This is not my code but from ticket #9265
* Made a picture of how it looks, old left andnew right. https://imagebin.ca/v/5wIe6TIMzw4C
* Think we have a bug somewhere and don't store the name of the Bluetooth device (shown i the image).
* I have made som small changes but other than that it's the same code as in the ticket
* Ran the src/tools/checkstyle/checkstyle.py to get som style stuff, probably missed some anyway.
Change-Id: Ifeb75c8ad890f541e100cdcf78b394675a48ada9
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3825
Reviewed-by: Fredrik Modéen <fredrik@modeen.se>
Various projects, both commercial and OSS, began to use inclusive
terminology. There is no reason to not do it.
In Haiku, bootloader uses Blacklist, which is recommended to replace
with Denylist or Blocklist. I think Blocklist is appropriate here,
since it's a list used to block offending driver at boot.
Some strings remain unchanged for compatibility with previous naming,
but this change prepares for later removal of these (once everyone has
updated their kernel and bootloader).
Change-Id: Id9105ff5e9fcb866000355089b5ef97bf63ee854
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3145
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
a protection_max attribute is added in VMArea.
a read-only opened file already can't be mapped shared read-write at the moment,
but can later be changed to read-write with mprotect() or set_area_protection().
When creating the VMArea, the actual maximum protection is stored in the area,
so that it can be checked when needed.
this fixes a VM TODO.
Change-Id: I33b144c192034eeb059f1dede5dbef5af947280d
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3804
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
The standardized version of readv() and writev() take an int as the third
parameter. Arguably a size_t makes more sense, but the standardization bodies
decided otherwise.
The non-standard functions of readv_pos() and writev_pos() have been updated
for consistency. The corresponding _kern_readv() and _kern_writev() internal
functions continue to take the size_t parameter.
The ABI will not change, even though on 64 bit machines the size of the count
parameter will change from 8 to 4 bytes.
The actual use will be slightly different. Like with the size_t argument type,
it will not be possible to give a count lower than 0. If the value is less than
0, then the B_BAD_VALUE/EINVAL error will be set.
Change-Id: I949c8ed67dbc0b4e209768cbdee554c929fc242e
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3770
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
Do the final installation operations for all the packages in the
/system/packages directory when the OS is booted for the first time.
This will run their post-install scripts, create users, groups and generate
settings files (marked with a package version attribute). Previously we just
ran all the shell scripts found in the /system/boot/post-install directory
(don't do that as much now).
Fixes bug #14382
This patch has simpler code flow in CommitTransactionHandler::_ApplyChanges
Tested on 32 and 64 bit systems. Once it's official, need to remove the
open_ssh redundant post-install script that creates users etc. from HaikuPorts.
Now we can notice bugs like package version attributes on settings files aren't
fully working. :-)
Didn't remove special case for add_catalog_entry_attributes.sh since it
still does stuff that the build system doesn't do. Might be able to add
that script as part of the Haiku.hpkg. See change 3751 for removing it,
https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3751
Change-Id: I3807b78042fdb70e5a79eca2e2a45816ece0236f
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2342
Reviewed-by: Alexander G. M. Smith <agmsmith@ncf.ca>
Reviewed-by: Niels Sascha Reedijk <niels.reedijk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Previously, BUrlRequest returns data received via a callback that can't
return any value. This approach have several issues:
- It's not possible to signify failures to the request.
- Users have to implement custom listeners just to handle the common
case of outputting to a buffer/file/etc.
- The received data has to be serialized into BMessage when
BUrlProtocolDispatchingListener is employed. This can cause a
noticible slowdown in real-world scenarios as evident by #10748.
With this change, BUrlRequest will output directly into a BDataIO, which
exposes a richer API for request handlers to work with (for example a
BitTorrent client can request a BPositionIO for non-linear data
delivery), as well as simplifying common cases for users.
The adaptation only requires one additional API:
BHttpRequest::SetStopOnError(). This API simply instructs the HTTP
request handler to cancel the request if an HTTP error is occurred.
Change-Id: I4160884d77bff0e7678e0a623e2587987704443a
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3084
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
The switch to make BUrlResult serializable was debuted in
f9e1854f19 with the rationale is that
BHttpRequest auto-redirection might cause the headers to become
obsolete by the time a client process the BMessage received from
BUrlProtocolDispatchingListener.
With the change to BHttpRequest to not notify listeners when
auto-redirection is enabled, this is no longer the case and the
serialization code can go away now. This simplifies BUrlResult and its
subclasses, and gain us some performance for clients using
BUrlProtocolDispatchingListener as the result object no longer has to be
serialized.
This also change the ABI of BUrlProtocolListener::HeadersReceived to no
longer passing a BUrlResult.
Additionally, BUrlResult and BHttpResult now express the size of the content
as an off_t, thus allowing results larger than 4 GB.
Change-Id: I9dd29a8b26fdd9aa8e5bbad8d1728084f136312d
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3082
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Further removal of the use of custom list class;
this time with the package lists.
Relates To #15534
Change-Id: I1f01ed9d5ddbd7754097ce0adbf505d6ba17fd2f
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3732
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
This change only applies in libnetservices.a. The implementation in
libbnetapi.so will use the original definitions.
Change-Id: I0aaa5a40af5fbcafaf233c32206cb4af862f8141
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2465
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
The BGeolocation class uses the network interface in libnetservices.a, so it
is moved here for now.
This will break any out of tree projects that depend on it, but it is a source
incompatible change only.
Change-Id: I6f5b1332eb87ad37dd33fbe09fdb11b16f7f26e4
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3670
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
In order to prevent classes between libnetapi.so with the legacy API and
applications using the libnetservices.a library, the latter will have the
classes in a distinct namespace.
In the implementation, both libbnetapi.so and libnetservices.a will use the
same header and source files. If LIBNETAPI_DEPRECATED is defined during build,
the headers and source will have binary compatible behavior. Otherwise, the
classes and other objects will be put in the HaikuExt namespace.
In order to build the libbnetapi.so and libnetservices.a with the proper
build configuration, there is a stub `src/kits/net/libnetapi_deprecated` folder
that applies the special configuration to the source files.
Currently HaikuDepot, Webpositive, libshared.a and the http_streamer add on
use the compatible API in libbnetapi.so.
Change-Id: Ic73e9f271ef75749adda46f6f72e9a0b2851b461
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3667
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
These classes have been moved to the public API too soon, and they need some
more time to mature before they can be declared stable.
Change-Id: I9c52a8e6cc103922abde7a6b911fe0c3e6bf5700
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3665
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Store the bus cookie in the mmc_disk driver and pass it to the bus
manager when executing commands. This avoids calling into the device
manager at each read and write operation. The code to get the cookie
from mmc_disk isn't so nice since it needs to access the grandparent
device (the mmc bus root), it would be simpler if this cookie would be
available directly from mmc bus devices.
We can get card removal and card insertion interrupt at the same time
due to insufficient hardware debouncing (the SDHCI spec says we
shouldn't, but it happens on Ricoh controllers. Can't blame them, they
don't advertise themselves as compliant with the spec). So, check the
card status from the interrupt handler and ignore the incorrect
interrupts.
Fix unreliable card initialization: power must be turned on before
starting up the SD clock. Remove a now unneeded delay that was added in
an attempt to avoid initial instability.
Change-Id: Ibd8d051da1a1d859f3924ee535f4a05d9b6398d4
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3639
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
It works, but performance is still unexpectedly low (getting about
50kB/s write speed) with almost no CPU load.
Change-Id: I7da3ee70c8b379c4e6c2250d67f880c78635874f
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3630
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
* otherwise the signal to be handled might be blocked. fixes#15193
* also remove automatic syscall restart on _kern_select, to match Linux and
BSDs behavior: this fixes parallel build with newer gnu make, which happens
to use pselect.
* also remove automatic syscall restart on _kern_poll.
from https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal.7.html
"The following interfaces are never restarted after being
interrupted by a signal handler, regardless of the use of
SA_RESTART; they always fail with the error EINTR when
interrupted by a signal handler: ...
select(2), and pselect(2)."
from https://notes.shichao.io/unp/ch6/
"Berkeley-derived kernels never automatically restart select."
