ld.so will now go through all DT_NEEDED entries in the dynamic table and load and relocate
those shared libraries as well. Lazy linking of functions via the PLT is not yet supported,
all PLT entries are looked up ahead of time by ld.so.
In the CRT startup code, when linked in a PIC executable, jumps to
`__init_libj6`, `__init_libc`, `main`, and `exit` were not linked
correctly. They needed a bit more support for looking up the GOT, and
getting the symbol address out of it.
Now libutil has a `got.inc` file for inclusion in asm code that needs to
reference symbols from the GOT.
This change allows the `vma_map` and `vma_create_map` syscalls to map to
addresses other than the one specified, and therefore makes the address
parameter to those syscalls `inout` in order to return the mapped
address.
Also add the `exact` flag for specifying that mapping needs to be done
at the exact address given. If the mapping collides with another, the
new `j6_err_collision` error is returned.
Added an `API` macro in `j6/api.h` that expands to mark the given
declaration as a default-visible symbol. Also change `format` and
`vformat` to non-template functions, and make calls to `main`, `exit`,
and the library init functions in `_start` GOT-relative.
This is the second of two big changes to clean up includes throughout
the project. Since I've started using clangd with Neovim and using
VSCode's intellisense, my former strategy of copying all header files
into place in `build/include` means that the real files don't show up in
`compile_commands.json` and so display many include errors when viewing
those header files in those tools.
That setup was mostly predicated on a desire to keep directory depths
small, but really I don't think paths like `src/libraries/j6/j6` are
much better than `src/libraries/j6/include/j6`, and the latter doesn't
have the aforementioned issues, and is clearer to the casual observer as
well.
Some additional changes:
- Added a new module flag `copy_headers` for behavior similar to the old
style, but placing headers in `$module_dir/include` instead of the
global `build/include`. This was needed for external projects that
don't follow the same source/headers folder structure - in this case,
`zstd`.
- There is no longer an associated `headers.*.ninja` for each
`module.*.ninja` file, as only parsed headers need to be listed; this
functionality has been moved back into the module's ninja file.
This is the first of two rather big changes to clean up includes
throughout the project. In this commit, the implicit semi-dependency on
libc that bonnibel adds to every module is removed. Previously, I was
sloppy with includes of libc headers and include directory order. Now,
the freestanding headers from libc are split out into libc_free, and an
implicit real dependency is added onto this module, unless `no_libc` is
set to `True`. The full libc needs to be explicitly specified as a
dependency to be used.
Several things needed to change in order to do this:
- Many places use `memset` or `memcpy` that cannot depend on libc. The
kernel has basic implementations of them itself for this reason. Now
those functions are moved into the lower-level `j6/memutils.h`, and
libc merely references them. Other modules are now free to reference
those functions from libj6 instead.
- The kernel's `assert.h` was renamed kassert.h (matching its `kassert`
function) so that the new `util/assert.h` can use `__has_include` to
detect it and make sure the `assert` macro is usable in libutil code.
- Several implementation header files under `__libj6/` also moved under
the new libc_free.
- A new `include_phase` property has been added to modules for Bonnibel,
which can be "normal" (default) or "late" which uses `-idirafter`
instead of `-I` for includes.
- Since `<utility>` and `<new>` are not freestanding, implementations of
`remove_reference`, `forward`, `move`, and `swap` were added to the
`util` namespace to replace those from `std`, and `util/new.h` was
added to declare `operator new` and `operator delete`.
The libc CRT _start function had a stray pop left in it, which was
causing the stack to never be 16-byte aligned and thus causing crashes
when SSE instructions were called.
Clang will complain if main() is not declared with 0, 2, or 3 arguments.
In order to allow an extra 4th parameter, a new weak main() symbol which
just jumps to driver_main is defined, and _start passes the extra init
pointer to main.
Additionally, libc's crt0.s _start is made weak, and a matching
_libc_crt0_start symbol is defined for implementations that wish to
override _start but still call libc's _start. (Will be used by init.)
For the coming switch to cap/handle ref-counting being the main lifetime
determiner of objects, get rid of self handles for threads and processes
to avoid circular references. Instead, passing 0 to syscalls expecting a
thread or process handle signifies "this process/thread".
The clang __builtin_* functions cannot be relied upon, as they may just
emit a call to the stdlib version. So this commit adds an implementation
for ceil and frexpr, as well as their float versions.
Influenced by other libc implementations, I had tried to make memcpy
smarter for differently-sized ranges, but my benchmarks showed no real
change. So change memcpy back to the simple rep movsb implementation.
The __init_libc function was already running the .init_array functions,
but was never running the .preinit_array functions. Now it runs them
both, in the correct order.
