Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Justin C. Miller
f7ae2e2220 [kernel] Re-design thread blocking
In preparation for the new mailbox IPC model, blocking threads needed an
overhaul. The `wait_on_*` and `wake_on_*` methods are gone, and the
`block()` and `wake()` calls on threads now pass a value between the
waker and the blocked thread.

As part of this change, the concept of signals on the base kobject class
was removed, along with the queue of blocked threads waiting on any
given object. Signals are now exclusively the domain of the event object
type, and the new wait_queue utility class helps manage waiting threads
when an object does actually need this functionality. In some cases (eg,
logger) an event object is used instead of the lower-level wait_queue.

Since this change has a lot of ramifications, this large commit includes
the following additional changes:

- The j6_object_wait, j6_object_wait_many, and j6_thread_pause syscalls
  have been removed.
- The j6_event_clear syscall has been removed - events are "cleared" by
  reading them now. A new j6_event_wait syscall has been added to read
  events.
- The generic close() method on kobject has been removed.
- The on_no_handles() method on kobject now deletes the object by
  default, and needs to be overridden by classes that should not be.
- The j6_system_bind_irq syscall now takes an event handle, as well as a
  signal that the IRQ should set on the event. IRQs will cause a waiting
  thread to be woken with the appropriate bit set.
- Threads waking due to timeout is simplified to just having a
  wake_timeout() accessor that returns a timestamp.
- The new wait_queue uses util::deque, which caused the disovery of two
  bugs in the deque implementation: empty deques could still have a
  single array allocated and thus return true for empty(), and new
  arrays getting allocated were not being zeroed first.
- Exposed a new erase() method on util::map that takes a node pointer
  instead of a key, skipping lookup.
2022-02-22 00:00:15 -08:00
Justin C. Miller
346c172b32 [libc] Add new libc
This new libc is mostly from scratch, with *printf() functions provided
by Marco Paland and Eyal Rozenberg's tiny printf library, and malloc and
friends provided by dlmalloc.
2022-02-06 21:39:04 -08:00
Justin C. Miller
f1246f84e0 [kernel] Add capabilities to handles
This change finally adds capabilities to handles. Included changes:

- j6_handle_t is now again 64 bits, with the highest 8 bits being a type
  code, and the next highest 24 bits being the capability mask, so that
  programs can check type/caps without calling the kernel.
- The definitions grammar now includes a `capabilities [ ]` section on
  objects, to list what capabilities are relevant.
- j6/caps.h is auto-generated from object capability lists
- init_libj6 again sets __handle_self and __handle_sys, this is a bit
  of a hack.
- A new syscall, j6_handle_list, will return the list of existing
  handles owned by the calling process.
- syscall_verify.cpp.cog now actually checks that the needed
  capabilities exist on handles before allowing the call.
2022-01-28 01:54:45 -08:00
Justin C. Miller
950360fddc [libj6] Move remaining j6 headers out of src/include
This means the kernel now depends on libj6. I've added the macro
definition __j6kernel when building for the kernel target, so I can
remove parts with #ifdefs.
2022-01-12 16:04:16 -08:00
F in Chat for Tabs
8f529046a9 [project] Lose the battle between tabs & spaces
I'm a tabs guy. I like tabs, it's an elegant way to represent
indentation instead of brute-forcing it. But I have to admit that the
world seems to be going towards spaces, and tooling tends not to play
nice with tabs. So here we go, changing the whole repo to spaces since
I'm getting tired of all the inconsistent formatting.
2021-08-01 17:46:16 -07:00
Justin C. Miller
55c9faaa79 [libj6] Move _init_libc to _init_libj6
As part of the move of jsix-specific code from libc to libj6, all the
library initialization is now libj6-specific, so move it all over.
2021-04-07 23:05:58 -07:00