Change-Id: I3e9488f60c966b38d427f992f06e6e2217d4adc5
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3636
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Axel Dörfler <axeld@pinc-software.de>
* otherwise the signal to be handled might be blocked. fixes#15193
* also remove automatic syscall restart on _kern_select, to match Linux and
BSDs behavior: this fixes parallel build with newer gnu make, which happens
to use pselect.
* also remove automatic syscall restart on _kern_poll.
from https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/signal.7.html
"The following interfaces are never restarted after being
interrupted by a signal handler, regardless of the use of
SA_RESTART; they always fail with the error EINTR when
interrupted by a signal handler: ...
select(2), and pselect(2)."
from https://notes.shichao.io/unp/ch6/
"Berkeley-derived kernels never automatically restart select."
Change-Id: I7f86d221eae1ad93d8a308a75581d2c30a369c9e
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3627
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
- Switch to 25MHz clock
- Switch to 4bit transfers mode (the default is 1bit)
Reading and writing SD cards do not seem to work anymore with these
changes. I get invalid data on read, and on write, an interrupt is never
called in some cases.
On sparc, the minimal page size we can use is 8K. Since B_PAGE_SIZE and
PAGESIZE defines were hardcoded to 4K, this resulted in a lot of
confusion in all code trying to manipulate pages.
- Remove cpu.h from headers/private/kernel/arch/*. It dates back from
NewOS and was not used anymore since our kernel uses B_PAGE_SIZE
(PAGE_SIZE was the only thing defined in this header).
- Add posix/arch/*/limits.h with the arch specific page size and include
it from the main limits.h.
- Adjust bios_ia32/debug.cpp which was the only place using the
PAGE_SIZE constant from the deleted headers.
- Change OS.h to define B_PAGE_SIZE to be the same as POSIX PAGESIZE.
- Define PAGESIZE in the build header if the host OS doesn't.
Change-Id: I8c3732cf952ea3c2f088aa16d216678fbf198b96
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3558
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
The main differences:
- The initialization sequence requires an additional command (this was
already done)
- The layout of the CSD register and the way to compute the device
geometry from it changes
- The read and write commands parameter is a sector number instead of a
byte position
Change-Id: Ie729e333c9748f36b37acd70c970adfd425cf0b6
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3512
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
The SDHCI spec also offers an "advanced DMA" mode where we can use
scatter-gather lists. It would allow to remove several of the DMA
restrictions, but hardware support for it is optional, so we need this
version anyway.
The geometry is retrieved on demand in the first read or write or in a
call to the get geometry or get device size ioctl. It is not possible to
retrieve it from the device initialization because that is called as
part of the mmc_bus scanning, which needs a specific sequence of
commands and keeps the bus locked to prevent drivers to insert their own
commands in the middle of that sequence.
TODO:
- Move the DMA restrictions definition to sdhci_pci and forward it up to
mmc_disk (which is the one creating the IOScheduler)
- Decide if we want to keep non-DMA support (probably should, but it
makes things more complex, because it uses virtual addresses)
Change-Id: Ib1dd14eacf62052d747bfb3ef7820bc5a34d3030
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3471
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
* The "default" of 3MiB wasn't enough for modern larger media
formats, resulting in inability to play 4k video no matter
how much horse power you threw at Haiku. (4k is ~8MiB)
* This dynamically calculates the ChunkCache based on the
video framesize * 2.
* 4k video now plays smoothly on my Ryzen 1800x.
Change-Id: I65bf6bd6fa60ac3196ea70eeeb5e655d43c10bcd
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3598
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Mostly the same as PowerPC, using OpenFirmware.
Change-Id: I197cc181e92da92c272ee9cfa20c8ad2d2c63d41
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3579
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
The manually written code was all wrong (missing branch delay slots,
wrong type of return instruction used, probably more bugs). Use the same
approach as x86 to have inline functions instead, which is much better
for performance and simpler to write.
Change-Id: Iac0fc814c15311658f983da58ac7f9d3edd75b81
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3595
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
The definition in SupportDefs.h using gcc builtins is sufficient. No
need for a custom one. The same approach is used on x86 with gcc8
already, but other platforms had not been adjusted to use it.
Change-Id: I3973ff723a31f90cc8d19ac098eb1e85d471d610
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3594
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
The sparc ABI reserves the g7 register for this.
Change-Id: I93b81ecef72cde859972ef7b7f6b9991d35f9f29
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3583
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
It was bumped for bios and efi from previously very low values, but
other architectures did not follow.
Change-Id: I6ce92e2cdb0261d4d0637753e77d555d407073fc
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3575
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
* Introduce fat_shell for build system fat manipulation
* Will theoretically let us do away with mtools when we
have another internal tool for partition manipulation
Change-Id: I661be556e79009842f157a9402c8f85da85d6336
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3556
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
la57 kernel support is required. we simply add a 5th level and enable the cr4
feature. the safemode option "256tb_memory_limit" is named after the 4gb one,
but the current support is limited to 512GB as before (this can be later extended).
Change-Id: I922774473c4a6112a0e4ff74162285ad58aa53af
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3552
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Axel Dörfler <axeld@pinc-software.de>
* Makes our UEFI bootloader somewhat FDT/DTB aware on all
architectures.
* Will report when an FDT is found, and provide it to kernels
that want it.
Change-Id: I90324fc0579a9c835e60568fa9b654c2df0aba27
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3543
Reviewed-by: Fredrik Holmqvist <fredrik.holmqvist@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
It allow to use arbitrary handle type, null value and destructor function.
Change-Id: I87c444cb7ef1b08d1dbed7fe4171700171d651d2
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2977
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Axel Dörfler <axeld@pinc-software.de>
First implementation of reading sectors from an SD card.
This is not the best performance for many reasons:
- No DMA
- Reads only one sector at a time
- Cannot read more than 512 bytes per syscall
Also there are major limitations:
- Cannot read less than 512 bytes. The hardware of course works in full
sectors. The mmc_disk driver should go through the io scheduler to
make sure requests have a reasonable size and offset, and nothing
tries to read just a few bytes in the middle of a sector.
- SD cards only (no SDHC, no MMC)
Architecture problems:
I think too much of the implementation is done in sdhci_pci and should
be moved to the upper layers. However it is difficult to say without
having implemented DMA (which indeed will be at the low level of the
sdhci controller). It doesn't help that the order of operations is a
bit different depending on wether there is DMA or not. In DMA mode you
first prepare the buffer, then run the command. In non-DMA mode you
first send the command, then read the data into the buffer. We need an
API at the mmc_bus level that doesn't care about that low-level detail.
There are other things that the MMC bus should be doing however, such
as switching to different clock speeds depending on which card is
activated and how fast it can go.
At least the following should be done:
- The read method for mmc_bus and sdhci_pci should use a scatter-gather
structure as a parameter instead of a single buffer
- See if can be integrated into ExecuteCommand at sdhci level (it's
essentially a command with an additional data phase)
Change-Id: I688b6c694561074535c9c0c2545f06dc04b06e7d
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3466
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
No read and write support for now. But we implement getting SD card
capacity. SDHC is not supported yet (it uses a different layout for the
CSD register which will be rejected by this version of the code)
Change-Id: Ife844a62f3846c0a780259e9a3a08195e2fd965e
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1068
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
C++ don't allow zero size class fields. If field with empty class field
is used, it's size will be 1 byte.
Create DeleteFunc instance as local variable at each use instead.
Fixes#16638.
Change-Id: Ifb76c45ea02e9fed014751542ee5f16f41e11d15
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3458
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
The same as CObjectDeleter.
Change-Id: I85c4cb3635f01f13e529ca087324cc2fcb42cfc0
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3456
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
It allows to make typedef of pointer types and declaring pointers in headers.
Store of destructor function pointer in CObjectDeleter is no longer needed.
Change-Id: Ic629fd10b28b09f4190edf8ba6b911ca3108ab0e
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3455
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Only keep a fixed number of icons in memory at once.
