Commit Graph

148 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Stefan Kalkowski
7ced122ddc hw: support for i.MX8M Quad EVK
Fix #3426
2019-08-13 12:02:27 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
fa1aa33f83 hw: sanitize arm trustzone/virtualization services
Those services are not SoC specific and have to reside at a generic place.

Fix #3445
2019-08-13 12:02:26 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
907de9d37f hw: move timer into board.h
Unify the generic timer implementation for ARMv7 and ARMv8.

Ref #3445
2019-08-13 12:02:26 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
0b77e8ea62 hw: consistently move cpu into board namespace
Ref #3445
2019-08-13 12:02:26 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
875858b2cc hw: integrate interrupt controllers into board.h
Additionally, unify more implementation details in between different
usage patterns of ARM's generic interrupt controller (v2)

Ref #3445
2019-08-13 12:02:26 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
90d07741aa hw: support for ARM64 Raspberry Pi 3
Restriction: enables only cpu core 0 and the timer interrupt by now.

Fix #3405
2019-07-09 08:55:22 +02:00
Sebastian Sumpf
da17f2cbd3 hw: eager FPU switching for x86_64
Since gcc 8.3.0 generates SSE instructions into kernel code, the
kernel itself may raise FPU exceptions and/or corrupt user level FPU
contexts thereby. Both things are not feasible, and therefore, lazy FPU
switching becomes a no go for base-hw because we cannot avoid FPU
instructions because of the entanglement of base-hw, base, and the tool
chain (libgcc_eh.a).

issue #3365
2019-05-27 14:53:32 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
a1e70b9ba4 kernel: differentiate board-specific components
Components like kernel, core, and bootstrap that are built for a
specific board need to reside inside the same architectural dependent
build directory. For instance there are sel4, foc, and hw kernel builds
for imx6q_sabrelite and imx7d_sabre, which have to reside inside the same
arm_v7 build directory.
This commit names those components explicitely, and adapts the run-tool to it.

Fix #3316
2019-05-27 14:46:52 +02:00
Alexander Boettcher
450c8dc149 vm_session: track dataspaces used by attach
Track the dataspaces used by attach and add handling of flushing VM space
when dataspace gets destroyed (not triggered via the vm_session interface).

Issue #3111
2019-05-06 16:15:25 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
935abb55b7 hw: move src/lib/hw header to src/include/hw
* Remove bad style of using `src/lib` as include path

Fix #3244
2019-04-01 19:33:51 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
baf815d099 hw: add support for i.MX7 Dual SABRE board
Fix #3251
2019-04-01 19:33:49 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
3725e91603 hw: implement power-saving kernel lock for ARM smp
Thanks to former work of Martin Stein this commit finally incorporates a
non-spinning kernel lock on multi-core ARM platforms.

Fix #1313
2019-04-01 19:33:47 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
e9b3569f44 hw: remove overall cache maintainance from core
This functionality is only needed in bootstrap now that kernel and
userland share the same address-space.

Fix #2699
2019-04-01 19:33:46 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
822a6e7c5f hw_riscv: strictly separate machine and syscall ids
Fix #3230
2019-03-18 15:56:59 +01:00
Stefan Kalkowski
55b0dff795 hw: add board support for Nitrogen6 SoloX 2019-02-26 14:45:31 +01:00
Stefan Kalkowski
7ffc480db8 hw: avoid code duplication for imx6 initialization
This is preliminary work to move the Wandboard to and add the
Nitrogen6 SX board to the world repository.

Ref #3168
2019-02-26 14:45:31 +01:00
Stefan Kalkowski
c65860ee53 enable i.MX6 Quad Sabrelite board for hw and foc 2019-01-30 13:35:28 +01:00
Norman Feske
bf62d6b896 Move timer from os to base repository
Since the timer and timeout handling is part of the base library (the
dynamic linker), it belongs to the base repository.

Besides moving the timer and its related infrastructure (alarm, timeout
libs, tests) to the base repository, this patch also moves the timer
from the 'drivers' subdirectory directly to 'src' and disamibuates the
timer's build locations for the various kernels. Otherwise the different
timer implementations could interfere with each other when using one
build directory with multiple kernels.

Note that this patch changes the include paths for the former os/timer,
os/alarm.h, os/duration.h, and os/timed_semaphore.h to base/.

