possible mismatch images info between loader and kernel.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@38947 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
quite hidden bug theme.
This also reduce its RLE compression size, which should fix#6710.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@38946 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
The official release one stay the well-known one, just renamed to show it's trademarked images.
Fixed#6183.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@38891 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
This might help with ACPI shutdown issues, if not this change can be reverted. Not verified as it works on all my machines even without this.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@38585 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Add support for both discovery and regular iSCSI sessions. Command and status
sequence numbers do differentiate between session and connection but only
one connection per session is currently supported.
Code is Big Endian for now, so compile it for ppc only.
Based on RFC 3720 ff. Tested against OpenSolaris 2009.06.
Resolves most of ticket #5319.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@38536 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Pass the desired window size from the socket to the service.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@38530 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Modelled after UDP, add limited TCP support to the boot net stack. The socket
works by queuing received packets as well as sent packets that have not yet
been ACK'ed. Some known issues are documented, especially there's only limited
congestion control. I.e., we send immediately and in unlimited quantity, thus
its use should be restricted to local networks, and due to a fixed window size
there is potential for our socket being overrun with data packets before they
are read. Some corner cases like wrapping sequence numbers may cause a timeout.
The TCP implementation is based on Andrew S. Tanenbaum's "Computer Networks",
4th ed., as well as lecture notes from Prof. W. Effelsberg, the relevant RFCs
and Wikipedia. The pseudo-random number Galois LFSR used for the sequence
number was suggested by Endre Varga.
Since the code is unlikely to get much smaller, better merge it now so that
subsequent changes get easier to review. No platform actively uses TCP sockets
yet, and the receiving code has been reviewed for endianness issues and should
terminate okay after verifying the checksum if no sockets are open.
Based on a version tested with custom code (#5240) as well as with iSCSI.
Compile-tested boot_loader_openfirmware, pxehaiku-loader with gcc4 and
haiku_loader with gcc2. Closes ticket #5240.
Changes from #5240 proposed patch:
* Various bug fixes related to queuing, some memory leaks fixed.
* Never bump the sequence number when dequeuing a packet. It's done afterwards.
* Don't bump the sequence number again when resending the queue or ACK'ing.
* Aggressively ACK while waiting for packets.
* Don't queue sent ACK-only packets.
* More trace output, esp. for queue inspection.
* Adapted use of TCP header flags to r38434.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@38472 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Fix style issue, pointed out by Axel.
No functional changes.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@38456 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Add protocol number and struct for TCP header.
First minuscule part of ticket #5240.
Checked that pxehaiku_loader still compiles, too.
Changes from proposed patch:
* Simplify struct by merging flags into one 8-bit field.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@38434 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* _kern_[sg]et_timezone() now accepts/passes out the timezone name, too
* adjust Time preflet and clockconfig to pass the timezone name into the kernel
when calling _kern_set_timezone()
* ajust implementation of tzset() to fetch the timezone name from the kernel
via _kern_get_timezone() instead of reading 'libroot_timezone_info'
* the Time preflet no longer writes 'libroot_timezone_info'
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@38164 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* made FAT add-on use get_timezone_offset(), this time correctly adjusted for
the difference in units (minutes/seconds)
This makes the times in our FAT-fs agree with Linux again, at least :-)
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37905 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* dropped DaylightSavingTime from real_time_clock code in kernel, it was
never really being used for what it meant (and just being referred to by
gettimeofday(), which put a different meaning to it
* adjusted the syscalls get_timezone() & set_timezone() as well as their callers
accordingly
* got rid of get_rtc_info() and rtc_info struct in kernel, as it was only
being referred to by the FAT add-on and that one (like gettimeofday()) put a
different meaning to tz_minuteswest. Added a comment to FAT's util.c
showing a possible solution, should the hardcoded GMT timezone pose a problem.
* fixed declaration of gettimeofday() to match POSIX base specs, issue 7
* changed implementation of gettimeofday() to not bother trying to fill struct
timezone - it was using wrong values before, anyway.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37888 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* renamed syscalls _kern_[gs]et_tzfilename
to _kern_[gs]et_real_time_clock_is_gmt, as the filename part is no longer
relevant (and the two corresponding parameters were removed)
* C++-ified and reworked clockconfig to use the info from 'Time settings'
to setup the timezone info during boot
* removed invocation of _kern_get_tzfilename() from tzset(), as the syscall
no longer exists and tzset() is currently broken anyway
* adjusted the Time preflet to use the renamed syscall when getting/setting
the RTC info
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37881 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
video_splash.cpp and boot_splash.cpp will be updated to utilize it.
Relates to #6183. See #6255 for issues on using 'splash_logo-development.png'
with generate_boot_screen.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37739 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
See http://clang.llvm.org/compatibility.html#c++ why it is needed. Note that HashMap.h Key and Value are typenames as well.
Afaict this is correctly done, builds and runs on gcc4. This fixes#5892.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37550 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
vm_page::Init().
* Made vm_page::wired_count private and added accessor methods.
* Added VMCache::fWiredPagesCount (the number of wired pages the cache
contains) and accessor methods.
* Made more use of vm_page::IsMapped().
* vm_copy_on_write_area(): Added vm_page_reservation* parameter that can be
used to request a special handling for wired pages. If given the wired pages
are replaced by copies and the original pages are moved to the upper cache.
* vm_copy_area():
- We don't need to do any wired ranges handling, if the source area is a
B_SHARED_AREA, since we don't touch the area's mappings in this case.
- We no longer wait for wired ranges of the concerned areas to disappear.
Instead we use the new vm_copy_on_write_area() feature and just let it
copy the wired pages. This fixes#6288, an issue introduced with the use
of user mutexes in libroot: When executing multiple concurrent fork()s all
but the first one would wait on the fork mutex, which (being a user mutex)
would wire a page that the vm_copy_area() of the first fork() would wait
for.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37460 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Suggested by Ingo in ticket #6139. Code is adapted from x86.
Note that on ppc64 GPR1 needs to be 64-bit, thus the choice of addr_t.
Resolves part of ticket #6160.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37281 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
In r33670 the svn:eol-style property was dropped, which took care of
locally converting the line endings to the user's native style.
While most files use Unix-style LF line endings, some files have
Windows-style CR LF line endings.
Assure that the following r37262 directories use Unix-style line endings:
src/system/boot/
src/system/boot/arch/
src/system/boot/arch/ppc/
src/system/boot/loader/
src/system/boot/loader/net/
src/system/boot/platform/
src/system/boot/platform/openfirmware/
src/system/boot/platform/openfirmware/arch/
src/system/boot/platform/openfirmware/arch/ppc/
src/system/kernel/
src/system/kernel/arch/
src/system/kernel/arch/ppc/
src/system/kernel/platform/
src/system/kernel/platform/openfirmware/
headers/private/kernel/
headers/private/kernel/arch/
headers/private/kernel/arch/ppc/
headers/private/kernel/platform/
headers/private/kernel/platform/openfirmware/
headers/private/kernel/boot/
headers/private/kernel/boot/net/
headers/private/kernel/boot/platform/
headers/private/kernel/boot/platform/openfirmware/
This avoids patches containing irrelevant lines unintentionally converted.
No functional changes.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37265 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
headers and respectively added includes in source files.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37259 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
ClearAccessedAndModified() implementations into helper methods PageUnmapped()
and UnaccessedPageUnmapped() in the base class.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37187 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
vm_available_not_needed_memory() version that can be called from within the
kernel debugger.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37167 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
kernel private.
* Moved dumping code from dump_cache() to new VMCache::Dump().
* Override VMCache::Dump() in VMVnodeCache to also print the vnode.
* Removed no longer needed VMCache::GetLock().
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37138 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
restrictions for virtual/physical addresses.
* vm_page_allocate_page_run():
- Fixed conversion of base/limit to array indexes. sPhysicalPageOffset was not
taken into account.
- Takes a physical_address_restrictions instead of base/limit and also
supports alignment and boundary restrictions, now.
* map_backing_store(), VM[User,Kernel]AddressSpace::InsertArea()/
ReserveAddressRange() take a virtual_address_restrictions parameter, now. They
also support an alignment independent from the range size.
* create_area_etc(), vm_create_anonymous_area(): Take
{virtual,physical}_address_restrictions parameters, now.
* Removed no longer needed B_PHYSICAL_BASE_ADDRESS.
* DMAResources:
- Fixed potential overflows of uint32 when initializing from device node
attributes.
- Fixed bounce buffer creation TODOs: By using create_area_etc() with the
new restrictions parameters we can directly support physical high address,
boundary, and alignment.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37131 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Kernel doesn't use it, and it could be regenerated in the kernel if it did need it.
This also unlocks the apic range the bios can use. Previously the apic ids would have
to fit within 0..MAX_CPUS or it'd reject the cpu. Some boxes (mine in particular)
seem to sparsely populate the apic id so that the range is pretty large.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37108 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
was used.
* Renamed X86VMTranslationMap to X86VMTranslationMap32Bit and pulled the paging
method agnostic part into new base class X86VMTranslationMap.
* Moved X86PagingStructures into its own header/source pair.
* Moved pgdir_virt from X86PagingStructures to X86PagingStructures32Bit where
it is actually used.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37055 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Renamed i386_context_switch() to x86_context_switch().
* x86_context_switch() no longer sets the page directory.
arch_thread_context_switch() does that explicitly, now. This allows to solve
the TODO by reordering releasing the previous paging structures reference and
setting the new page directory.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37024 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Renamed vm_translation_map_arch_info to X86PagingStructures, and all
members and local variables of that type accordingly.
* arch_thread_context_switch(): Added TODO: The still active paging structures
can indeed be deleted before we stop using them.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37022 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
that are wide enough for both virtual and physical addresses.
* DMABuffer, IORequest, IOScheduler,... and code using them: Use
generic_io_vec and generic_{addr,size}_t where necessary.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36997 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
address ranges, and a set of support functions working with it.
* Changed the type of the kernel_args physical address range arrays to
phys_addr_range and adjusted the code working with those.
* Removed a bunch of duplicated address range code in the PPC's mmu.cpp.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36947 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
where appropriate.
* Typedef'ed page_num_t to phys_addr_t and used it in more places in
vm_page.{h,cpp}.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36937 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
created, and moved the heap's grow and VIP heap initialization to it. Should
fix#5956.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36855 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
map_backing_store() doesn't commit memory when this flag is given.
