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1137 lines
54 KiB
Plaintext
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===============================================
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Release notes for the Genode OS Framework 14.08
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===============================================
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Genode Labs
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The overall theme of version 14.08 is the introduction of a new scalable GUI
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architecture that takes security as the most fundamental premise. It is unique
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in the way that the security of graphical applications and thereby the privacy
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of the user depends on only a few components of very little complexity. We
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strive for low complexity to reduce the likelihood for bugs and thereby the
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attack surface of the system. When using a secure microkernel such as NOVA,
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Genode's trusted computing base for graphical applications is orders of
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magnitude less complex compared to contemporary operating systems. To
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illustrate the rigidity of this claim, the security-sensitive parts of the GUI
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stack do not even depend on a C runtime. With the current release, we
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maintain our focus on security while taking the scalability of the GUI
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architecture to a level that meets the expectations of general-purpose OSes.
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Thanks to its component-based design, the new GUI stack provides a great
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deal of flexibility with respect to its behaviour and style. Section
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[New GUI architecture] provides the rationale behind the development, the big
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picture of the architecture, and details about the current implementation.
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Besides the GUI-related improvements, the release comes with a new port
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of the OpenVPN client as Genode component (Section [New port of OpenVPN]),
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pluggable VFS file systems (Section [Pluggable VFS file systems]),
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a vastly improved integration of Qt5 (Section [Integration of Qt5]),
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and an upgrade of the Linux device-driver environment (DDE Linux) to version
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3.14.5 (Section [DDE Linux updated to version 3.14.5]).
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On the NOVA platform, both supported virtualization solutions received
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attention. Guests running in VirtualBox have become able to use networking,
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and the Seoul virtual-machine monitor got improved to support SMP.
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Furthermore, the development of our custom base-hw kernel continued at a high
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pace. Its performance could be greatly improved and its source structure got
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overhauled to make it more coherent and approachable. The latter point is
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important as we see the growing popularity of base-hw among the users of the
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framework. Section [Execution on bare hardware (base-hw)] covers the changes
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of this base platform in detail.
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New GUI architecture
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####################
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Up until now, Genode's GUI stack has been pretty rigid with the nitpicker GUI
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server being the centerpiece of the picture. Nitpicker is a low-level display
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multiplexer that allows multiple applications to share the physical screen and
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input devices in a secure way. It is designed such that no application can
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eavesdrop or influence another application via the GUI server, and user input
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is protected from snooping. The design applies microkernel-construction
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principles to the GUI level. Because the GUI server is in a similar position
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as a kernel in that it provides services shared by different clients that may
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distrust each other, it must be of low complexity to keep the likelihood for
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bugs (and thereby its attack surface) as low as possible. It must contain only
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those mechanisms that are crucial for a GUI to operate and impossible
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to implement outside of the GUI server. Following this principle, nitpicker
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lacks many features that are universally expected from a GUI server such as
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window decorations, window management, widgets, keyboard-layout management, or
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conversion between color spaces. It provides merely three mechanisms: A way
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for a client to make pixel buffers visible on screen using so-called views, a
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way for the user to direct user input to a specific application, and a way for
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the user to reveal the identity of the visible applications to counter Trojan
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Horses (the feature is dubbed "X-ray mode").
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Over the years, nitpicker served us well for covering relatively static
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special-purpose system scenarios. But when considering Genode as a
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general-purpose OS, it goes without saying that nitpicker alone does not make
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a desktop environment. The functionality stripped off the GUI server must be
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implemented somewhere else. With the current release, we took the opportunity
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to design a GUI architecture that maintains the low complexity of the status
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quo for static system scenarios while also scaling to GUI features expected
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from general-purpose computing such as dynamics, window management, and a
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great deal of customizability.
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When we set out to design the GUI architecture, we took the following
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requirements into account.
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:Security:
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First and foremost, we need to maintain the strong security properties
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provided by nitpicker. GUI applications must be isolated by default. No
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application must be able to peek at another application. Even the mere
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existence of an application should be hidden from other applications. If we
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need to introduce new components that are shared among multiple
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applications, those components must be kept as low-complex as possible to
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keep their attack surface small. User input must be made available only to
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the single application that the user talks to. If we need to add complex
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code such as graphics-heavy libraries to the picture, we have to contain it
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in sandboxes with no critical privileges.
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:Flexibility:
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The architecture should principally support a wide range of user-interface
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paradigms such as floating windows, tabbed and tiled window management,
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or plain virtual consoles.
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:Customizability:
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Everyone has a different taste when it comes to the look of GUIs. However,
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advanced presentation often comes at the expense of additional complexity.
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The architecture should allow us to largely customize all visual aspects of
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the GUI such as the way the mouse pointer looks like and how it responds to
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a hovered context, how windows are equipped with window elements, or the
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functionality of panels and on-screen displays.
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:Performance:
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Even though we rely on software rendering at the time being and cannot
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expect miracles when it comes to graphics performance, we want the GUI to
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perform well enough to be enjoyable, even on low-end platforms like the
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Raspberry Pi.
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:Dynamics:
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The GUI should adapt itself at runtime, i.e., respond to configuration
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changes on the fly and handle changed screen resolutions.
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:Composability:
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In line with Unix's philosophy, we aspire the creation of complementary
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components that implement orthogonal functionality such that they can be
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combined in many different ways. To optimize for composability, we have to
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avoid introducing new interfaces because a new interface cannot be combined
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with existing components per se. Rather than introducing additional
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interfaces and abstractions, we should try to make the existing interfaces
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more flexible. Finally, we don't want to re-invent the wheel. With
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composability, we also refer to the sandboxed re-use of existing (and often
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highly complex) software such as Qt5.
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Design
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======
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With the considerations above in mind, we came up with the following overall
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picture.
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[image gui_overview]
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High-level overview of the components of the GUI stack
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The thin arrows denote parent-child relationships. The init process starts
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nitpicker, the window manager, and the yellow applications (the figure omits
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other components such as device drivers for brevity). The dotted arrows
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represent the use of nitpicker sessions where each pointed-to component
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implements the server side of the nitpicker interface. Let us have brief look
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at the roles of the individual components.
