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.
Now that kutil has no kernel-specific code in it anymore, it can
actually be linked to by anything, so I'm renaming it 'util'.
Also, I've tried to unify the way that the system libraries from
src/libraries are #included using <> instead of "".
Other small change: util::bip_buffer got a spinlock to guard against
state corruption.
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.
Now that the other CPUs have been brought up, add support for scheduling
tasks on them. The scheduler now maintains separate ready/blocked lists
per CPU, and CPUs will attempt to balance load via periodic work
stealing.
Other changes as a result of this:
- The device manager no longer creates a local APIC object, but instead
just gathers relevant info from the APCI tables. Each CPU creates its
own local APIC object. This also spurred the APIC timer calibration to
become a static value, as all APICs are assumed to be symmetrical.
- Fixed a bug where the scheduler was popping the current task off of
its ready list, however the current task is never on the ready list
(except the idle task was first set up as both current and ready).
This was causing the lists to get into bad states. Now a task can only
ever be current or in a ready or blocked list.
- Got rid of the unused static process::s_processes list of all
processes, instead of trying to synchronize it via locks.
- Added spinlocks for synchronization to the scheduler and logger
objects.
This very large commit is mainly focused on getting the APs started and
to a state where they're waiting to have work scheduled. (Actually
scheduling on them is for another commit.)
To do this, a bunch of major changes were needed:
- Moving a lot of the CPU initialization (including for the BSP) to
init_cpu(). This includes setting up IST stacks, writing MSRs, and
creating the cpu_data structure. For the APs, this also creates and
installs the GDT and TSS, and installs the global IDT.
- Creating the AP startup code, which tries to be as position
independent as possible. It's copied from its location to 0x8000 for
AP startup, and some of it is fixed at that address. The AP startup
code jumps from real mode to long mode with paging in one swell foop.
- Adding limited IPI capability to the lapic class. This will need to
improve.
- Renaming cpu/cpu.* to cpu/cpu_id.* because it was just annoying in GDB
and really isn't anything but cpu_id anymore.
- Moved all the GDT, TSS, and IDT code into their own files and made
them classes instead of a mess of free functions.
- Got rid of bsp_cpu_data everywhere. Now always call the new
current_cpu() to get the current CPU's cpu_data.
- Device manager keeps a list of APIC ids now. This should go somewhere
else eventually, device_manager needs to be refactored away.
- Moved some more things (notably the g_kernel_stacks vma) to the
pre-constructor setup in memory_bootstrap. That whole file is in bad
need of a refactor.
Probably due to old UEFI page tables going away, some systems failed to
load ACPI tables at their physical location. Make sure to translate them
to kernel offset-mapped addresses.
- Add a tag field to all endpoint messages, which doubles as a
notification field
- Add a endpoint_bind_irq syscall to enable an endpoint to listen for
interrupt notifications. This mechanism needs to change.
- Add a temporary copy of the serial port code to nulldrv, and let it
take responsibility for COM2
Calling `spinwait()` was hanging due to improper computation of the
clock rate because justin did a dumb at math. Also the period can be
greater than 1ns, so the clock's units were updated to microseconds.
Create a clock class which can be queried for current timestamp in
nanoseconds. Also implements a simple HPET class as one possible clock
source.
Tags: time
Look up the global constructor list that the linker outputs, and run
them all. Required creation of the `kutil::no_construct` template for
objects that are constructed before the global constructors are run.
Also split the `memory_initialize` function into two - one for just
those objects that need to happen before the global ctors, and one
after.
Tags: memory c++
This commit makes several fundamental changes to memory handling:
- the frame allocator is now only an allocator for free frames, and does
not track used frames.
- the frame allocator now stores its free list inside the free frames
themselves, as a hybrid stack/span model.
- This has the implication that all frames must currently fit within
the offset area.
- kutil has a new allocator interface, which is the only allowed way for
any code outside of src/kernel to allocate. Code under src/kernel
_may_ use new/delete, but should prefer the allocator interface.
- the heap manager has become heap_allocator, which is merely an
implementation of kutil::allocator which doles out sections of a given
address range.
- the heap manager now only writes block headers when necessary,
avoiding page faults until they're actually needed
- page_manager now has a page fault handler, which checks with the
address_manager to see if the address is known, and provides a frame
mapping if it is, allowing heap manager to work with its entire
address size from the start. (Currently 32GiB.)
* Implement MSI style interrupts
* Move interrupt handling to device_manager for IRQs
* Give device_manager the ability to allocate IRQs
* Move achi::port to an interrupt-based scheme