Completes To #15370
Change-Id: I23e3a4fa7559894034f45afb3b536910ea037078
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3367
Reviewed-by: Rene Gollent <rene@gollent.com>
the preallocate syscall will call the preallocate filesystem hook, if available.
fix#6285
Change-Id: Ifff4595548610c8e009d4e5ffb64c37e0884e62d
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3382
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
Currently used by fixup_next_boot_floppy.
Change-Id: I47c10657b5280f00e470a3171ad11744859ce76c
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3310
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
For now it just forwards the command to the SDHCI controller.
The bus will gain more features and functions as work advances (tracking
which card is active, arbitration of DMA transfers, etc).
Change-Id: I094eb84f27e7789387a3f8fb65fba1e5fcfa3e8a
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3094
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Update BTab::DrawTab() to pass the current index, the index of the
selected tab, and the index of the first and last tabs into
BControlLook::DrawActiveTab() and BControlLook::DrawInactiveTab().
This allows you to draw tabs differently in your BTab or BControlLook
subclass in many different circumstances.
Modify BControlLook API to add indexes to DrawActiveTab() and
DrawInactiveTab() like so:
void DrawActiveTab(..., int32 index = 0, int32 selected = -1,
int32 first = 0, int32 last = 0);
void DrawInactiveTab(..., int32 index = 0, int32 selected = -1,
int32 first = 0, int32 last = 0);
These extra indexes are not used by HaikuControlLook which relies only
on if the tab is active or inactive to draw.
Add IndexOf(BTab* tab) method to BTabView and document it to get the
index of the current tab in BTab::DrawTab(). Also add a warning in the
BTabView::DrawTab() method not to use the position and full parameters
anymore, use BTabView::IndexOf(), BTabView::Selection(), and
BTabView::TabCount() to get the info you need.
Using a dynamic_cast to a BTabView in BeControlLook to determine if the
view is derived from a BTabView didn't work in the case of WebPositive.
Furthermore, WebPositive does custom tab drawing which needed to be
updated for alternative control look. These index parameters passed from
BTab to BeControlLook allow us to draw the tab like BeOS without relying
on a dynamic_cast to BTabView to get the info.
Reproduce the functionality described above for BTab in WebPositive's
custom tabs. Eliminate no longer needed code in favor of using indexes.
Update WebPositive custom tabs to use BControlLook::DrawTabFrame()
instead of BControlLook::DrawInactiveTab() matching the update made in
BTabView.
In BeControlLook::DrawTabFrame() fill rect with base color, WebPositive
doesn't draw any tab background, so it expects this work to be done for
it.
Eliminate hasFrames variable from WebPositive.
Rename TabSelected(index) to UpdateSelection(index) in WebPositive to
better reflect its purpose.
Adjusted HaikuControlLook::DrawInactiveTab() to draw the tab borders more
selectively. Only draw border if left border is set for top and bottom tabs
or top border is set for left and right tabs. Undo no longer needed frame
manipulation border drawing workaround in HaikuControlLook::DrawTabFrame().
Draw scroll bar triangle without using DrawArrowShape().
Unlike in HaikuControlLook, DrawArrowShape() is used to draw arrows in
BOutlineListView and menus distinctly from how it draws arrows in scroll
bars. Draw our distinct arrows in DrawSrollBarButtons() instead.
This fixes overflow of time edit up-down arrows in Clock prefs and the
collapse-expand arrow in Deskbar not being vertically centered.
In DrawBorders() only inset if we actually draw the border.
Fix alignment issues with DrawSliderThumb dots for example in
MediaPlayer volume knobs.
Draw using line arrays calling AddLine instead of StrokeLine in
several places.
DrawMenuBar() extends to draw final pixel which eliminates an extra
lines at the end of menu bars.
Truncate button labels better fixing a few issues for example keymap
keyboard layout button labels. Button insets has been updated a bit
to fix drawing issues with buttons missing a border.
Using a dynamic_cast to a BButton to determine if a view is a button
in BeControlLook didn't work in the case of the keymap label. Look for
B_FLAT, B_HOVER, or B_DEFAULT_BUTTON flag in BeControlLook::DrawLabel()
to draw the label inverted on click. Pass the B_FLAT flag from Keymap
keys when drawing using BControlLook so that the label is inverted.
Change-Id: I07631f4b006bdb9aeca2adc9cbdf2da54dae8e92
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2866
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
when the cpufreq module is loaded, we let the scheduler update its policy.
Improve assert report
CoreEntry::GetLoad() could return more than kMaxLoad.
Change-Id: I127f9b3e8062b5996872aae30b4021b9904fa179
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3216
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
implement on x86 with APERFMPERF.
Change-Id: Ia484854c76dee76c5447983de15800a25d791d39
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3213
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
to call a function on the target cpu. Early mechanism not available.
Change-Id: I9d049e618c319c59729d1ab53fb313b748f82315
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3212
Reviewed-by: Axel Dörfler <axeld@pinc-software.de>
This allows you to pass node_ref's around like you can entry_ref's.
Added node_ref_flatten(), node_ref_unflatten() and node_ref_swap() to
MessageUtils. These are close cousins to entry_ref_flatten(),
entry_ref_unflatten(), and entry_ref_swap() but for node_ref's.
Added B_NODE_REF_TYPE to TypeConstants.h in the Support Kit.
Added B_NODE_REF_TYPE to Debugger and ByteOrder in Support Kit,
B_NODE_REF_TYPE is treated the same as a B_REF_TYPE (entry_ref).
Add documentation for new NodeRef methods and B_NODE_REF_TYPE.
Change-Id: I32c6ed276bf1a7894a835b9fc9de5a882c35883c
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3182
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
When a thread is created, it is expected that some other thread (usually the
creating thread) will want to make sure it completes. This is done using the
pthread_join() or wait_for_thread() calls.
It is possible that threads end before another thread waits for its completion.
That's why there is a dead thread list for each team, which holds thread ids
and their exit status so that a call to pthread_join() or wait_for_thread() in
the future can complete succesfully.
The dead thread list was limited to 32 threads per team. If there would be
more, the oldest thread would be kicked off. This could cause issues in
situations where a team would create more than 32 threads, and would start
waiting for their result after they have finished. Some of the calls would fail
because the threads would no longer be in the dead list.
This specifically caused problems for cargo (the Rust package manager), which
could depending on the number of dependencies, could create more than 32
threads. See: https://github.com/nielx/rust/issues/3
This change removes the limit of dead threads within a team. Note that there is
a risk that a badly written program that does not detach or joins its threads
can make this an endless list, but the impact is relatively small (dead threads
only occupy a bit of kernel memory).
Change-Id: I0135dd54e10ee48a529f23228d21237d4f1a74e2
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3178
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
The catalogs are loaded from separate files, so there is no need to have
an app entry_ref to load them, just a MIME type is enough.
The implementation is a bit simplified: only the default catalog format
is allowed (unlike when loading from entry_ref, where extra catalog
formats can be added in add-ons).
Unrelated cleanup: remove unused code to load catalogs from attributes
of an application. We considered this when designing the locale kit, but
using resources or separate files works better.
Use this in Cortex, where some strings are in a static library, so they
don't have an associated executable or library or add-on to identify
them. The code in Cortex is not complete localization, several parts
should use StringForRate, BStringFormat, etc.
Change-Id: I09be22b1f50891250c4497c51e1db8dcee279140
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3172
Reviewed-by: Kacper Kasper <kacperkasper@gmail.com>
When copying an area with vm_copy_area only the new protection would be
applied and any possibly existing page protections on the source area
were ignored.
For areas with stricter area protection than page protection, this lead
to faults when accessing the copy. In the opposite case it lead to too
relaxed protection. The currently only user of vm_copy_area is
fork_team which goes through all areas of the parent and copies them to
the new team. Hence page protections were ignored on all forked teams.
Remove the protection argument and instead always carry over the source
area protection and duplicate the page protections when present.
Also make sure to take the page protections into account for deciding
whether or not the copy is writable and therefore needs to have copy on
write semantics.
