* Provide paravirtualized block API for accessing the second partition
of the block device that is provided by the ESDHC driver.
* Provide paravirtualized serial API for sending log-output over Genodes
serial port.
* Use the latest Linux suggested in the USB Armory Wiki [1] when on USB Armory
while still using the older vendor Linux when on i.MX53 QSB. I.e.,
provide a device tree through RAM and a rootfs through the paravirtualized
block device when on USB Armory while providing ATAGs and Initrd when on
i.MX53 QSB.
* Switch on the LED on the USB Armory when the VMM catches a VM-exception
and switch it off again when as soon as the exception is handled. This
merely show-cases the ability to instrument the LED for such purposes. In an
ideal world, the LED is switched on as long as we're on the "Secure Side"
and switched off as long as we're not.
* For further information see repos/os/run/tz_vmm.run
[1] https://github.com/inversepath/usbarmory/wiki/Preparing-a-bootable-microSD-imageFixes#1497
Move ADMA2 stuff to extra header and unit. Move ESDHCv2 implementations to
extra unit. Use exceptions instead of error codes. Clean-up documentation.
Ref #1497
The manual termination of multi-block writes via "Stop Transmission" commands
seems to leave the card in a busy state sometimes. This causes errors on
subsequent commands. Thus, we have to synchronize manually with the
card-internal state via "Send State" commands. Additionally, the method
for issuing the manual "Stop Transmission" commands was refined.
Ref #1497
We have to issue a data synchronization barrier after writing a ADMA2
table to ensure that the corresponding write commands were actually
executed before issuing the SD command.
Ref #1497
On i.MX53 QSB, a "Send Op Cond" command during the driver initialization
returns another response value than on the USB Armory. As the check for
this response seems to have no relevance for the driver functionality (Linux
reads the value from MMIO but I can't find a place in the source code where
it is used), we simply remove it.
Ref #1497
Previously, it was not necessary to acknowledge an IRQ initially before using
it. However, since the IRQ framework changed lately it is. Adapt to this.
Ref #1497
In the event where a nitpicker session's quota was depleted by the
allocation of view handles, nitpicker would abort. The patch prevents
the abort by reflecting this condition as an Out_of_metadata exception
to the client. This way, the client can upgrade its session as needed.
The problem was triggered by running the decorator_stress test (changed
to generate 40 windows) with the themed_decorator.
This patch addresses the corner case that the specified neighbor view
is the first view of the view stack. If this is the case when inserting
the view in front of the neighbor (behind == false), the target position
within the view stack must be a null pointer, not the first view.
Because the conditions have become rather complicated, both cases
of 'behind' are handled separately now.
This patch ensures that focus changes performed via the Session::focus
call are made effective the next time, the user is idle. Previously,
focus changes during drag operations were simply discarded.
Currently, when a signal arrives in the main thread, the signal dispatcher is
retrieved and called from the main thread, the dispatcher uses a proxy object
that in turn sends an RPC to the entry point. This becomes a problem when the
entry point destroys the dispatcher object, before the dispatch function has
been called by the main thread. Therefore, the main thread should simply send an
RPC to the entry point upon signal arrival and the dispatching should be handled
solely by the entry point.
Issue #1738