* Used the new flag vm_copy_area(): We no longer commit memory for read-only
areas. This prevents read-only mapped files from suddenly requiring memory
after fork(). Might improve the situation on machines with very little RAM
a bit.
We should probably mark writable copies over-committing, since the usual
case is fork() + exec() where the child normally doesn't need more than a
few pages until calling exec(). That would significantly reduce the memory
requirement for jamming the Haiku tree.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36651 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Separated the other stuff previously done in debug_init_post_vm() to the new
debug_init_post_settings().
* Removed superfluous status_t return codes - they are ignored, anyway, and if
there really is a show stopper in the init process, panicking would be the
thing one should do.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36623 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
implemented for any architecture yet.
* vm_set_area_memory_type(): Call VMTranslationMap::ProtectArea() to change the
memory type for the already mapped pages.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36574 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Don't set the VMArea's memory type in arch_vm_set_memory_type(), but let the
callers do that.
* vm_set_area_memory_type(): Does nothing, if the memory type doesn't change.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36573 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
of consistency.
* Moved the B_OVERCOMMITTING_AREA flag from B_KERNEL_AREA_FLAGS to
B_USER_AREA_FLAGS, since we really allow it to be passed from userland.
* Most VM syscalls check the provided protection against B_USER_AREA_FLAGS
instead of B_USER_PROTECTION, now. This way they allow for
B_OVERCOMMITTING_AREA as well.
* _user_map_file(), _user_set_memory_protection(): Check the protection like
the other syscalls do and use fix_protection() instead of doing that
manually.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36572 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
boot CPU wait until all other CPUs are ready to wait. This solves a
theoretical problem in main(): The boot CPU could run fully through the early
initialization and reset sCpuRendezvous2 before the other CPUs left
smp_cpu_rendezvous(). It's very unlikely on real hardware that the non-boot
CPUs are so much slower, but it might be a concern in emulation.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36558 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
scheduler. This avoids the need to use the send_signal_etc() work-around for
resume_thread() during the early kernel initialization. Might fix#5851.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36530 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
free respective free and cached pages.
* Removed the unused vm_page_allocate_page_run_no_base().
* vm_page_allocate_page_run() (and allocate_page_run()):
- Use vm_page_reserve_pages() instead of vm_page_try_reserve_pages(), i.e.
wait until the reservation succeeds.
- Now we iterates two times through the pages to find a suitable page run. In
the first iteration it only looks for free/clear pages, in the second
iteration it also considers cached pages. This increases the chance of the
function to succeed, when a lot of caching is going on.
This reduces the amount of memory required to use the IOCache when booting
off the anyboot Live CD to around 160 MB in qemu. It also seems to work with
128 MB, but the syslog indicates that some memory allocations fail, which
is not exactly inspiring confidence.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36489 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
swap space when the cache shrinks. Currently the implementation stil leaks
swap space of busy pages.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36373 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
can safely be used.
* Since using the I/O APIC is disabled by default, I've removed the "return"
that prevented its use when enabled. Let's see if it already does anything.
* Adapted other arch_int.cpp with a bit of cleanup.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36290 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
mapped page.
* debug_{mem,strl}cpy():
- Added "team" parameter for specifying the address space the address are
to be interpreted in.
- When the standard memcpy() (with fault handler) fails, fall back to
vm_debug_copy_page_memory().
* Added debug_is_debugged_team(): Predicate returning true, if the supplied
team_id refers to the same team debug_get_debugged_thread() belongs to.
* Added DebuggedThreadSetter class for scope-based debug_set_debugged_thread().
Made use of it in several debugger functions.
* print_demangled_call() (x86): Fixed unsafe memory access.
Allows KDL stack traces to work correctly again, even if the page daemon has
already unmapped the concerned pages.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36230 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
interrupts (MSI).
* Add the remaining IDT entries and redirection functions in the interrupt code.
* Make the PIC end_of_interrupt() return a result to indicate whether the vector
was handled by this PIC. If it isn't we now issue a apic_end_of_interrupt()
in the assumption of apic local interrupt, MSI or IPI. This also removes
the need for the gUsingIOAPIC global and doing manual apic_end_of_interrupt()
calls in the SMP and timer code.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36221 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
other places where previously the same functionality was duplicated. Also
seperated the header which was originally arch_smp.h into apic.h and arch_smp.h
again as some of it is MP and not actually APIC.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36182 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Implemented a tiny bit more sophisticated version of
estimate_max_scheduling_latency() that uses a syscall that lets the scheduler
decide.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36170 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
locks.
* Added syscalls for a new kind of mutex. A mutex consists only of an int32 and
doesn't require any kernel resources. So it's initialization cannot fail
(it consists only of setting the mutex value to 0). An uncontended lock or
unlock operation can basically consist of an atomic_*() in userland. The
syscalls (when the mutex is contended) are a bit more expensive than semaphore
operations, though.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36158 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Added new thread flag THREAD_FLAGS_ALWAYS_RESTART_SYSCALL. If set, it forces
syscall restart even when a signal handler without SA_RESTART was invoked.
* Fixed sigwait(): If one of requested signals wasn't already pending it would
never wake up. Also, the syscall always needs to be restarted, if interrupted
by another signal.
* Renamed a bunch of the POSIX signal function implementations which did return
an error code directly (instead via errno). Added correct POSIX functions
where needed.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36054 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
return it.
* lock_memory_etc(): On error the VMAreaWiredRange object could be leaked.
* [un]lock_memory_etc(): Call VMArea::Unwire() with the cache locked and
explicitly delete the range object after unlocking the cache to avoid
potential deadlocks.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36035 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Since the requirement is that the area's top cache is locked, allocating
memory isn't allowed.
* lock_memory_etc(): Create the VMAreaWiredRange object explicitly before
locking the area's top cache.
Fixes#5680 (deadlocks when using the slab as malloc() backend).
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36033 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* _user_map_file(), _user_unmap_memory(): Verify that the address (if given) is
page aligned.
* Reworked memory locking (wiring):
- VMArea does now have a list of wired memory ranges and supports waiting for
a range to be removed.
- vm_soft_fault():
- Added "wirePage" parameter that, if given, makes the function wire the
page and return it.
- Added "wiredRange" parameter (for calls from lock_memory_etc()) and made
sure we never unmap wired pages. This could e.g. happen when a page from a
lower cache was read-mapped and a write fault occurred. Now in such a
situation the function waits for the page to be unwired and restarts.
- All functions that manipulate areas in a way that could affect wired ranges
do now either require the caller to make sure there are no wired ranges in
the way or do that themselves. Added a few wait_if_*_is_wired() helper
functions for that purpose.
- lock_memory_etc():
- Does now also work correctly when the range spans more than one area.
- Adds VMAreaWiredRanges to the affected VMAreas and retains an address
space reference (so that the address space won't be deleted as long as a
wired range exists).
- Resolved TODO: The area's caches are now locked when
increment_page_wired_count() is called.
- Resolved TODO: The race condition due to missing locking after looking up
the page mapping is now prevented. We hold the cache locks (in case the
page is already mapped) and the new vm_soft_fault() parameter allows us
to get the page wired.
- unlock_memory_etc(): Changes symmetrical to those in lock_memory_etc() and
resolved all TODOs.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@36030 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Added fields for temporary storage of the debug registers dr6 and dr7 to the
arch_cpu_info structure. The actual registers are stored at the beginning of
x86_exit_user_debug_at_kernel_entry() and read in
x86_handle_debug_exception().
The problem was that x86_exit_user_debug_at_kernel_entry() itself overwrote
dr7 and, if kernel breakpoints were enabled, dr6 could be overwritten anytime
after. So x86_handle_debug_exception() would find incorrect values in the
registers (definitely in dr7) and thus interpret the detected debug condition
incorrectly. Usually watchpoints were recognized as breakpoints.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@35951 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
arch_debug_registers instead.
* Call arch_debug_save_registers() on all CPUs when entering the kernel
debugger.
* Added debug_get_debug_registers() to return a specified CPU's saved
registers.
* x86:
- Replaced the previous arch_debug_save_registers() implementation. Disabled
getting the registers via the gdb interface for the time being.
- Fixed the "sc", "call", and "calling" commands to also work for threads
running on another CPU.
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support file creation.
* Extended open() and open_from() to support O_CREAT to create files.
open_from() has got an optional "permissions" parameter for that purpose.
* Fixed errno. It would crash when being used. Also changed the POSIX functions
to return their error code via errno as expected.
* Added writev().
* FAT file system:
- Added support for reading long file names.
- Added support for creating files (8.3 name only) and writing to them.
- Enabled scanning partitions with it.
* Boot loader menu:
- Enabled the "Reboot" menu item unconditionally.
- Added "Save syslog from previous session" menu item to the debug menu.
Currently saving the syslog to FAT32 volumes is supported.
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received, but if the signal was in the thread's signal block mask, it would
not be handled. Added thread::sig_temp_enabled, an additional mask of not
blocked signals, which is set by sigsuspend() and evaluated and reset by
handle_signals(). Fixes#5567.
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* The kernel syslog ring buffer is no longer emptied by the syslog sender
thread. Instead we only drop the oldest data from the buffer when we're
writing to it and there's not enough free space in it.
Advantages: We drop old data rather than the most recent data when the buffer
is full. The "syslog" KDL command has more data available now. So the odds
are that kernel syslog messages not written to disk yet are at least still
in the kernel buffer.
* Changed dprintf_no_syslog() semantics: Now it writes to the syslog, but
doesn't notify the syslog sender thread.
boot loader:
* Added the ring_buffer implementation and a dummy user_memcpy().
* bios_x86: Moved the syslog stuff from serial.{cpp,h} to debug.{cpp.h}.
* Moved the debug options from the "Select safe mode options" menu to a new
"Select debug options" menu.
* Added option "Enable debug syslog" to the new menu (ATM available on x86
only). It allocates a 1 MB in-memory buffer for the syslog for this session
in such a way that it can be accessed by the boot loader after a reset.
* Added item "Display syslog from previous session" to the new menu, doing
what its name suggests.
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a given flat buffer.
* Added ring_buffer_peek() for random position reading from the ring buffer
without changing its state.
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* Made the page table allocation more flexible. Got rid of sMaxVirtualAddress
and added new virtual_end address to the architecture specific kernel args.
