Linux del_timer() and mod_timer() return if the timer was pending before
the modification. Additionally, these functions are potentially called
from handler function of the timer to modify and, therefore, checking
for timeout != INVALID_TIMEOUT is not sufficient as the timeout is
indeed valid when the handler is executed.
This patch fixes an aliasing problem of the 'close' method signature
that prevented the Input::Root_component::close method to be called.
This way, the event-queue state was not reset at session-close time,
which prevented a subsequent session-creation request to succeed. With
the patch, input servers like ps2_drv, usb_drv that rely on the
Input::Root_component support the dynamic re-opening of sessions. This
happens in particular when using a dynamically configured input filter.
We update the alarm-scheduler time with results of
Timer::Connection::curr_time when we schedule new timeouts but when
handling the signal from the Timer server we updated the alarm-scheduler
time with the result of Timer::Connection::elapsed_us. Mixing times
like this could cause a non-monotone time value in the alarm scheduler.
The alarm scheduler then thought that the time value wrapped and
triggered all timeouts immediately. The problem was fixed by always
using Timer::Connection::curr_time as time source.
Ref #2490
This recipe copies the entire stdcxx library into the API archive, which
is an interim solution until we introduce a proper ABI for stdcxx. With
this current version, every user of the stdcxx ABI will implicitly build
the stdcxx library.
This patch merges two similar rules, which create content at 'include'
into a single rule. This prevents a possible race condition when
creating archives in parallel.
We moved the stack-area segment 128 MiB behind text and data to comply
with assumptions in the kernel ELF loader.
This commit also reenables static binaries on linux and removes the
unused stack_area.stdlib.ld script.
Fixes#2521
This is a drivers subsystem that starts the most fundamental
(framebuffer, input, block) device drivers dynamically, depending on the
runtime-detected devices. The discovered block devices are reported
as a "block_devices" report.
This patch applies the handling of cursor keys, function keys, and page
up/down keys even if no keymap is defined. This is the case when using
the terminal with character events produced by the input filter.
This patch is a workaround for the apparent problem that noux
applications, which perform execve, implicitly use functionality from
the dynamic linker, not explicitly via the libc. If the binary lacks the
dependency information, noux will fail on the execve attempt. The latter
is the case when the noux package is built as a depot archive where
library dependencies are not traversed over multiple levels.
In nested scenarios like driver_manager.run, the initial session quota
for IO_PORT, IO_PORT, and IRQ sessions is expectedly insufficient.
However, the condition is properly handled by re-attemping the request
with a slightly increased quota. Still, core prints a warning each time
the request is denied for quota reasons, which spams the log. This patch
removes the non-critical message.
Create periodic and one-shot timeouts with the maximum duration
to see if triggers any corner-case bugs. They must not trigger during
the test.
Ref #2490
If we add an absolute timeout to the back-end alarm-scheduler we must first
call 'handle' at the scheduler to update its internal time value.
Otherwise, it might happen that we add a timeout who's deadline is so big that
it normally belongs to the next time-counter period but the scheduler thinks
that it belongs to the current period as its time is older than the one used
to calculate the deadline.
Ref #2490
When we have two time values of an unsigned integer type and we create
the difference and want to know wether it is positive or negative within
the same value we loose at least one half of the value range for casting
to signed integers. This was the case in the alarm scheduler when
checking wether an alarm already triggered. Even worse, we casted from
'unsigned long' to 'signed int' which caused further loss on at least
x86_64. Thus, big timeouts like ~0UL falsely triggered directly.
Now, we use an extra boolean value to remember in which period of the
time counter we are and to which period of the time counter the deadline
of an alarm belongs. This boolean switches its value each time the time
counter wraps. This way, we can avoid any casting by checking wether the
current time is of the same period as the deadline of the alarm that we
inspect. If so, the alarm is pending if "current time >= alarm
deadline", otherwise it is pending if "current time < alarm deadline".
Ref #2490
If the PIT timer driver gets activated too slow (e.g. because of a bad priority
configuration), it might miss counter wraps and would than produce sudden time
jumps. The driver now detects this problem dynamically, warns about it and
adapts the affected values to avoid time jumps.
Ref #2400
The cache directory content is slightly different on each prepare-port
run and fortunately not used at build time. So, we just remove it at the
end of port preparation.
When using the elfweaver to generate boot images, python stores
precompiled modules in the source directory besides the .py files. This
changed the contrib source tree with binary files specific to the build
host. As a result the depot create tool picked up the changed source
tree and produced strange new hashes. Now, the tool sources are copied
to the build directory where python can do its optimizations and the
depot stays clean.
The NIC router always reports the link state "Up" (true) because
the effective link state depends on the targeted remote interface
and thus on the individual routing for each packet. Consequently,
also the signal handler for state changes gets ignored.
Ref #2490
IP stacks may treat a network interface as "down" when it states a MAC
address with the I/G bit (bit 40) set to "Group" (value 0) instead of
"Individual" (value 1). This was observed with a TinyCore 8 inside a
Virtualbox VM. Thus, the previously choosen 03:03:03:03:03:00 as base
for the MAC address allocator is bad. Now we use the 02:02:02:02:02:00
instead. This also ensures that the MAC addresses are not marked as
"Universal" but as "Local" (bit 41, value 1) which is correct in general
as the router allocates MAC addresses only for virtual networks.
Ref #2490
The timer driver should always be of the highest priority to avoid
problem with timers that have low max-counter values like the PIT
with only 53 ms.
Ref #2400
The NIC dump component didn't support forwarding of link states and link-state
signals until now. Furthermore, it now prints MAC address and link state
on session creation and on every link state change.
Ref #2490
Previously, the uplink session was created on component startup while the
creation of the downlink session is timed by the client component. This
created a time span in which packets from the uplink were dropped at the
nic_dump. Now the uplink session-request is done by the session component
of the downlink.
Ref #2490