... handling any interrupt service routines.
This was causing crashes while running /userspace/ apps without any
syscalls being triggered, presumably due to switching at awkward times.
BIOS execution is provided through the `v8086` module, which provides
software emulation of an 8086 processor. It is not currently working
with some BIOSes and may (read: probably will be) replaced with another
emulator (x86emu comes to mind) at some point in the near future. In the
meantime, the default video mode for QEMU works with this and it's
enough to get us on real VESA instead of fake VBE. The `bochs` module
will be renamed in a future commit. Userspace programs have been
adjusted to work at bitrates other than 32 *POORLY*. If you write pixels
left-to-right, they should work fine. They only work with 24-bpp
otherwise, and then you need to be careful of what pixels you are
writing when, or you will overwrite things in other pixels.
You may pass a commandline argument like the following to set display
modes:
vid=vesa,1024,768
Or for stranger modes under QEMU or Bochs, use the bochs VBE
initializer:
vid=bochs,1280,720
Note that the address of the linear framebuffer is still found via
hackish probing instead of PCI or trusting the VBE information, so if
you have things in the wrong memory ranges (0xE0000000+), be prepared to
have them get read.
Once again, this entire commit is a massive hack. I am happy that it
worked, and I will continue to make it less hacky, but in the meantime,
this is what we've got.
Happy holidays.
- Free process resources when a process exits (reaped in next process
cycle; should probably reap after a wait() or something)
- Free process struct after wait()
- Fix page allocation
- Fix fork() return value for child process (attempted to write to an
invalid point in kernel-stack memory)
We shouldn't be triple faulting randomly anymore!
Continue investigating the fork() return value, as there was a bugged
return at some point during executon of a test run of thrash-process.
- Fixes a number of bugs with VGA text-mode (including crashes and
colors)
- Makes it far easier to include more console drivers in the kernel,
though this will be terribly redundant in the future.
- Actually check for video graphics modes before attempting to draw the
mouse cursor.