On Sun, Oct 09, 2011 at 04:18:48PM +0200, V??clav Zeman wrote: > Jeremy Chadwick wrote, On 9.10.2011 16:11: > > On Sun, Oct 09, 2011 at 03:48:57PM +0200, V??clav Zeman wrote: > >> V??clav Zeman wrote, On 9.10.2011 15:25: > >>> Bakul Shah wrote, On 6.10.2011 8:40: > >>>> On Wed, 05 Oct 2011 23:06:04 +0200 =?UTF-8?B?VsOhY2xhdiBaZW1hbg==?= > >>>> <v.hais...@sh.cvut.cz> wrote: > >>>>> Hi. > >>>>> > >>>>> No matter what I try, valgrind on 7.3-STABLE is giving me this, both > >>>>> Valgrind > >>>>> ports: > >>>>> > >>>>> valgrind: Startup or configuration error: > >>>>> Can't establish current working directory at startup > >>>>> valgrind: Unable to start up properly. Giving up. > >>>>> > >>>>> What do I need to do to make it work? > >>>> > >>>> Try running valgrind under ktrace (& view with kdump). That > >>>> will tell you what directory it is trying to access or what > >>>> syscall fails and why. > >>> Hi. > >>> > >>> So I have done that and more. I have first updated from 7.3 to 8.2 > >>> (RELENG_8 > >>> actually). I have not managed to recompile all of the installed Ports yet, > >>> but I made sure to recompile valgrind and its dependencies. The same thing > >>> has happened! > >>> > >>> As I have said, I have done the ktrace and here is the interesting bit: > >>> > >>> 78028 valgrind NAMI "/usr/local/lib/valgrind/memcheck-amd64-freebsd" > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free RET execve 0 > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free CALL getpid > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free RET getpid 78028/0x130cc > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free CALL > >>> __sysctl(0x39a91450,0x4,0x389a3800,0x39a91468,0,0) > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free SCTL "kern.proc.vmmap.78028" > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free RET __sysctl 0 > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free CALL > >>> mmap(0x400009000,0x400000,PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC,MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_FIXED|MAP_ANON,0xffffffffffffffff,0) > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free RET mmap 17179906048/0x400009000 > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free CALL getrlimit(RLIMIT_DATA,0x39e6a780) > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free RET getrlimit 0 > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free CALL setrlimit(RLIMIT_DATA,0x39a919e0) > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free RET setrlimit 0 > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free CALL getrlimit(RLIMIT_STACK,0x39e6a790) > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free RET getrlimit 0 > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free CALL __getcwd(0x3882d700,0x3ff) > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free NAMI ".." > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free RET __getcwd -1 errno 2 No such file or > >>> directory > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free CALL write(0x2,0x3830b060,0x6c) > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free GIO fd 2 wrote 108 bytes > >>> "valgrind: Startup or configuration error: > >>> valgrind: Can't establish current working directory at startup > >>> " > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free RET write 108/0x6c > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free CALL write(0x2,0x3830b060,0x33) > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free GIO fd 2 wrote 51 bytes > >>> "valgrind: Unable to start up properly. Giving up. > >>> " > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free RET write 51/0x33 > >>> 78028 memcheck-amd64-free CALL exit(0x1) > >>> > >>> Now what? Why would the __getcwd call be failing with "No such file or > >>> directory"? > >>> > >> It is the nullfs! > >> > >> I have /home mounted using nullfs to /usr/home: > >> > >> /usr/home /home nullfs rw,multilabel,acls > >> 0 0 > >> > >> When I run valgrind from the /usr based directory, it works: > >> > >> shell::wilx:/usr/home/users/wilx/tmp/yttool> valgrind --tool=memcheck > >> ./yttool > >> ==34679== Memcheck, a memory error detector > >> ==34679== Copyright (C) 2002-2010, and GNU GPL'd, by Julian Seward et al. > >> ==34679== Using Valgrind-3.6.1 and LibVEX; rerun with -h for copyright info > >> ==34679== Command: ./yttool > >> ==34679== > >> ==34679== > >> ==34679== HEAP SUMMARY: > >> ==34679== in use at exit: 20,395 bytes in 119 blocks > >> ==34679== total heap usage: 6,719 allocs, 6,600 frees, 716,787 bytes > >> allocated > >> ==34679== > >> ==34679== LEAK SUMMARY: > >> ==34679== definitely lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks > >> ==34679== indirectly lost: 0 bytes in 0 blocks > >> ==34679== possibly lost: 134 bytes in 4 blocks > >> ==34679== still reachable: 20,261 bytes in 115 blocks > >> ==34679== suppressed: 0 bytes in 0 blocks > >> ==34679== Rerun with --leak-check=full to see details of leaked memory > >> ==34679== > >> ==34679== For counts of detected and suppressed errors, rerun with: -v > >> ==34679== ERROR SUMMARY: 0 errors from 0 contexts (suppressed: 0 from 0) > >> > >> But when I run it from the nullfs mount, it fails: > >> > >> shell::wilx:/usr/home/users/wilx/tmp/yttool> cd $HOME/tmp/yttool > >> shell::wilx:~/tmp/yttool> valgrind --tool=memcheck ./yttool > >> valgrind: Startup or configuration error: > >> valgrind: Can't establish current working directory at startup > >> valgrind: Unable to start up properly. Giving up. > > > > Amazing how userland utilities behave differently depending upon the > > underlying filesystem type, eh? Good thing I asked what your underlying > > filesystem types were. Don't ever think that "it'll all just work". > > :-) > > > > I believe there are other issues/stipulations with nullfs (some have > > been reported over the years), so I'm not too surprised by this issue. > > I have no idea who currently maintains nullfs(5) either; it looks like a > > major group effort given the committers who have touched it in the past > > few years: > > > > http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/src/sys/fs/nullfs/ > > > > I'm CC'ing Kostik (kib@) as he might have some ideas. > > > > If this isn't a known issue, please file a PR for the issue with > > nullfs(5). The issue is not within valgrind, so the PR should not be > > for that. > I have filled a PR: <http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=161424> Nullfs VNTOCNP implementation has a known deficiency. Working on the item is in my TODO list.
> > > > > As for a workaround: is there some reason you can't just use "ln -s > > /usr/home /home" and solve the problem? > None. I remember using nullfs for /home instead of the link because I just > liked that it never has shown /usr there and also because it seemed cooler. :) > > -- > VZ >
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