Jump to content
 English      
HP.com Home Products and Services Support and Drivers Solutions How to Buy
» Contact HP
        More options        
HP.com Home
patch database

patch details: PHKL_32806

» 

IT Resource Center

» Login
» Register
» My profile
» Search knowledge base
» Forums
» Patch database
» Download drivers, software and firmware
» Warranty check
» Support Case Manager
» Software Update Manager
» Training and Education
» More maintenance and support options
» Online help
» Site map
Content starts here
» view selected patch list
The recommended patch is :  PHKL_35564
The most recent patch is :  PHKL_35564

   useful links
» Patch Family Tree

You may provide feedback on this document.
» patch name » patch description » creation date » post date » hardware platforms - os releases » products » filesets » automatic reboot? » status » critical » category tags » path name » symptoms » defect description » enhancement » sr » patch files » what(1) output » cksum(1) output » patch conflicts » patch dependencies » hardware dependencies » other dependencies » supersedes » equivalent patches » patch package size » installation instructions » special installation instructions


Patch Name: PHKL_32806

Patch Description: s700_800 11.11 Cumulative VM patch

Creation Date: 05/02/14

Post Date: 05/04/05

Hardware Platforms - OS Releases: 
	s700: 11.11
	s800: 11.11

Products: N/A

Filesets: 
	OS-Core.CORE2-KRN,fr=B.11.11,fa=HP-UX_B.11.11_32,v=HP
	OS-Core.CORE2-KRN,fr=B.11.11,fa=HP-UX_B.11.11_64,v=HP

Automatic Reboot?: Yes

Status: General Superseded

Critical: 
	Yes
	PHKL_32806: ABORT
	PHKL_32578: PANIC
	PHKL_31003: PANIC
	PHKL_30158: HANG
	PHKL_28990: ABORT CORRUPTION HANG
		The defect described in JAGae67573 can result in
		seemingly random application failures for those
		applications that call mprotect(2) with the
		PROT_CHECK flag.
	PHKL_28428: PANIC CORRUPTION
	PHKL_28267: PANIC CORRUPTION
	PHKL_27278: PANIC CORRUPTION
	PHKL_26744: PANIC
	PHKL_26233: PANIC
	PHKL_25614: CORRUPTION PANIC ABORT
		JAGad62420:  a process with a private 3rd quadrant
		can obtain an erroneous address when calling mmap(2)
		for a large mapping ( size > 1 GB).  The erroneous
		address can match an already existing address for
		that process.  If this is the case, subsequent use
		of this address could lead to corruption of data
		already at that address, as now 2 pointers with
		different meaning refer to the same block of data.
		The corruption is limited to the own address space
		of the process, and possibly files mapped by the
		process.
		The corruption is limited to the calling process
		address space, and will not affect system or other
		process memory.

	PHKL_25129: CORRUPTION
	PHKL_24073: HANG

Category Tags: 
	defect_repair enhancement general_release critical panic
	halts_system corruption

Path Name: /hp-ux_patches/s700_800/11.X/PHKL_32806

Symptoms: 
	PHKL_32806:
	( SR:8606387618 CR:JAGaf47771 )
	Process running on Cluster File System (vxfs-cfs) node may
	dump core when the disk image of the executable is
	"touched" on any other CFS node.

	PHKL_32578:
	( SR:8606379142 CR:JAGaf39391 )
	Sharing a memory map between processes using memory windows
	may lead to panic with the panic message "rmfree: overlap"
	and the following panic stack trace:
	  panic+0x6c
	  do_rmfree+0x208
	  rmfree+0x3c
	  shared_space_return+0xc8
	  hdl_detach+0x144
	  detachreg+0x98
	  dispreg+0x114
	  exit+0x724
	  rexit+0x24
	  syscall+0xaec
	  syscallinit+0x55c