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The *nitpicker* GUI server multiplexes the physical input and output devices
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among multiple clients. Examples of such clients are depicted on the left
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side. I.e., the program that provides the backdrop image is connected directly
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to nitpicker. As is, nitpicker can still be used stand-alone to build static
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scenarios at minimal complexity.
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The *window manager* is a nitpicker client that provides an alternative
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implementation of the nitpicker interface. Because it is compatible to the
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real nitpicker at the interface level, a client cannot decide whether it talks
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to the real nitpicker or to the window manager. The presence of the window
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manager is transparent to the client. In contrast to the real nitpicker
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server, the window manager applies dynamic window management to the views
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created by its clients. The term "dynamic window management" may refer to
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vastly different concepts (floating windows vs. full-screen apps vs. tiled and
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tabbed window management), styles (theming, shadows, location of window
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handles), and ways of interaction (mouse, touch, keyboard). A single
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implementation to rule them all would certainly become extremely complex.
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However, since the window manager is shared by mutually distrusting
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applications, we strive to avoid complexity within this component to
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mitigate the chance for security exploits. For this reason, the window manager
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does not implement the complex window management and decoration by itself but
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delegates those tasks to two sandboxed child processes, namely the window
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layouter and the decorator. The window manager merely orchestrates the
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inter-relationship between GUI applications, the decorator, the window
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layouter, and the real nitpicker GUI server but it is free from policy. Hence,
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it can remain simple even when the GUI features get more sophisticated.
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The *window layouter* receives a list of windows (along with their size
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constraints), the user input that refers to window decorations, and the
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information about the currently hovered window element. In turn, it produces a
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data model that describes a window layout. Put shortly, it solely implements
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the behaviour of the window manager. It does neither see user input that
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refers to one of the applications nor can it access any pixels produced by the
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applications. It does not even know the location of window handles on screen.
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Even in the event that a highly sophisticated window layouter may become
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complex and bug-ridden, such bugs could not compromise the privacy of the
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user.
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The *decorator* takes the data model of the window layout as produced by the
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window layouter and the current pointer position when it points to a window
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decoration. Based on this information, it draws window decorations using a
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virtualized nitpicker session provided by the window manager. It is sandboxed
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in a similar way as the window layouter so that a bug in the decorator cannot
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put the privacy of the user at risk. In addition to drawing window
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decorations, the decorator produces a data model that contains information
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about the currently hovered window element. This model is fed to the layouter.
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Thanks to this design, only the decorator knows the location and look of
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window elements. By replacing the decorator with an alternative
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implementation, the visual style can be freely customized.
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Implementation
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==============
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The implementation of the new architecture consists of a largely revisited
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interface of the nitpicker GUI server, the new window manager, and example
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implementations of a window layouter and decorator. Furthermore, it comes with
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several new or revised supplemental components such as a pointer, status
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bar, backdrop, and nit_fb.
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The window manager is located at _gems/src/server/wm_. It consists of less
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than 2000 lines of code and is unlikely to grow much in the future. Similar to
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nitpicker, it does not depend on a C runtime but only the naked Genode API.
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The low complexity of this critical component makes us very confident that we
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will be able to maintain strong security at the GUI level.
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An example of a decorator is provided at _gems/src/app/decorator/_ and
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_os/include/decorator/_ (the reusable parts). It has a built-in Motif-inspired
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look, supplemented with a few fading effects. Technically, it actually
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contains a window system on its own. That is, it maintains a window stack and
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a single virtual framebuffer, on which all window decorations are painted. For
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each window, it creates four nitpicker views for making the top, left, right,
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and bottom window borders appear on screen. Alternative implementations may
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use different approaches such as creating a distinct nitpicker session per
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window. The decorator can be separately tested via the
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_gems/run/decorator.run_ and _gems/run/decorator_stress.run_ scripts.
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A simple example window layouter can be found at
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_gems/src/app/floating_window_layouter/_. It implements a plain floating
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window layout that allows the moving, resizing, and topping of windows.
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Nitpicker remains to be the key piece of the puzzle. But in order to fulfill
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its central position within the new GUI stack, we had to improve it in several
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ways. To accommodate the interplay of the nitpicker views maintained by the
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decorator and the applications, we added support for atomically updating
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multiple views at once. As a measure to mitigate potential overload situations
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and to allow us to switch to an asynchronous client interface, we changed the
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redraw handling to become time-period driven. An added signalling facility
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allows clients to synchronize themselves with nitpicker's periodic redraw
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processing. To allow the window manager to switch the keyboard focus according
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to the policy of the window layouter, we added a way to manage the focus using
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the nitpicker interface. In order to move the formerly built-in mouse cursor
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and status bar from nitpicker to separate programs, we introduced the
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notion of domains and layers. More details about those features are provided
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in Section [Nitpicker GUI server].
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All the components have in common that they have no access to the file system,
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the network, or any other parts of the system that are unrelated to the GUI.
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Each of the two security-critical (potential multi-level) components nitpicker
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and the window manager consists of less than 3000 lines of code and are
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unlikely to grow much in the future. So we succeeded in separating the
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security-critical parts from complex parts. At the same time, the new
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architecture promises a lot of flexibility. The look and behaviour can be
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customized by implementing interchangeable window layouters and decorators.
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As nitpicker and the window manager can be used at the same time, special
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programs (like panels or on-screen displays) can be connected to nitpicker
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directly while regular applications are managed through the window manager.
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There even can be multiple window managers running at the same time. E.g., on
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a multi-level security system, each security domain could have a distinct
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window manager. This would further increase the degree of isolation because
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such window-manager instances would not be shared by applications of different
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security levels. Performance-wise the implementation performs reasonably well
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on the Raspberry Pi.
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[image wm_screenshot]
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The new window manager, decorator, floating window layouter, backdrop,
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and status bar in action. Windows 7 is executed in VirtualBox while the
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WebKit-based Arora web browser is running as Genode application.
