Hi!

I have found a bug where qemu would sit in an endless loop whenever "-smb" was 
enabled and accessed. It is probably the same problem some people in the user 
forums talk about, and here's my analysis and fix:

On glibc systems with NPTL, fork() is not atomic with regard to signals, while 
on non-NPTL-systems, it is. This behaviour is considered to be correct by the 
libc developers, as no relevant spec forbids this behaviour.

See this thread for details:
http://sourceware.org/ml/libc-hacker/2007-02/msg00009.html

In qemu, accessing the SMB ip-address causes the slirp code to issue a fork in 
slirp/misc.c, which hangs, as we are in mid-emulation and SIGALARM signals 
come in at a high rate, probably triggering the above mentioned behaviour.

This patch solves the problem by temporarily blocking all signals until the 
fork is over. It doesn't unblock signals in the child, as I assume that 
executing the server program will care for that anyways. It works for me, 
finally I can access "-smb"-folders again.

-- 
CU
  Jörg
--- slirp/misc.c	2007-08-27 10:30:20.000000000 +0200
+++ slirp/misc.c.new	2007-08-27 10:29:50.000000000 +0200
@@ -313,6 +313,7 @@
 	int opt;
         int master;
 	char *argv[256];
+	int mask;
 #if 0
 	char buff[256];
 #endif
@@ -346,8 +347,10 @@
 		}
 	}
 	
+	mask = sigsetmask(~0);
 	switch(fork()) {
 	 case -1:
+	 	sigsetmask(mask);
 		lprint("Error: fork failed: %s\n", strerror(errno));
 		close(s);
 		if (do_pty == 2)
@@ -426,6 +429,7 @@
 		exit(1);
 		
 	 default:
+	 	sigsetmask(mask);
 		if (do_pty == 2) {
 			close(s);
 			so->s = master;

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