	( SR:8606380135 CR:JAGaf40371 )
	With profiling enabled, killing an application may lead
	to a panic due to Data Page Fault with following stack
	trace:

	panic+0x154
	report_trap_or_int_and_panic+0x94
	trap+0xef4
	nokgdb+0x8
	ki_mmap+0x8c
	ki_syscalltrace+0x4c
	syscall+0xb14
	$syscallrtn+0x0

	PHKL_31003:
	( SR:8606354805 CR:JAGaf15561 )
	In rare cases, system may panic with the stacktrace similar
	to one give below while processing mmap(2) requests.

	panic+0x6c
	report_trap_or_int_and_panic+0x94
	trap+0xed4
	thandler+0xd20
	shrinkvfd+0x70
	growreg+0x1e8
	mapvnode+0x1e0
	mmap_file_object+0x128
	smmap_common+0x2e8
	smmap+0x50
	syscall+0xaec
	syscallinit+0x554

	( SR:8606351558 CR:JAGaf12363 )
	The system may panic with a stacktrace similar to one given
	below while processing fork()/mmap() requests.

	panic+0x6c
	report_trap_or_int_and_panic+0x94
	trap+0xef4
	thandler+0xd20
	mrg_return_freemem+0x1d0
	freepfd+0x254
	do_freepagesc+0x1b4
	for_val2+0x29c
	for_val2+0x13c
	foreach_chunk+0x3c
	pgfree+0x9c
	freereg+0x3c
	private_copy+0x1c0
	dupvas+0x220
	procdup+0x3c
	newproc+0x640
	fork1+0x1c0
	fork+0x14
	syscall+0xaec
	syscallinit+0x554

	PHKL_30616:
	( SR:8606341242 CR:JAGaf02151 )
	This product update is a member of a set needed to enable
	the optional HP-UX Mmap-Perf feature.
	Upon installation, the HP-UX Mmap-Perf bundle(EnhancedMMAP)
	will install the full set of product updates
	(including this one) to enable the Mmap-Perf feature.

	If the HP-UX Mmap-Perf feature product is not
	installed, this product update will have no impact on your
	system.

	PHKL_30158:
	( SR:8606335008 CR:JAGae96085 )
	System may hang when fork(2) fails due to unavailable
	protection or space ids. The following is the stack
	trace when the hang is TOC'ed.

	su_waiters+0x10
	call_su_waiters+0x1c
	lock_write+0xfc
	findpreg+0x150
	pfault+0xe4
	trap+0xa1c
	nokgdb+0x8
	b_eight_word_loop+0x4
	long_copyin+0xb4
	long_uiomove+0xfc
	vx_write_default+0xab0
	vx_write1+0x878
	vx_rdwr+0x144
	vn_rdwr+0x84
	write_to_core+0xe0
	write_prp_core+0x3c
	pa32_write_prp_seg+0x7c
	pa32_walkpregions+0x50
	pa32_core+0x134
	core+0x1b8
	psig+0x4fc
	syscall+0xb38
	$syscallrtn+0x0
	syscall+0xb38
	$syscallrtn+0x0

	PHKL_28990:
	( SR:8606304228 CR:JAGae67573 )
	Applications that use the mprotect(2) system call with the
	PROT_CHECK flag may fail randomly due to an incorrect
	result returned from mprotect(2).

	( SR:8606283720 CR:JAGae47665 )
	This patch is required for systems running Hyper Messaging
	Protocol(HMP)/Message Passing Interface (MPI)
	applications. The MPI applications hang after some time
	as they receive corrupt data. This problem can be seen on
	systems running MPI or HMP applications with the
	hyperfabric cards.

	When the parent forks and the child exits before the parent
	(MPI/HMP application) sends/receives data, there could be
	data corruption. The behavior is evident when using a
	popen(), pclose() call and immediately starting data
	transfer via HMP.

	PHKL_28428:
	( SR:8606267409 CR:JAGae31651 )
	System panic when removing an iomap range from a child
	process of a fork() system call when the parent process
	has already removed the range.