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The entire scenario runs on the NOVA microhypervisor.
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For test-driving the new GUI architecture, please have a look at the
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_gems/run/wm.run_ script. Furthermore, we have switched all Qt5 examples
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to take advantage of the new window manager.
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Low-level OS infrastructure
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###########################
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Nitpicker GUI server
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====================
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To accommodate the new GUI architecture, we significantly improved nitpicker.
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At the API level, the most important change is the revisited session interface
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that allows for the batching of multiple view operations into an atomic RPC
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request. The mouse pointer and status bar are no longer parts of nitpicker but
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are realized as separate programs located at _os/src/app/pointer_ and
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_os/src/app/status_bar_. The _os/run/demo.run_ script contains a working
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example of how those components can be tied together. The feature set has been
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enhanced with the notion of domains, layers, and virtualized coordinate
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systems. The following excerpt of nitpicker's updated documentation explains
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how these features can be used by means of configuration. Details about
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further configuration options can be found at
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_os/src/server/nitpicker/README_.
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:Domains:
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Nitpicker clients are grouped into so-called domains where each domain can be
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subjected to a different policy. The assignment of clients to domains is
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expressed via '<policy>' nodes as illustrated by the following example:
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! <config>
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! ...
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! <policy label="pointer" domain="pointer"/>
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! <policy label="status_bar" domain="panel"/>
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! <policy label="" domain=""/>
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! ...
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! </config>
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When a session is created, the session label as provided with the creation
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request determines the policy rule to apply to the session. The policy with
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the longest matching label comes into effect. In the example above, the
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client labeled as "pointer" will be assigned to the domain named "pointer".
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The client labeled as "status_bar" will be assigned to the domain "panel".
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All other clients will be assigned to the third domain with an empty name.
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The properties of each domain are declared via '<domain>' nodes. For example:
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! <config>
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! ...
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! <domain name="pointer" layer="1" xray="no" origin="pointer" />
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! <domain name="panel" layer="2" xray="no" />
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! <domain name="" layer="3" ypos="18" height="-18" />
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! ...
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! </config>
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:Layering:
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The 'name' attribute of a '<domain>' node corresponds to the 'domain'
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declarations of the '<policy>' nodes. Each domain requires the definition of a
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'layer', which is a number. It allows for constraining the stacking position
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of the domain's views to a certain part of the global view stack. The
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front-most layer has the number 0. In the example above, all views of the
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"pointer" domain are presented in front of all others because the "pointer"
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domain is assigned to the lowest layer. All views of the "panel" domain are
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placed behind the "pointer" but in front to all other views that belong to the
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unnamed domain.
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:Domain-specific coordinate systems:
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The operations issued by nitpicker clients refer to screen coordinates. For
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each domain, the coordinate system can be constrained in the following ways.
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The 'origin' attribute specifies the location of the coordinate (0,0) on
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screen. It can take the values "top_left", "top_right", "bottom_left",
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"bottom_right", and "pointer". By default, the coordinate origin (0,0) refers
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to the top-left screen corner. When configured to use the "pointer" as origin,
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all views of the domain are positioned relative to the current pointer
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position. When moving the mouse, the movement will be applied to all views of
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the domain. This enables the realization of pointer shapes outside of the
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nitpicker server.
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In addition to the coarse definition of the 'origin', it is possible to
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further shift the origin by a fixed amount of pixels using the 'xpos' and
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'ypos' attributes. By specifying an 'ypos' value of 18 as in the example
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above, an operation that places a view at (0,0) will position the view at
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(0,18). This is useful to preserve a certain screen area for a panel.
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The combination of the 'origin' attribute with 'xpos' and 'ypos' allows the
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constraining of the screen at each border without the need to specify
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values that depend on the screen dimension. E.g., for placing a panel at
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the right screen border, the 'origin' attribute can be set to "top_right"
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and the 'xpos' value to a negative width of the panel.
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:Domain-specific screen size constraints:
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The screen dimensions reported when a client requests the size of the screen
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can be tweaked per domain. E.g., when preserving a part of the screen for a
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panel, it is sensible to reduce the screen size reported to normal clients by
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the size of the panel so that such clients can adjust themselves to the part
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of the screen not covered by the panel. The screen-size constrains are
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expressed via the 'width' and 'height' attributes. If specifying a positive
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value, the value is reported to the client as is. If specifying a negative
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value, the value is subtracted from the physical dimensions. It is thereby
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possible to shrink the reported screen size independent of the physical screen
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size.
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:X-Ray mode:
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The behavior of nitpicker's X-ray mode can be defined for each domain
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individually. Each domain can have an associated color configured via the
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'color' attribute. This color is used by nitpicker while the X-ray mode
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is active.
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By setting the 'xray' attribute to "frame" (default), the views of the
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domain will be surrounded by a thin frame of the domain color. The content
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of all non-focused views will be tinted using the domain color.
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When setting the 'xray' value to "opaque", the view's content will be
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replaced by the opaque session color. This is useful for domains that
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display many tiny views, e.g., window handles.
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By assigning the value "none", the X-ray mode will not be applied to the
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domain. This is useful for trusted domains such as the pointer or a global
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panel. When X-ray mode gets activated, the views of those trusted clients
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remain unobstructed.
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Nitpicker-based virtual framebuffer (nit_fb)
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============================================
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The existing nit_fb server has been reimplemented using the server API.
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It thereby enables dynamic resizing of the framebuffer.
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Note that the new implementation does not feature the ability to perform a
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periodic refresh via the 'refresh_rate' configuration argument. This feature
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was removed because the refresh policy can (and should) always be implemented
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on the client side.
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ROM session interface
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=====================
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Originally, the ROM session interface had been designed for providing boot
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modules to the user land. Later, in version
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[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/12.05#System_reconfiguration_at_runtime - 12.05],
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we enhanced the interface to support dynamic updates of ROM modules to
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facilitate the reconfiguration of components at runtime. In the meanwhile,
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the dynamic updating of ROM modules has become commonplace within Genode,
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which prompted us to optimize the performance of the update mechanism.
