This commit includes a number of changes to enable loading of PIE
executables:
- The loader in srv.init checks for a `PT_INTERP` segment in the program
its loading, and if it exists, loads the specified interpreter and
passes control to it instead of the program itself.
- Added ld.so the dynamic linker executable and set it as the
interpreter for all user-target programs.
- Program initial stack changed again to now contain a number of
possible tagged structures, including a new one for ld.so's arguments,
and for passing handles tagged with protocol ids.
- Added a stub for a new VFS protocol. Unused so far, but srv.init will
need to serve VFS requests from ld.so once I transition libraries to
shared libs for user-target programs. (Right now all executables are
PIE but statically linked, so they only need internal relocations.)
- Added 16 and 8 bit variants of `util::bitset`. This ended up not being
used, but could be useful.
This commit re-adds testapp to the default manifest and does some
housecleaning on the module:
- Remove the old serial.* and io.*
- Update it to use current syscall APIs
- Update it to use libj6's higher-level thread API
The initrd image is now created by the build system, loaded by the
bootloader, and passed to srv.init, which loads it (but doesn't do
anything with it yet, so this is actually a functional regression).
This simplifies a lot of the modules code between boot and init as well:
Gone are the many subclasses of module and all the data being inline
with the module structs, except for any loaded files. Now the only
modules loaded and passed will be the initrd, and any devices only the
bootloader has knowledge of, like the UEFI framebuffer.
Split the functionality of outputting kernel logs out of the UART
driver, and into a new service. The UART driver now registers a console
out channel with the service locator, which the logger service
retrieves, and then enters a loop getting logs from the kernel and
printing them out to the console.
The new mailbox kernel object API offers asynchronous message-based IPC
for sending data and handles between threads, as opposed to endpoint's
synchronous model.
First attempt at a UART driver. I'm not sure it's the most stable. Now
that userspace is handling displaying logs, also removed serial and log
output support from the kernel.
While bonnibel already had the concept of a manifest, which controls
what goes into the built disk image, the bootloader still had filenames
hard-coded. Now bonnibel creates a 'jsix_boot.dat' file that tells the
bootloader what it should load.
Changes include:
- Modules have two new fields: location and description. location is
their intended directory on the EFI boot volume. description is
self-explanatory, and is used in log messages.
- New class, boot::bootconfig, implements reading of jsix_boot.dat
- New header, bootproto/bootconfig.h, specifies flags used in the
manifest and jsix_boot.dat
- New python module, bonnibel/manifest.py, encapsulates reading of the
manifest and writing jsix_boot.dat
- Syntax of the manifest changed slightly, including adding flags
- Boot and Kernel target ccflags unified a bit (this was partly due to
trying to get enum_bitfields to work in boot)
- util::counted gained operator+= and new free function util::read<T>
Overall, I believe TOML to be a superior configuration format than YAML
in many situations, but it gets ugly quickly when nesting data
structures. The build configs were fine in TOML, but the manifest (and
my future plans for it) got unwieldy. I also did not want different
formats for each kind of configuration on top of also having a custom
DSL for interface definitions, so I've switched all the TOML to YAML.
Also of note is that this change actually adds structure to the manifest
file, which was little more than a CSV previously.