	Trap Type 15 (Data page fault):
	  Instruction Address (pcsq.pcoq) = 0x0.0x1256c4
	  Instruction (iir) = 0x4134002e (load/store)
	  Target Address (isr.ior) = 0x0.0x0000000000000017
	  Base Register (gr9) = 0x0000000000000000
	  Savestate Ptr (ssp) = 0xe57bc00.0x400003ffffff1378
	  Savestate Return Pointer (ss_rp) = 0x00000000001256c0

	panic: Data page fault

	A typical stack trace for this problem is:

		panic+0x6c
		report_trap_or_int_and_panic+0x94
		trap+0xef4
		nokgdb+0x8
		pddpage+0xc4
		io_unmap+0x25c
		iomap_nuke+0x24
		iomap_exit+0xa4
		exit+0xf30
		rexit+0x24
		syscall+0x20c
		$syscallrtn+0x0

	( SR:8606267454 CR:JAGae31696 )
	This problem was found in HP internal analysis and
	has not been encountered on customer systems. If
	the problem occurs, the system may panic or experience
	system memory corruption (which may in turn cause user
	memory corruption). Because the exact behavior depends
	entirely on the state of the system, a typical stack
	trace for such a panic is not possible.

	PHKL_28267:
	( SR:8606220721 CR:JAGad89858 ) Duplicate
	( SR:8606227157 CR:JAGad96219 )
	Under certain conditions of a process fork/exit, the system
	may panic with the panic string: "freevas: vas cnt 0, but
	still pointing to pregions".

	The stack trace may be similar to:

	panic+0x14
	freevas+0x164
	freeproc+0x22c
	wait1+0x25c
	waitpid+0x38
	syscall+0x394
	$syscallrtn+0x0

	PHKL_27278:
	( SR:8606262338 CR:JAGae26673 )
	Using glance, or any tools based on pstat, to report memory
	information about a single-threaded process, can cause a
	panic.
	The panic will occur in psl_search(). Before the panic
	occurs, corruption is possible as the process address space
	is corrupted.

	PHKL_26744:
	( SR:8606202772 CR:JAGad71946 )
	A data page fault panic may occur as the result of running
	mmap(2) more than 65535 times on a file.  The resulting
	stack trace may look similar to the following:

	panic+0x6c
	report_trap_or_int_and_panic+0x94
	trap+0xa9c
	nokgdb+0x8
	skl_deletevalue+0x4
	remove_pregion_from_region+0xc8
	detachreg+0xa4
	dispreg+0x164
	exit+0xb3c
	rexit+0x24
	syscall+0x724
	$syscallrtn+0x0

	PHKL_26386:
	( SR:8606186482 CR:JAGad55686 )
	This product update provides pre-enablement of extensions
	to mmap to allow mapping of I/O registers or address
	ranges.

	This product update will have no impact on your system
	until the extensions to mmap are fully enabled.

	PHKL_26233:
	( SR:8606230627 CR:JAGad99677 )
	System panic with the following stack trace.
	panic+0x6c
	report_trap_or_int_and_panic+0x94
	trap+0xed4
	thandler+0xd20
	hdl_vfault+0x80
	vfault+0x12c
	trap+0x234
	thandler+0xd20

	PHKL_25614:
	( SR:8606193208 CR:JAGad62420 )
	A 32 bit process with the 3rd quadrant private (obtained
	with the command chattr +q3 enable) can obtain an incorrect
	address when requesting a large (~1 GB) mapping with the
	mmap(2) call.
	Observed symptoms are :
	  -process aborted because of a memory fault
	   (signals SIGBUS or SIGSEGV).
	  -corruption of the memory for the calling process,
	   including files that are mapped in memory by the process.
	System memory and memory from other processes are not
	impacted.

	( SR:8606212954 CR:JAGad82141 )
	When a 32 bit process uses mmap64(2) to mmap(2) a large file
	on a 64 bit kernel, if the offset is bigger than 4 GB, the
	call returns EINVAL.

