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Date:      Fri, 21 May 1999 20:07:54 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>
To:        "David E. Cross" <crossd@cs.rpi.edu>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG, schimken@cs.rpi.edu, crossd@cs.rpi.edu
Subject:   Re: Repeatable kernel panic for 3.2-RELEASE NFS server
Message-ID:  <199905220307.UAA69634@apollo.backplane.com>
References:   <199905180532.BAA72781@cs.rpi.edu>

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:First, I would like to take this opportunity the thank Matt Dillon for
:his excellent work with NFS/TCP.  Wow, way to go :)
:
:Now on to the real problem :)
:
:One of our users way able to reliably crash an NFS server 3 times today.
:I have since copied his program and have reliably crashed a seperate and
:unloaded machine with the exact same panic, "lockmgr: locking against
:myself".  I check the recent DG patches that went in after -RELEASE and they
:do not appear to affect this part of the code.  I have a full debugging
:kernel compiled, yet when I issue a 'gdb -k kernel.0 vmcore.0' (where
:kernel.0 is either the debugging or strip-debug kernel), I receive
:an unresolved symbol error for "gd_curpcb", so I cannot provide additional
:information at this time.
:
:In the morning I will try to distill the code down to a more potent
:test-case.
:--
:David Cross                               |  email: crossd@cs.rpi.edu 

    Another possibly re: debugging.  If you compile up a kernel with 
    options DDB and options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER, the kernel will break into
    DDB when the panic occurs.  You can then issue a 'trace' command to get
    a backtrace.

    This may be good enough to determine what the problem is because
    the cause of a 'lockmgr: locking against myself' panic tends to be
    entirely contained within the current stack trace.

					-Matt
					Matthew Dillon 
					<dillon@backplane.com>


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