Change-Id: I52f295f2aaa66e31b4900b754343b3be9a19ba30
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3166
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Change-Id: Id050fad59ede444f2eab7eca681c6ec44612aaf9
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3160
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Reviewed-by: François Revol <revol@free.fr>
This enables generation of exceptions that are due to uncorrected
hardware errors. The exception handlers were already in place and will
now actually trigger kernel panics.
Note that this is the simplest form of MCE "handling" and does not add
anything of the broader machine check architecture (MCA) that also allow
reporting of corrected errors. As MCEs are generally hard to decode due
to their hardware specifity, this merely makes such problems more
obvious.
Might help to discern hardware issues in cases that would otherwise just
triple fault and cause a reboot.
Change-Id: I9e3a2640458f7c562066478d0ca90e3a46c3a325
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3155
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Axel Dörfler <axeld@pinc-software.de>
- libicule and libiculx do not exist anymore in newer ICU versions
(harfbuzz replaces them), but we didn't actually use them, so remove
them from the build feature and from the package dependencies
- Add namespace usage marcos since the newer ICU packages put ICU things
in a namespace, making it easier to have multiple versions of ICU used
side by side.
No functional change intended, but this makes it possible to build the
code with either ICU 57 (for gcc2) or 66 (for other architectures).
Pages in the given range are unmapped and freed without getting written
back anywhere. It can be used whenever a caller does not care about the
data in the given range anymore and wants to reduce page pressure.
Change-Id: I8bcce68fab278efef710d3714677e1d463504a56
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2843
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Change-Id: Ifbd82ef7bfc2c39b2aeb5c25be177421cd22d246
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2920
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
* Migrate some platform agnostic architecture code into
boot/arch from efi/arch. This helps to avoid conflicts
between kernel and boot sources as well.
* Conflicts between arch_cpu in efi and kernel code means
bootcode really should *never* directly use kernel arch
headers. (other platforms don't, which is why they don't
have this same issue)
* We carefully thread any needed kernel headers (namely
assembly helper macros) into the bootloader headers without
mixing in the whole conflicting kernel/arch headers.
* ARM now properly get its cpu init code called, and we
progress further into the EFI bootloader.
Change-Id: If67ec9758b5ce68563ebd9eb45d5196401911c67
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2975
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
None of these were used; they were all imported with the original
root Haiku commit, and they are totally unrelated to PulkoMandy's
new SPARC work. Plus, they were also under a BSD Advertising Clause
license.
Utilize user_memcpy and IS_USER_ADDRESS when necessary to prevent SMAP violations.
Also add a "wacom_device_header" struct to more easily share data between the wacom
kernel driver and input_server addon.
Should fix#14589
Change-Id: Ie2784020b21523f82fd450a2db2de60ccf9d6620
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2783
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
* This allows file systems to retrieve the actual error code on a
failure, and report it to the user.
* All affected file systems have been adjusted to the API change.
This is a binary incompatible change.
Change-Id: Id73392aaf9c6cb7d643ff9adcb8bf80f3037874c
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2913
Reviewed-by: Axel Dörfler <axeld@pinc-software.de>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
xsave or xsavec are supported.
breaks vregs compatibility.
change the thread structure object cache alignment to 64
the xsave fpu_state size isn't defined, it is for instance 832 here, thus I picked 1024.
Change-Id: I4a0cab0bc42c1d37f24dcafb8259f8ff24a330d2
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2849
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Otherwise it clashes with the implementation in OpenSSL which uses the
same names but now has a different ABI.
Change-Id: I5cb3ff97d7b28de978cdcbd8a06f25f65fb53784
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2854
Reviewed-by: Kyle Ambroff-Kao <kyle@ambroffkao.com>
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
The code to parse the resource table reads one entry at a time because
the table size isn't known. This resulted in a lot of read syscalls,
each reading just 12 bytes. Use a BBufferIO to buffer these and reduce
the number of syscalls. This helps especially when there are lot of
resources, for example in libbe with all the country flags.
It also removes some spam from strace output for all these read calls.
Change-Id: Ib165a0eacc2bc5f3d319c22c2fac4f439efbdef2
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2858
Reviewed-by: Rene Gollent <rene@gollent.com>
The goal here is to avoid potentially expensive fork()ing.
The time for a fork() is (for a process with no real heap usage
and thus few areas) 300-400us on my system. load_image() takes
3000us (3ms) or so, but this of course includes exec() time.
Overall, for compiling HaikuDepot (with a tweaked jam to use
posix_spawn on Haiku, not just on Linux) there is a slight
decrease in time:
before:
real 1m21.727s
user 1m2.131s
sys 0m43.029s
after:
real 1m19.472s
user 1m1.752s
sys 0m41.740s
Which is probably within the realm of "noise", so more benchmarks
are needed. Likely if we tweak our jam usage to not need as many
shells when running commands, this would be a much more noticeable
change.
Change-Id: I217f2476b1ed9aa18322b3c2bc8986571d89549a
It iterates over all areas intersecting a given address range and
removes the need for manually skipping uninteresting initial areas. It
uses VMAddressSpace::FindClosestArea() to efficiently find the starting
area.
This speeds up the two iterations in unmap_address_range and one in
wait_if_address_range_is_wired and resolves a TODO in the latter hinting
at such a solution.
Change-Id: Iba1d39942db4e4b27e17706be194496f9d4279ed
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2841
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
This introduces VMAddressSpace::FindClosestArea() that can be used to
find the closest area to a given address in either direction. This is
now trivial and efficient since both kernel and user address spaces use
a binary search tree.
Using FindClosestArea() getting multiple area infos is sped up
dramatically as it removes the need for a linear search from the first
area to the one given in the cookie on each successive invocation.
Change-Id: I227da87d915f6f3d3ef88bfeb6be5d4c97c3baaa
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2840
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
They return the left and right most nodes of the entire tree, i.e.
starting from the root node.
Change-Id: I651a9db6d12308aef4c2ed71484958428e58c9bc
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2838
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
This reverts parts of hrev52546 that removed the B_KERNEL_AREA
protection flag and replaced it with an address space comparison.
Checking for areas in the kernel address space inside a user address
space does not work, as areas can only ever belong to one address space.
This rendered these checks ineffective and allowed to unmap, delete or
resize kernel managed areas from their respective userland teams.
That protection was meant to be applied to the team user data area which
was introduced to reduce the kernel to userland overhead by directly
sharing some data between the two. It was intended to be set up in such
a manner that this is safe on the kernel side and the B_KERNEL_AREA flag
was introduced specifically for this purpose.
Incidentally the actual application of the B_KERNEL_AREA flag on the
team user data area was apparently forgotten in the original commit.
The absence of that protection allowed applications to induce KDLs by
modifying the user area and generating a signal for example.
This change restores the B_KERNEL_AREA flag and also applies it to the
team user data area.
Change-Id: I993bb1cf7c6ae10085100db7df7cc23fe66f4edd
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2836
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
The code in the Resize and Rebase methods was identical except for the
iterator.
Change-Id: I9f6b3c2c09af0c26778215bd627fed030c4d46f1
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2835
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
This allows switching from another recursive_lock, mutex or read-locked
rw_lock analogous to the switching possibilities already in mutex.
With this, recursive_locks can be used in more complex situations where
previously only mutexes would work.
Also add debugger command to dump a recursive_lock.
Change-Id: Ibeeae1b42c543d925dec61a3b257e1f3df7f8934
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2834
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
The memory map may be unordered and include overlapping ranges. To make
sure that nothing gets included as usable that should actually be
excluded, first scan for all usable ranges and add them, then remove
anything unusable from these ranges again.
To calculate the amount of unusable memory, count the total after the
first pass and then subtract the total after the second. This way, only
unusable ranges that actually overlap physical memory (and therefore
reduce the amount of usable memory) get excluded.
Note that the explicit ignore of the ACPI reclaim memory is subsumed by
the above. We still don't want to add this region to the usable memory
map, as that would allow the kernel to allocate pages into that region,
possibly corrupting ACPI tables before they were used. We also don't
want to add it as an allocated range, as it is not guaranteed that ACPI
is done with the tables before the unused bootloader ranges are freed in
the kernel.