	( SR:8606188767 CR:JAGad57983 )
	Applications requiring large amounts of private memory
	address space (greater than 2GB) may use shared memory space
	to offset their private memory space needs.  This is done by
	using the mmap(2) flags:
	MAP_ANONYMOUS|MAP_GLOBAL|MAP_SHARED.
	Even with this effort to conserve private memory space,
	these applications are running out of private memory space.
	A close examination shows that allocations intended for
	shared space were put into private memory space in error.

	( SR:8606205797 CR:JAGad74972 )
	A panic "Returning ID that is already free" may occur as a
	result of a process (proc A) calling mmap(2) with MAP_FIXED
	and an address that overlaps with an existing text mapping.
	This will result in a panic in one of the following ways:

	 (1) Panic occurs when process proc A exits.

	 (2) The process proc A does a munmap(2) of the previous
	     mmap(2) (as mentioned above) and subsequent mmap(2)
	     calls from any process (proc X) get assigned the same
	     address.  When process proc X exits (case 1) the panic
	     occurs.

	A stack trace may look similar to the following:

	panic+0x6c
	hdl_return_id+0xb8
	hdl_free_protid+0x1c
	hdl_detach+0x17c
	attachreg+0x228
	mmap_anon_object+0xc4
	smmap_common+0x35c
	smmap+0x50
	syscall+0x750
	$syscallrtn+0x0

	PHKL_25129:
	( SR:8606215349 CR:JAGad84536 )
	Memory corruption may occur after the installation of
	PHKL_24679.

	PHKL_24679:
	( SR:8606201639 CR:JAGad70813 )
	The system takes a lot of time in creating a large number of
	threads. The cost of creating threads increases
	exponentially as the number of threads increases and so the
	system appears to be very slow when one tries to create a
	lot of threads.

	PHKL_25227:
	( SR:8606188435 CR:JAGad57643 )
	Narrow mode (32bit) HP-UX 11.11 programs cannot mmap64() any
	part of a large file beyond the first 2GB.

	PHKL_24743:
	( SR:8606205558 CR:JAGad74733 ) Duplicate
	( SR:8606204858 CR:JAGad74036 )
	Decreased performance for mmap() operations has occasionally
	been observed in superdome systems with more than 32 cpus.
	These symptoms are not specific to superdomes, but could
	possibly occur on other high end systems as well.

	PHKL_24073:
	( SR:8606189205 CR:JAGad58421 )
	A multi-threaded process hangs and cannot be killed. This
	process will have been repeatedly mmap()ing parts of the
	same file, while at the same time reading or writing to it
	with the read(), write(), readv(), or writev() system calls
	from a different thread. That file must also be on a JFS
	file system.

	The Netscape Messaging Server's smtpd process is the only
	application we've seen do the particular combination of
	operations required to get into this state.

Defect Description: 
	PHKL_32806:
	( SR:8606387618 CR:JAGaf47771 )
	CFS semantics guarantees that change in data or metadata of
	a vnode being shared across different nodes will be
	reflected to all the nodes using this vnode. This is done
	by calling a "Virtual Memory" function to perform
	invalidation of the data/metadata pages being mapped for
	the vnode. The "VM" invalidate function invalidates all the
	pages being  mapped for this vnode, However there are some
	critical information (PLT/DLT tables) for an executable
	that should not be invalidated. This is not taken care
	currently, leading to a core dump of a process using this
	vnode.

	Resolution:
	The invalidate function is modified to prevent the
	critical information from being invalidated. The critical
	data is PLT/DLT tables of the executables which are present
	in the PT_DATA pages for a process. The invalidate function
	is modified to prevent invalidation of the PT_DATA pages.

	PHKL_32578:
	( SR:8606379142 CR:JAGaf39391 )
	This occurs due to a missing validation check for flags
	passed with mmap(2).

	Resolution:
	The resolution is to validate mmap(2) flags across all
	processes sharing the memory map.

	( SR:8606380135 CR:JAGaf40371 )
	This occurs due to an uninitialized value being interpreted
	which leads to a Data Page Fault.