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The new 'Rom_session::update' function can be used to request the update of an
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existing ROM dataspace. If the new data fits into the existing dataspace, a
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subsequent call of 'dataspace' can be omitted. This way, ROM dataspace updates
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don't suffer from page-fault-handling costs that would occur when replacing
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the dataspace with each update.
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Input session interface
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=======================
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Until now, all components that responded to user input used to poll the
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input-session interface at a rate of 10-20 milliseconds. This approach was
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fine in the presence of a few GUI applications but it does not scale. It
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also becomes a problem when chaining multiple GUI components. For example,
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when virtualizing the interface of the nitpicker GUI server or when nesting
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multiple nitpicker instances, input latencies would accumulate.
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Hence, we changed both the 'Input::Session' interface and the skeleton for the
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server-side implementation of this interface _input/component.h_. The
|
|
'Input::Session' interface offers a new 'sigh' function, which can be called
|
|
by the client to register a signal handler. The signal handler gets notified
|
|
on the arrival of new input. This alleviates the need to poll for input events
|
|
at the client side.
|
|
|
|
The server-side skeleton for implementing input services underwent a redesign
|
|
that makes it more modular and robust. I.e., there are no global functions
|
|
needed at the server side and the event-queue enable/disable mechanism is
|
|
implemented at a central place (in the root component) rather than inside each
|
|
driver.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loader session interface
|
|
========================
|
|
|
|
The loader provides a service that allows clients to dynamically create Genode
|
|
subsystems via a session interface. In contrast to a process that is spawning
|
|
a new subsystem as an immediate child process, a loader client has very
|
|
limited control over the spawned subsystem. It can merely define the binaries
|
|
and configuration to start, define the position where the loaded subsystem
|
|
will appear on screen, and kill the subsystem. But it is not able to interfere
|
|
with the operation of the subsystem during its lifetime. The most illustrative
|
|
use case is the execution of web-browser plugins where neither the browser
|
|
trusts the plugin nor the plugin trusts the browser.
|
|
|
|
The far-reaching changes of the nitpicker GUI server required the loader
|
|
interface to be partially redesigned. In the original version, the client
|
|
could get hold of the view capability of the subsystem's view. In order to
|
|
display the loaded subsystem on screen using the new version, the client has
|
|
to supply a view capability that will be used as the parent view of the
|
|
subsystem's view. The subsystem's view will no longer become accessible to the
|
|
client. Instead, the client performs view operations (like positioning the
|
|
view relative to the parent view) directly using the loader-session interface.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pluggable VFS file systems
|
|
==========================
|
|
|
|
The virtual file system (VFS) infrastructure introduced with version
|
|
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/14.05#Per-process_virtual_file_systems - 14.05],
|
|
supports a number of built-in file-system types such as the TAR, ROM, FS,
|
|
block, terminal, or LOG file systems. It allows the tailoring of the
|
|
file-system environment specifically for each individual program.
|
|
|
|
To make the VFS even more flexible, we have added support for external VFS
|
|
file systems. Such file systems come in the form of shared libraries that are
|
|
loaded on demand when the corresponding file-system type is encountered in the
|
|
process' VFS configuration. By convention, this library is named after the
|
|
file-system type it provides. For example, a file system that provides a
|
|
'random' file-system node would be called 'vfs_random.lib.so'. It is still
|
|
possible to give the node another name in the VFS. The following configuration
|
|
snippet illustrates this idea:
|
|
|
|
! <config>
|
|
! <libc>
|
|
! <vfs>
|
|
! <dir name="dev"> <jitterentropy name="random"/> </dir>
|
|
! </vfs>
|
|
! </libc>
|
|
! </config>
|
|
|
|
Here the "jitterentropy" file system, implemented in
|
|
_vfs_jitterentropy.lib.so_, provides a file-system node named "random" in the
|
|
_dev/_ directory. When traversing the '<vfs>' section of the configuration,
|
|
the C runtime will request the ROM module _vfs_jitterentropy.lib.so_ from its
|
|
parent and load it as a shared library. The actual program is able to
|
|
conveniently access the file system by opening _/dev/random_.
|
|
|
|
|
|
C-runtime support for time functions
|
|
====================================
|
|
|
|
Up to now, we only used the uptime as base period for all programs using the
|
|
libc. Though unfortunately the time stamp of changed files used to show a
|
|
wrong date, it posed no major issue but was merely an inconvenience. But it
|
|
becomes a major issue when dealing with TLS/SSL. To check a given certificate,
|
|
the TLS code needs a reasonable base period to validate the period stored in
|
|
the certificate. Therefore, we needed a way to provide a more accurate base
|
|
period. Most systems feature a hardware real-time clock (RTC), which is able
|
|
to give a current date. However, not all platforms supported by Genode have a
|
|
usable hardware real-time-clock, e.g., some ARM-based boards lack a battery to
|
|
sustain power to its RTC.
|
|
|
|
For this reason, it is necessary to provide a way to use different base-period
|
|
sources in a uniform way. We extended the '<vfs>' section of the libc
|
|
configuration with a 'rtc' attribute to accommodate for this requirement. By
|
|
using this attribute, one can use any node of the process' VFS to provide the
|
|
base period of the libc. The following configuration snippet illustrates this
|
|
idea:
|
|
|
|
! <config>
|
|
! <libc>
|
|
! <vfs rtc="/dev/rtc">
|
|
! <dir name="dev"> <rtc/> </dir>
|
|
! </vfs>
|
|
! </libc>
|
|
! </config>
|
|
|
|
In this example, the libc uses the _/dev/rtc_ node to get access to the actual
|
|
base-period source. On that account, we implemented a VFS file system called
|
|
"rtc" that uses a 'Rtc_session' to query the RTC value of the system.
