* The Haiku specific notes contain a structure size field, now.
* Change the type of the count and size fields in the Haiku specific
notes to uint32 also for 64 bit ELF. The size field for a note is a
uint32 anyway.
* Add function core_dump_write_core_file(). It writes a core file for
the current thread's team. The file format is similar to that of
other OSs (i.e. ELF with PT_LOAD segments and a PT_NOTE segment), but
most of the notes are Haiku specific (infos for team, areas, images,
threads). More data will probably need to be added.
* Add team flag TEAM_FLAG_DUMP_CORE, thread flag
THREAD_FLAGS_TRAP_FOR_CORE_DUMP, and Team property coreDumpCondition,
a condition variable available while a core dump is progress. A
thread that finds its flag THREAD_FLAGS_TRAP_FOR_CORE_DUMP set before
exiting the kernel to userland calls core_dump_trap_thread(), which
blocks on the condition variable until the core dump has finished. We
need the team's threads to stop so we can get their CPU state (and
have a generally unchanging team state while writing the core file).
* Add user debugger message B_DEBUG_WRITE_CORE_FILE. It causes
core_dump_write_core_file() to be called for the team.
* Dumping core as an immediate effect of a terminal signal has not been
implemented yet, but that should be fairly straight forward.
Similar to arch_get_debug_cpu_state(), but the thread whose CPU state
to retrieve is specified. Works only for threads that aren't running,
and on x86-64 we can get the FPU state only when the thread was
interrupted in userland.
Not implemented for the incomplete architecture ports.
This resolves a TODO: We used thread_interrupt() to wake up the thread
from an interruptable wait. However, if the thread was already in the
kernel and about to start waiting, that would have no effect and the
thread would wait anyway. Now there's the new non-blockable signal
SIGNAL_DEBUG_THREAD, which is sent to the thread instead, making sure
that thread doesn't start waiting.
* When a watched directory contains a mount point, we need to resolve
the actual parent directory of the mount point in the file system to
serve the monitor.
* Added a directory argument for notify_{stat/attribute}_changed().
* This allows to watch only a directory, and get the notifications for
all of its files, not just add/remove entry notifications.
* Use print format macros to fix the 64 bit build.
* Correct a typo in the shift of the trigger mode definition. As the
value is 0 either way, this does not make a functional difference.
* Use macros instead of values in comparisons.
- Termios: cf{get,set}{i,o}speed can handle arbitrary speed values.
- The value is stored in the appropriate fields of the termios structure
in this case. The old constants (stored in the flags) are preserved
for BeOS binary compatibility.
- Adjust the FTDI FT232* driver to accept custom rates, by replacing the
hardcoded regster values with a function that will compute it
according to FTDI documentation (confirmed giving the same values for
the existing baudrates).
* Reverts f3e381dd
* Details in #12633
* For some unknown reason, this change breaks an Intel Core 2
system from booting (Dell Optiplex 960, E8400)
* If anyone has any ideas on why, let me know :-)
The heap implementation of the runtime_loader was switched to the one
of the bootloader in 6f0994d but was since updated independently.
To keep the diff between the two implementations as small as possible,
the bootloader implementation was first copied to the runtime_loader
and then some features not relevant in the runtime_loader (like the
special large allocation handling) have been removed and the
runtime_loader specific features (grow_heap, add_area) have been
reintegrated. But basically this applies 96689a5..HEAD of
src/system/boot/loader/heap.cpp to the runtime_loader heap.
This brings in the switch from a linked list to a splay tree based
free chunk management. Since the allocation counts in the runtime_loader
are rather small, this does not perceptibly affect performance in either
direction though.
The needed storage space for tracking the allocation size was not
accounted for when growing the heap. Since the growth size is always
rounded up to a multiple of 32KiB, this did almost never matter as the
new allocation wouldn't need the full size. If the allocation did
happen to need the full size however, the newly added area would always
be too small. As the allocation attempt was simply restarted after each
successful growth, this lead to an endless loop creating small new
areas, which would then quickly starve the system for memory.
Haiku does not yet support certain features related to POSIX threads.
Constants used to test for the presence of these features should
therefore be left undefined, according to the POSIX spec, but are
currently set to -1. This can cause software built on Haiku to
incorrectly detect the presence of these features.
* unistd.h: Undefine _POSIX_THREAD_ATTR_STACKADDR,
_POSIX_THREAD_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING feature constants.
* conf.cpp: __sysconf: Return -1 for unsupported features.
Signed-off-by: Augustin Cavalier <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
This commit replaces the placeholder implementation of sbrk(), which
operated on a process' heap, with real implementations of brk() and
sbrk() that adjust a process' program break.
* unistd.h: Add standard definitions of brk() and sbrk(); include
stdint.h for intptr_t.
* thread.cpp: Recognize RLIMIT_AS and RLIMIT_DATA resource limits
(both currently unlimited); order limit identifiers alphabetically.
* arch-specific.cpp: Remove sbrk_hook().
* malloc_debug_api.cpp: Remove sbrk_hook().
* unistd/Jamfile: Build brk.c instead of sbrk.c.
* unistd/brk.c: Add.
* unistd/sbrk.c: Delete (placeholder implementation).
* libroot_stubs.c: Remove sbrk_hook().
* libroot_stubs_legacy.c: Remove sbrk_hook().
* src/tests/.../posix/Jamfile: Build brk_test.c.
* brk_test.c: Add (simple unit test that demonstrates behaviour of
sbrk()).
Signed-off-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
The anonymous namespace makes type definitions local to the translation
unit (like static does for objects). For pretty much any type not shared
across multiple files this is what one wants to happen (and might
erroneously expect to happen automatically).
This commit solves some actual collisions that were present:
* The VFS and the rootfs both used an incompatible VnodeHash struct for
their BOpenHashTable.
* XSI semaphores and message queues both used queued_thread, Ipc and
IpcHashTableDefinition.
For release builds these did not cause problems as the types were fully
inlined. Debug builds would crash at boot however because parts of a
BOpenHashTable<VnodeHash> from the rootfs meant to operate on struct
rootfs_vnode would be applied to one from the VFS expecting struct
vnode.
As such collisions are violations of the one definition rule, the code
is at fault and unfortunatley the compiler isn't required to diagnose
such problems across translation units (which isn't actually trivial).
This can lead to subtle and hard to debug problems and it's therefore
best to avoid leaking types into the global namespace whenever possible.
The opendir and closedir/free_dircookie hooks were called with
mismatched vnode. It seems only googlefs is actually affected by this,
since all other fs without a get_vnode_name just don't are about the
passed vnode arg to closedir and free_dircookie.
Now I should really get some sleep!
Reduce duplication of code by
* Removing from elf_common.h definitions available in os/kernel/elf.h
* Deleting elf32.h and elf64.h
* Renaming elf_common.h to elf_private.h
* Updating source to build using public and private ELF header files
together
Signed-off-by: Jessica Hamilton <jessica.l.hamilton@gmail.com>