On Mon, 11 Oct 1999, Mike Smith wrote:

> > Running ``nmap -sP 172.22.0.0/16'' as a normal user will cause a panic on
> > a recent 3.3-STABLE system :(
> 
> Could you be any less specific about the panic?  Any sort of detail is 
> just going to make us want to fix it.

Here most of the message I posted to -stable:

----snip----
*From [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tue Oct 12 07:20:08 1999
Date: Mon, 27 Sep 1999 19:43:21 +1000 (EST)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: nmap V. 2.3BETA5 causes panic

The system will panic with an 'out of mbufs' message when I run the above
nmap command ("ping scan" a class B subnet - my internal IP network).

Should this be happening when run as a normal user??  The kernel is pretty
stock with maxusers 32, no NMBCLUSTERS option, unneeded devices removed.  
There is 64M RAM and 256M swap; it is has dual 90MHz P54C's.

This system (my workstation) is a:
FreeBSD 3.3-STABLE #0: Mon Sep 20 09:44:35 EST 1999

I am:
bash-2.03$ id
uid=1000(andyf) gid=1000(andyf) groups=1000(andyf), 0(wheel)

I have:
bash-2.03$ limits
Resource limits (current):
  cputime          infinity secs
  filesize          1048576 kb
  datasize            65536 kb
  stacksize            8192 kb
  coredumpsize       131072 kb
  memoryuse           65536 kb
  memorylocked         8192 kb
  maxprocesses          256
  openfiles             256

I use:
bash-2.03$ 

How would you go about preventing this problem?

Thanks.
----snip----

> 
> -- 
> \\ Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. \\  Mike Smith
> \\ Tell him he should learn how to fish himself,  \\  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> \\ and he'll hate you for a lifetime.             \\  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> 

--
 
 :{ [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
        Andy Farkas
    System Administrator
   Speednet Communications
 http://www.speednet.com.au/
  




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