|
|
Currently this file system only works on x86-based platforms because it is the
|
|
only platform that provides a RTC driver. Other platforms may use other ways
|
|
to provide a RTC source. It is actually possible to use a "inline" file system
|
|
to supply an arbitrary virtual time to a program:
|
|
|
|
! <vfs rtc="/dev/inline_rtc">
|
|
! </dir name="dev">
|
|
! <inline name="inline_rtc">2014-08-26 13:46
|
|
! </inline>
|
|
! </dir>
|
|
! </vfs>
|
|
|
|
The format of the output of any base-period source is by definition
|
|
'%Y-%m-%d %H:%M\n' (the man page of date(1) contains an explanation of
|
|
these sequences).
|
|
|
|
The gettimeofday(3) as well as the clock_gettime(3) function implemented in
|
|
Genode's libc backend will query the base-period source on the first execution
|
|
of these functions. They then add the current uptime in seconds and return
|
|
this value. If there is no such source, the functions just return the uptime
|
|
as they did before.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Improved support for cache attributes
|
|
=====================================
|
|
|
|
On ARM it's important to not merely distinguish between ordinary cached memory
|
|
and write-combined one, but also to consider non-cached memory. To insert the
|
|
appropriate page table entries, e.g., in the base-hw kernel, we need to pass
|
|
the information about the kind of memory from the user-level program that
|
|
performs the allocation to the core process. Therefore, we introduced a new
|
|
'Cache_attribute' type, which replaces the former 'write_combined' flag where
|
|
necessary, in particular the RAM session interface.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Utilities
|
|
=========
|
|
|
|
Object life-time management using weak pointers
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The management of object lifetimes is one of the most challenging problems of
|
|
dynamic systems. If not handled properly, references to no-longer existing
|
|
objects may remain in the system. When dereferenced, such a dangling pointer
|
|
will eventually lead to memory corruption. In the presence of multiple threads
|
|
(which usually imply a certain degree of indeterminism), such problems become
|
|
a nightmare to debug. They cannot be easily reproduced and their symptoms vary
|
|
a lot because any part of the memory may become corrupted. Most popular
|
|
high-level languages address this problem via garbage collection. At the low
|
|
level where Genode operates, however, we cannot rely on a garbage-collecting
|
|
runtime to relieve us from dealing with this issue.
|
|
|
|
One way to approach this problem is to explicitly notify the holders of those
|
|
pointers about the disappearance of the object. But this would require the
|
|
object to keep references to those pointer holders, which, in turn, might
|
|
disappear as well. Hence, this approach implies that both the pointed-to
|
|
object and the pointer holders know each other, which creates unwanted
|
|
circular dependencies. Consequently, this approach yields complex
|
|
implementations, which are prone to deadlocks or race conditions when multiple
|
|
threads are involved. Within Genode's core process, we employ a more elegant
|
|
pattern called "weak pointers" to overcome the problem. With the current
|
|
release, we promote this mechanism to become part of the framework API in the
|
|
form of the new header _base/include/base/weak_ptr.h_. So regular components
|
|
can use it for managing object lifetimes.
|
|
|
|
An object that might disappear at any time is represented by the 'Weak_object'
|
|
class template. It keeps track of a list of so-called weak pointers pointing
|
|
to the object. A weak pointer, in turn, holds privately the pointer to the
|
|
object alongside a validity flag. It cannot be used to dereference the object.
|
|
For accessing the actual object, a locked pointer must be created from a weak
|
|
pointer. If this creation succeeds, the object is guaranteed to be locked (not
|
|
destructed) until the locked pointer gets destroyed. If the object no longer
|
|
exists, the locked pointer will be invalid. This condition can (and should) be
|
|
detected via the 'Locked_ptr::is_valid()' function prior dereferencing the
|
|
pointer.
|
|
|
|
In the event a weak object gets destructed, all weak pointers that point
|
|
to the object are automatically invalidated. So a subsequent conversion into
|
|
a locked pointer will yield an invalid pointer, which can be detected (in
|
|
contrast to a dangling pointer).
|
|
|
|
To use this mechanism, the destruction of a weak object must be deferred until
|
|
no locked pointer points to the object anymore. This is done by calling the
|
|
function 'Weak_object::lock_for_destruction()' at the beginning of the
|
|
destructor of the to-be-destructed object. When this function returns, all
|
|
weak pointers to the object will have been invalidated. So it is save to
|
|
destruct and free the object.
|
|
|
|
|
|
New utility for tracking dirty rectangles
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
One problem shared by many graphical applications is the book-keeping of
|
|
two-dimensional areas to update - be it a widget library that needs to redraw
|
|
a certain part of a window or be it driver that needs keep the information
|
|
about which pixels to flush to the physical device. The new 'Dirty_rect' class
|
|
template provided by _os/include/util/dirty_rect.h_ provides a convenient
|
|
solution to this book-keeping problem. It maintains the information about
|
|
dirty areas in the form of a configurable number of rectangles. When a new
|
|
dirty area gets registered, it changes the geometry of those rectangles to
|
|
represent a compound of all reported dirty areas in a way that includes only a
|
|
low number of non-dirty pixels.
|
|
|
|
Ultimately, by employing the 'Dirty_rect' utility, graphical programs can
|
|
easily gain two desired features: the dropping of intermediate states so that
|
|
subsequent graphical operations won't queue up, and the merging of many small
|
|
operations into a few large operations, reducing the overhead of per-operation
|
|
setup-costs.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Libraries and applications
|
|
##########################
|
|
|
|
Port of the CPU Jitter Random-Number Generator
|
|
==============================================
|
|
|
|
When using cryptographic algorithms, it is essential to have a source of good
|
|
random numbers. Common operating systems use all kinds of sources to gather
|
|
entropy such as device drivers to provide good random numbers to the kernel as
|
|
well as to the userland. This mostly happens in the kernel itself because most
|
|
common operating systems are using a monolithic kernel architecture. Such a
|
|
kernel can access all kinds of sources to gather entropy and is thereby able
|
|
to produce good random numbers.
|
|
|
|
Since Genode is component-based, it is more difficult to gather entropy. A
|
|
specific protocol is needed to exchange and gather entropy because all
|
|
components are isolated by default.
|
|
|
|
As a first step to address this issue, we ported Stephan Mueller's
|
|
[http://www.chronox.de/jent.html - CPU Jitter Random Number Generator].