This commit joins the implementation of exit, _Exit, and abort into a
single translation unit, and also adds atexit, at_quick_exit, and
quick_exit. While this does go against the ideal of all libc functions
being in their own translation unit, their implementations are very
related, and so I think this makes sense.
The ctype functions are now both macros and functions (as allowed by the
spec). They're now implemented in the ctype_b style of glibc, as
libunwind wants __ctype_b_loc to work.
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.
The great header shift: It didn't make sense to regenerate headers for
the same module for every target (boot/kernel/user) it appeared in. And
now that core headers are out of src/include, this was going to cause
problems for the new libc changes I've been working on. So I went back
to re-design how module headers work.
Pre-requisites:
- A module's public headers should all be available in one location, not
tied to target.
- No accidental includes. Another module should not be able to include
anything (creating an implicit dependency) from a module without
declaring an explicit dependency.
- Exception to the previous: libc's headers should be available to all,
at least for the freestanding headers.
New system:
- A new "public_headers" property of module declares all public headers
that should be available to dependant modules
- All public headers (after possible processing) are installed relative
to build/include/<module> with the same path as their source
- This also means no "include" dir in modules is necessary. If a header
should be included as <j6/types.h> then its source should be
src/libraries/j6/j6/types.h - this caused the most churn as all public
header sources moved one directory up.
- The "includes" property of a module is local only to that module now,
it does not create any implicit public interface
Other changes:
- The bonnibel concept of sources changed: instead of sources having
actions, they themselves are an instance of a (sub)class of Source,
which provides all the necessary information itself.
- Along with the above, rule names were standardized into <type>.<ext>,
eg "compile.cpp" or "parse.cog"
- cog and cogflags variables moved from per-target scope to global scope
in the build files.
- libc gained a more dynamic .module file
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.
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>
Continuing moving things out of kutil. The assert as implemented could
only ever work in the kernel, so remaining kutil uses of kassert have
been moved to including standard C assert instead.
Along the way, kassert was broken out into panic::panic and kassert,
and the panic.serial namespace was renamed panicking.
The moving of kernel-only code out of kutil continues. (See 042f061)
This commit moves the following:
- The heap allocator code
- memory.cpp/h which means:
- letting string.h be the right header for memset and memcpy, still
including an implementation of it for the kernel though, since
we're not linking libc to the kernel
- Changing calls to kalloc/kfree to new/delete in kutil containers
that aren't going to be merged into the kernel
- Fixing a problem with stdalign.h from libc, which was causing issues
for type_traits.
This change moves Bonnibel from a separate project into the jsix tree,
and alters the project configuration to be jsix-specific. (I stopped
using bonnibel for any other projects, so it's far easier to make it a
custom generator for jsix.) The build system now also uses actual python
code in `*.module` files to configure modules instead of TOML files.
Target configs (boot, kernel-mode, user-mode) now moved to separate TOML
files under `configs/` and can inherit from one another.
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.
Pull syscall code out of libc and create new libj6. This should
eventually become a vDSO, but for now it can still be a static lib.
Also renames all the _syscall_* symbol names to j6_*
This also prompted a change of the process initialization protocol to
allow handles to get typed, and changing to marking them as just
self/other handls. This also means exposing the object type enum to
userspace.
Move process init from each process needing a main.s with _start to
crt0.s in libc. Also change to a sysv-like initial stack with a
j6-specific array of initialization values after the program arguments.
In order to implement capabilities on system resources like IRQs so that
they may be restricted to drivers only, add a new 'system' kobject type,
and move the bind_irq functionality from endpoint to system.
Also fix some stack bugs passing the initial handles to a program.
The rcx register is used by the function call ABI for the 4th argument,
but is also clobbered by SYSCALL to hold the IP. The r10 register is
caller-saved but not part of the ABI, so stash rcx there when crossing
the syscall boundary.
The vm_space allow() functionality was a bit janky; using VMAs for all
regions would be a lot cleaner. To that end, this change:
- Adds a "static array" ctor to kutil::vector for setting the kernel
address space's VMA list. This way a kernel heap VMA can be created
without the heap already existing.
- Splits vm_area into different subclasses depending on desired behavior
- Splits out the concept of vm_mapper which maps vm_areas to vm_spaces,
so that some kinds of VMA can be inherently single-space
- Implements VMA resizing so that userspace can grow allocations.
- Obsolete page_table_indices is removed
Also, the following bugs were fixed:
- kutil::map iterators on empty maps no longer break
- memory::page_count was doing page-align, not page-count
See: Github bug #242
See: [frobozz blog post](https://jsix.dev/posts/frobozz/)
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