Issue #3101
2019-01-14 12:33:57 +01:00
Stefan Kalkowski
8e13b376b0 hw: improve cross-cpu synchronization
This commit addresses several multiprocessing issues in base-hw:

* it reworks cross-cpu maintainance work for TLB invalidation by
  introducing a generic Inter_processor_work and removes the so
  called Cpu_domain_update
* thereby it solves the cross-cpu thread destruction, when the
  corresponding thread is active on another cpu (fix #3043)
* it adds the missing TLB shootdown for x86 (fix #3042)
* on ARM it removes the TLB shootdown via IPIs, because this
  is not needed on the multiprocessing ARM platforms we support
* it enables the per-cpu initialization of the kernel's cpu
  objects, which means those object initialization is executed
  by the proper cpu
* it rollbacks prior decision to make multiprocessing an aspect,
  but puts back certain 'smp' mechanisms (like cross-cpu lock)
  into the generic code base for simplicity reasons
2019-01-07 12:25:44 +01:00
Stefan Kalkowski
d7fa4cfb8b hw: enable eager FPU context switch for ARM
* Add an ieee754 FPU test
* Remove simple fpu test

Fix #2822
2018-11-29 11:54:31 +01:00
Norman Feske
19d7a488de init: health monitoring of child components
Fixes #3039
2018-11-27 11:36:34 +01:00
Alexander Boettcher
cf3ff17c50 hw/x86: enable SMP support
Fixes #2929
2018-08-28 16:48:44 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
68015a6e9d base: remove cortex* compiler flags (fix #2787) 2018-05-03 15:32:01 +02:00
Johannes Schlatow
bfe0031304 base-hw: enable SMP support for Zynq-7000 boards
Issue #2641
2018-02-09 13:34:19 +01:00
Johannes Schlatow
d4a75ed9bb base-hw: move spec/zynq files to zynq_qemu
This is necessary because in contrast to the zynq boards (see specs in genode-world), only zynq_qemu uses UART_0.
These files should thus fall under the zynq_qemu spec.

Fixes #2615
2017-12-21 15:01:51 +01:00
Alexander Boettcher
15cc6d688f core: add support to export log output as ROM
Issue #2207
2017-12-21 15:01:46 +01:00
Alexander Boettcher
2cb635c3e3 base-*: rename core_log.cc to core_log_out.cc
Issue #2207
2017-12-21 15:01:46 +01:00
Christian Helmuth
4112037c0c hw: fix building usb_armory
This removes cpu_trustzone.cc (which was removed in
d6a05245f2) from the build dependencies.

Issue #2540
2017-11-30 11:23:11 +01:00
Stefan Kalkowski
d6a05245f2 hw: remove User_context
Fix #2540
2017-11-06 13:57:20 +01:00
Stefan Kalkowski
0635d5fffb hw: turn Cpu_idle into a Thread
Fix #2539
2017-11-06 13:57:20 +01:00
Stefan Kalkowski
84331ac0f7 hw: remove obsolete Kernel::Cpu_context
Due to the changes when fixing issue #2091 the Kernel::Cpu_context
became superfluent and is not used anymore.

Fix #2538
2017-11-06 13:57:20 +01:00
Stefan Kalkowski
4e97a6511b hw: switch page-tables only when necessary
* Instead of always re-load page-tables when a thread context is switched
  only do this when another user PD's thread is the next target,
  core-threads are always executed within the last PD's page-table set
* remove the concept of the mode transition
* instead map the exception vector once in bootstrap code into kernel's
  memory segment
* when a new page directory is constructed for a user PD, copy over the
  top-level kernel segment entries on RISCV and X86, on ARM we use a designated
  page directory register for the kernel segment
* transfer the current CPU id from bootstrap to core/kernel in a register
  to ease first stack address calculation
* align cpu context member of threads and vms, because of x86 constraints
  regarding the stack-pointer loading
* introduce Align_at template for members with alignment constraints
* let the x86 hardware do part of the context saving in ISS, by passing
  the thread context into the TSS before leaving to user-land
* use one exception vector for all ARM platforms including Arm_v6

