Date: Thu, 29 Jan 2004 22:33:14 -0800 (PST) From: Nate Eldredge <nge@cs.hmc.edu> To: FreeBSD-gnats-submit@FreeBSD.org Cc: nge@cs.hmc.edu Subject: ports/62378: lsof semi-broken on 5.1-RELEASE-p10 Message-ID: <200401300633.i0U6XE0I021851@mercury.lan> Resent-Message-ID: <200402050940.i159e5AX087264@freefall.freebsd.org>
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>Number: 62378 >Category: ports >Synopsis: lsof semi-broken on 5.1-RELEASE-p10 >Confidential: no >Severity: non-critical >Priority: medium >Responsible: freebsd-ports-bugs >State: open >Quarter: >Keywords: >Date-Required: >Class: sw-bug >Submitter-Id: current-users >Arrival-Date: Thu Feb 05 01:40:05 PST 2004 >Closed-Date: >Last-Modified: >Originator: Nate Eldredge >Release: FreeBSD 5.1-RELEASE-p10 i386 >Organization: >Environment: System: FreeBSD mercury.lan 5.1-RELEASE-p10 FreeBSD 5.1-RELEASE-p10 #0: Fri Oct 3 19:12:00 PDT 2003 nate@mercury:/medium/obj/medium/src/sys/MERCURY i386 >Description: Using lsof-4.70 from ports, it doesn't give very helpful information about files in processes. For a perfectly ordinary sleep process I get mercury# sleep 1000 < /tmp/foo & [1] 21798 mercury# lsof -p 21798 COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME sleep 21798 root cwd unknown file system type: -1045301384 sleep 21798 root rtd unknown file system type: -1037192472 sleep 21798 root 0 no more information sleep 21798 root 1 0xc1ba6168 file struct, ty=0, op=0xc03a5ce0 sleep 21798 root 2 0xc1ba6168 file struct, ty=0, op=0xc03a5ce0 The filesystem in question is ordinary UFS. >How-To-Repeat: >Fix: >Release-Note: >Audit-Trail: >Unformatted:
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