On Tuesday 16 October 2007 00:06, David Howells wrote:
quoted text > Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> wrote:
> > I get funny SIGBUS' like so:
> >
> > fault
> > if (->page_mkwrite() < 0)
> > nfs_vm_page_mkwrite()
> > nfs_write_begin()
> > nfs_flush_incompatible()
> > nfs_wb_page()
> > nfs_wb_page_priority()
> > nfs_sync_mapping_wait()
> > nfs_wait_on_request_locked()
> > nfs_wait_on_request()
> > nfs_wait_bit_interruptible()
> > return -ERESTARTSYS
> > SIGBUS
> >
> > trying to figure out what to do about this...
>
> Hmmm... It sounds like the fault handler should deliver the appropriate
> signal, should ->page_mkwrite() return ERESTARTSYS, and then retry the
> access instruction that caused the fault when the signal handler has
> finished running.
I don't think the fault handler is currently in any position to do
that ATM. It is possible to make it interruptible in some contexts,
but faults from kernel code may not be able to cope.
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Messages in current thread:
Re: nfs mmap adventure (was: 2.6.23-mm1) , Nick Piggin , (Mon Oct 15, 9:46 pm)