Fix #2091
2017-10-19 13:31:18 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
42db1e112b hw: introduce kernel/user address space split
* introduces central memory map for core/kernel
* on 32-bit platforms the kernel/core starts at 0x80000000
* on 64-bit platforms the kernel/core starts at 0xffffffc000000000
* mark kernel/core mappings as global ones (tagged TLB)
* move the exception vector to begin of core's binary,
  thereby bootstrap knows from where to map it appropriately
* do not map boot modules into core anymore
* constrain core's virtual heap memory area
* differentiate in between user's and core's main thread's UTCB,
  which now resides inside the kernel segment

Ref #2091
2017-10-19 13:31:17 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
ea46c462a4 base: make stack area base specifiable for core
When running core as the kernel inside every component, a separate
stack area for core is needed that is different from the user-land
component's one.

Ref #2091
2017-08-28 16:49:46 +02:00
Martin Stein
23f35370a2 core: generic ROM module initialization
For most base platforms (except linux and sel4), the initialization of
boot modules is the same. Thus, merge this default implementation in the
new unit base/src/core/platform_rom_modules.cc.

Ref #2490
2017-08-28 16:49:36 +02:00
Alexander Boettcher
58e4f6cf9d core: add map method to pd_session interface
The method can be used to trigger the eager insertion of page frames into
page tables. Intention: to be used for memory used for DMA.

Issue #2209
2017-08-18 10:24:46 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
a004462096 hw: fix capability accounting of kernel/core
The recently implemented capability resource trading scheme unfortunately
broke the automated capability memory upgrade mechanism needed by base-hw
kernel/core. This commit splits the capability memory upgrade mechanism
from the PD session ram_quota upgrade, and moves that functionality
into a separate Pd_session::Native_pd interface.

Ref #2398
2017-06-19 12:35:55 +02:00
Martin Stein
685f509a43 timer connection: no interpolation on arm w/o hw
On ARM, we do not have a component-local hardware time-source. The ARM
performance counter has no reliable frequency as the ARM idle command
halts the counter. Thus, we do not do local time interpolation on ARM.
Except we're on the HW kernel. In this case we can read out the kernel
time instead.

Ref #2435
2017-05-31 17:50:28 +02:00
Sebastian Sumpf
c3cf7f3c3a riscv: ISA-1.9.1 and GCC-6.3.0 adaptions
Adds 1.9.1 support to base-hw

Note:
* the kernel timer is not working
* dynamic linking is currently not supported
2017-05-31 13:16:24 +02:00
Sebastian Sumpf
6c95eb9aff base-hw: RISC-V BBL
The Berkley Boot Loader handles kernel loading and machine mode
2017-05-31 13:16:24 +02:00
Sebastian Sumpf
496671e523 gcc: RISC-V 6.3.0
issue #2423
2017-05-31 13:16:20 +02:00
Norman Feske
0167d5af50 Integrate core's RAM service into the PD service
Fixes #2407
2017-05-31 13:16:14 +02:00
Norman Feske
a96919632e core: unify Pd_session_component across kernels
Issue #2407
2017-05-31 13:16:13 +02:00
Norman Feske
4773707495 core: split RAM dataspace factory from RAM service
By separating the session-interface concerns from the mechanics of the
dataspace creation, the code becomes simpler to follow, and the RAM
session can be more easily merged with the PD session in a subsequent
step.

Issue #2407
2017-05-31 13:16:12 +02:00
Norman Feske
a1df4fee44 base: restructure signal-submit initialization
This patch allows core's 'Signal_transmitter' implementation to sidestep
the 'Env::Pd' interface and thereby adhere to a stricter layering within
core. The 'Signal_transmitter' now uses - on kernels that depend on it -
a dedicated (and fairly freestanding) RPC proxy mechanism for signal
deliver, instead of channeling signals through the 'Pd_session::submit'
RPC function.
2017-05-31 13:16:12 +02:00
Martin Stein
c70fed29f7 os/timer: interpolate time via timestamps
Previously, the Genode::Timer::curr_time always used the
Timer_session::elapsed_ms RPC as back end.  Now, Genode::Timer reads
this remote time only in a periodic fashion independently from the calls
to Genode::Timer::curr_time. If now one calls Genode::Timer::curr_time,
the function takes the last read remote time value and adapts it using
the timestamp difference since the remote-time read. The conversion
factor from timestamps to time is estimated on every remote-time read
using the last read remote-time value and the timestamp difference since
the last remote time read.

