I'm running Debian Unstable booting with file-rc, and there are several system daemons that have screwy SigBlk masks, of which sshd is one. They are listed in the attached "commands" file.
You can get the data for a similar report on your own machine by running the following commands (as root):
grep SigBlk /proc/*/status | grep -v 0000000000000000 > commands
for x in $(grep SigBlk /proc/*/status | grep -v 000000000000 | sed -e 's@/proc/\(.*\)/status.*$@\1@g'); do echo -n "$x: "; cat /proc/$x/cmdline; echo; done >> commands
After running this, I cleaned things up a bit in vim to better organize the report.
Perhaps people experiencing this bug on Ubuntu could run a similar report?
I'm running Debian Unstable booting with file-rc, and there are several system daemons that have screwy SigBlk masks, of which sshd is one. They are listed in the attached "commands" file.
You can get the data for a similar report on your own machine by running the following commands (as root):
grep SigBlk /proc/*/status | grep -v 0000000000000000 > commands \(.*\)/ status. *$@\1@g' ); do echo -n "$x: "; cat /proc/$x/cmdline; echo; done >> commands
for x in $(grep SigBlk /proc/*/status | grep -v 000000000000 | sed -e 's@/proc/
After running this, I cleaned things up a bit in vim to better organize the report.
Perhaps people experiencing this bug on Ubuntu could run a similar report?