[kernel] Let objects inherit caps from superclasses

The main point of this change is to allow "global" capabilities defined
on the base object type. The example here is the clone capability on all
objects, which governs the ability to clone a handle.

Related changes in this commit:
- Renamed `kobject` to `object` as far as the syscall interface is
  concerned. `kobject` is the cname, but j6_cap_kobject_clone feels
  clunky.
- The above change made me realize that the "object <type>" syntax for
  specifying object references was also clunky, so now it's "ref <type>"
- Having to add `.object` on everywhere to access objects in
  interface.exposes or object.super was cumbersome, so those properties
  now return object types directly, instead of ObjectRef.
- syscall_verify.cpp.cog now generates code to check capabilities on
  handles if they're specified in the definition, even when not passing
  an object to the implementation function.
This commit is contained in:
Justin C. Miller
2022-01-29 15:22:38 -08:00
parent bdae812274
commit cd037aca15
19 changed files with 101 additions and 70 deletions

View File

@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ class Interface:
self.desc = desc
self.functions = [c for c in children if isinstance(c, Function)]
self.exposes = [e.type for e in children if isinstance(e, Expose)]
self.__exposes = [e.type for e in children if isinstance(e, Expose)]
def __str__(self):
parts = [f"interface {self.name}: {self.uid}"]
@@ -35,8 +35,12 @@ class Interface:
mm = [(i, None, self.functions[i]) for i in range(len(self.functions))]
base = len(mm)
for o in [e.object for e in self.exposes]:
for o in self.exposes:
mm.extend([(base + i, o, o.methods[i]) for i in range(len(o.methods))])
base += len(o.methods)
return mm
@property
def exposes(self):
return [ref.object for ref in self.__exposes]

View File

@@ -7,11 +7,12 @@ class Object:
self.uid = uid
self.options = opts
self.desc = desc
self.super = typename
self.methods = children
self.cname = cname or name
self.caps = caps
self.__super = typename
from . import ObjectRef
self.__ref = ObjectRef(name)
@@ -25,3 +26,8 @@ class Object:
return "\n".join(parts)
reftype = property(lambda self: self.__ref)
@property
def super(self):
if self.__super is not None:
return self.__super.object