|
|
This random-number generator uses the CPU execution-time jitter as entropy
|
|
source and can be deployed in a de-centralized fashion, e.g., in the application
|
|
itself.
|
|
For the port of the number generator, we utilize the 'rdtsc' instruction
|
|
on x86-based platform whereas on ARM-based platforms, we use the available
|
|
performance counters as more or less high-resolution timers.
|
|
Though one entropy source is arguably not enough to provide good random
|
|
numbers, it offers a way to gather at least some entropy while developing
|
|
or porting applications that rely on it.
|
|
As a practical example of using the library, the 'vfs_jitterentropy' file
|
|
system uses the number generator to provide the _/dev/random_ node to libc
|
|
based applications.
|
|
|
|
|
|
New port of OpenVPN
|
|
===================
|
|
|
|
OpenVPN enables a user to access remote resources through a secure tunnel by
|
|
providing an encrypted connection to a remote host. Among others, it can be
|
|
used to bridge independent networks on the ethernet layer. In the Genode
|
|
world, OpenVPN represents a component that sits in-between a NIC server (such
|
|
as a network driver) and a NIC client. That is, it requests a NIC session and,
|
|
in turn, provides a NIC service by itself.
|
|
|
|
With the current release, we included an initial port of OpenVPN version 2.3.4
|
|
operating as an OpenVPN client. After parsing its configuration, the OpenVPN
|
|
client tries to connect to the remote host. If the attempt is successful, it
|
|
announces the NIC service that can be used by other programs. The OpenVPN port
|
|
utilizes the existing POSIX front end. Therefore, the regular command-line
|
|
options have to be used to configure the client:
|
|
|
|
! <config>
|
|
! <arg value="openvpn"/>
|
|
! <arg value="--config"/>
|
|
! <arg value="/client.conf"/>
|
|
! <libc stdout="/dev/log" stderr="/dev/log" rtc="/dev/rtc">
|
|
! <vfs>
|
|
! <dir name="dev">
|
|
! <log/>
|
|
! <jitterentropy name="random"/>
|
|
! <rtc/>
|
|
! </dir>
|
|
! <rom name="ca.crt"/>
|
|
! <rom name="client.conf"/>
|
|
! <rom name="client.crt"/>
|
|
! <rom name="client.key"/>
|
|
! </vfs>
|
|
! </libc>
|
|
! </config>
|
|
|
|
As shown in the configuration, all needed files are imported via the ROM
|
|
service into the VFS of the OpenVPN process. To actually use the NIC service
|
|
provided by the OpenVPN client, the TCP/IP stack has to be configured
|
|
accordingly to reach the server, and the connection to the NIC service must be
|
|
routed from the application to the OpenVPN client. For example:
|
|
|
|
! <config>
|
|
! <libc stdin="/dev/null" stdout="/dev/log" stderr="/dev/log"
|
|
! tx_buf_size="2M" rx_buf_size="2M" ip_addr="10.8.0.50"
|
|
! netmask="255.255.255.0" gateway="10.8.0.4">
|
|
! ...
|
|
! </libc>
|
|
! </config>
|
|
! <route>
|
|
! <service name="Nic"> <child name="openvpn"/> </service>
|
|
! <any-service> <parent/> <any-child/> </any-service>
|
|
! </route>
|
|
|
|
The TCP/IP stack has to be configured statically because processing DHCP
|
|
requests in the OpenVPN client is not implemented for the time being.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Networking for VirtualBox
|
|
=========================
|
|
|
|
With this release, we enabled network support in our port of VirtualBox.
|
|
Based on the VirtualBox TAP back-end driver, we derived a Genode network
|
|
driver, which directly uses the Genode NIC-session interface. Together with
|
|
Genode's nic_bridge, the so-called bridged networking mode of VirtualBox is
|
|
now available. The network cards and models we support are pcnet and e1000.
|
|
The VirtualBox networking can be configured as follows:
|
|
|
|
! <start name="virtualbox">
|
|
! <resource name="RAM" quantum="1G"/>
|
|
! <config>
|
|
! <net model="e1000"/>
|
|
! <net model="pcnet"/>
|
|
! ...
|
|
! </config>
|
|
! </start>
|
|
|
|
|
|
SMP for the Seoul virtual-machine monitor
|
|
=========================================
|
|
|
|
To leverage multiple virtual CPUs and placing them on different host CPUs, we
|
|
extended the x86 VMM interface in _ports/include/vmm_. With this change,
|
|
a 'Cpu_session' can be specified on vCPU construction. By providing
|
|
different CPU sessions - which control the affinity and priority of threads
|
|
and vCPUs - a VMM can now place vCPUs at different physical CPUs.
|
|
|
|
To evaluate this feature, we synchronized our Seoul branch with the vanilla
|
|
branch and incorporated the patch series of Jacek Galowicz and Markus
|
|
Partheymueller dealing with improvements of Seoul. In particular, we enabled
|
|
the creation of several vCPUs, which will be assigned to all available host
|
|
CPUs in a round-robin fashion.
|
|
|
|
For the Seoul VMM, several vCPUs can be instantiated by adding the vCPU
|
|
parameters several times to the Seoul machine configuration:
|
|
|
|
! <machine>
|
|
! ...
|
|
! <vcpu/> <halifax/> <vbios/> <lapic/> <!-- vCPU 1 -->
|
|
! <vcpu/> <halifax/> <vbios/> <lapic/> <!.. vCPU 2 -->
|
|
! ...
|
|
! </machine>
|
|
|
|
Additionally, all run scripts for Seoul now feature a convenience variable to
|
|
specify the number of vCPUs.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Integration of Qt5
|
|
==================
|
|
|
|
Since we introduced the original port of Qt5 one year ago, we have steadily
|
|
worked on improving its integration with the framework. This release is no
|
|
exception. Closely related to the new GUI stack described in Section
|
|
[New GUI architecture], we switched to the new window manager. So Qt windows
|
|
will appear alongside other windows in a uniform way.