* Increased the virtual space we reserve for the kernel to 16 MB. That
should suffice for quite a while. The previous 2 MB were too tight when
building the kernel with debug info.
* mmu_init(): The way we were translating the BIOS' extended memory map to
our physical ranges arrays was broken. Small gaps between usable memory
ranges would be ignored and instead marked allocated. This worked fine for
the boot loader and during the early kernel initialization, but after the
VM has been fully set up it frees all physical ranges that have not been
claimed otherwise. So those ranges could be entered into the free pages
list and would be used later. This could possibly cause all kinds of weird
problems, probably including ACPI issues. Now we add only the actually
usable ranges to our list.
Kernel:
* vm_page_init(): The pages of the ranges between the usable physical memory
ranges are now marked PAGE_STATE_UNUSED, the allocated ranges
PAGE_STATE_WIRED.
* unmap_and_free_physical_pages(): Don't free pages marked as unused.
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happen on syscalls or "int" instructions. The debug exception handler sets
the thread debug flags B_THREAD_DEBUG_STOP and
B_THREAD_DEBUG_NOTIFY_SINGLE_STEP (new) and lets the thread continue. Before
leaving the kernel the thread is stopped and a single-step notification is
sent. Fixes#3487.
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over ownership of the object. Fixes double free introduced in r35605.
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they were never freed unless the cache was destroyed (I just wondered why
my system would bury >1G in the magazines).
* Made the magazine capacity variable per cache, ie. for larger objects, it's
not a good idea to have 64*CPU buffers lying around in the worst case.
* Furthermore, the create_object_cache_etc()/object_depot_init() now have
arguments for the magazine capacity as well as the maximum number of full
unused magazines.
* By default, you might want to initialize both to zero, as then some hopefully
usable defaults are computed. Otherwise (the only current example is the
vm_page_mapping cache) you can just put in the values you'd want there.
The page mapping cache uses larger values, as its objects are usually
allocated and deleted in larger chunks.
* Beware, though, I couldn't test these changes yet as Qemu didn't like to run
today. I'll test these changes on another machine now.
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needs to be or'ed to the address specification), "uncached" is assumed.
* Set the memory type for the "BIOS" and "DMA" areas to write-back. Not sure, if
that's correct, but that's what was effectively used on my machines before.
* Changed x86_set_mtrrs() and the CPU module hook to also set the default memory
type.
* Rewrote the MTRR computation once more:
- Now we know all used memory ranges, so we are free to extend used ranges
into unused ones in order to simplify them for MTRR setup.
- Leverage the subtractive properties of uncached and write-through ranges to
simplify ranges of any other respectively write-back type.
- Set the default memory type to write-back, so we don't need MTRRs for the
RAM ranges.
- If a new range intersects with an existing one, we no longer just fail.
Instead we use the strictest requirements implied by the ranges. This fixes
#5383.
Overall the new algorithm should be sufficient with far less MTRRs than before
(on my desktop machine 4 are used at maximum, while 8 didn't quite suffice
before). A drawback of the current implementation is that it doesn't deal with
the case of running out of MTRRs at all, which might result in some ranges
having weaker caching/memory ordering properties than requested.
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* Added vm_clear_page_mapping_accessed_flags() and
vm_remove_all_page_mappings_if_unaccessed(), which combine the functionality
of vm_test_map_activation(), vm_clear_map_flags(), and
vm_remove_all_page_mappings(), thus saving lots of calls to translation map
methods. The backend is the new method
VMTranslationMap::ClearAccessedAndModified().
* Started to make use of the cached page queue and changed the meaning of the
other non-free queues slightly:
- Active queue: Contains mapped pages that have been used recently.
- Inactive queue: Contains mapped pages that have not been used recently. Also
contains unmapped temporary pages.
- Modified queue: Contains unmapped modified pages.
- Cached queue: Contains unmapped unmodified pages (LRU sorted).
Unless we're actually low on memory and actively do paging, modified and
cached queues only contain non-temporary pages. Cached pages are considered
quasi free. They still belong to a cache, but since they are unmodified and
unmapped, they can be freed immediately. And this is what
vm_page_[try_]reserve_pages() do now when there are no more actually free
pages at hand. Essentially this means that pages storing cached file data,
unless mmap()ped, no longer are considered used and don't contribute to page
pressure. Paging will not happen as long there are enough free + cached pages
available.
* Reimplemented the page daemon. It no longer scans all pages, but instead works
the page queues. As long as the free pages situation is harmless, it only
iterates through the active queue and deactivates pages that have not been
used recently. When paging occurs it additionally scans the inactive queue and
frees pages that have not been used recently.
* Changed the page reservation/allocation interface:
vm_page_[try_]reserve_pages(), vm_page_unreserve_pages(), and
vm_page_allocate_page() now take a vm_page_reservation structure pointer.
The reservation functions initialize the structure -- currently consisting
only of a count member for the number of still reserved pages.
vm_page_allocate_page() decrements the count and vm_page_unreserve_pages()
unreserves the remaining pages (if any). Advantages are that reservation/
unreservation mismatches cannot occur anymore, that vm_page_allocate_page()
can verify that the caller has indeed a reserved page left, and that there's
no unnecessary pressure on the free page pool anymore. The only disadvantage
is that the vm_page_reservation object needs to be passed around a bit.
* Reworked the page reservation implementation:
- Got rid of sSystemReservedPages and sPageDeficit. Instead
sUnreservedFreePages now actually contains the number of free pages that
have not yet been reserved (it cannot become negative anymore) and the new
sUnsatisfiedPageReservations contains the number of pages that are still
needed for reservation.
- Threads waiting for reservations do now add themselves to a waiter queue,
which is ordered by descending priority (VM priority and thread priority).
High priority waiters are served first when pages become available.
Fixes#5328.
* cache_prefetch_vnode(): Would reserve one less page than allocated later, if
the size wasn't page aligned.
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general "flags" parameter. It encodes the target state of the page -- so
that the page isn't unnecessarily put in the wrong page queue first -- a
flag whether the page should be cleared, and one to indicate whether the
page should be marked busy.
* Added page state PAGE_STATE_CACHED. Not used yet.
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flag. The obvious advantage is that one can still see what state a page is in
and even move it between states while being marked busy.
* Removed the vm_page::is_dummy flag. Instead we mark marker pages busy, which
in all cases has the same effect. Introduced a vm_page_is_dummy() that can
still check whether a given page is a dummy page.
* vm_page_unreserve_pages(): Before adding to the system reserve make sure
sUnreservedFreePages is non-negative. Otherwise we'd make nonexisting pages
available for allocation. steal_pages() still has the same problem and it
can't be solved that easily.
* map_page(): No longer changes the page state/mark the page unbusy. That's the
caller's responsibility.
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argument. They replace the previous special-purpose allocation functions
(malloc_nogrow(), vip_io_request_malloc()).
* Moved the I/O VIP heap to heap.cpp accordingly.
* Added quite a bit of passing around of allocation flags in the VM,
particularly in the VM*AddressSpace classes.
* Fixed IOBuffer::GetNextVirtualVec(): It was ignoring the VIP flag and always
allocated on the normal heap.
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memory and page reservation functions have a new "priority" parameter that
indicates how deep the function may tap into that reserve. The currently
existing priority levels are "user", "system", and "VIP". The idea is that
user programs should never be able to cause a state that gets the kernel into
trouble due to heavy battling for memory. The "VIP" level (not really used
yet) is intended for allocations that are required to free memory eventually
(in the page writer). More levels are thinkable in the future, like "user real
time" or "user system server".
* Added "priority" parameters to several VMCache methods.
* Replaced the map_backing_store() "unmapAddressRange" parameter by a "flags"
parameter.
* Added area creation flag CREATE_AREA_PRIORITY_VIP and slab allocator flag
CACHE_PRIORITY_VIP indicating the importance of the request.
* Changed most code to pass the right priorities/flags.
These changes already significantly improve the behavior in low memory
situations. I've tested a bit with 64 MB (virtual) RAM and, while not
particularly fast and responsive, the system remains at least usable under high
memory pressure.
As a side effect the slab allocator can now be used as general memory allocator.
Not done by default yet, though.
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* Added support to do larger raw allocations (up to one large chunk (128 pages))
in the slab areas. For an even larger allocation an area is created (haven't
seen that happen yet, though).
* Added kernel tracing (SLAB_MEMORY_MANAGER_TRACING).
* _FreeArea(): Copy and paste bug: The meta chunks of the to be freed area
would be added to the free lists instead of being removed from them. This
would corrupt the lists and also lead to all kinds of misuse of meta chunks.
object caches:
* Implemented CACHE_ALIGN_ON_SIZE. It is no longer set for all small object
caches, but the block allocator sets it on all power of two size caches.
* object_cache_reserve_internal(): Detect recursion and don't wait in such a
case. The function could deadlock itself, since
HashedObjectCache::CreateSlab() does allocate memory, thus potentially
reentering.
* object_cache_low_memory():
- I missed some returns when reworking that one in r35254, so the function
might stop early and also leave the cache in maintenance mode, which would
cause it to be ignored by object cache resizer and low memory handler from
that point on.
- Since ReturnSlab() potentially unlocks, the conditions weren't quite correct
and too many slabs could be freed.
- Simplified things a bit.
* object_cache_alloc(): Since object_cache_reserve_internal() does potentially
unlock the cache, the situation might have changed and their might not be an
empty slab available, but a partial one. The function would crash.
* Renamed the object cache tracing variable to SLAB_OBJECT_CACHE_TRACING.
* Renamed debugger command "cache_info" to "slab_cache" to avoid confusion with
the VMCache commands.
* ObjectCache::usage was not maintained anymore since I introduced the
MemoryManager. object_cache_get_usage() would thus always return 0 and the
block cache would not be considered cached memory. This was only of
informational relevance, though.
slab allocator misc.:
* Disable the object depots of block allocator caches for object sizes > 2 KB.
Allocations of those sizes aren't so common that the object depots yield any
benefit.
* The slab allocator is now fully self-sufficient. It allocates its bootstrap
memory from the MemoryManager, and the hash tables for HashedObjectCaches use
the block allocator instead of the heap, now.
* Added option to use the slab allocator for malloc() and friends
(USE_SLAB_ALLOCATOR_FOR_MALLOC). Currently disabled. Works in principle and
has virtually no lock contention. Handling for low memory situations is yet
missing, though.
