The scheduler did not consider the consumed quota during a call to "update"
if the head that consumed the quota was removed from the scheduler. When this
occured, the internal round time did not advance as expected but remained at
its previous value untile the next call to "update" (without a removed head)
This commit introduces a new flag that is set only when the head gets removed
in order to detect and handle the situation correctly on the next call to
"update".
Ref #4151
Ref #4710
Setting the _need_to_schedule member in the 'ready' method of the scheduler
was not done correctly. At least, the _need_to_schedule was set true in
situations were the head was not outdated by the 'ready' operation.
Ref #4151
* Remove *request* in context of: wait, reply, send to shorten it.
* Use ready_to_* instead of can_*, which is regularily used in Genode's APIs
* Replace helping_sink with helping_destination, as destination is more common
Ref genodelabs/genode#4704
The IPC protcol violations are:
* Sending to an unknown thread (cap)
* Waiting for messages if a reply hasn't happened yet
This silents threads that otherwise repeatedly cause kernel messages
about the violation.
Ref genodelabs/genode#4704
* Split the internal state into incoming and outgoing message relations
* Avoid fragmenting of one state like formerly '_state' and '_help'
* Remove pointer to caller, use incoming FIFO instead
This commit fixes at least two bugs that were triggered by tests that
destroy threads in many different states, like run/bomb:
* The '_help' data member was not reset reliable in each situation where a
helping relationship came to an end. However, when we fixed this bug alone
in the old state model, the issues remained. The new state model fixes
this bug as well.
* A thread sometimes referenced an already dead thread as receiver. This caused
the kernel IPC code to access the vtable of an object that didn't exist any
longer. Note that the two threads were not in direct IPC relationship while
the receiver was destroyed, so, there must have been an intermediate node
between them. Due to the complexity of this problem, we eventually gave up
pin-pointing the exact reason in the kernel IPC code. The issue disappeared
with the new state model.
Fixgenodelabs/genode#4704
When writing the GPT header, the tool always wrote the GPT entries
belonging to the primary header to LBA following the header. Normally
this is LBA 2 as the header is located in LBA 1. The GPT allows for
up to 128 entries that all in all cover 16 KiB of storage space.
However, on some systems, e.g. ARM-based machines, the bootloader can
be stored in this region. For this reason the GPT entries may be moved
to a different LBA.
This commit changes the tool to adhere to then given GPE LBA in header
when writing out the modified GPT data.
Fixes#4720.
The old 'Io_response_handler::io_progress_response' interface has been
replaced by the 'Vfs::Env::User::wakeup_vfs_user' (issue #4697). The
remaining 'read_ready_response' method is now hosted in the
appropriately named 'Read_ready_response_handler'.
Issue #4706
This patch keeps driving the internal state machines until no progress
can be made. This required fixing the return values of several execute
functions, which used to report progress while being in complete state.
Along the way, the patch removes default switch cases to ensure that all
states are covered.
Issue #4706
This commit supplements the various I/O signal handlers of the VFS
plugins with calls of the new 'Vfs::Env::User::wakeup_vfs_user'
interface, which will subsequently replace the old 'Io_progress_handler'
(issue #4697).
Issue #4706
The 'blocked_handles' queue was used to notify the VFS user via the
'io_progress_response' mechanism. This is now covered by the
'wakeup_vfs_user' interface introduced in issue #4697.
Issue #4706
Information about PS/2 and PIT where moved to app/pci_decode in the
following commit.
pci_decode: report devices from ACPI info
We still provide an empty <devices> node as the file itself is used by
platform agnostic run scripts.
When running on x86, and riscv never enter the kernel for cache maintainance,
but use the dummy implementation of the generic base library instead.
On ARMv8 it is not necessary to enter privileged mode for cache cleaning, and
unification of instruction/data cache, but only for invalidating cache lines
at all levels, which is necessary for the use cases, where this function it
needed (coherency of DMA memory).
Fixgenodelabs/genode#4339
This call is used to query the cache line size of the underlying CPU.
For now it is only implemented and used by 'arm_v8' platforms.
It does not distinguish between D-/I-cache sizes and always uses the
smallest size. Furthermore it does not account for any discrepancy
in 'big.little' CPUs.
Issue #4339.
To prevent the kernel to deadlock, or call itself with a syscall when
using a lock potentially hold by a core thread, the log console's
backend for core (hw) gets replaced by a specific variant that checks
whether it runs in the kernel context before using the mutex.
Fixgenodelabs/genode#3280
When a domain receives a new dynamic router IP address and that domain has
active connection states (TCP/UDP/ICMP) from another domain with NAT applied,
the connection states used to stay active while becoming obsolete. They
become obsolete because their identification and their packet processor
use the old routers IP address due to NAT.
One consequence was that connections became dysfunctional when the server
domain received a new dynamic router IP address. Request packets were still
routed from client to server, but when entering the server, their source IP
address was the outdated router address. Consequently, the server responses
used the outdated address as destination and the router dropped the responses
because it did not know this address anymore.
This commit fixes the problem by letting a domain destroy all its connection
states that were initiated from within other domains whenever it detaches from
its current IP configuration.
Strictly speaking, it is not necessary to destroy all connection states, only
those that the domain applies NAT to. However, the Genode AVL tree is not built
for removing a selection of nodes and trying to do it anyways is complicated.
So, for now, we simply destroy all connection states.
Note that the other way around was handled correctly already. When a domain
detaches from its IP config, all interfaces of that domain destroy all the
connection states they created (towards other domains).
Fixes#4696
If the IP config does not change on updates to the router IP config of a domain
change (a common case on DHCP RENEW), prevent detaching from the old config and
attaching to the new one. Because this would not only create unnecessary CPU
overhead but also force all clients at all interfaces that are listening to
this config (via config attribute 'dns_config_from') to restart their
networking (re-do DHCP).
Ref #4696
Check 'pv == nullptr' in 'ShClSvcImplWriteData' and return
VERR_INVALID_POINTER if invalid (as is done, for example, in the X11
implementation).
issue #4666