This patch updates the launchpad config to use XML attributes and
removes the built-in default configuration (which is only meaningful
for demo.run anyway).
By splitting Session_policy into two classes, we make it more flexible.
Originally, the constructor accepted solely an args string, which made it
unusable for situations where we already have extracted the session
label (e.g., stored in the session meta data of a server). Now, the
extraction of the label from the args string is performed by the new
Session_label class instead, which, in turn, can be passed to the
constructor of Session_policy.
This change causes a minor API change. The following code
Session_policy policy(session_args);
Must be turned into
Session_label label(session_args);
Session_policy policy(label);
Originally, the convenience utility for accessing a process
configuration came in the form of a header file. But this causes
aliasing problems if multiple compilation units access the config while
the configuration gets dynamically updated. Moving the implementation of
the accessor to the singleton object into a library solves those
problems.
This patch adds support for iterating through a const list. This allows
users of lists to be more rigid with regard to constness. Furthermore,
the patch adds the function 'List::insert_at' for inserting an element
at a specified position. By adding this function, we can remove code
duplication in nitpicker.
This patch adds some of lwip's checksum calculation options to the
Genode-specific 'lwiptops.h' configuration file. The checksum calculations
are enabled by default.
Fixes#868.
Only the directories and files which were created in the first place
by the libc port should be removed. Thereby ignore the exit code of
the find command to prevent GNUmake from stopping its execution.
Fixes#841.
With this patch, the 'not implemented' messages of the pthread function
stubs always get printed to the Genode log console instead of stdout.
Issue #815.
The window scale option (http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1323) patch of lwIP
definitely works solely for the receive window, not for the send window.
Setting the send window size to the maximum of an 16bit value, 65535,
or multiple of it (x * 65536 - 1) results in the same performance.
Everything else decrease performance.
We will have to check this window scale patch before using higher values.
Minor speed improvements of ~6Mbit. Additionally a ethernet frame fits now
into one memory allocation per pbuf. Beforehand two were allocated - one being
1514 bytes and another one being 2 bytes (monitored by instrumenting copy loop
in libports/src/lib/lwip/platform/nic.cc).
lwip reports via getsockopt the size of the default size of the receive buffer
to the netperf server. lwip returns 2GB and netperf server uses this value to
allocate some buffers - which of course fails with out of memory.
Reduces the "default size" to some smaller value.
With the commit we are not forced anymore to (but still can) use specific
netperf client options regarding memory allocations of the receive buffer.
The PWD variable contains the current working directory of the original
location where 'make -C' is executed, not the directory specified as
argument of '-C'. The tools referenced by ports/libports, however,
expect PWD to point to the root of the respective repository.
This patch splits the download of signatures from the download of the
archive to improve robustness. This way, signature files will be
downloaded even if the corresponding archive is already in place.
Issue #748
In fact, the sizes were the same the whole time, but by using
the same enum in both cases to instantiate the Packet_stream_tx
and Packet_stream_rx members of the e.g. RPC object, it allows
for more flexible generalization between e.g. source or, sink
objects, when programming event-driven, and implementing generic
handlers for their signals.
This patch makes the handling of failed integrity checks of 3rd-party
packages more robust. Previously, a once failed 'make prepare PKG=curl'
would not leave any trace of the verification state. Hence, a successive
attempt to perform the 'make prepare' step again succeeded even if the
signature check failed.
To solve this problem, the outcome of a successful signature check is
represented by a tag file called 'download/<archive-name>.verified'.
Because the rule for extracting the archive depends on the .verify tag
file, the extraction step is not performed until the signature check
succeeds.
Issue #748