respective Private* base class.
* Changed sigwait() and sigsuspend() to use thread_block() instead of a
condition variable.
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thread_block(), thread_unblock(),...) that allow a thread to wait for
something without needing a semaphore or condition variable. It can
simply block and another thread can unblock it. Supports timeouts and
interrupting. Both semaphores and condition variables use this
common mechanism, now.
* Semaphores:
- Some simplifications due to the thread blocking mechanism.
- Changed locking order to sem -> thread. It was the other way around
before and when introducing the wait_for_objects() support I had
also introduced a situation where the locking was reverse, which
could potentially cause a dead lock on SMP systems.
- Instead of queueing thread structures, a semaphore queues
queued_thread entries now, which are created on the stack. The
thread::sem structure could thus be removed.
- Added sem_entry::net_count, which is sem_entry::count plus the
acquisition count of all waiting threads. This number is needed in
remove_thread_from_sem() and instead of computing it there we
maintain it.
- Fixed remove_thread_from_sem(). It would not unblock threads, if
the sem count was <= 0.
- Made sem::last_acquirer unconditional. It is actually needed for
sem_info::latest_holder. Fixed fill_sem_info() accordingly.
- Added some optional tracing output, though only via ktrace_printf().
* Condition variables:
- Could be simplified significantly through the use of the thread
blocking mechanism. Removed a good deal of unnecessary code.
- Moved the ConditionVariableEntry "flags" parameter from Wait() to
Add(), and adjusted all places where condition variables are used
accordingly.
* snooze() uses thread_block_with_timeout() instead of a semaphore.
* Simplified thread interrupting in the signal and user debugger code.
Instead of separate functions for threads waiting on a semaphore or
condititon variable, we only have a single thread_interrupt(), now.
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thought I had done.
Of course, that wouldn't have happened if Ingo didn't break the network boot
with his netstack changes ;-)
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address back to userland, even if the provided buffer was smaller. Fixes
a problem with Firefox, which is for some reason providing a buffer
smaller than our sockaddr_in.
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the heap and the IOV_MAX limit.
* They also take the responsibility of copying the ancillary data in and
out.
* These syscalls were badly broken. They used a member of an
uninitialized structure instead of the iovec pointer passed from
userland. sendmsg() would thus fail or send arbitrary data, recvmsg()
would overwrite arbitrary memory.
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src/system/kernel/fs/fd.cpp: In function 'ssize_t common_user_vector_io(int, off_t, const iovec*, size_t, bool)':
src/system/kernel/fs/fd.cpp:727: error: ISO C++ says that these are ambiguous, even though the worst conversion for the first is better than the worst conversion for the
second:
headers/private/kernel/syscall_restart.h:151: note: candidate 1: bool SyscallRestartWrapper<Type>::operator<(const Type&) const [with Type = long int]
src/system/kernel/fs/fd.cpp:727: note: candidate 2: operator<(long int, int) <built-in>
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24927 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
ATM.
* Changed common_fcntl() to also work for non-vnode-based FDs. Only the
operations that require a vnode do fail now. F_SETFL uses the new
fd_ops::set_flags() if available, falling back to the vnode respective
operation.
* Changed some direct accesses to file_descriptor::u::vnode. It was safe
in those cases, but might not be anymore if we ever change fd_vnode().
ftp can at least connect to servers again, now, but apparently we still
have a problem with syscall restarts -- downloads fail after one second,
when the timer goes off.
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sMountMutex lock when calling sync() on a file system. This fixes a potential
deadlock (I just encountered for the first time).
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syscall_restart_ioctl_is_restarted() to syscall_restart_is_restarted,
IoctlSyscallFlagUnsetter to SyscallFlagUnsetter, and
IoctlSyscallRestartWrapper to SyscallRestartWrapper, as they are no
longer only used for ioctl().
* Removed unused syscall_restart_ioctl_handle_post().
* Made SyscallRestartWrapper a lot fancier. Instead of storing a
reference to the result value, it stores the value itself, and it
features all the interesting operators that make it appear like that
value. This simplifies the use of the class quite a bit.
* THREAD_FLAGS_SYSCALL is now set for all socket function and the
read[v](), write[v]() syscalls.
* Added is_syscall() function and net_stack hook to the net stack.
* Removed "kernel" parameter from all net_stack_interface and net_socket
module hooks. They aren't need any longer, since is_syscall() can be
used instead.
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* get_dir_path_and_leaf() now removes trailing slashes from the path.
* This fixes bug #2016, thanks!
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- The net_stack driver is no longer used. Instead we have a kernel
module which is directly used by syscall implementations in the
kernel. I.e. we no longer tunnel those functions through ioctls, but
have normal syscalls.