Also add the missing unusable memory amount from ignoring the first MiB
of memory in the EFI loader.
May fix#16056 although it is not certain that graphics memory ranges
are actually included in the memory map.
Change-Id: Ie7991d2c4dcd988edac2995b3a7efc509fa0f4a3
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2814
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
APE reader was using a GPL licensed version of MD5. A similar
implementation in the public domain was available in libnetapi, which I
moved to libshared so the APE reader can use it (and made some fixes,
missing const mainly). It only needs a small wrapper to use it easily
from C++ in a way compatible with the previous implementation.
Part of #13814.
I forgot to change MUTEX_INITIALIZER following removal of the
unused field.
Change-Id: I011c023ae00bb4576c8bcecf83546892fef3a77e
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2719
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
As far as I can tell, there is no reason to ignore unlocks, ever;
if no threads are waiting, then mutex_unlock() will act appropriately.
So all we need to do is increment the lock's count here,
as we are relinquishing our request for locking.
On the other hand, if we did not find our structure in the lock,
that means we own the lock; so to return with an error from here
without changing the count would result in a deadlock, as the lock
would then be ours, despite our error code implying otherwise.
Additionally, take care of part of the case where we have woken up
by mutex_destroy(), by setting thread to NULL and checking for it
in that case. There is still a race here, however.
May fix#16044, as it appears there is a case where ACPICA
calls this with a timeout of 0 (we should make this be
a mutex_trylock, anyway.)
Change-Id: I98215df218514c70ac1922bc3a6f10e01087e44b
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2716
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
It is used by several of the filesystems, so it seems a good idea to
move it to the shared/ directory.
UFS2, BFS, XFS, EXT2 and EXFAT are adjusted.
Change-Id: I493e37a1e7d3ae24251469f82befd985a3c1dbdd
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2489
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Rename MovePageRange to Adopt and group it with Resize/Rebase as it
covers the third, middle cut case.
Implement VMAnonymousCache::Adopt() to actually adopt swap pages. This
has to recreate swap blocks instead of taking them over from the source
cache as the cut offset or base offset between the caches may not be
swap block aligned. This means that adoption may fail due to memory
shortage in allocating the swap blocks.
For the middle cut case it is therefore now possible to have the adopt
fail in which case the previous cache restore logic is applied. Since
the readoption of the pages from the second cache can fail for the same
reason, there is a slight chance that we can't restore and lose pages.
For now, just panic in such a case and add a TODO to free memory and
retry.
Change-Id: I9a661f00c8f03bbbea2fe6dee90371c68d7951e6
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2588
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
* Adds VMCache::MovePageRange() and VMCache::Rebase() to facilitate
this.
Applied on top of hrev45098 and rebased with the hrev45564 page_num_t to
off_t change included.
Change-Id: Ie61bf43696783e3376fb4144ddced3781aa092ba
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2581
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
This code comes from an old Be Newsletter and since then the API
received the addition of SetMouseEventMask. In several places the
MouseDownThread was misused: it would spawn a new thread on every mouse
click and not clear the previous one. This could for example lead to
BSpinner skipping values if you clicked it at the right speed.
There are functional changes in BSpinner, before it updated for the
first time 100ms after mouse down, and then as you moved the mouse
around the button, now it activates immediately on first click and then
every 200ms (which may be a bit short). In other places, no functional
changes intended.
Change-Id: Ie600dc68cbb87d1e237633953e5189918bf36575
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2599
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
add a WMI Asus driver, to control keyboard backlight brightness.
Change-Id: Ib86f70b4a407178b0a1f532269387a55915cc460
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2485
Reviewed-by: Fredrik Holmqvist <fredrik.holmqvist@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
This allows to use FileDescriptorCloser as unique pointer for file descriptor.
Change-Id: I4c768fafba6ed35658b2fdb075b9b547f53bc8da
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2495
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
Scroll bars should look and work identically to before on
HaikuControlLook.
Add DrawScrollBarButton() and DrawScrollBarThumb() and
DrawScrollBarBorder() methods. These methods are used to draw scroll
bars in a generic way so that they can be drawn differently by alternative
control look's (e.g. BeControlLook). Also it gives us back drawing of
scroll bar knobs. However the knob setting is not exposed in the
interface in this commit.
These methods are in addition to the 2 existing DrawScrollBarBackground()
methods that draw the scroll bar background. One draws the area above and
below the thumb and the other is called by the first to actually draw the
area.
The rest of the drawing besides the backgrounds was being done in
BScrollBar before. To draw the scroll bar arrows and thumb we were recyling
other ControlLook methods, while this worked well enough on HaikuControlLook
it wasn't flexible enough for alternative control looks.
DrawScrollBarButton() is used to draw the four scroll buttons and is
typically (so far) used in combination with DrawArrowShape().
DrawScrollBarThumb() draws the scroll bar thumb.
DrawScrollBarBorder() draws a 1px border around the entire scroll bar,
potentially B_KEYBOARD_NAVIGATION_COLOR if focused (although this is
feature not currently used.)
Draw unscrollable scroll bars as if they were disabled including the
buttons with their arrow shapes, background, and thumb.
Add FBC backwords compatibility macros in ControlLook.cpp
Change-Id: I9237c5ce45d17d674785111d51de951e5686306b
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/351
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Change-Id: Id43bfcbfc24b1adb8f6e9fff587c6df9b62910f2
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2413
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Previous version of the patch was broken by the EFI refactoring.
Change-Id: I6dd125100b22b2461c531bfd8f81b3dd28e2b751
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2409
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
- Cleanup HEAD_MODE constants. These should be completely removed, now
that we have a proper notion of pipes and displays. But the DPMS code
still uses them, for now.
- Fix the ie_pipe command where width and height were swapped and
missing a +1 to show the actual videomode values
change int types to uint32, as it's more correct.
Change-Id: Iae7043abe4c8b8a121548fe6d6a809f1bd879c8a
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2334
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
We need to assign PLLs to pipes and transcoders. The assignments on
previous generations were fixed, but now it's up to us to set it up.
Do the simplest thing for now: assign PLL1 to pipe A and PLL2 to pipe B.
It is no longer an error to destroy a ConditionVariableEntry
that is still attached to a ConditionVariable; it will
now be implicitly detached in that case.
This makes ConditionVariableEntrys much eaiser to use
from an API standpoint.
Change-Id: I03c676d3a198aa885de733d3e1729b15f80de031
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2301
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
There is no good reason to put them in a private header.
No functional change (but drivers now have access
to these constants.)
Change-Id: I7ac00a120ab44fbc110bc858dfd87d69d0061135
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2294
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: John Scipione <jscipione@gmail.com>
Change-Id: I0d6d2f8db2bc86c08d5ba2648f1cf46d85b54a5e
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2267
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
* arm efi additions
* cleanup some cpu headers which were oddly
split between efi and bios_ia32
* Move calculate_cpu_conversion_factor over to
arch_timer since it is timerish, and x86 only
* Drop some duplicated code from efi start. Move
hpet init code into efi timer/hpet code
Change-Id: Ia4264a5690ba8c09417b06788febc4f572f111ce
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2259
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
* This is the bulk of the work. Anything else should be
minor cleanups and tweaking.
* riscv64 isn't a viable EFI platform yet.. just acting
as a stand-in to test a non-x86 EFI haiku_loader
Change-Id: Ib03de81e2b562e693987b86d7b4318209fb1c792
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2256
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
On modern x86, one can use __rdtscp to get the current cpu in userland.
Change-Id: I1767e379606230a75e4622637c7a5aed9cdf9ab0
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2248
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
hrev53379 clears the buffer cache for disconnected clients, and also delete buffers.
This is too early (see #15263, media_addon_server crash), and should only happen
after the buffer is recycled. This can be resolved by abusing the fFlags field of
BBuffer to mark the buffer for deletion, and mark the buffer to be reclaimed.