* Improved the output of some debugger commands.
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* Added optional parameter "void** oldTable" to Resize(). If given the old
allocation for the table is returned instead of freeing it.
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CACHE_DONT_LOCK_KERNEL_SPACE. If the former is given, the slab memory manager
does not wait when reserving memory or pages. The latter prevents area
operations. The new flags add a bit of flexibility. E.g. when allocating page
mapping objects for userland areas CACHE_DONT_WAIT_FOR_MEMORY is sufficient,
i.e. the allocation will succeed as long as pages are available.
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* Implemented a more elaborated raw memory allocation backend (MemoryManager).
We allocate 8 MB areas whose pages we allocate and map when needed. An area is
divided into equally-sized chunks which form the basic units of allocation. We
have areas with three possible chunk sizes (small, medium, large), which is
basically what the ObjectCache implementations were using anyway.
* Added "uint32 flags" parameter to several of the slab allocator's object
cache and object depot functions. E.g. object_depot_store() potentially wants
to allocate memory for a magazine. But also in pure freeing functions it
might eventually become useful to have those flags, since they could end up
deleting an area, which might not be allowable in all situations. We should
introduce specific flags to indicate that.
* Reworked the block allocator. Since the MemoryManager allocates block-aligned
areas, maintains a hash table for lookup, and maps chunks to object caches,
we can quickly find out which object cache a to be freed allocation belongs
to and thus don't need the boundary tags anymore.
* Reworked the slab boot strap process. We allocate from the initial area only
when really necessary, i.e. when the object cache for the respective
allocation size has not been created yet. A single page is thus sufficient.
other:
* vm_allocate_early(): Added boolean "blockAlign" parameter. If true, the
semantics is the same as for B_ANY_KERNEL_BLOCK_ADDRESS.
* Use an object cache for page mappings. This significantly reduces the
contention on the heap bin locks.
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one for each per CPU store):
* The depot is now protected by a R/W lock combined with a spinlock. It is
required to either hold read lock + spinlock or just the write lock.
* When accessing the per CPU stores we only need to acquire the read lock
and disable interrupts. When switching magazines with the depot we
additionally get the spinlock.
* When allocating a new magazine we do completely unlock.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@35200 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* The threads beside the main thread are killed earlier now (in the new
team_shutdown_team()), before removing the team from the team hash and from
its process group. This fixes#5296.
* Use a condition variable instead of a semaphore to wait for the non-main
threads to die. We notify the condition right after a thread has left the
team. The semaphore was released by the undertaker.
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things a bit.
* Some style cleanup.
* The object depot does now have a cookie that will be passed to the return
hook.
* Fixed object_cache_return_object_wrapper() using the new cookie.
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VMCacheRef object which points to the cache. This allows to optimize
VMCache::MoveAllPages(), since it no longer needs to iterate over all pages
to adjust their cache pointer. It can simple swap the cache refs of the two
caches instead.
Reduces the total -j8 Haiku image build time only marginally. The kernel time
drops almost 10%, though.
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* Added "bool consumerLocked" parameter to VMCache::Unlock() and
ReleaseRefAndUnlock(). Since Unlock() may cause the cache to be merged with
a consumer cache, the flag is needed to prevent a deadlock in case the
caller still holds a lock to the consumer. Hasn't been a problem yet, since
that situation never occurred.
* VMCacheChainLocker: Reversed unlocking order to bottom-up. The other
direction could cause a deadlock in case caches would be merged, since the
locking order would be reversed. The way VMCacheChainLocker was used this
didn't happen, though.
* fault_get_page(): While copying a page from a lower cache to the top cache,
we do now unlock all caches but the top one, so we don't unnecessarily
kill concurrency.
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* Reorganized the code for [un]mapping pages:
- Added new VMTranslationMap::Unmap{Area,Page[s]}() which essentially do what
vm_unmap_page[s]() did before, just in the architecture specific code, which
allows for specific optimizations. UnmapArea() is for the special case that
the complete area is unmapped. Particularly in case the address space is
deleted, some work can be saved. Several TODOs could be slain.
- Since they are only used within vm.cpp vm_map_page() and vm_unmap_page[s]()
are now static and have lost their prefix (and the "preserveModified"
parameter).
* Added VMTranslationMap::Protect{Page,Area}(). They are just inline wrappers
for Protect().
* X86VMTranslationMap::Protect(): Make sure not to accidentally clear the
accessed/dirty flags.
* X86VMTranslationMap::Unmap()/Protect(): Make page table skipping actually
work. It was only skipping to the next page.
* Adjusted the PPC code to at least compile.
No measurable effect for the -j8 Haiku image build time, though the kernel time
drops minimally.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@35089 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Pulled the physical page mapping functions out of vm_translation_map into
a new interface VMPhysicalPageMapper.
* Renamed vm_translation_map to VMTranslationMap and made it a proper C++
class. The functions in the operations vector have become methods.
* Added class GenericVMPhysicalPageMapper implementing VMPhysicalPageMapper
as far as possible (without actually writing new code).
* Adjusted the x86 and the PPC specifics accordingly (untested for the
latter). For the other architectures the build is, I'm afraid, seriously
broken.
The next steps will modify and extend the VMTranslationMap interface, so that
it will be possible to fix the bugs in vm_unmap_page[s]() and employ
architecture specific optimizations.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@35066 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* ioapic_init(): map_physical_memory() was called for already mapped
addresses. This worked fine, but only because the x86 page mapping code
didn't mind.
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* Use atomic_{and,or}() instead of atomic_set(), as there are no built-ins
for the latter.
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This makes appending the pages to the active queue more efficient and we
don't need the vm_page::is_cleared bit anymore.
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* Added Debug{First,Next}() methods to allow easy iteration through the
address spaces in kernel debugger commands.
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device path + child partition name. When a "raw" device is unpublished the node
removal notification triggers the partition and child partitions to be
unpublished/removed. Since in that case the "raw" node is already unpublished
trying to resolve it in devfs_unpublish_partition() again to unpublish the child
partitions would fail, leaving the child partition nodes behind. When a new raw
device would then become available publishing its partitions would fail because
of these left behind nodes, causing bug #4587. Seeing that this code is more
compact and straight forward anyway I don't quite see why it was changed in the
first place.
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table. It is now inline and uses double-checked locking. This reduces the
contention on the lock to insignificant. Total -j8 Haiku image build speedup
is marginal, but the total kernel time drops 12%.
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access to a vm_page. It is basically an atomically accessed thread ID field
in the vm_page structure, which is explicitly set by macros marking the
critical sections. As a first positive effect I had to review quite a bit of
code and found several issues.
* Added several TODOs and comments. Some harmless ones, but also a few
troublesome ones in vm.cpp regarding page unmapping.
* file_cache: PrecacheIO::Prepare()/read_into_cache: Removed superfluous
vm_page_allocate_page() return value checks. It cannot fail anymore.
* Removed the heavily contended "pages" lock. We use different policies now:
- sModifiedTemporaryPages is accessed atomically.
- sPageDeficitLock and sFreePageCondition are protected by a new mutex.
- The page queues have individual locks (mutexes).
- Renamed set_page_state_nolock() to set_page_state(). Unless the caller says
otherwise, it does now lock the affected pages queues itself. Also changed
the return value to void -- we panic() anyway.
* set_page_state(): Add free/clear pages to the beginning of their respective
queues as this is more cache-friendly.
* Pages with the states PAGE_STATE_WIRED or PAGE_STATE_UNUSED are no longer
in any queue. They were in the "active" queue, but there's no good reason
to have them there. In case we decide to let the page daemon work the queues
(like FreeBSD) they would just be in the way.
* Pulled the common part of vm_page_allocate_page_run[_no_base]() into a helper
function. Also fixed a bug I introduced previously: The functions must not
vm_page_unreserve_pages() on success, since they remove the pages from the
free/clear queue without decrementing sUnreservedFreePages.
* vm_page_set_state(): Changed return type to void. The function cannot really
fail and no-one was checking it anyway.
* vm_page_free(), vm_page_set_state(): Added assertion: The page must not be
free/clear before. This is implied by the policy that no-one is allowed to
access free/clear pages without holding the respective queue's lock, which is
not the case at this point. This found the bug fixed in r34912.
* vm_page_requeue(): Added general assertions. panic() when requeuing of
free/clear pages is requested. Same reason as above.
* vm_clone_area(), B_FULL_LOCK case: Don't map busy pages. The implementation is
still not correct, though.
My usual -j8 Haiku build test runs another 10% faster, now. The total kernel
time drops about 18%. As hoped the new locks have only a fraction of the old
"pages" lock contention. Other locks lead the "most wanted list" now.
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* Renamed page_queue to VMPageQueue and made it a proper C++ class. Use
DoublyLinkedList instead of own list code.
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have one anymore anyway.
* Removed unnecessary setting the list links to NULL after removing a node.
* Replaced "element == NULL" check in Insert() by an assert. This just hid
potential errors.
* Added Insert{Before,After}() methods and declared the Insert() version
with the InsertBefore() semantics obsolete.
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sure that the kernel's frame buffer console points to the right data.
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* Changed the rw_lock_{read,write}_unlock() return values to void. They
returned a value != B_OK only in case of user error and no-one checked them
anyway.
* Optimized rw_lock_read_[un]lock(). They are inline now and as long as
there's no contending write locker, they will only perform an atomic_add().
* Changed the semantics of nested locking after acquiring a write lock: Read
and write locks are counted separately, so read locks no longer implicitly
become write locks. This does e.g. make degrading a write lock to a read
lock by way of read_lock + write_unlock (as used in the VM) actually work.
These changes speed up the -j8 Haiku image build on my machine by a few
percent, but more interestingly they reduce the total kernel time by 25 %.
Apparently we get more contention on other locks, now.
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* Added VMCache::MovePage() and MoveAllPages() to move pages between caches.
* VMAnonymousCache:
- _MergeSwapPages(): Avoid doing anything, if neither cache has swapped out
pages.
- _MergeSwapPages() does now also remove source cache pages that are
shadowed by consumer swap pages. This allows us to call _MergeSwapPages()
before _MergePagesSmallerSource(), save the swap page shadowing check
there and get rid of the vm_page::merge_swap flag. This is an
optimization based on the assumption that usually none or only few pages
are swapped out, so we save a lot of checks.