This commit also re-works the timeout test. The test now has two stages.
In the first stage, it tests fast polling of the
Genode::Timer::curr_time. This stage checks the error between locally
interpolated and timer-driver time as well as wether the locally
interpolated time is monotone and sufficiently homogeneous. In the
second stage several periodic and one-shot timeouts are scheduled at
once. This stage checks if the timeouts trigger sufficiently precise.

This commit adds the new Kernel::time syscall to base-hw. The syscall is
solely used by the Genode::Timer on base-hw as substitute for the
timestamp. This is because on ARM, the timestamp function uses the ARM
performance counter that stops counting when the WFI (wait for
interrupt) instruction is active. This instruction, however is used by
the base-hw idle contexts that get active when no user thread needs to
be scheduled.  Thus, the ARM performance counter is not a good choice for
time interpolation and we use the kernel internal time instead.

With this commit, the timeout library becomes a basic library. That means
that it is linked against the LDSO which then provides it to the program it
serves. Furthermore, you can't use the timeout library anymore without the
LDSO because through the kernel-dependent LDSO make-files we can achieve a
kernel-dependent timeout implementation.

This commit introduces a structured Duration type that shall successively
replace the use of Microseconds, Milliseconds, and integer types for duration
values.

Open issues:

* The timeout test fails on Raspberry PI because of precision errors in the
  first stage. However, this does not render the framework unusable in general
  on the RPI but merely is an issue when speaking of microseconds precision.

* If we run on ARM with another Kernel than HW the timestamp speed may
  continuously vary from almost 0 up to CPU speed. The Timer, however,
  only uses interpolation if the timestamp speed remained stable (12.5%
  tolerance) for at least 3 observation periods. Currently, one period is
  100ms, so its 300ms. As long as this is not the case,
  Timer_session::elapsed_ms is called instead.

  Anyway, it might happen that the CPU load was stable for some time so
  interpolation becomes active and now the timestamp speed drops. In the
  worst case, we would now have 100ms of slowed down time. The bad thing
  about it would be, that this also affects the timeout of the period.
  Thus, it might "freeze" the local time for more than 100ms.

  On the other hand, if the timestamp speed suddenly raises after some
  stable time, interpolated time can get too fast. This would shorten the
  period but nonetheless may result in drifting away into the far future.
  Now we would have the problem that we can't deliver the real time
  anymore until it has caught up because the output of Timer::curr_time
  shall be monotone. So, effectively local time might "freeze" again for
  more than 100ms.

  It would be a solution to not use the Trace::timestamp on ARM w/o HW but
  a function whose return value causes the Timer to never use
  interpolation because of its stability policy.

Fixes #2400
2017-05-31 13:16:11 +02:00
Martin Stein
4d3d4ecca0 hw core: merge Kernel::Clock and Kernel::Timer
With this, we get rid of platform specific timer interfaces. The new
Timer class does the same as the old Clock class and has a generic
interface. The old Timer class was merely used by the old Clock class.
Also, we get rid of having only one timer instance which we tell with
each method call for which CPU it shall be done. Instead now each Cpu
object has its own Timer member that knows the CPU it works for.

Also, rename all "tics" to "ticks".

Fixes #2347
2017-05-31 13:16:10 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
b58b69515c Remove UART specific SPEC identifiers (Ref #2403) 2017-05-31 13:16:10 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
6106e64aac base: remove include/spec/* other than ISA
This commit moves the headers residing in `repos/base/include/spec/*/drivers`
to `repos/base/include/drivers/defs` or repos/base/include/drivers/uart`
respectively. The first one contains definitions about board-specific MMIO
iand RAM addresses, or IRQ lines. While the latter contains device driver
code for UART devices. Those definitions are used by driver implementations
in `repos/base-hw`, `repos/os`, and `repos/dde-linux`, which now need to
include them more explicitely.

This work is a step in the direction of reducing 'SPEC' identifiers overall.

Ref #2403
2017-05-31 13:16:01 +02:00
Stefan Kalkowski
b9549e58d0 hw: cleanup core code (Ref #2394) 2017-05-31 13:15:53 +02:00