	Resolution:
	The resolution is to initialize the variable before use and
	validate the data before interpretation.

	PHKL_31003:
	( SR:8606354805 CR:JAGaf15561 )
	Some mmap(2) requests are not correctly processed.

	Resolution:
	mmap(2) requests are now processed correctly.

	( SR:8606351558 CR:JAGaf12363 )
	Under certain circumstances when fork()/mmap() fails, the
	system may panic.

	In the failure path of fork()/mmap(), the source's region
	lock is released before the destination's partially created
	region is freed back. Releasing source's region lock creates
	a window where vhand() acquires it and pushes valid pages
	into swap. Now in the failure path of fork()/mmap(),
	freereg() is invoked to release the same pages (COW'd) from
	the destination's region. Since destination is not yet
	completely setup, it's MRG pointer is NULL which when
	referenced leads to a panic.

	Resolution:
	The solution involves releasing the pages from destination's
	region before the source's region lock is released. This
	ensures that it is source's responsibility to release
	the page to the free memory pool.

	PHKL_30616:
	( SR:8606341242 CR:JAGaf02151 )
	This product update contains minor enhancements required to
	enable the HP-UX Mmap-Perf.

	Resolution:
	Enhancements added to set up the system for loading the
	HP-UX Mmap-Perf feature when this product is
	configured.

	PHKL_30158:
	( SR:8606335008 CR:JAGae96085 )
	When a process having called mprotect(PROT_NONE) on
	private region(s) calls fork(2) system call and if
	fork(2) does not succeed due to unavailability of
	protection or space ids, it may result in hang.

	This is due to freeing the parent process' resources
	incorrectly in the fork(2) cleanup path.

	Resolution:
	Incorrect logic in the fork(2) cleanup path is corrected.

	PHKL_28990:
	( SR:8606304228 CR:JAGae67573 )
	mprotect(2), when called with the PROT_CHECK flag, was
	checking access rights on pages from the beginning of the
	specified pregion instead of from the pregion offset that
	is passed in.

	Resolution:
	Corrected the access protection checking code to begin at
	the given offset instead of at the beginning of the
	pregion.

	( SR:8606283720 CR:JAGae47665 )
	When MPI/HMP applications fork a child process and
	make the child exit, the child - which shares the parent's
	address space because of the Copy On Write feature of
	fork - clears bits incorrectly in the shared pages.
	This action leads to data corruption for the parent.
	Since the bit is incorrectly cleared, the HMP call
	back function is not called when the parent does a
	copy-on-write. So, the lowfat code writes new data
	to the old page causing data corruption.  This defect
	exists in the large page (> 4k) code only.

	Resolution:
	Corrected the code to disallow the child from
	incorrectly clearing bits in the shared address space.

	PHKL_28428:
	( SR:8606267409 CR:JAGae31651 )
	The fork() system call does not add the child process
	address space to the iomap control structures as intended
	when the parent of the fork() has performed an iomap.

	Resolution:
	Revised the fork() system call to add the child address
	space as intended.

	( SR:8606267454 CR:JAGae31696 )
	The exec() system call re-uses the address space of the
	calling process for the target process. If the calling
	process had performed an iomap operation (via a device
	driver), the mapping is removed from the address space.
	However, the address space is not being removed from
	the iomap control structures. When the target process
	exits, the kernel memory address of this address space
	remains in the control structures. This address may now
	reference a new kernel structure, kernel data, or memory
	which is not in use. Since the use of this reference in
	the control structures involves memory reads and writes,
	using the invalid reference may cause a kernel panic
	or may overwrite kernel or user data.

	Resolution:
	Perform the removal of such a mapping in the exec()
	system call in the same way as an explicit unmap,
	ensuring that the address space reference is also
	removed.