- Implemented _MergePagesSmallerConsumer() as an alternative to
_MergePagesSmallerSource(). The former is used when the source cache has
more pages than the consumer cache. It iterates over the consumer cache's
pages, moves them to the source and finally moves all pages back to the
consumer. The final move is relatively cheap (though unfortunately we
still have to update all pages' vm_page::cache field), so that overall we
save iterations of the main loop with the more expensive checks.
The optimizations particularly improve the common fork()+exec*() situations.
fork() uses CoW, which is implemented by putting two new empty caches between
the to be copied area and its cache. exec*() destroys one copy of the area,
its cache and thus causes merging of the other new cache with the old cache.
Since this usually happens in a very short time, the old cache does still
contain many pages and the new cache only few. Previously the many pages were
all checked and moved individually. Now we do that for the few pages instead.
A very extreme example of this situation is the Haiku image build. jam has a
huge heap (> 200 MB) and it fork()s+exec*()s for every action to be executed.
Since during the cache merging the cache is locked, any write access to a
heap page causes jam to block until the cache merging is done. Formerly that
took so long that it killed a lot of parallelism in multi-job builds. That
could be observed particularly well when lots of small actions where executed
(like the Link, XRes, Mimeset, SetType, SetVersion combos when building
executables/libraries/add-ons). Those look dramatically better now.
The overall speed improvement for a -j8 image build on my machine is only
about 15%, though.
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another. The code originates from vm_copy_on_write_area(). We now generate
the VM cache tracing entries, though.
* count_writable_areas() -> VMCache::CountWritableAreas()
* Added debugger command "cache_stack" which is enabled when VM cache tracing
is enabled. It prints the source caches of a given cache or area at the
time of a specified tracing entry.
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- Replaced the "userOnly" parameter by a "flags" parameter, that allows to
specify kernel and userland stack traces individually.
- x86, m68k: Don't always skip the first frame as that prevents the caller
from being able to record its own address.
* capture_tracing_stack_trace(): Replaced the "userOnly" parameter by
"kernelOnly", since one is probably always interested in the kernel stack
trace, but might not want the userland stack trace.
* Added stack trace support for VM cache kernel tracing.
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* Added Lock()/Unlock() for explicit locking by a service user.
* Added NotifyLocked() and made Notify() inline.
* Added HasListeners() so one can check whether there is a listener at all
before preparing the event message.
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- enqueue_in_run_queue() no longer returns whether rescheduling is supposed
to happen. Instead is sets cpu_ent::invoke_scheduler on the current CPU.
- reschedule() does now handle cpu_ent::invoke_scheduler_if_idle(). No need
to let all callers do that.
* thread_unblock[_locked]() no longer return whether rescheduling is supposed
to happen.
* Got rid of the B_INVOKE_SCHEDULER handling. The interrupt hooks really
can't know, when it makes sense to reschedule or not.
* Introduced scheduler_reschedule_if_necessary[_locked]() functions for
checking+invoking the scheduler.
* Some semaphore functions (e.g. delete_sem()) invoke the scheduler now, if
they wake up anything with greater priority.
I've also tried to add scheduler invocations in the condition variable and
mutex/rw_lock code, but that actually has a negative impact on performance,
probably because it causes too much ping-ponging between threads when
multiple locking primitives are involved.
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* simple_smp scheduler: Rewrote the interesting part of
enqueue_in_run_queue(). It always selects a target CPU for the inserted
thread, now. If no CPU is idle, the CPU running the thread with the lowest
priority is chosen. If the thread running on the target CPU has a lower
priority than the inserted one, it will be asked to reschedule. If that's
the current CPU, we'll return the correct value (wasn't done before at
all).
These changes help reducing latencies. On my machine in an idle system
playing music DebugAnalyzer shows maximum latencies of about 1 us. I still
find that a bit much, but it's several orders of magnitude better than
before. The -j8 Haiku image build time dropped about 10%.
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implemented by means of an additional member in cpu_ent.
* Removed thread::keep_scheduled and the related functions. The feature
wasn't used yet and wouldn't have worked as implemented anyway.
* Resurrected an older, SMP aware version of our simple scheduler and made it
the default instead of the affine scheduler. The latter is in no state to
be used yet. It causes enormous latencies (I've seen up to 0.1s) even when
six or seven CPUs were idle at the same time, totally killing parallelism.
That's also the reason why a -j8 build was slower than a -j2. This is no
longer the case. On my machine the -j2 build takes about 10% less time now
and the -j8 build saves another 20%. The latter is not particularly
impressive (compared with Linux), but that seems to be due to lock
contention.
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system_time_nsecs(), returning the system time in nanoseconds. The function
is only really implemented for x86. For the other architectures
system_time() * 1000 is returned.
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waits for certain events on a given page, NotifyPageEvents() wakes up
waiting threads respectively.
* Used the new feature instead of condition variables for waiting on busy
pages. We save publishing and unpublishing of a condition variable whenever
a page is marked busy. There's only something to do, if there's at least
one thread waiting in the list of the respective cache. The general
assumption is that this is only rarely the case and even if it happens,
there should be only very few threads.
* Added an apparently missing notification in cache_io(). At least I didn't
see the reason for it not being there.
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to clarify that they never enlarge the area.
* Reimplemented VMKernelAddressSpace. It is somewhat inspired by Bonwick's
vmem resource allocator (though we have different requirements):
- We consider the complete address space to be divided into contiguous
ranges of type free, reserved, or area, each range being represented by
a VMKernelAddressRange object.
- The range objects are managed in an AVL tree and a doubly linked list
(the latter only for faster iteration) sorted by address. This provides
O(log(n)) lookup, insertion and removal.
- For each power of two size we maintain a list of free ranges of at least
that size. Thus for the most common case of B_ANY*_ADDRESS area
allocation, we find a free range in constant time (the rest of the
processing being O(log(n))) with a rather good fit. This should also
help avoiding address space fragmentation.
While the new implementation should be faster, particularly with an
increasing number of areas, I couldn't measure any difference in the -j2
haiku build. From a cursory test the -j8 build hasn't tangibly benefitted
either.
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- Renamed to AVLTreeBase and moved it into its own header/source file.
- Renamed FindClose() to FindClosest().
- Added CheckTree() method for debugging purposes. It checks the validity
of the tree.
* Added a templatized class AVLTree which doesn't offer a map-like interface
like AVLTreeMap, but rather one similar to BOpenHashMap and SplayTree. It
is more convenient to use, if one wants to store objects that already
contain the key.
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necessary and prevent the structures from being used in a union.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@34525 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
link to them.
* VM{Kernel,User}AddressSpace manage the respective VMArea subclass now, and
VMAddressSpace has grown factory methods {Create,Delete}Area.
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new derived classes VM{Kernel,User}AddressSpace. Currently those are
identical, but that will change.
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pure address space feature, so it should be handled there.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@34491 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
and size.
* Made VMArea::Set{Base,Size}() private and made VMAddressSpace a friend.
In vm.cpp the new VMAddressSpace::ResizeArea{Head,Tail}() are used
instead.
Finally all address space changes happen in VMAddressSpace only. *phew*
Now it's ready to be thoroughly butchered. :-)
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@34467 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
This makes it more explicit where the fields are modified.
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simplify migration of the area management, but as a side effect, it also
makes area deletion O(1) (instead of O(n), n == number of areas in the
address space).
* Moved more area management functionality from vm.cpp to VMAddressSpace and
VMArea structure creation to VMArea. Made the list and list link members
itself private.
* VMAddressSpace tracks its amount of free space, now. This also replaces
the previous mechanism to do that only for the kernel address space. It
was broken anyway, since delete_area() subtracted the area size instead of
adding it.
* vm_free_unused_boot_loader_range():
- lastEnd could be set to a value < start, which could cause memory
outside of the given range to be unmapped. Haven't checked whether this
could happen in practice -- if so, it would be seriously unhealthy.
- The range between the end of the last area in the range and the end of
the range would never be freed.
- Fixed potential integer overflows when computing addresses.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@34459 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
of the condition variable and synchronization subsystem of the freebsd compat
layer which will be committed next.
* Also there was a discussion about adding these functions on the commit
mailing list. The mail in http://www.freelists.org/post/haiku-commits/r34395-in-haikutrunksrclibscompatfreebsd-network-compatsys,3
is a good sum up of it (need to scroll somewhat down, though).
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* "Classified" VMAddressSpace, i.e. turned the vm_address_space_*() functions
into methods, made all attributes (but "areas") private, and added
accessors.
* Also turned the vm.cpp functions vm_area_lookup() and
remove_area_from_address_space() into VMAddressSpace methods. The rest of
the area management functionality will follow soon.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@34447 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
CreateAsmStructOffsetsHeader mechanism to generate a header with macros
defined to the sizes of the structures we're interested in and when compiling
in C mode define the structures as "struct { char bytes[size]; }".
It works in principle, but due to how jam works, one would have to specify the
dependency to the generated header for all sources that include it directly or
indirectly.
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resource manager.
* Could be drastically improved, though, by taking the fragmentation into
account.
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* Implemented renameat(), faccessat(), fchownat(), fchmodat(), and mkfifoat().
* Added stub for mknodat().
* The kernel backend for faccessat() does not yet differentiate between
effective and real user/group IDs, though.
* Removed B_ENABLE_INCOMPLETE_POSIX_AT_SUPPORT, as we now support everything
(more or less). This also closes ticket #4928.
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would always inherit them all, causing quite a number of open files.
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checking the physical frame buffer location.
* This allows us to map the whole frame buffer at once, which means there is no
need anymore to remap the memory on mode change.
* Also, this will ease the burden of the MTRRs, as the memory size will be
properly aligned.
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all MTRRs at once.
* Added a respective x86_set_mtrrs() kernel function.
* x86 CPU module:
- Implemented the new hook.
- Prefixed most debug output with the CPU index. Otherwise it gets quite
confusing with multiple CPUs.
- generic_init_mtrrs(): No longer clear all MTRRs, if they are already
enabled. This lets us benefit from the BIOS's setup until we install our
own -- otherwise with caching disabled things are *really* slow.
* arch_vm.cpp: Completely rewrote the MTRR handling as the old one was not
only slow (O(2^n)), but also broken (resulting in incorrect setups (e.g.
with cachable ranges larger than requested)), and not working by design for
certain cases (subtractive setups intersecting ranges added later).