- Removed the superfluous net starter module.
- Implemented the FDTYPE_SOCKET type file_descriptors, that is sockets
are no longer vnode based.
- Adjusted libnetwork (the socket function implementations)
accordingly.
- Adjusted netstat accordingly.
* Socket module:
- Implemented socketpair().
- Added "kernel" parameter to the control hook. Quite a few more hooks
would actually need the parameter, but I didn't change those yet,
since that would probably also require changes to the protocol
module interface.
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same as !IS_USER_ADDRESS.
* Use the new IoctlSyscallFlagUnsetter helper class in _kern_ioctl().
The former implementation wasn't checking correctly for a previous
syscall flag.
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API, uses the _PRINTFLIKE macro where appropriate.
* Got rid of the "qent" structure, struct timer now contains everything we
need. This makes the affected code in sem.cpp, signal.cpp, and timer.c much
cleaner, and resolves a few TODOs.
* Minor cleanup in vfs.cpp.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24871 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Removed the pipefs functionality. We only need to support FIFO nodes.
* Renamed the remaining pipefs_*() functions to fifo_*().
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also free the device info which it must not do, as this info is in fact just
a pointer to the device info of the raw node. Removing a raw device that had
partitions published therefore always lead into KDL when closing the raw
device after unpublising the partition, as the close_hook pointer which sits
in the device info now was 0xdeadbeef. This should make for example unplugging
USB devices work as expected.
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FIFO. Reimplemented pipe() to use it.
* pipefs is no longer mounted. Will remove the superfluous code soon.
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inactive until at least one reader and one writer have opened it. As
long as it is inactive, reads from and writes to it just block. When
active, they behave as before (if there's no counterpart writes fail:
SIGPIPE + EPIPE, reads return 0). When both reader and writer count
drop to zero, the pipe becomes inactive again.
* Allocate the ring buffer lazily when the pipe becomes active and
delete it when it becomes inactive.
This makes the pipe implementation FIFO compatible. IOW, FIFOs work as
expected as far as I've tested them.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24819 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- Moved most file_system_module_info hooks into separate structures.
Those that operate on mounted volumes to fs_volume_ops, those
operating on a vnode to fs_vnode_ops.
- Got rid of the fs_volume, fs_cookie, fs_vnode typedefs. We use void*
again.
- Instead of a void* volume and node cookie hooks are passed a
fs_volume and fs_vnode structure pointer, which contain the cookie
and an ops pointer (fs_volume a few more things).
- The VFS {new,publish,get,...}_vnode() functions take a fs_volume*
instead of the volume ID. So does vfs_get_fs_node_from_path().
- Added type and flags arguments to publish_vnode() and the
get_vnode() hook and removed the type argument from lookup() hook.
Added vnode::type using formerly unused bits to store the node type.
Simplified a few things in the VFS due to the now always available
node type.
- Added fs_volume_ops::{create,delete}_sub_vnode() and
fs_vnode_ops::get_super_vnode() hooks. They are used to support file
system layers, e.g. allowing to extend an FS not supporting BeOS
attribute with attribute support. Needs some more work in the VFS.
- Added fs_vnode_ops::create_special_node() hook for creating special
nodes (e.g. FIFOs).
* Adjusted the built-in file systems and BFS according to the interface
changes. Removed all other FSs from the image for the time being.
We'll see whether further API changes are necessary before porting
them.
* Adjusted the bfs_shell accordingly.
* Implemented create_special_node() in rootfs to support special nodes.
* Added support for FIFOs:
- Added syscall _kern_create_fifo() (used by mkfifo()), which creates
a special node (type S_IFIFO) in the respective file system.
- When a special node is published the VFS creates a respective sub
node. Currently only FIFOs are supported.
- Added a little support for FIFO subnodes by using functionality from
the pipefs.
- Added mkfifo to the image. It can create FIFOs in the rootfs, but
the FIFOs aren't really usable ATM, since they still work like
pipes, i.e. readers and writers need to have them open at the same
time.
* Some smaller changes in the VFS:
- Made the *_CALL macros nicer to use (vargs).
- Refactored FS entry lookup into new function lookup_dir_entry().
- create_vnode() no longer just calls the FS create() hook. First it
looks up the entry and uses open_vnode(), if it already exists. This
is necessary for two reasons: 1) The FS might not support create()
while still allowing to open() entries. 2) When the FS has other
layers on to of it (or the respective node) it might not be
responsible for opening the node.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24816 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
and ino_t instead of a path. Supposed to work with node monitoring messages.
