Removing the `allocator.h` file defining the `kutil::allocator`
interface, now that explicit allocators are not being passed around.
Also removed the unused `frame_allocator::raw_allocator` class and
`kutil::invalid_allocator` object.
Tags: memory
Many kernel objects had to keep a hold of refrences to allocators in
order to pass them on down the call chain. Remove those explicit
refrences and use `operator new`, `operator delete`, and define new
`kalloc` and `kfree`.
Also remove `slab_allocator` and replace it with a new mixin for slab
allocation, `slab_allocated`, that overrides `operator new` and
`operator free` for its subclass.
Remove some no longer used related headers, `buddy_allocator.h` and
`address_manager.h`
Tags: memory
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.)
Previously CPU statue was passed on the stack, but the compiler is
allowed to clobber values passed to it on the stack in the SysV x86 ABI.
So now leave the state on the stack but pass a pointer to it into the
ISR functions.
Processes can now wait on signals/children/time. There is no clock
currently so "time" is just a monotonically increating tick count. Added
a SLEEP syscall to test this waiting/waking.
The syscall/sysret instructions don't swap stacks. This was bad but
passable until syscalls caused the scheduler to run, and scheduling a
task that paused due to interrupt.
Adding a new (hopefully temporary) syscall interrupt `int 0xee` to allow
me to test syscalls without stack issues before I tackle the
syscall/sysret issue.
Also implemented a basic `pause` syscall that causes the calling process
to become unready. Because nothing can wake a process yet, it never
returns.
- Scheduler now has multiple linked_lists of processes at different
priorities
- Process structure improvements
- scheduler::tick() and scheduler::schedule() separation
Now any initrd file is treated like a program image and passed to the
loader to load as a process. Very rudimentary elf loading just allocates
pages, copies sections, and sets the ELF's entrypoint as the RIP to
iretq to.