Now we maintain an array with the successfully set ranges. When a new range
is added, we recompute the complete MTRR setup as we need to. The new
algorithm analyzing the ranges has linear complexity and also handles range
base addresses with an alignment not matching the range size (e.g. a range
at address 0x1000 with size 0x2000) and joining of adjacent/overlapping
ranges of the same type.
This fixes the slow graphics on my 4 GB machine (though unfortunately the
8 MTRRs aren't enough to fully cover the complete frame buffer (about 35
pixel lines remain uncachable), but that can't be helped without rounding up
the frame buffer size, for which we don't have enough information). It might
also fix#1823.
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to be cloned.
* Added "flags" parameter to the SetTo(const void*,...) version.
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* Made reference returned by _GetKey() const. That's sufficient.
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to the owning team.
* Instead, the team now maintains a list containing the ports it owns.
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* This makes sem_delete_owned_sems() a lot more efficient; before it would need
to scan the entire semaphore table.
* This speeds up the test build of the kernel by another 2 seconds (with
KDEBUG=2) on my laptop.
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(hopefully) correct place.
* It seems to be even harder to understand basic locking primitives: when you
think about it, it shouldn't surprise you that conditional variables never
return B_WOULD_BLOCK. This fixes gdb again.
* Added tracing support to the ports subsystem.
* get_port_message() will now resize the port heap if needed (but will also
take timeouts into account while doing so, more or less). The initial port
space is 4MB (as before), the growth rate is the same, and the system wide
limit is arbitrarily set to 64 MB (all swappable). A team limit has been set
to 8 MB, but is not enforced yet. Since ports are using up address space in
the kernel, those seems to be proper limits.
* This also fixes a strange, and rare lockup where the mouse cursor would still
move, but everything else would basically hang, but look perfectly normal from
KDL on the first look. As recently happened on Brecht's laptop, and debugged
by mmlr and me: the cbuf space got used up when lots of windows wanted to
redraw after a workspace switch. The app_server wouldn't answer anymore to
client requests, but thought it would have done so, as LinkSender::Flush()
doesn't care if it got a B_NO_MEMORY (the ports will now block until memory
is available if possible, so that should not be a problem anymore).
* Improved "port" KDL command, it now also prints the messages in the port.
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* its own heap allocator instead of cbuf - this makes cbuf superfluous, and I
therefore removed it from the kernel. The heap is swappable, so lifts the
kernel's resource usage a bit. In the future, the heap should grow as well;
right now it should be at least as good as before.
* it no longer uses spinlocks, but just mutexes now for better scalability - it
was not usable with interrupts turned off anyway (due to its semaphore usage).
* it no longer uses semaphores, but condition variables.
* Needed to move the port initialization to a later point, as swappable memory
wasn't usable that early.
* All ports test are still passing, hopefully I didn't mess anything up :-)
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@33728 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Allow an allocator to be created on the heap to allow for non-locked
allocators to be created.
* Some cleanup.
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read out in the ConditionVariableEntry::WaitStatus(). That way you can notify
with a specific status that can be read out on the other end.
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high contention of the read lock (I experimented with the VM page mapping
lock)), it actually hurt the compile performance pretty obviously.
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makes the reader case a lot less expensive, and should relieve the thread
spinlock contention a bit.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@33643 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Locker.cpp.
* The services are now using recursive_locks, and rw_locks instead.
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in the free and/or clear queue. This performs better in the case where only few
pages are free/clear but performs worse in the case where there are a lot of
usable pages. It's not used anywhere but it might come in handy one time.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@33527 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
takes a list of iovecs describing the physical pages to be mapped. With it one
can map a set of physically disjoint pages into one linear virtual range. This
is a private API right now, but we might want to make it public as
map_physical_memory_vecs alongside map_physical_memory.
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are required to be physically contiguos, which should be reworked to put them
into seperate iovecs. Still this manages to combine a great deal of page
writes into larger bursts already. Reduces the amount of IO requests being
scheduled (and greatly benefits media where page wise writes are slow when
they are accessed through a non-IOScheduler path, i.e. USB mass storage until
that is properly implemented).
* Abstracted per page page writing tasks into a PageWriteWrapper class.
* Abstracted per transfer page writing tasks into PageWriteTransfer class which
formerly was the PageWriterCallback.
* Use both classes from the PageWriterRun and from
vm_page_write_modified_page_range to remove code duplication.
* Adjusted synchronous VMAnonymousCache::Write() to cope correctly with larger
iovecs and more than one iovec. It assumed that there was exactly one page per
vector previously.
* Introduced MaxPagesPerWrite() and MaxPagesPerAsyncWrite() to VMCache to allow
a cache to specify restricitions. VMAnonymousCache does restrict the max pages
to 1 for WriteAsync right now as I didn't feel like reworking that one to cope
with non single page writes just yet.
* Pulled out PageWriteTransfer methods for better readability.
* Some typo fixes.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@33507 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- Fixed vfs_get_vnode_from_fd() return type.
- Added vfs_open_vnode().
- Added a "bool traverseLeafLink" parameter to vfs_get_fs_node_from_path().
It was always resolving symlinks.
* device manager/devfs:
- devfs: get_node_for_path() no longer resolves leaf symlinks. That still
doesn't help with file disk devices, as creating partition wouldn't work
anyway.
- Pulled the module-related implementation part of BaseDevice into new class
AbstractModuleDevice and made all methods of BaseDevice virtual. Small
adjustments to devfs to be happy with the new BaseDevice interface.
- Added BaseDevice subclass FileDevice, which maps the interface to a file's
file descriptor. Still got a few TODOs, but should basically work.
- Use FileDevice for publishing file disk devices in devfs. Now those do
actually work, though there's some BFS trouble with one of the images I
tested.
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Remove the 4 cores limit at boot, and fix the allocator to handle 8 cores.
There are still performance problems, but this allows booting with 8 cores.
WARNING: since this changes x86 platform kernel args, you really don't want to update haiku_loader and kernel_x86 separately!
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aren't routed correctly over the 8259, it seems.
- Removed passing the hpet_regs around, since there's a static variable.
- Added lots of debug dprintfs.
- Fixed setting the timer interrupt to edge
- Timer is initialized once.
- Use the timer 0 instead of 2.
- Renamed register definitions to be more readable
- Use 64 bits registers and unions where applicable.
- Other things I don't remember
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@33345 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Also shortened some defines using "TN" instead of "TIMER". It's also
the same scheme used in the specs
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@33334 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
mapped pages and a non-read and non-write protection to block a certain address
range from being used by anything.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@33030 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* scheduler_enqueue_in_runqueue() now allows the scheduler to return a hint as to whether a reschedule is desirable or not. This is used in a few other places in order to relegate scheduling decisions entirely to the scheduler rather than the priority hacks previously used. There are probably other places in the kernel that could now make use of that information to more intelligently call reschedule() though.
* Switch over the default scheduler to scheduler_affine().
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32554 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Keep track of the currently running threads.
* Make use of that info to decide if a thread that becomes ready should preempt
the running thread.
* If we should preempt we send the target CPU a reschedule message.
* This preemption strategy makes keeping track of idle CPUs by means of a bitmap
superflous and it is therefore removed.
* Right now only other CPUs are preempted though, not the current one.
* Add missing initialization of the quantum tracking code.
* Do not extend the quantum of the idle thread based quantum tracking as we want
it to not run longer than necessary. Once the preemption works completely
adding a quantum timer for the idle thread will become unnecessary though.
* Fix thread stealing code, it did missed the last thread in the run queue.
* When stealing, try to steal the highest priority thread that is currently
waiting by taking priorities into account when finding the target run queue.
* Simplify stealing code a bit as well.
* Minor cleanups.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32503 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Revert back start of kernel space to the usual place, no need to differ from other archs here.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32401 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Start of framebuffer initialization for the Verdex board.
For now it points to the data section as framebuffer for testing and shows an RGB pattern.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32352 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* The vesa driver no longer uses VGA programming if the chip does not support
VGA compatibility.
* The VESA driver now tries to set the DAC to 8 bits per color gun.
* In VESA modes, the driver no longer tries to use VGA programming; introduced
the new vesa_set_indexed_colors() that is now used for palette programming.
This should fix wrong colors of 8 bit BWindowScreen users with VESA on real
hardware (emulators usually didn't mind either way).
* Note that the app_server needs to maintain a palette per 8 bit screen, as
right now, the colors are garbled after a workspace switch. Stefano, are you
looking into that already?
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32347 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- don't clobber the parameter regs in the entry point,
- fix entry point address for netbsd loader emulation,
- added a gUImage global to point to the uimage blob with the tgz,
- added tgz info to platform stage2 args,
- add simple uimage support, just dumps the header and gets the nth blob in the image, (seems we have a bug in the math code, some infos don't print),
- made devices.cpp use them to publish the MemoryDisk,
- add an haiku_loader_nbsd.ub target which puts both the loader and kernel_arm for now (need to replace with the tgz).
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32295 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- moved board/ folder around again, it probably belongs only to kernel stuff,
- added board_config.h templates for gumstix boards.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32197 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- added some multiboot support code:
- dump some of the passed info,
- parse command line (skip the 'kernel' name and pass the rest to stage2_args.arguments),
- added an add_stage2_driver_settings() function which takes stage2_args.arguments and translates it into safe mode driver settings, a bit dumb for now.
This allows using qemu -kernel haiku_loader -append 'debug_screen true' and get debug output without having to enter the menu (once multiboot info is used to determine the boot device too).
The idea is to allow passing driver settings and using them to pass extra stuff (like 'force_keymap fr' and other stuff for demo), and to help automate tests ('run_test /bin/sometest').
This should answer Axel's question :)
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32076 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
allow for more parallelism. Also introduce seperate locks for the bins and
for page allocation. This greatly reduces lock contention and reduces the
duration the locks are held due to them overall protecting less code. Now only
allocations of the same size hitting the same allocator or allocating larger
chunks of memory should block. Previously, basically any allocation and also
free would be mutually exclusive, making it scale pretty badely.
* Added memalign_nogrow(). As it uses heap_memalign() anyway, there's no real
reason not to allow for an alignment.
* Some cleanup.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32074 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
ROUNDUP to use '*' and '/' -- the compiler will optimize that for powers of
two anyway and this implementation works for other numbers as well.