Some BBuffers don't reside in the SharedBufferList, so we have to mark them as to
be reclaimed. For those in the SharedBufferList, call a new RemoveBuffer(), which
can check whether the buffer is still to be reclaimed. For reclaimed BBuffers,
delete them right away, others can be marked for deletion.
fixes#15606#15263, possibly #15433
Change-Id: I66e94138e7e10a40d4c48e2ac042f816c79f5aab
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2245
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: X512 <danger_mail@list.ru>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Leavengood <leavengood@gmail.com>
In a menu, we use the right side both for submenu arrows and shortcuts.
As a result, when an entry has both a shortcut and a submenu, its
shortcut is not aligned with others, and this does not look so nice.
The spacing for the arrow appears only if there is a submenu in any of
the items in the parent menu.
Change-Id: If91fdcdad36abb0141fb05d1f59141f89540c1db
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/355
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Leavengood <leavengood@gmail.com>
- 7xx (1st gen) has no driver in Haiku or is handled by the intel_810 driver
- PowerVR has no driver in Haiku
So there is no point in having those in the intel_extreme driver.
While I'm at it, fix the video timing/resolution constraints for
sanitize_video_mode.
- Implement watch_input_devices in input_server, as it was TODO. For
now, only one watcher is allowed at a time.
- Use it in Input preferences to get notified about added and removed
devices and update the device list accordingly.
Change-Id: I52018af53738e68271d6d63b5bea31fd7cab1b3b
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2041
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
The hacks to still use actual system headers for zlib didn't quite work.
- Define Z_SOLO, which makes zlib build without any system include
- Remove use of std::max and #include <algorithm> from AVLTree
- Do not include DebugSupport.h because it uses system headers
- Do not include uuid.h and define just what we need
Now it's possible to compile the btrfs_shell on Linux.
Change-Id: I74a14b5f6804db45ab5a9f582ab493d696376fd3
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2098
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
This issue was initially detected by PVS Studio (issue number V547) and fixed
as part of Google Code-in 2019.
The initial problem was the calculate_cpu_conversion_factor function
which had been copied in the BIOS and EFI versions of the boot code.
Further investigation led to more duplicated or very similar functions
being identified.
Introduce an arch_cpu.h for the x86 boot platform to group these things
in a single place, and adjust the BIOS and EFI code to call into that.
Note that the BIOS and EFI code is still a little platform specific,
ideally there should be a boot_arch_cpu_init() function for each
architecture as already done for openfirmware and u-boot.
Also remove some irrelevant comments from copypasted files for other
architectures, as that was filling my git grep with useless noise.
Change-Id: I16d815f0bf015cec0b4e03cc14f3cc447c7164c5
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1985
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Get enough of the mmu working to be able to allocate memory.
Unlike on PowerPC, we get both address and size as 64bit values. So
adjust of_region to allow this.
Also unlike the PPC port, we do not drive the hardware directly, instead we
rely on the openboot primitives to manage the translation table. This
allows staying independant of the hardware, which is a good idea at
least for the bootloader (we can do actual hardware things in the
kernel)
Change-Id: Ifa57619d3a09b8f707e1f8640d8b4f71bb717e2a
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1482
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Gets call-method working for sparc, and fix more places where we
accidentally truncate 64bit values or sign-extend 32 bit ones.
Change-Id: Ic79c55ffa8d2b475858def1639004412f17dd0c1
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1986
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
- The name for the registers were swapped
- The width and height were also swapped in one of them
- Remove some old #if 0 code that touched these registers but has been
disabled for a while.
LVDS panels must really be driven at their native resolution, otherwise
they will simply not work. This means we should basically never touch
the video timings on that side. We need to only set the source size in
the pipe configuration, and let the panel fitter figure out the scaling.
On my G45 laptop, this allows me to use non-native resolutions on the
laptop display. This also means when booting with a VGA display
connected, I do get a valid display on the internal panel (using the VGA
resolution). VGA still gets "out of range", so we're still not setting
up something there.
If I switch to VGA display in the BIOS, I get a working picture there
and garbage on the internal display, which is progress (before I would
get a black screen on the internal display)
Fixes#12723.
For #15515
As mentionned in the ticket, we may also want to hide the symbols
altogether from libroot for newer API/ABI versions, unless we still want
to provide C89/C99/C++98/C++11 compatibility, in which case we still
need them around.
Change-Id: I0ee267fb6c4c2f4bae9b1ba6f68e2bcefc399a7f
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2061
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
* Drop gnu-efi
Change-Id: Ib601fc8ced49b18281b6b98cf861a5aef1b9c065
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2026
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
enable to check whether a shutdown process is in progress.
Change-Id: I8efdddb3caa80e9fd188f202b6e92a888a7608e5
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/2042
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
- Remove duplicate and otherwise unused lendian_bitfield.h
- Adjust listusb jamfile to use lendian_bitfield.h
- Fix various typos in usb_video.h and restore some fields to make
listusb happy
- Factor in types changes (introduction of intptr_t)
- Align JamFiles syntax with in progress architectures (arm/sparc)
- Xorriso doesn't support much of the mkisofs options (anymore ?)
- (After a correct bootstrap) one should be able to build @minimum-raw and haiku-boot-cd again
Change-Id: I4f779ad8f2210389fa9b7f7c0a98c3652a64c257
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1983
Reviewed-by: François Revol <revol@free.fr>
Using the geonames.org API, so we will need an API key for it (similar
to the one used for MLS, deployed by the buildbot)
The unit tests uses the "demo" user, which is restricted to 20000 API
call credits and often expired. But we cannot use our secret key here as
it would need to be available to anyone running the test. If we ever get
to automate running the tests on a buildserver we could probably make it
use the secret username known by our buildbot instead.
Change-Id: Ia16880db82555ce85505ad28e1c623f692f46be0
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1873
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
* Move x86 hpet behind timer interface.
* Add a few if x86,x86_64 macros to start.cpp.
Change-Id: I583ec1b064785182e6d48dfbcd91b1bb2ead4b44
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1929
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
The tab frame is drawn behind the tabs.
Create a new DrawTabFrame method in BControlLook and HaikuControlLook
that draws the tab frame background.
Until now we've been reusing the DrawInactiveTab method to draw the tab frame
in BTabView. While this works on HaikuControlLook, it doesn't work on other
ControlLook's (such as BeControlLook) that draw their tab frame differently.
Add FBC method to preserve binary compatibility on gcc2 and gcc4.
Move DrawTabFrame method to where _ReservedControlLook1 was in header.
Set rect to area of tab frame in TabView instead of doing the
calculation in HaikuControlLook so that others may benefit.
Change-Id: I513e238914f6d680f495659b6ec902df15555015
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1936
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Use the gcc builtin instead, which generates more efficient code (it
saves a function call) and means less platform specific code to write
for us.
Change-Id: I1d55b5703027b2ea4ecde2438ea306bd4850eb32
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1859
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Change-Id: I88afad6d071e8b577c23da9c60392c60b3726514
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1895
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Non-KDEBUG kernels and kernel add-ons use atomic operations to acquire
and release the locks inline, so non-KDEBUG kernels/addons are only
compatible with other non-KDEBUG kernels/addons.
Following this change, though, KDEBUG kernels/addons should be able
to run under non-KDEBUG kernels/addons, too, since they always call
into the actual kernel functions and do not inline anything of
consequence.
It previously returned the cookie directly, which made it impossible
to distinguish between a NULL cookie and the function not having
anything to dequeue. This lead to some code setting a cookie that was
not actually used.
Return the dequeue status as a boolean and provide the cookie with an
optionally handed in pointer instead and adjust all users.
Change-Id: Iaac1726ac4bc7ae42bb96b8f0915852b6def5822
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1814
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
This makes ARM64 target compile more files. This patch is one of
series of patches to support new architecture, as fixes in many
places are required just to compile the code.
Signed-off-by: Jaroslaw Pelczar <jarek@jpelczar.com>
Change-Id: Ia060612733cd3a0fcb781fec449da164ed635b8e
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1807
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
This adds one (private) VFS function, and checks in all usages of
the vnode->cache as a VMVnodeCache that it really is one. (Generic
usages, for the moment just the ReleaseRef() calls in vnode
destruction, are intentionally not touched.)