	PHKL_28267:
	( SR:8606220721 CR:JAGad89858 ) Duplicate
	( SR:8606227157 CR:JAGad96219 )
	The reference count for the process' Virtual Address Space
	(vas) is not protected from multiple concurrent accesses
	by any lock.  This results in a race condition and possible
	ambiguous value in the reference count.  If the reference
	count is decremented to zero but the vas is still pointing
	to valid pregions that are still in use, the freevas panic
	will occur when attempting to free the vas.

	Resolution:
	The resolution is to lock the vas whenever the reference
	count is incremented/decremented, thereby serializing
	any changes and maintaining coherency of the reference
	count.

	PHKL_27278:
	( SR:8606262338 CR:JAGae26673 )
	There is a race condition between pstat and a function
	managing a process address space. This causes the corruption
	of the list representing a process address space, leading
	to a panic.

	Resolution:
	The fix consists of enforcing locking even for
	single-threaded processes, to protect them from
	external pstat requests.

	PHKL_26744:
	( SR:8606202772 CR:JAGad71946 )
	The variable holding the mmap reference count is not checked
	for overflow.  When the variable resets to zero, the system
	panics with a data page fault.

	Resolution:
	The overflow condition is now detected.  The panic is
	avoided by returning ENOMEM when the mmap(2) reference count
	variable overflows.

	PHKL_26386:
	( SR:8606186482 CR:JAGad55686 )
	This product update contains minor enhancements required to
	enable extensions to mmap to allow mapping of I/O registers
	or address ranges.

	Resolution:
	Extended mmap to recognize MAP_IO flag and perform mapping
	if functionality is enabled.

	PHKL_26233:
	( SR:8606230627 CR:JAGad99677 )
	Kernel incorrectly handles some of the parameters to
	setrlimit.

	Resolution:
	The kernel is fixed to handle the particular parameters
	correctly.

	PHKL_25614:
	( SR:8606193208 CR:JAGad62420 )
	On 64 bit systems, calls to mmap(2) by 32 bit processes with
	sizes in the range of 1 GB or greater cause the allocation
	algorithm to allocate a segment in the 64 bit address space
	instead of the 32 bit address space.  The 64 bit address is
	truncated to 32 bits on return to the 32 bit calling
	process.  The cause of this error is an incorrect boundaries
	checking in the allocation algorithm.  When using a
	debugger, one can observe a 64 bit segment in the process
	address space.

	Resolution:
	The allocation algorithm now checks boundary conditions
	correctly, producing a correct memory address.

	( SR:8606212954 CR:JAGad82141 )
	One kernel structure associated with the mapped file is
	based on the type of the process address space.  Thus a 32
	bit process creates a 32 bit mapped file kernel structure.
	The kernel structure should be independent from the type of
	the calling process.

	Resolution:
	The creation of the kernel structure associated with a mmap
	file has been made independent from the type of the process.

	( SR:8606188767 CR:JAGad57983 )
	The mmap(2) system call ignores the MAP_GLOBAL flag when
	used in combination with the MAP_SHARED and MAP_ANONYMOUS
	flags.

	Resolution:
	Checking for the MAP_GLOBAL option in mmap(2) when the
	MAP_ANONYMOUS and MAP_SHARED flags are used.  The allocation
	is then made from the appropriate quadrant.

	( SR:8606205797 CR:JAGad74972 )
	This panic results from trying to free the same ID twice as
	a result of the system allowing a mapping that overlaps with
	an existing mapping of text.

	Resolution:
	mmap(2) calls with addresses that overlap with existing text
	mappings will now fail.

	PHKL_25129:
	( SR:8606215349 CR:JAGad84536 )
	In one corner case the fix for "PHKL_24679" overwrites some
	memory beyond the allocated limit for an internal data
	structure.

	Resolution:
	Overwriting of memory is fixed by checking for a corner
	case.

	PHKL_24679:
	( SR:8606201639 CR:JAGad70813 )
	When ever a range of virtual address space is allocated for
	a thread the OS always searches for a hole from the highest
	possible address so as to give maximum possible space for
	the heap to grow. When large number of threads are created
	and all space in the proximity of the highest address is
	occupied it takes a while before the search could get a
	hole of required size, which slows down the thread creation
	process.

