day or so. There are still some caddr_t types in
the arguments of some calls, I will do those separately (later) as
they touch a lot more of the system.
Approved by christos@NetBSD.org.
no longer use and/or need it
- removed casts from unionfs, deadfs and fdesc
(there are more to hunt down still)
- changed vfs_quotactl args argumet from caddr_t to void *
- changed vfs_quotactl structures/callers to reflect the api change
Compiled fine and ran for about a day. Approved/reviewed by
christos@netbsd.org and gimpy@netbsd.org.