This commit contains a couple large, interdependent changes:
- In preparation for capability checking, the _syscall_verify_*
functions now load most handles passed in, and verify that they exist
and are of the correct type. Lists and out-handles are not converted
to objects.
- Also in preparation for capability checking, the internal
representation of handles has changed. j6_handle_t is now 32 bits, and
a new j6_cap_t (also 32 bits) is added. Handles of a process are now a
util::map<j6_handle_t, handle> where handle is a new struct containing
the id, capabilities, and object pointer.
- The kernel object definition DSL gained a few changes to support auto
generating the handle -> object conversion in the _syscall_verify_*
functions, mostly knowing the object type, and an optional "cname"
attribute on objects where their names differ from C++ code.
(Specifically vma/vm_area)
- Kernel object code and other code under kernel/objects is now in a new
obj:: namespace, because fuck you <cstdlib> for putting "system" in
the global namespace. Why even have that header then?
- Kernel object types constructed with the construct_handle helper now
have a creation_caps static member to declare what capabilities a
newly created object's handle should have.
Since we have a DSL for specifying syscalls, we can create a verificaton
method for each syscall that can cover most argument (and eventually
capability) verification instead of doing it piecemeal in each syscall
implementation, which can be more error-prone.
Now a new _syscall_verify_* function exists for every syscall, which
calls the real implementation. The syscall table for the syscall handler
now maps to these verify functions.
Other changes:
- Updated the definition grammar to allow options to have a "key:value"
style, to eventually support capabilities.
- Added an "optional" option for parameters that says a syscall will
accept a null value.
- Some bonnibel fixes, as definition file changes weren't always
properly causing updates in the build dep graph.
- The syscall implementation function signatures are no longer exposed
in syscall.h. Also, the unused syscall enum has been removed.
This syscall allows a process to give another process access to an
object it has a handle to. The value of the handle as seen in the
receiver process is returned to the caller, so that the caller may
notify the recipient which handle was given.
Stop creating stacks in user space for user threads, that should be done
by the thread's creator. This change adds process and stack_top
arguments to the thread_create syscall, so that threads can be created
in other processes, and given a stack address.
Also included is a fix in add_thunk_user due to the r11/flags change.
THIS COMMIT BREAKS USERSPACE. See subsequent commits for the user side
changes related to this change.
This change adds a new interface DSL for specifying objects (with
methods) and interfaces (that expose objects, and optionally have their
own methods).
Significant changes:
- Add the new scripts/definitions Python module to parse the DSL
- Add the new definitions directory containing DSL definition files
- Use cog to generate syscall-related code in kernel and libj6
- Unify ordering of pointer + length pairs in interfaces