	Resolution:
	The fix to the problem is to keep a hint for starting the
	search next time so we do not have to start always from the
	highest address.

	PHKL_25227:
	( SR:8606188435 CR:JAGad57643 )
	The kernel code was limited by design to allow narrow
	mode mmap64() to 2GB or less only.

	Resolution:
	The kernel was enhanced to remove this limitation. Narrow
	mode mmap64() can now map up to 4GB.

	PHKL_24743:
	( SR:8606205558 CR:JAGad74733 ) Duplicate
	( SR:8606204858 CR:JAGad74036 )
	Unnecessary acquisition and release of region locks in
	common execution paths can cause unpredictable performance
	degradation.

	Resolution:
	ltered code path to minimize frequency of region
	lock/release in procedures mmap_file_pieces() and
	mmap_file_object().  Note that this is only one of the
	causes for unpredictable performance degradation in mmap.

	PHKL_24073:
	( SR:8606189205 CR:JAGad58421 )
	This problem was caused by a lock ordering problem between
	VM and JFS. JFS can call VM while holding an inode lock;
	the routines called may require a vas lock. VM can call JFS
	while holding a vas lock; the routines called may require
	an inode lock. If we get unlucky, we hit the same vas/inode
	lock combination from both directions, and the threads
	deadlock. Because the vas lock potentially held by VM is
	a per process resource, this situation can only be
	encountered by a multithreaded process.

	Resolution:
	The fix is to have the VM routine drop the vas lock before
	calling the file system code; fortunately, the VM routine
	can safely drop and reacquire the lock around the call ...
	it was mostly holding it to avoid dropping and reacquiring
	it repeatedly in a loop.

Enhancement: 
	No (superseded patches contained enhancements)
	PHKL_30616:
		Support added for Mmap-Perf
		Enhancement to improve the performance of
		smmap_hole_file which is called via mmap(2).
		The smmap_hole_file improvement will be derived
		when this patch will be configured.
	PHKL_28428:
		Enhancements were delivered in a patch this one has
		superseded.  Please review the Defect Description
		text for more information.

SR: 
	8606186482 8606188435 8606188767 8606189205 8606193208
	8606201639 8606202772 8606204858 8606205558 8606205797
	8606212954 8606215349 8606220721 8606227157 8606230627
	8606262338 8606267409 8606267454 8606283720 8606304228
	8606335008 8606341242 8606351558 8606354805 8606379142
	8606380135 8606387618

Patch Files: 
	
	OS-Core.CORE2-KRN,fr=B.11.11,fa=HP-UX_B.11.11_32,v=HP:
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(hdl_policy.o)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(vm_procdup.o)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_mmap.o)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_pregion.o)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_vas.o)

	OS-Core.CORE2-KRN,fr=B.11.11,fa=HP-UX_B.11.11_64,v=HP:
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(hdl_policy.o)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(vm_procdup.o)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_mmap.o)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_pregion.o)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_vas.o)

what(1) Output: 
	
	OS-Core.CORE2-KRN,fr=B.11.11,fa=HP-UX_B.11.11_32,v=HP:
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(hdl_policy.o):
		hdl_policy.c $Date: 2004/12/23 02:57:50 $Revision: r
			11.11/4 PATCH_11.11 (PHKL_32578)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(vm_procdup.o):
		vm_procdup.c $Date: 2002/11/21 12:14:20 $Revision: r
			11.11/2 PATCH_11.11 (PHKL_28267)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_mmap.o):
		vm_mmap.c $Date: 2005/02/14 01:09:56 $Revision: r11.
			11/12 PATCH_11.11 (PHKL_32806)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_pregion.o):
		vm_pregion.c $Date: 2003/04/11 12:42:27 $Revision: r
			11.11/6 PATCH_11.11 (PHKL_28990)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_vas.o):
		vm_vas.c $Date: 2004/06/03 05:32:10 $Revision: r11.1
			1/7 PATCH_11.11 (PHKL_31003)