This will be used by ramfs to set the cache from its own,
so that map_file() calls on a ramfs can work.
Refactored out of execvpe. Originally I did this for my attempted
change to posix_spawn, but that change turned out to be wrong and
actually not that beneficial. This bit seems potentially useful,
though, so here it is.
The patched errata are only the AMD ones FreeBSD patches
(it seems there are no Intel errata that can be patched
this way, they are all in microcode updates ... or can't
be patched in the CPU at all.)
This also seems to be roughly the point in the boot that
FreeBSD patches these, too, despite how "critical" some
of them seem.
Change-Id: I9065f8d025332418a21c2cdf39afd7d29405edcc
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/1740
Reviewed-by: Jessica Hamilton <jessica.l.hamilton@gmail.com>
It now lives in OS.h. The idea is that this will now be
accessible to userland applications, so userland memory
is protected from access by other processes, just as
kernel memory is.
No functional change (the constants are still the same,
though I've changed some to use shifts to make clear
which bits are allocated are which are unused.)
Sparcv9 runs Openboot in 64 bit mode, which means the cell size is
64bit. Use intptr_t where appropriate to make the open firmware calls
work.
Beware, some values are still 32bit, this matters for example for
of_getprop, if you get 32bits into a 64bit variables it will be in the
MSB of it (big endian only weakness...) and confuse things. See for
example in console.cpp, where the input and output handles are retrieved
as 32bit values. It seems wise to check the expected size when using
of_getprop in these cases, instead of just checking for errors.
Change-Id: Ie72ebc4afe7c6d7602a47478f0bfb6b8247004b8
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1369
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Consider this scenario:
* A userland thread puts its ID into some structure so that it
can be woken up later, sets its wait_status to initiate the
begin of the wait, and then calls _user_block_thread.
* A second thread finishes whatever task the first thread
intended to wait for, reads the ID almost immediately
after it was written, and calls _user_unblock_thread.
* _user_unblock_thread was called so soon that the first
thread is not yet blocked on the _user_block_thread block,
but is instead blocked on e.g. the thread's main mutex.
* The first thread's thread_block() call returns B_OK.
As in this example it was inside mutex_lock, it thinks
that it now owns the mutex.
* But it doesn't own the mutex, and so (until yesterday)
all sorts of mayhem and then a random crash occurs, or
(after yesterday) an assert-failure is tripped that
the thread does not own the mutex it expected to.
The above scenario is not a hypothetical, but is in fact the
exact scenario behind the strange panics in #15211.
The solution is to only have _user_unblock_thread actually
unblock threads that were blocked by _user_block_thread,
so I've introduced a new BLOCK_TYPE to differentiate these.
While I'm at it, remove the BLOCK_TYPE_USER_BASE, which was
never used (and now never will be.) If we want to differentiate
different consumers of _user_block_thread for debugging
purposes, we should use the currently-unused "object"
argument to thread_block, instead of cluttering the
relatively-clean block type debugging code with special
types.
One final note: The race condition which was the case of
this bug does not, in fact, imply a deadlock on the part
of the rw_lock here. The wait_status is protected by the
thread's mutex, which is acquired by both _user_block_thread
and _user_unblock_thread, and so if _user_unblock_thread
succeeds faster than _user_block_thread can initiate
the block, it will just see that wait_status is already
<= 0 and return immediately.
Fixes#15211.
* It's safe to assume that if the file is shorter than
the provided header, things will go poorly.
* Avoids a random vauge ReadBuffer error.
* This doesn't fix#15230, but makes the issue clearer.
Change-Id: I3471e6de384a0c9be94049ad891c01be980f7846
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1679
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Before this commit, *all* ConditionVariable operations (yes, all;
even Wait, Notify, etc.) went through a single spinlock, that also
protected the sConditionVariableHash. This obviously does not scale
so well with core count, to say the least!
With this commit, we add spinlocks to each Variable and Entry.
This makes locking somewhat more complicated (and nuanced; see
inline comment), but the trade-off seems completely worth it:
(compile HaikuDepot in VMware, 2 cores)
before
real 1m20.219s
user 1m5.619s
sys 0m40.724s
after
real 1m12.667s
user 0m57.684s
sys 0m37.251s
The more cores there are, the more of an optimization this will
likely prove to be. But 10%-across-the-board is not bad to say
the least.
Change-Id: I1e40a997fff58a79e987d7cdcafa8f7358e1115a
It's used by both Tracker and Codycam and others might find it useful.
Change-Id: I585d3a1bdc7f8fce7d36bedf6867464cd541ba2e
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1637
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Previously, it identified all Zen CPUs as Ryzen 7. Since the model
and stepping information consist of microarchitecture information
and don't carry the model number, use the parse_amd based name,
which will remove any unnecessary details from the returned name.
Fixes#15153.
Change-Id: I1a20bf35a60b2fdd20d4cc90ec2dd95fd0e6439d
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1634
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Even on 64bit CPUs it's a 32bit register.
Change-Id: I9a4de6eec225de19a90d70fae1382b662e530629
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1625
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
B_OS_NAME_LENGTH is 32, char* is 8 (on x64), and this structure
has quite a lot of pointers in it so it is not like we really
needed to save those 24 bytes. Hitting malloc() in here is not
so great, especially because we usually have B_DONT_LOCK_KERNEL_SPACE
turned on, so just inline and avoid it.
Change-Id: I5c94955324cfda08972895826b61748c3b69096a
The idea was that the Media Extractor could wrap the original source
given by BMediaTrack, but all operations on the data go through
MediaExtractor anyway.
We could probably move ownership of the BDataIO completely into
MediaExtractor instead.
Change-Id: I846b34b543fb983e60f6adf86cb17e835303267b
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1587
Reviewed-by: Stephan Aßmus <superstippi@gmx.de>
This was (following the packagefs changes) the number-one (by call
count) consumer of malloc() during the boot -- 52866 calls, and 100%
of them either 1024 or 1025 bytes!
Virtually all of these are ephemeral (indeed, the object_cache
stats after a boot with this patch shows there is only a single slab
of 64 buffers allocated, and most of them unused), so this is
probably a significant performance boost.
Change-Id: I659f5707510cbfeafa735d35eea7b92732ead666
If the buildbots were working, I would have been informed of this
about an hour after I committed it last night. But it seems they aren't.
Maybe kallisti5 will have some more incentive to work on that?
Cleans up some lock/get/unlock sequences, and makes it possible
for external consumers to get team structs (which will be necessary
for permissions checks.)
* Now matches the rest of the architectures.
Change-Id: I6699e0c8f729923770f136f2c9599185a685336a
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1527
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Axel Dörfler <axeld@pinc-software.de>
Remove a currently unused copy of it from HaikuDepot.
Change-Id: Idb97fae8e7190da6bc1049b3c1f1df929ea91bab
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1506
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Their copy constructors are exactly what GCC would generate,
but we can't remove them because doing so would make them
trivially copyable, and so they would be passed in registers
on x86_64, an ABI breakage.
So instead we have to add explicit casts to void* here.
A lot of these classes are not *technically* "trivially copyable"
for one reason or another, but in all of these cases it seems
OK to me to use memcpy/memset on them. Adding a cast to void*
tells GCC that "I know what I'm doing here" and shuts up the
warning.
These worked in identical fashion to what the default copy
constructors would be, but their mere presence marks the class
as being "non-trivially copyable," which means that memcpy'ing
it is now a -Werror on GCC 8.
We have to be careful when making this change, though: classes
which *are* trivially copyable can be passed inside registers
on x86_64, so changes like these break ABI in a dangerous way.
These classes is private, so it should not be a problem, but
for other classes (e.g. BRect, BPoint) we cannot fix them
properly right now.
add-ons" is set.
Confirmed to fix#14361. It is finally possible to un-brick an install
with a bad system library in non-packaged without having to use another
install to do so.
