Several users of the signal API used custom convenience classes to
invoke signal-handling functions on the reception of incoming signals.
The 'Signal_dispatcher' pattern turned out to be particularly useful. To
avoid the duplication of this code across the code base, this patch
adds the interface to 'base/signal.h'.
Furthermore, the patch changes the 'Signal::num()' return type from int
to unsigned because negative numbers are meaningless here.
Fixes#511
When matching the 'label' session argument using '<if-args>' in a
routing table, we can omit the child name prefix because it is always
the same for all sessions originating from the child anyway. Therefore,
this patch adds a special case for matching session labels. It makes the
expression of label-specific routing more intuitive.
Add functionality to lookup an object and lock it. Additional the case is
handled that a object may be already in-destruction and the lookup will deny
returning the object.
The object_pool generalize the lookup and lock functionality of the rpc_server
and serve as base for following up patches to fix dangling pointer issues.
With this patch, the loader installs an optional client-provided fault
handler as default CPU exception handler and RM fault handler for all
CPU and RM sessions of the loaded subsystem. This way, loader clients
become able to respond to failures occuring within the subsystem.
The new feature is provided via the added 'Loader::fault_handler' RPC
function.
The 'run/failsafe' test covers two cases related to the loader, which
are faults produced by the immediate child of the loader and faults
produced by indirect children.
This patch reflects eventual allocation errors in a more specific way to
the caller of 'alloc_aligned', in particular out-of-metadata and
out-of-memory are considered as different conditions.
Related to issue #526.
The block count in DMA requests is limited to 8 bit. Therefore,
if a client requests more than 255 blocks in a single packet request,
split the request in a loop.
With this patch, custom UIDs and GIDs can be assigned to individual
Genode processes or whole Genode subsystems.
The new 'base-linux/run/lx_uid.run' script contains an example of how to
use the feature.
Fixes#510
On Linux, we want to attach additional attributes to processes, i.e.,
the chroot location, the designated UID, and GID. Instead of polluting
the generic code with such Linux-specific platform details, I introduced
the new 'Native_pd_args' type, which can be customized for each
platform. The platform-dependent policy of init is factored out in the
new 'pd_args' library.
The new 'base-linux/run/lx_pd_args.run' script can be used to validate
the propagation of those attributes into core.
Note that this patch does not add the interpretation of the new UID and
PID attributes by core. This will be subject of a follow-up patch.
Related to #510.
Using the new 'join()' function, the caller can explicitly block for the
completion of the thread's 'entry()' function. The test case for this
feature can be found at 'os/src/test/thread_join'. For hybrid
Linux/Genode programs, the 'Thread_base::join()' does not map directly
to 'pthread_join'. The latter function gets already called by the
destructor of 'Thread_base'. According to the documentation, subsequent
calls of 'pthread_join' for one thread may result in undefined behaviour.
So we use a 'Genode::Lock' on this platform, which is in line with the
other platforms.
Related to #194, #501
Implement 'Signal_receiver::pending()'.
Provide display-subsystem MMIO.
Avoid method ambiguousness in 'Irq_context' in
'dde_linux/src/drivers/usb/signal/irq.cc'
(it derives from two list element classes when using 'base_hw').
Enables demo scenario with 'hw_panda_a2'.
Fix bug regarding idle thread in thread scheduling in
'base-hw/src/core/kernel.cc'.
Fix regarding signal submit in signal framework in
'base-hw/src/core/kernel.cc'.
Implies support for the ARMv6 architecture through 'base-hw'.
Get rid of 'base/include/drivers' expect of 'base/include/drivers/uart'.
Merge with the support for trustzone on VEA9X4 that came from
Stefan Kalkowski.
Leave board drivers in 'base/include/platform'.
Rework structure of the other drivers that were moved to
'base_hw/src/core' and those that came with the trustzone support.
Beautify further stuff in 'base_hw'.
Test 'nested_init' with 'hw_imx31' (hardware) and 'hw_panda_a2' (hardware),
'demo' and 'signal' with 'hw_pbxa9' (qemu) and 'hw_vea9x4'
(hardware, no trustzone), and 'vmm' with 'hw_vea9x4'
(hardware, with trustzone).
The new 'Uart::Session' interface is an extension of the
'Terminal::Session' interface that allows for configuring UART-specific
parameters, i.e., the baud rate.
Since the recent move of the process creation into core, the original chroot trampoline
mechanism implemented in 'os/src/app/chroot' does not work anymore. A
process could simply escape the chroot environment by spawning a new
process via core's PD service. Therefore, this patch moves the chroot
support into core. So the chroot policy becomes mandatory part of the
process creation. For each process created by core, core checks for
'root' argument of the PD session. If a path is present, core takes the
precautions needed to execute the new process in the specified chroot
environment.
This conceptual change implies minor changes with respect to the Genode
API and the configuration of the init process. The API changes are the
enhancement of the 'Genode::Child' and 'Genode::Process' constructors to
take the root path as argument. Init supports the specification of a
chroot per process by specifying the new 'root' attribute to the
'<start>' node of the process. In line with these changes, the
'Loader::Session::start' function has been enhanced with the additional
(optional) root argument.
Thanks to the exclusive use of SCM rights for delegating access rights
to memory objects and RPC entrypoints, Genode processes outside of core
won't need to access any files.
g++ 4.4.5 outputs the following warnings in our code using the loader
session:
.../base/include/base/capability.h: In member function 'typename Genode::Trait::Call_return<typename IF::Ret_type>::Type Genode::Capability<RPC_INTERFACE>::call() const [with IF = Loader::Session::Rpc_view_geometry, RPC_INTERFACE = Loader::Session]':
.../base/include/base/capability.h:207: warning: 'ret.Genode::Capability<Loader::Session>::Return<Loader::Session::Rpc_view_geometry>::_value.Loader::Session::View_geometry::width' may be used uninitialized in this function
.../base/include/base/capability.h:207: warning: 'ret.Genode::Capability<Loader::Session>::Return<Loader::Session::Rpc_view_geometry>::_value.Loader::Session::View_geometry::height' may be used uninitialized in this function
.../base/include/base/capability.h:207: warning: 'ret.Genode::Capability<Loader::Session>::Return<Loader::Session::Rpc_view_geometry>::_value.Loader::Session::View_geometry::buf_x' may be used uninitialized in this function
.../base/include/base/capability.h:207: warning: 'ret.Genode::Capability<Loader::Session>::Return<Loader::Session::Rpc_view_geometry>::_value.Loader::Session::View_geometry::buf_y' may be used uninitialized in this function
This is easily fixed with providing a default constructor.
Because of the C++ rules regarding initialer lists code that used
them for View_geometry had to be modified to use a normal construction
call. In my tests only Nitpicker had to be changed.