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296373 |
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04-Mar-2016 |
marius |
- Copy stable/10@296371 to releng/10.3 in preparation for 10.3-RC1 builds. - Update newvers.sh to reflect RC1. - Update __FreeBSD_version to reflect 10.3. - Update default pkg(8) configuration to use the quarterly branch.
Approved by: re (implicit) |
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256281 |
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10-Oct-2013 |
gjb |
Copy head (r256279) to stable/10 as part of the 10.0-RELEASE cycle.
Approved by: re (implicit) Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
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197840 |
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07-Oct-2009 |
zml |
Handle GRANTED_RES messages more gracefully: Send along a grant cookie to reference the lock, look up the grant cookie when the GRANTED_RES comes back. Properly handle the case of an error on the grant. Add a short expiration window so that granted locks are not freed immediately.
Approved by: dfr (mentor) MFC after: 2 weeks
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182153 |
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25-Aug-2008 |
dfr |
Add a missing return statement in nlm4_unlock_msg_4_svc which prevented it from returning a reply message in most cases. This in turn caused interoperability problems with Mac OS X clients.
PR: 126561 Submitted by: Richard.Conto at gmail.com MFC after: 1 week
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180025 |
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26-Jun-2008 |
dfr |
Re-implement the client side of rpc.lockd in the kernel. This implementation provides the correct semantics for flock(2) style locks which are used by the lockf(1) command line tool and the pidfile(3) library. It also implements recovery from server restarts and ensures that dirty cache blocks are written to the server before obtaining locks (allowing multiple clients to use file locking to safely share data).
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems PR: 94256 MFC after: 2 weeks
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177685 |
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28-Mar-2008 |
dfr |
Minor changes to improve compatibility with older FreeBSD releases.
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177633 |
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26-Mar-2008 |
dfr |
Add the new kernel-mode NFS Lock Manager. To use it instead of the user-mode lock manager, build a kernel with the NFSLOCKD option and add '-k' to 'rpc_lockd_flags' in rc.conf.
Highlights include:
* Thread-safe kernel RPC client - many threads can use the same RPC client handle safely with replies being de-multiplexed at the socket upcall (typically driven directly by the NIC interrupt) and handed off to whichever thread matches the reply. For UDP sockets, many RPC clients can share the same socket. This allows the use of a single privileged UDP port number to talk to an arbitrary number of remote hosts.
* Single-threaded kernel RPC server. Adding support for multi-threaded server would be relatively straightforward and would follow approximately the Solaris KPI. A single thread should be sufficient for the NLM since it should rarely block in normal operation.
* Kernel mode NLM server supporting cancel requests and granted callbacks. I've tested the NLM server reasonably extensively - it passes both my own tests and the NFS Connectathon locking tests running on Solaris, Mac OS X and Ubuntu Linux.
* Userland NLM client supported. While the NLM server doesn't have support for the local NFS client's locking needs, it does have to field async replies and granted callbacks from remote NLMs that the local client has contacted. We relay these replies to the userland rpc.lockd over a local domain RPC socket.
* Robust deadlock detection for the local lock manager. In particular it will detect deadlocks caused by a lock request that covers more than one blocking request. As required by the NLM protocol, all deadlock detection happens synchronously - a user is guaranteed that if a lock request isn't rejected immediately, the lock will eventually be granted. The old system allowed for a 'deferred deadlock' condition where a blocked lock request could wake up and find that some other deadlock-causing lock owner had beaten them to the lock.
* Since both local and remote locks are managed by the same kernel locking code, local and remote processes can safely use file locks for mutual exclusion. Local processes have no fairness advantage compared to remote processes when contending to lock a region that has just been unlocked - the local lock manager enforces a strict first-come first-served model for both local and remote lockers.
Sponsored by: Isilon Systems PR: 95247 107555 115524 116679 MFC after: 2 weeks
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