Subject: Re: Problems with NetBSD-current kernels after 2005-10-04
To: None <current-users@NetBSD.org>
From: Peter Postma <peter@pointless.nl>
List: current-users
Date: 10/11/2005 11:12:44
On Tue, Oct 11, 2005 at 10:02:06AM +0100, Matthias Scheler wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 07, 2005 at 10:02:14AM +0100, Matthias Scheler wrote:
> > none of the kernels I built on my NetBSD-current machine after the 4th of
> > October worked stable for me. Wednesday's kernel crashed, yesterday's
> > kernel frooze and today's kernel crashed with this panic message:
> 
> I've tried with a kernel built from today's sources because Thomas Klausner
> suggested that the backout of the page finger printing code should have
> fixed it. Unfortunately I'm stilling getting panics:
> 
> uvm_fault(0xc0555da0, 0xcec2b000, 0, 2) -> 0xe
> fatal page fault in supervisor mode
> trap type 6 code 2 eip c02ecaae cs 8 eflags 10282 cr2 cec2b194 ilevel 0
> panic: trap
> Begin traceback...
> trap() at netbsd:trap+0x162
> --- trap (number 6) ---
> vget(cd5bbbe4,10,1,cc7a0a80,cdc1a66c) at netbsd:vget+0x11a
> cache_lookup(cd5bbddc,ce8efc44,ce8efc58,cdc1a66c,0) at netbsd:cache_lookup+0x160
> ufs_lookup(ce8efa54,ce8efc58,ce8efa6c,c02eb739,c0464e80) at netbsd:ufs_lookup+0xed
> VOP_LOOKUP(cd5bbddc,ce8efc44,ce8efc58,c024c583,cd2fa10c) at netbsd:VOP_LOOKUP+0x30
> lookup(ce8efc34,cc7b1800,400,ce8efc4c,ce8efb14) at netbsd:lookup+0x212
> namei(ce8efc34,cd881400,ce8efb5c,c02f92e7,cd881470) at netbsd:namei+0x133
> elf32_load_file(cdc1a66c,ce8efe94,c2b1a000,ce8efea8,ce8efcd8) at netbsd:elf32_load_file+0x55
> exec_elf32_makecmds(cdc1a66c,ce8efe94,c272a800,404,0) at netbsd:exec_elf32_makecmds+0x1e2
> check_exec(cdc1a66c,ce8efe94,0,0,c286fb78) at netbsd:check_exec+0x1f5
> execve1(cda1e5b4,806ba04,806b72c,806ac04,c029dd33) at netbsd:execve1+0x131
> sys_execve(cda1e5b4,ce8eff64,ce8eff5c,cdc1a66c,c2b52f00) at netbsd:sys_execve+0x30
> syscall_plain() at netbsd:syscall_plain+0x18f
> 

I just had the same panic (also todays sources). I'm not using softdeps
and I've got tmpfs mounted on /var/run and /tmp.

-- 
Peter Postma