already being locked by our thread. VOP_INACTIVATE() makes no
statement as to the lock state of the parent, yet this code assumed
we had it unlocked.
With this change, we let vn_lock() fail with EDEADLK if we already
have the parent locked. We then handle the rename cleanup, and on
the way out just vrele() the parent vnode, not vput() it.
Fixes a case seen by Steve Woodford at Wasabisystems dot com where
we'd panic while running a pkgsrc configure test that verified
fork() functionality. I expect the problem is a result of the recent
exit() changes and the performance of the machines he tested on.
Specifically we would crash during an nfs_remove(). As best I can
tell, when nfs_remove() tested to see if we should rename or we
should remove, v_usecount was > 1 and vattr.va_nlink was 1. Thus
we did the sillyrename in nfs_remove(). However by the time we got
down to the vput(vp), v_usecount had dropped to one and thus vput()
triggered the VOP_INACTIVATE() code path. nfs_inactive() tries to
lock the parent to undo the sillyrename, and deadlocks as we still
have it locked.