* The thread::fault_handler use in C[++] code was broken with gcc 4. At least
when other functions were invoked. Trying to trick the compiler wasn't a
particularly good idea anyway, since the next compiler version could break
the trick again. So the general policy is to use the fault handlers only in
assembly code where we have full control. Changed that for x86 (save for the
vm86 mode, which has a similar mechanism), but not for the other
architectures.
* Introduced fault_handler, fault_handler_stack_pointer, and fault_jump_buffer
fields in the cpu_ent structure, which must be used instead of
thread::fault_handler in the kernel debugger. Consequently user_memcpy() must
not be used in the kernel debugger either. Introduced a debug_memcpy()
instead.
* Introduced debug_call_with_fault_handler() function which calls a function
in a setjmp() and fault handler context. The architecture specific backend
arch_debug_call_with_fault_handler() has only been implemented for x86 yet.
* Introduced debug_is_kernel_memory_accessible() for use in the kernel
debugger. It determines whether a range of memory can be accessed in the
way specified. The architecture specific back end
arch_vm_translation_map_is_kernel_page_accessible() has only been implemented
for x86 yet.
* Added arch_debug_unset_current_thread() (only implemented for x86) to unset
the current thread pointer in the kernel debugger. When entering the kernel
debugger we do some basic sanity checks of the currently set thread structure
and unset it, if they fail. This allows certain commands (most importantly
the stack trace command) to avoid accessing the thread structure.
* x86: When handling a double fault, we do now install a special handler for
page faults. This allows us to gracefully catch faulting commands, even if
e.g. the thread structure is toast.
We are now in much better shape to deal with double faults. Hopefully avoiding
the triple faults that some people have been experiencing on their hardware
and ideally even allowing to use the kernel debugger normally.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32073 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- stubbed out arch_cpu_init_percpu(),
- make atomic ops declarations extern "C",
- move calls to [i]sync inside the asm code that needs it.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32067 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* SMP:
- Added smp_send_broadcast_ici_interrupts_disabled(), which is basically
equivalent to smp_send_broadcast_ici(), but is only called with interrupts
disabled and gets the CPU index, so it doesn't have to use
smp_get_current_cpu() (which dereferences the current thread).
- Added cpu index parameter to smp_intercpu_int_handler().
* x86:
- arch_int.c -> arch_int.cpp
- Set up an IDT per CPU. We were using a single IDT for all CPUs, but that
can't work, since we need different tasks for the double fault interrupt
vector.
- Set the per CPU double fault task gates correctly.
- Renamed set_intr_gate() to set_interrupt_gate and set_system_gate() to
set_trap_gate() and documented them a bit.
- Renamed double_fault_exception() x86_double_fault_exception() and fixed
it not to use smp_get_current_cpu(). Instead we have the new
x86_double_fault_get_cpu() that deducts the CPU index from the used stack.
- Fixed the double_fault interrupt handler: It no longer calls int_bottom to
avoid accessing the current thread.
* debug.cpp:
- Introduced explicit debug_double_fault() to enter the kernel debugger from
a double fault handler.
- Avoid using smp_get_current_cpu().
- Don't use kprintf() before sDebuggerOnCPU is set. Otherwise
acquire_spinlock() is invoked by arch_debug_serial_puts().
Things look a bit better when the current thread pointer is broken -- we run
into kernel_debugger_loop() and successfully print the "Welcome to KDL"
message -- but we still dereference the thread pointer afterwards, so that we
don't get a usable kernel debugger yet.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32050 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Added x86_double_fault_get_cpu(), a save way to get the CPU index when in
the double fault handler. smp_get_current_cpu() requires at least a somewhat
intact thread structure, so we rather want to avoid it when handling a double
fault. There are a lot more of those dependencies in the KDL entry code.
Working on it...
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@32028 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
used to mark entries after recovering a tracing log from a previous session.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31991 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
call to fetch non-clear pages.
* B_PHYSICAL_BASE_ADDRESS does now imply B_CONTIGUOUS.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31932 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
each attribute access needed 3 syscalls, now only one as it should.
* Renamed the new Haiku call fs_open_attr() to fs_fopen_attr(), and added a new
function fs_open_attr() that takes a path (same semantics as the
fs_[f]open_attr_dir() functions already present in BeOS).
* Merged former _kern_open_attr(), and _kern_create_attr() into one syscall.
* Cleaned up vfs.h.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31881 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
Tracker's OpenHashTable.h which it should eventually replace. We've renamed the
class to BOpenHashTable and changed the interface slightly so that HashTableLink
became superfluous.
Adapted all the code that used it. Since the OpenHashTables no longer clash,
this should fix the GCC4 build.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31791 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
functions.
* Since we now use UserStringParameter, this fixes the missing null termination
of the parameter string, and thus bug #4045.
* Removed UserMemoryParameter, as it's no longer in use.
* Adjusted syscalls accordingly.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31779 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
there are prefixed with the respective architecture name. Useful for remote
debugging a different architecture.
* <x86/arch_debugger.h>: Introduced a structure for the FPU state, so that it
isn't left to the debugger.
* Removed the _kern_get_thread_cpu_state() syscall. Was originally intended for
bdb compatiblity, but isn't really needed.
* Kernel x86 arch_get_debug_cpu_state(): The use of fnsave was broken, since
it reinits the FPU after saving the state. This resulted in weird results
when debugging functions using the FPU. We now use fxsave, if available.
Otherwise fnsave + frstor should be used -- not fully implemented yet.
Same for arch_set_debug_cpu_state().
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31682 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
parameter from start_system_profiler().
* Added stack depth, and interval parameters to it, though.
* Profiling the boot process is now possible.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31671 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
patch from about a year ago (I couldn't use any code of his yet, though,
but there are a few things left). The emergency keys are triggered by
pressing Alt-SysReq + key.
* By default, only Alt-SysReq+'d' is used as a means to deliberately enter
the kernel debugger. F12 belongs to userland again, now :-)
* Debugger add-ons now have another optional method to implement their own
emergency keys - 'd' for the debugger cannot be overridden, though.
* The mechanism can be turned off via a new kernel setting, so it's not that
easy anymore to "crash" Haiku if you don't want to.
* Right now, the PS/2 driver, and the pre-input_server in-kernel debugger
keyboard mini-driver support this, USB not yet.
* Minor cleanup.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31660 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Added missing name parameter to the partitioning system module child creation
and child creation validation hooks. Pass the name to them.
* Added BPartitionParameterEditor interface, which is/will be used for editing
disk system specific parameters.
* Implemented partition parameter editors for BFS initialization and Intel
partition map child creation.
* Fixed the incorrect supported child partition type iteration in the Intel
partition map add-on. It does now return actual types.
* Handle the "active" flag parameter in the Intel partitioning system module.
* DriveSetup:
- Replaced the "Create" submenu by a simple menu item. The type can now by
chosen in the dialog.
- Make use of initialization and child creation parameter editors. Some
non-generic code has been moved to the respective editor implementations
(BFS, intel partitioning system).
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31658 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* devfs:
- devfs_[un]publish_partition(): They no longer get the partition path as
parameter, but rather the device path and the partition name.
- Added devfs_rename_partition(), which renames an already published
partition node.
* KPartition/KDiskDevice:
- Replaced the fPublished flag by fPublishedName, the name under which the
partition is published. This simplifies UnpublishDevice() and makes it
practically infallible.
- Added GetFileName(), which only returns the partition's file name.
Simplified GetPath() by using it.
- When a partition is added/removed the subsequent sibling partitions get a
new index. Now we also rename their published device nodes (and those of
their descendents). When something goes wrong we unpublish the concerned
partition's device to be on the safe side. Would be a shame to accidentally
format the wrong partition, eh? :-)
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31520 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
KPartition::CreateChild(). CreateChild() calls AddChild(), which publishes
the new partition, though at that point offset and size were not set, so that
the published devices would not be usable.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31463 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
after all CPUs have been queried for their features. On SMP machines
sysenter/sysexit weren't used before due to the non-boot CPUs appearing not
to have the feature.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31226 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
is a syscall iframe.
* User debugger support: Don't to call BreakpointManager::PrepareToContinue(),
if the thread returns from a syscall. We don't want to skip breakpoints in
that case.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31223 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* The bulk of the work -- i.e. juggling the software and hardware breakpoints,
watchpoints, and memory reads/writes -- is done in the new class
BreakpointManager.
* For the architectures a few capability macros have to be defined, one
pointing to the software breakpoint instruction opcode. Done for x86.
* Some more simplifications in the user debugger code, made possible by the
recently introduced debugger_changed_condition attribute.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31214 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
installed team debugger and adjusted the code accordingly. It's not needed yet,
but I intend to add support for software breakpoints and those require a bit of
uninitialization that needs to be synchronized with debugger changes and can't
be done with interrupts disabled.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31194 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Removed unused inner struct State.
* Added work-around for the extremely annoying "fState my be used
uninitialized" warning gcc 4 produces. I'm not aware of any solution that
doesn't generate unnecessary code. :-/
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31193 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
and added a _kern_unreserve_address_range() as well.
* The runtime loader now reserves the space needed for all its areas first
to make sure there is enough space left for all areas of a single image.
* This also fixes the final part of bug #4008.
* Minor cleanup.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31115 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
the first part of making the runtime loader behave itself; it should already
make Clockwerk run okay with any number of translators (even if not all of
them will work yet).
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31113 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Generalized address checks. The debugger can now also read the commpage.
* Added new syscall _kern_get_thread_cpu_state() to get the CPU state of a
not running thread. Introduced arch_get_thread_debug_cpu_state() for that
purpose, which is only implemented for x86 ATM (uses the new
i386_get_thread_user_iframe()).
* Don't allow a debugger to change a thread's "esp" anymore. That's the esp
register in the kernel. "user_esp" can still be changed.
* Generally set RF (resume flag) in eflags in interrupt handlers, not only
after a instruction breakpoint debug exception. This should prevent
breakpoints from being triggered more than once (e.g. when the breakpoint is
on an instruction that can cause a page fault). I still saw those with bdb
in VMware, but that might be a VMware bug.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@31045 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
boot device is actually read-only (even if it's using the write overlay).
* Do not create a swap file on a read-only device - this would really be a
stupid use of the write overlay (just saw this happening on an older
machine).