Took the name from vfs_entry_ref_to_path() that takes the same arguments, but
suggestions for a better name are welcome.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24813 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Added {Create|Delete}Device() analogous to {Create|Delete}FileDevice
* Added a small DeviceWatcher class that reacts to entry creation/removal
* Implemented a way to start/stop node monitoring
* Start watching for devices after the boot volume has been mounted and the
the second initial scan was run
The disk device manager now creates and scans a device when a "raw" node is
published and deletes the device on removal. This makes hot-plugging of disk
devices (for example memory sticks using usb_disk) work. Their partitions will
be scanned and published so they can be mounted. Somehow the removal of the
partitions does not yet work however, any insights are welcome.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24777 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Introduced a new publish_node() which then actually publishs the node,
similar to the VFS's new_vnode(), and publish_vnode() semantics.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24762 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
allows event listeners to add new listeners inside a node monitoring event
(i.e. if one wants to add a listener for the entry that has just been created
and triggered the current notification).
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Instead return the directory vnode, so the calling function can insert it after
all vnode initialization is done. Otherwise entry created notifications are
sent upon inserting the node into the directory for vnodes that are not yet
fully initialized (i.e. they have no type or the device hooks are not yet set).
That would cause for example ioctls to fail when someone would react to a
notification of a newly created device.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24759 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
r24721/r24722. After resolving a symlink we weren't updating the local
type variable to the type of the link target, so that the directory
check in the next iteration would always fail.
* Added TODO.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24735 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* No longer checks for the path delimiter twice.
* Now also checks if the first part of the path is a directory.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24722 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
first loop - the vnode passed in would still need to be checked, though.
Eventually, it would be nice to move the check to the top, though, so that
we don't need to search for the patch delimiter twice.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24721 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
as expected by POSIX programs. This allowed be to compile Haiku under itself
without any hacks at all, so I guess this means that now we are officially
self-hosting!
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in the buffer, they need to be notified after a read when their
minimal write size requirement has just become satisfied. We were
notifying only when there was no space in the buffer before, which
caused bug #1755.
* Removed Inode::NotifyWriteDone(). It's not needed anymore, since we
don't queue writers. They are always all notified, so that one doesn't
have to notify the next one, when it's done.
* Renamed *Request* to *ReadRequest, since we do have WriteRequests now
as well.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24701 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- Added a "root" vnode to the io_context. It is used for resolving
paths and converting nodes to paths instead of sRoot. Some more
passing around of io_context structures was necessary.
- Introduced a new lock sIOContextRootLock to protect
io_context::root. The current uses of io_context::io_mutex
(put_vnode(), remove_vnode() while holding it) looked too suspicious
to use that mutex in vnode_path_to_vnode().
- Added _kern_change_root() syscall and chroot() libroot function.
- Added chroot coreutils program to the image. Funnily it seems to be
much easier to set up a little jail than under Linux (just copy
bash and libroot.so into respective subdirs; mount another pipefs
if you want pipe support).
With Haiku allowing direct access to directories via inode IDs
jailing is obviously not very secure at the moment.
- Added /var/empty to the image. It will be the chroot target for ssh.
* Changed vfs.cpp:get_cwd() so that the io_context::io_mutex is no
longer held when calling dir_vnode_to_path().
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24673 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
vnode from the hash before putting it caused all sorts of problems.
* For example, BFS would trim its preallocations when the vnode is put;
if someone would read that same vnode after it had been removed, but
before BFS could trim it, it would read the old vnode which still
seemed to own the blocks which would subsequently be freed.
* This fixes bug #1914, and should also fix bug #1956.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24607 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
the former ones).
* Removed extraneous white space.
* net_server settings are now also updated when the size of the
file changed.
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able to resolve symlinks.
* file_open_entry_ref() now evaluates the openMode and passes the
correct "traverse" argument to entry_ref_to_vnode(). This fixes bug
#1932 (symlink refs wouldn't be resolved).
* dir_open_entry_ref() now always resolves symlinks, all other uses of
entry_ref_to_vnode() keep their previous behaviour, though.
* Fixed warnings; since Ingo's header changes, NULL now causes a warning
when it is used as int.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24442 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
readlink() function. It is no longer required to null-terminate the
string, shall not fail, if the buffer is too small, and shall return
the length of the string actually written into the buffer.
* Adjusted rootfs, devfs, and bfs accordingly. Also adjusted their
read_stat() hooks to return the correct symlink length in st_size.
* Our readlink() does now comply to the standard (and BeOS).
Additionally if the buffer is big enough it is nice to non-conforming
apps and null-terminates it.
* BSymLink::ReadLink() explicitly null-terminates the string now.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@24425 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96