Searched hist:169565 (Results 1 - 2 of 2) sorted by relevance
/freebsd-10-stable/sys/sys/ | ||
H A D | sysent.h | diff 169565 Mon May 14 20:40:04 MDT 2007 jhb Rework the support for ABIs to override resource limits (used by 32-bit processes under 64-bit kernels). Previously, each 32-bit process overwrote its resource limits at exec() time. The problem with this approach is that the new limits affect all child processes of the 32-bit process, including if the child process forks and execs a 64-bit process. To fix this, don't ovewrite the resource limits during exec(). Instead, sv_fixlimits() is now replaced with a different function sv_fixlimit() which asks the ABI to sanitize a single resource limit. We then use this when querying and setting resource limits. Thus, if a 32-bit process sets a limit, then that new limit will be inherited by future children. However, if the 32-bit process doesn't change a limit, then a future 64-bit child will see the "full" 64-bit limit rather than the 32-bit limit. MFC is tentative since it will break the ABI of old linux.ko modules (no other modules are affected). MFC after: 1 week |
/freebsd-10-stable/sys/kern/ | ||
H A D | kern_sharedpage.c | diff 169565 Mon May 14 20:40:04 MDT 2007 jhb Rework the support for ABIs to override resource limits (used by 32-bit processes under 64-bit kernels). Previously, each 32-bit process overwrote its resource limits at exec() time. The problem with this approach is that the new limits affect all child processes of the 32-bit process, including if the child process forks and execs a 64-bit process. To fix this, don't ovewrite the resource limits during exec(). Instead, sv_fixlimits() is now replaced with a different function sv_fixlimit() which asks the ABI to sanitize a single resource limit. We then use this when querying and setting resource limits. Thus, if a 32-bit process sets a limit, then that new limit will be inherited by future children. However, if the 32-bit process doesn't change a limit, then a future 64-bit child will see the "full" 64-bit limit rather than the 32-bit limit. MFC is tentative since it will break the ABI of old linux.ko modules (no other modules are affected). MFC after: 1 week |
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