Change-Id: Iafea7821f02cb34e77c766b1f97d1c19206b1081
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1452
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
All of Barrett's individual reverts have been squashed into this
one commit, save a few actual bugfixes.
Change-Id: Ib0a7d0a841d3ac40b1fca7372c58b7f9229bd1f0
This allows cpu_type.h to be used in C-based software,
with the get_cpu_*() functions all accessible via C as well
as C++ code.
Tested changes with sysinfo, AboutHaiku and Pulse.
Change-Id: Ide87d8e3f2ba5f0f1890f385b1ac90c677bcc274
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1453
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
app_server just passes the add-on path around.
Maybe we should make sure the add-on can be loaded when setting it.
Change-Id: I3acd3299782a22c1666bd5435dbf3d8053e359fa
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1430
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
* mutex_destroy() only checked wether or not there were waiters,
not if the lock itself was presently held by another thread.
Now we do, which should make #15015 panic much earlier instead
of trying to use freed memory.
* mutex_transfer_lock() and recursive_lock_transfer_lock() did
not check that the calling thread actually owned the lock.
Now it does, which should trigger asserts if anyone tries
to do this.
Copied from PPC with the hooks for Apple hardware removed.
To be completed with the actual PCI bus implementation for Sun machines.
This is where we start doing machine specific stuff, apparently.
Change-Id: I06af4de9621e9d40593d153642478d928083e49a
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1364
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
* Kernel is 64 bit, and we won't need a 32bit load base.
Change-Id: I729bab01c8f71083002db061e153b0e5052b9a1c
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1326
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
* firewire and freebsd_network expect the macros come from
sys/param.h, as this is one of the places FreeBSD defines them
* All others are Haiku-native and can use Be-style macros.
Add a platform cleanup hook before starting the kernel. The openfirmware
and PXE loaders clean up their network stack there, while the other
loaders currently do nothing.
This closes ticket #6166
Change-Id: I34765892dfd9b2310c6af97c9ff7d414afae49e5
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/50
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Change-Id: Ia2a86d8814d06950ea2d2d19d966c642d26f81d6
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1302
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Add various stubs to fix undefined references. No implementation for
anything yet.
Change-Id: I2d398bc2369d099e3a35f0713058d6a5edc6801d
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1138
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
This behaves mostly like a pointer, but pointer maths works in bytes,
not the native object size.
It avoids casting to char* and back when doing byte-based pointer math,
making the code easier to read.
Change-Id: I6a8681a398345f0c7d419a2cfe7244d972ffa62f
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1086
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Add empty implementation of timer, elf, vm, debugger support, to let the
kernel link.
Also add the kernel linker script.
Change-Id: If0795fa6554aea3df1ee544c25cc4832634ffd78
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1108
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Previous commit adding these was merged very quickly, so here's one
more...
Change-Id: I23c424db7631db1f0ec48e2d0ae47c8409ae6af2
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1088
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Gets the stage0 bootstrap to run.
Imlementation is probably nonsense at this point.
Change-Id: I10876efbb54314b864c0ad951152757cdb2fd366
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1061
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
The kernel version is only partially tested.
Change-Id: I9a2f6c78087154ab137eadbced99062a8a2dd688
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/918
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
sdhci:
- Add semaphore for interrupt management
- Add basic operations (setting clock, executing a command)
- Add early initialization (clocks and power up)
- Wrap the bus in a C++ class to ease usage
- Expose API to MMC bus manager
- TODO: manage card insertion and removal interrupts
- TODO: use MSI when available
mmc_bus:
- Implements SD card management independant of the way we access the bus
(later on different drivers can provide the same API as SDHCI)
- Worker thread to do the initialization
- Implement card initialization process up until getting an RCA from the
card. This is the generic part to assign an ID to the card, after this
point commands can be targetted at the specific card so it can be
handed over to the mmc_disk driver.
- TODO: initialization for non-SDHC cards which do not reply to CMD8.
Change-Id: I71950ca3ce206378a68fa7f97c19f638183d6cdd
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1032
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Nothing that uses this API at present needs a const iterator (and
as far as I could see, nothing ever called Remove() on the iterator.)
But this is now how HashMap's API works, so let's be consistent.
Changes are pretty straightforward. The iterator is now const
again, but can be passed to the hash table itself for removal
of the current item.
Change-Id: Ifd3c8096ffb187a183ca5963ed69a256562a524f
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1042
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
The HashMap and HashSet classes are copied from userlandfs. The
HashMap one works as-is as it's already used in userlandfs; the
HashSet does not even compile yet.
Change-Id: I1deabb54deb3f289e266794ce618948b60be58c0
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1041
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
There isn't much use for a class that can only compute the dates of
two minor and one major holiday. Probably in the future the Locale Kit
could be extended to expose ICU holiday APIs, but seeing as that
is a less-used functionality, this can just be removed altogether
for now at least.
Change-Id: I18be044be7d5c6896295ed85d294abeea90b8bb0
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/1037
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
It is only used as an argument to _kern_load_image directly, not to
any of the load_image functions in image.h, so it belongs in a syscall-
specific header like other such constants.
No functional change intended.
* This iSCSI implementation only worked on PPC big-endian atm.
* We're pretty sure iSCSI support in haiku_loader doesn't make
much sense anymore. iPXE on (on arm,x86,etc EFI/BIOS platforms)
supports iSCSI boot of disks.
* Haiku could use a iSCSI driver add-on, but it would exist much
higher up and likely use standard drivers vs bare-minimum iSCSI
target impementations.
* Leaving TCP and adding to all arches since it could make sense
for haiku's native network disk subsystem or network debugging?
Change-Id: Ic181b93a1d8ffd77f69e00e372b44b79abbddb42
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/899
Reviewed-by: Alex von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Registrar schedules an event every second to do
fRoster-CheckSanity(). This uses 2.5% cpu on my machine
when idle. Changing it to five seconds lowers it to 0.1%
waddlesplash then pointed me to this bug which changes it
to watch for team deletion and call fRoster->CheckSanity()
As I know little in this area, it's mostly based on what
LaunchDaemon does in MessageRecieved.
Change-Id: Ie69f9399cab41d2d492d469b5d3dc88e6080c15c
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/876
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
The old fixed-rect method was very error-prone in corner-cases,
resulting in half-visible (cut off) parameters, incorrectly
sized controls, etc. on various devices, which often made it
impossible to use.
While there are still a few rough edges (scrollbar behavior could
be further improved, though it's already much better than it was before),
this method is much better than the previous one.
Fixes#11592 and related tickets.
Change-Id: I65175f760bda98e42d1fc68ba8e526470bf17c25
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/889
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
Implemented against POSIX-1.2013.
The implementation POSIX requirement thats setpriority() shall affect the
priority of all system scope threads only extends to POSIX threads. This
is implemented by modifying the default attributes for newly spawned
pthreads.
It is not possible to modify the default pthread attributes for different
processes with the current implementation, as default pthread attributes
are implemented in user-space. As a result, PRIO_PROCESS for which and 0
for who is the only supported combination for setpriority().
While it is possible to move the default attributes to the kernel, it
is chosen not to so as to keep the pthread implementation user-space only.
POSIX requires that lowering the nice value (increasing priority) can be
done only by processes with appropriate privileges. However, as Haiku
currently doesn't harbor any restrictions in setting the thread priority,
this is not implemented.
It is possible to have small precision errors when converting from Unix-
style thread priority to Be-style. For example, the following program
outputs "17" instead of the expected "18":
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/resource.h>
int
main()
{
setpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, 0, 18);
printf("%d\n", getpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, 0));
return 0;
}
The underlying reason is because when you setpriority() both 18 and 19
are converted to the Be-style "2". This problem should not happen with
priority levels lower than or equal to 20, when the Be notation is more
precise than the Unix-style.
Done as a part of GCI 2014. Fixes#2817.
Signed-off-by: Timothy Gu <timothygu99@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Leorize <leorize+oss@disroot.org>
Change-Id: Ie14f105b00fe8563d16b3562748e1c2e56c873a6
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/78
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>