	OS-Core.CORE2-KRN,fr=B.11.11,fa=HP-UX_B.11.11_64,v=HP:
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(hdl_policy.o):
		hdl_policy.c $Date: 2004/12/23 02:57:50 $Revision: r
			11.11/4 PATCH_11.11 (PHKL_32578)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(vm_procdup.o):
		vm_procdup.c $Date: 2002/11/21 12:14:20 $Revision: r
			11.11/2 PATCH_11.11 (PHKL_28267)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_mmap.o):
		vm_mmap.c $Date: 2005/02/14 01:09:56 $Revision: r11.
			11/12 PATCH_11.11 (PHKL_32806)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_pregion.o):
		vm_pregion.c $Date: 2003/04/11 12:42:27 $Revision: r
			11.11/6 PATCH_11.11 (PHKL_28990)
	/usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_vas.o):
		vm_vas.c $Date: 2004/06/03 05:32:10 $Revision: r11.1
			1/7 PATCH_11.11 (PHKL_31003)

cksum(1) Output: 
	
	OS-Core.CORE2-KRN,fr=B.11.11,fa=HP-UX_B.11.11_32,v=HP:
	222236238 19004 /usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(hdl_policy.o)
	548605164 8576 /usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(vm_procdup.o)
	1790278490 32908 /usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_mmap.o)
	2301035792 16404 /usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_pregion.o)
	1605549661 16024 /usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_vas.o)

	OS-Core.CORE2-KRN,fr=B.11.11,fa=HP-UX_B.11.11_64,v=HP:
	1141271533 42800 /usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(hdl_policy.o)
	1322771529 17144 /usr/conf/lib/libvm-pdk.a(vm_procdup.o)
	963164099 72384 /usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_mmap.o)
	3440416074 33312 /usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_pregion.o)
	1036958040 37472 /usr/conf/lib/libvm.a(vm_vas.o)

Patch Conflicts: None

Patch Dependencies: None

Hardware Dependencies: None

Other Dependencies: None

Supersedes: 
	PHKL_32578 PHKL_31003 PHKL_30616 PHKL_30158 PHKL_28990 PHKL_28428
	PHKL_28267 PHKL_27278 PHKL_26744 PHKL_26386 PHKL_26233 PHKL_25614
	PHKL_25227 PHKL_25129 PHKL_24743 PHKL_24679 PHKL_24073

Equivalent Patches: None

Patch Package Size: 180 KBytes

Installation Instructions: 
	Please review all instructions and the Hewlett-Packard
	SupportLine User Guide or your Hewlett-Packard support terms
	and conditions for precautions, scope of license,
	restrictions, and, limitation of liability and warranties,
	before installing this patch.
	------------------------------------------------------------
	1. Back up your system before installing a patch.

	2. Login as root.

	3. Copy the patch to the /tmp directory.

	4. Move to the /tmp directory and unshar the patch:

		cd /tmp
		sh PHKL_32806

	5. Run swinstall to install the patch:

		swinstall -x autoreboot=true -x patch_match_target=true \
			  -s /tmp/PHKL_32806.depot

	By default swinstall will archive the original software in 
	/var/adm/sw/save/PHKL_32806.  If you do not wish to retain a
	copy of the original software, include the patch_save_files
	option in the swinstall command above:

		-x patch_save_files=false

	WARNING: If patch_save_files is false when a patch is installed,
		 the patch cannot be deinstalled.  Please be careful
		 when using this feature.

	For future reference, the contents of the PHKL_32806.text file is 
	available in the product readme:

		swlist -l product -a readme -d @ /tmp/PHKL_32806.depot

	To put this patch on a magnetic tape and install from the
	tape drive, use the command:

		dd if=/tmp/PHKL_32806.depot of=/dev/rmt/0m bs=2k

Special Installation Instructions: None




» top of page
Printable version
Privacy statement Using this site means you accept its terms
© 2009 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.