* Made swap_file_{add|delete}() take a const char* path - there was no reason
this was writable, and this also avoids casting away the const when adding
the default swap file.
* Minor cleanup.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30975 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
have a simple dedicated heap for the kernel debugger with stacked allocation
pools (deleting a pool frees all memory allocated in it). The heap should
eventually be used for all commands that need temporary storage too large for
the stack instead of each using its own static buffer.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30949 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- While walking down the cache chain, we keep all upper caches locked.
- When we have to unlock -- when waiting for a busy page or reading a page in
-- we unlock completely, including the address space, and restart
vm_soft_fault().
- Folded fault_get_page() and fault_find_page() into one.
This simplifies and improves things considerably:
- We no longer need dummy pages.
- We no longer need vm_area::no_cache_change.
- #2710 is fixed, since we no longer hold the address space lock while
waiting.
* vm_soft_fault(): When we have found our page, we first check whether a page
is already mapped at the address. If it is already our page, we just change
its protection. If not, we unmap it first. Fixes race conditions when multiple
threads fault at the same address at the same time.
* fault_get_page(): When copying a read-only page from a lower cache, no longer
mark it active, since at least for the fault area it is shadowed from then on.
* vm_set_area_protection(): Fixed potential overflow for in the
vm_translation_map::protect() call.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30911 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
gcc could apparently assume that the register assigned to the one in the
clobber list would keep its value (as can be observed when disassembling
add_debugger_command_etc()).
Using a dummy output register works around the problem and also avoids the
unnecessary initialization of the register.
Comments explaining the mystery welcome.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30909 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
allowing optional prepending of a string to the symbol names.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30750 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
with vm_cache_acquire_locked_page_cache().
* Added new function vm_page_num_unused_pages() which returns the pages that are
actually completely free and unused.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30514 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Implemented a way to do asynchronous pre-fetching when mapping files.
* There are slight code duplications in some places that could benefit
from cleaning up, but nothing too bad.
* Implementing smarter ways to trigger prefetching and more analysis of
the situations in the kernel would be nice. Currently up to 10 MB
of every mapped file are pre-fetched without further analysis.
* The speed improvement is nice for certain operations. On our test
system (real hardware), Firefox took 9 seconds from being launched
to display a window. Now it takes 5 seconds. Both measurements
right after booting. The same system took 35 seconds from launching
Haiku in the GRUB menu to displaying the Tracker desktop background
image. Now it takes 27 seconds.
* We didn't have the chance to check out the effects of this on the
CD boot, but potentially, they could speed it up a lot.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30465 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- Moved scheduler listening interface to <listeners.h> and added more
convenient to use templatized notification functions.
- Added a listener mechanism for the wait objects (semaphores, condition
variables, mutex, rw_lock).
* system profiler:
- Hopefully fixed locking issues related to notifying the profiler thread
for good. We still had an inconsistent locking order, since the scheduler
notification callbacks are invoked with the thread lock held and have to
acquire the object lock then, while the other callbacks acquired the object
lock first and as a side effect of ConditionVariable::NotifyOne() acquired
the thread lock. Now we make sure the object lock is the innermost lock.
- Track the number of dropped events due to a full buffer.
_user_system_profiler_next_buffer() returns this count now.
- When scheduling profiling events are requested also listen to wait objects
and generate the respective profiling events. We send those events lazily
and cache the infos to avoid resending an event for the same wait object.
- When starting profiling we do now generate "thread scheduled" events for
the already running threads.
- _user_system_profiler_start(): Check whether the parameters pointer is a
userland address at all.
- The system_profiler_team_added event does now also contain the team's name.
* Added a sem_get_name_unsafe() returning a semaphore's name. It is "unsafe",
since the caller has to ensure that the semaphore exists and continues to
exist as long as the returned name is used.
* Adjusted the "profile" and "scheduling_recorder" according to the system
profiling changes. The latter prints the number of dropped events, now.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30345 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
will return consistent values. This helps with debug measurements for the time
being. Obviously we'll have to think of something different when we support
speed-stepping on models with frequency-dependent TSCs.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30287 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
theoretically write the given page.
* page writer: Fixed the incorrect check whether a temporary page can be
written by using the new CanWritePage().
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30281 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
passed in a structure now, so it is easier to extend it and ignore unused
parameters.
* One can now select which system profiling events one is interested in.
* Added scheduling events to the system profiling interface. Those are pretty
much the ones recorded when scheduler tracing is enabled. Still missing are
the "wait object" events that allow to interpret what a thread is waiting
for.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30243 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
methods that used an "event mask" field. There was no need to introduce
a "flags" field for the same purpose.
* Renamed protected DefaultNotificationService methods (removed "_" prefix).
* Adjusted the code providing a notification service accordingly.
* Changed the event message several notification services generated by renaming
the "opcode" field to "event".
* Implemented the TEAM_ADDED event and also added a TEAM_EXEC event.
* Added notifications for threads and images.
* Added visitor-like iteration functions for teams, threads, and images.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@30126 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Renamed DoublyLinkedList::Size() to Count(), since it actually counts the
items (ie. O(n)).
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29979 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* optimized unmapping of a single page that was rather inefficient
for large areas
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29978 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
(mostly at least). Also disables -Werror for the binutils, but those should
be fixed eventually.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29804 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
device additions/removals can be monitored.
* Minor cleanup.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29582 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
implementations that can be used by subsystems that want to have a pretty
standard service. Only the latter is really complete, though.
* The notification manager is now available earlier in the boot process.
* Added notifications to teams/ports (only add/remove).
* The network notification implementation is now using the
DefaultUserNotificationService.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29543 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
can be checked.
* Make the usb_keyboard module check the presence of the needed debugger
commands to avoid the error messages in case of them being unavailable.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29472 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* The I/O context related vfs_*() functions have io_context* instead of void*
parameters/return values, now.
* vfs_new_io_context(): Lock the parent I/O context before getting its table
size. Otherwise the table size could change until we do.
* vfs_resize_fd_table(): Fixed use of MutexLocker. We created only a temporary
object, not one with function scope.
* Renamed load_image_etc() to load_image_internal() and added a parameter for
specifying the parent team of the one to create.
* Introduced a kernel private load_image_etc() with a few more arguments than
load_image().
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29375 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
stored now.
* Extended the debugger message for B_DEBUGGER_MESSAGE_HANDED_OVER by the
causing thread.
* Also send B_DEBUGGER_MESSAGE_HANDED_OVER to the debugger to which the team
was handed over. The message will be the very first one the debugger gets
from the team in question.
* Some harmless refactoring (added thread_hit_serious_debug_event()).
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29302 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Added debugger commands to resolve usb_ids to pipes.
* Adjusted the physical memory allocator to be usable in a slimmed down mode
when running inside the kernel debugger.
* Implemented USB keyboard support for KDL through a kernel debugger add-on.
* Added kgetc() and made use of it where previously individual methods were used
to ensure that reading characters always goes through the kernel debugger
add-ons and the other methods.
This has some preconditions to meet though:
1) The keyboard must be in the boot protocol (currently the case but needs to
be revisited once we have a full usb_hid).
2) The keyboard must be attached to a UHCI root port (i.e. not use EHCI or OHCI,
also not through hubs unless those are USB 1.1).
3) the usb_hid driver has to be opened for this to work. This means that for the
time between initializing USB and when usb_hid is opened by the input_server
there is no keyboard support.
Also note that this has no way of detecting hot-plug, meaning that you can't
re-attach your USB keyboard from the hub to the root port once in KDL.
On the bright side of things, since this is a non-destructive mechanism it is
possible to enter and leave KDL without loosing the USB state.
Tested OK in QEMU, not tested on real hardware yet, will see in a few minutes.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29291 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
It causes the interrupt handler to be inserted at the very end of the list
instead of at the top. It is intended to be used as a workaround when a
interrupt handler cannot know if it actually handled the interrupt. This
should never be used by native drivers. Also if we know that the result is
not valid because of this flag we won't disable the vector in case we count
many unhandled interrupts as those numbers are then unreliable.
* Moved B_NO_LOCK_VECTOR to be a private flag as well.
* Made the interrupt handler list a simple manually maintaned singly linked list
instead of the doubly linked one used with insque and remque as it greatly
simplifies things for such an easy use case and is more compact.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29241 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Replaced the use of offsetof() for structs that aren't PODs. Add a
offset_of_member() macro to util/khash.h because that's what it's used for
in our cases.
* Change the signature of add_debugger_command()/remove_debugger_command() on
GCC > 2 to avoid the depricated conversion from string constants to char *.
* Adding some "suggested" parenthesis. I know that not everyone likes that, but
it pointed out at least one bug that is fixed here as well.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@29113 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
as public defines. They are now called THREAD_{MIN|MAX}_SET_PRIORITY to
better reflect what they are for. Minimum priority is now 1, ie. you no
longer can set another thread to the idle priority. This fixes part of
ticket #2959.
* set_thread_priority() will no longer allow to change the priority of the
idle thread to something else. This fixes the rest of ticket #2959.
* Automatic whitespace cleanup in OS.h.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@28521 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Added new(mynothrow) operators which avoid clashes when also linking
against libgcc.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@28474 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
- code is disabled yet as the bootloader doesn't have add_boot_item.. will need to pass via kernel args
- add a GetFileMap() method to the vfs, and implement it in FAT code.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@28445 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
This is not necessary, since userland teams' page directories also
contain the kernel mappings, and avoids unnecessary TLB flushes. To make
that possible the vm_translation_map_arch_info objects are reference
counted now.
This optimization reduces the kernel time of the Haiku build on my
machine with SMP disabled a few percent, but interestingly the total
time decreases only marginally. Haven't tested with SMP yet, but for
full impact CPU affinity would be needed.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@28287 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Added deferred_delete() that takes a DeferredDeletable and deletes it
asynchronously.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@28285 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
scheduler_set_thread_priority(). Setting the thread priority was the
only situation in which it was used.
* Renamed scheduler.cpp to scheduler_simple.cpp.
* The scheduler functions are no longer called directly. Instead there's
an operation vector now, which is initialized at kernel init time.
This allows for picking the most suitable scheduler for the machine
(e.g. a non-SMP scheduler on a non-SMP machine).
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@28262 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
* Turned the checks for all those macros to "#if"s instead of "#ifdef"s.
* Introduced macro KDEBUG_LEVEL which serves as a master setting.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@28248 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96