|
|
|
|
The redesign of the nitpicker GUI server had a significant effect on the Qt5
|
|
port. Nitpicker's new asynchronous mode of operation prompted us to implement
|
|
double buffering in our back end of the Qt platform abstraction (QPA). This is
|
|
needed to avoid intermediate drawing states to become visible on screen.
|
|
|
|
The Genode-specific additions to the Qt API for seamlessly integrating
|
|
existing nitpicker applications into Qt programs underwent an almost complete
|
|
rewrite. The 'QNitpickerViewWidget' allows for the embedding of nitpicker
|
|
clients. It is, for example, used by qt_avplay to run the video codec as a
|
|
separate sandboxed program with a direct channel to the GUI server. The
|
|
'QPluginWidget' provides a web-plugin mechanism to download a Genode subsystem
|
|
from an URL and run it using the loader server. It is used by our port of the
|
|
Arora web browser.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, our port of Qt5 has been adapted to the new ports mechanism
|
|
introduced with the previous release. At installation time of the "qt5" port,
|
|
the Qt source codes are merely downloaded and integrated into the respective
|
|
contrib directory but no further steps (like building QMake) are taken. All
|
|
required host tools are built as side effects when building Qt. The tools will
|
|
be built within the respective build directory instead of the source tree.
|
|
This keeps the source tree clean from binaries and other compilation
|
|
artifacts.
|
|
|
|
As a minor change, the Qt launchpad application has been updated to handle its
|
|
configuration in the same way as the Scout launchpad.
|
|
|
|
|
|
New backdrop application
|
|
========================
|
|
|
|
A new backdrop application found at _gems/src/app/backdrop_ replaces the old
|
|
program that was hosted in the demo repository. It composes a background image
|
|
out of a solid color and an arbitrary number of PNG image files. It is able to
|
|
dynamically respond to configuration changes as well as a changed screen size.
|
|
For more details, please refer to the accompanied _README_ file.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Device drivers
|
|
##############
|
|
|
|
Timer on NOVA
|
|
=============
|
|
|
|
Thanks to the new support of semaphore timeouts by the NOVA kernel, we
|
|
retired the PIT-based timer driver on the NOVA platform and switched to a
|
|
NOVA-specific timer variant instead. This step alleviates the performance
|
|
overhead caused by programming the PIT via subsequent I/O port operations
|
|
and reduces the inter-processor-interrupt (IPI) load.
|
|
|
|
|
|
DDE Linux updated to version 3.14.5
|
|
===================================
|
|
|
|
With the prospect to support more and up-to-date device drivers in the future,
|
|
we updated the DDE-Linux code base from Linux version 3.9.0 to 3.14.5. This
|
|
update includes all USB drivers (network, HID, storage) on all supported
|
|
platforms (x86, Exynos5, OMAP, and Raspberry Pi) as well as the port of
|
|
Linux's TCP/IP stack. Genode's new server framework implementation, which
|
|
allows delivery of signals to an entry point, gave us the opportunity to make
|
|
the server code truly single threaded. That is, only one thread executes Linux
|
|
code, which relieves us from the burden of having to implement Linux's lock
|
|
semantics.
|
|
|
|
As a functional addition, the USB driver gained support for HID multitouch
|
|
devices.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Platforms
|
|
#########
|
|
|
|
Execution on bare hardware (base-hw)
|
|
====================================
|
|
|
|
New source-tree structure
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
As the development of the base-hw project was always intended to serve us
|
|
as guinea pig for experiments in kernel design, the resulting code couldn't be
|
|
protected from accumulating some fundamental inconsistencies in style and
|
|
methodology. However, now that this project enjoys more and more interest, not
|
|
just among the inner circle of Genode developers, the time had come to clean
|
|
up and consolidate some basic concepts for further contributions.
|
|
|
|
:Build configuration of core:
|
|
|
|
Most of the core configuration moved to the new 'core' library, leaving a
|
|
generic _src/core/target.mk_ that solely states the library dependency. In the
|
|
course of this modification, we overcame three different - mainly stylistic -
|
|
issues. First, the new solution avoids loads of "skipping target" messages
|
|
during build process. Second, we removed many configuration redundancies that
|
|
were caused by the fact that the prior core configuration was split up only
|
|
by board specifiers such as 'arndale' or 'panda'. Now, this is done more
|
|
fine-grained as, for example, demonstrated by the core configuration files
|
|
for the Pandaboard:
|
|
|
|
! lib/mk/platform_panda/core.mk .. include arm_v7/core.inc
|
|
! lib/mk/arm_v7/core.inc .. include arm/core.inc
|
|
! lib/mk/arm/core.inc .. include core.inc
|
|
! lib/mk/core.inc
|
|
|
|
The third aspect is the way, in which the interplay of multiple orthogonal
|
|
specifiers is expressed. A good example for this is the 'trustzone' specifier
|
|
that can be present or not, depending on platform support for ARM Trustzone
|
|
and the endeavor to use this optional feature. The presence or absence of the
|
|
'trustzone' specifier shall be considered when building for i.MX53 or VEA9X4
|
|
boards only and shall then select the board specific enablement or disablement
|
|
of the Trustzone feature. To achieve this, we define three additional
|
|
libraries that act as extensions to the 'core' library. The i.MX53 and VEA9X4
|
|
specific configuration of the 'core' library itself states a dependency to
|
|
'core_trustzone'. The configuration for this library is then automatically
|
|
taken from _lib/mk/core_trustzone.mk_ or _lib/mk/trustzone/core_trustzone.mk_
|
|
according to the state of the 'trustzone' specifier. The former variant now
|
|
states a dependency to the 'core_trustzone_off' library while the latter
|
|
states a dependency to the 'core_trustzone_on' library. As with
|
|
'core_trustzone.mk', 'core_trustzone_on.mk' and 'core_trustzone_off.mk' exist
|
|
in different variants that allow for board distinction in the enablement and
|
|
disablement configuration. So in summary, the files for, e.g.,
|
|
i.MX53-Trustzone configuration look as follows:
|
|
|
|
! lib/mk/platform_imx53/core.mk .. add lib core_trustzone
|
|
! lib/mk/core-trustzone.mk .. add lib core_trustzone_off
|
|
! lib/mk/trustzone/core-trustzone.mk .. add lib core_trustzone_on
|
|
! lib/mk/platform_imx53/core-trustzone_off.mk
|
|
! lib/mk/platform_imx53/core-trustzone_on.mk
|
|
|
|
The same scheme applies to other examples of orthogonal specifiers such as the
|
|
interplay of 'perf_counter' and 'arm_v6' respectively 'arm_v7'. It can also be
|
|
enhanced to more than two dimensions of specifiers by adding further "switch"
|
|
libraries like 'core_trustzone'.
|
|
|
|
:File structure:
|
|
|
|
With broadening the diversity of supported ARM platforms, the base-hw file
|
|
structure had become hard to follow. It not only didn't coincide with the
|
|
directory organization of other Genode repositories, it also lacked consistent
|
|
rules itself. Especially the platform-specific files were affected by this
|
|
deficiency so much that even regular developers found themselves wondering
|
|
where to find a desired piece of code. Moreover, these conditions led to
|
|
sub-directories and files that solely satisfied bureaucracy or patched up
|
|
conceptual gaps.
|
|
|
|
After discussing several solutions, we decided to take an approach that
|
|
is not far from what other Genode repositories do but also copes with the high
|
|
diversity of specifier-dependent files in base-hw. First of all, all headers
|
|
moved into 'include' directories. Additionally, every file whose application
|
|
depends on the presence of a specifier 'x', moved into a sub-directory 'spec/x'
|
|
and is named after the role it fulfills. For example, the code for the
|
|
core driver of the i.MX53 interrupt controller now resides in
|
|
_src/core/include/spec/imx53/pic.h_ and _src/core/spec/imx53/pic.cc_.
|
|
But a role might also be composed of code that depends on multiple specifiers,
|
|
just as, for example, the PandaBoard CPU is a combination of ARM, ARMv7, and
|
|
Cortex-A9 specific code. In this case, the driver headers would be:
|
|
|
|
! core/include/spec/cortex_a9/cpu.h .. include spec/arm_v7/cpu_support.h
|
|
! core/include/spec/arm_v7/cpu_support.h .. include spec/arm/cpu_support.h
|
|
! core/include/spec/arm/cpu_support.h
|
|
|
|
where the 'cpu_support.h' files are only included by drivers of ARM and ARMv7
|
|
CPUs, by using the generic include path as base (e.g.
|
|
'#include <spec/arm/cpu_support.h>') and can thus exist multiple times for a
|
|
target platform. The _cpu.h_ file on the other hand must be unique for each
|
|
platform and is used by the rest of the core code without the specifier prefix
|
|
('#include <cpu.h>'). Corresponding source files would be located as follows:
|
|
|
|
! core/spec/arm/cpu.cc
|
|
! core/spec/arm_v7/cpu.cc
|
|
! core/spec/cortex_a9/cpu.cc
|
|
|
|
The 'support' postfix is not needed here as the files are directly selected in
|
|
the appropriate Makefiles, using the generic source directory as base
|
|
(e.g., 'SRC_CC += spec/arm_v7/cpu.cc').
|
|
|
|
Last but not least, there are roles that shall be encapsulated in an extra
|
|
directory and name space, like the thread implementation of the kernel. This
|
|
avoids clashes with filenames and symbols of, in this case, the Genode
|
|
implementation of threads. Such a distinction is expressed as follows for
|
|
generic files:
|
|
|
|
! core/include/kernel/thread.h
|
|
! core/kernel/thread.cc
|
|
|
|
And for specifier-dependent files like those of the ARM specific 'thread_base'
|
|
role:
|
|
|
|
! core/include/spec/arm/kernel/thread_base.h
|
|
! core/spec/arm/kernel/thread_base.cc
|
|
|
|
|
|
Enabling branch prediction
|
|
==========================
|
|
|
|
During recent experiments with branch prediction on ARM, the performance boost
|
|
for general work loads took us by surprise. We observed time savings of about
|
|
30 percent in the 'noux_tool_chain_auto' test. That motivated us to dig
|
|
deeper.
|
|
|
|
However, our existing assembly code paths for MMU context switches did not
|
|
consider out-of-order memory accesses, which are triggered by speculative
|
|
instruction fetches. Such speculative behaviour, however, occurs when using
|
|
branch prediction. We solved the problem by introducing a transitional
|
|
translation table with global mappings only to bridge the switch phase without
|
|
flushing the branch predictor each time.
|
|
|
|
With this solution in place, the branch predictor saves more then 50 percent
|
|
of execution time in the 'noux_tool_chain_auto' test, which exceeds all of our
|
|
expectations and is a remarkable step towards common usability. We merely have
|
|
to flush the predictor at startup and after adding a new entry to a
|
|
translation table whereas the latter case may be an opportunity for even
|
|
further optimization.
|
|
|
|
|
|
NOVA microhypervisor
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
We updated our kernel branch of NOVA to the latest vanilla branch of Udo
|
|
Steinberg. The new vanilla branch fixes some PCID (aka tagged TLB) issues we
|
|
encountered and adds support to specify timeouts on semaphore-down operations.
|
|
We use the latter feature to replace the user-mode timer service for
|
|
Genode/NOVA (formerly relying on the PIT timer) by a NOVA-specific version
|
|
leveraging the direct use of kernel semaphores.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Build system and tools
|
|
######################
|
|
|
|
Finished transition to new ports mechanism
|
|
==========================================
|
|
|
|
In version 14.05, we introduced
|
|
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/14.05#Management_of_ported_3rd-party_source_code - new tools]
|
|
for integrating 3rd-party software with Genode and migrated the majority of
|
|
our ports to the new mechanism. With the current version, we have finished the
|
|
transition by migrating the remaining ports, namely Qt5, GCC, and GDB.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Run-tool enhancements
|
|
=====================
|
|
|
|
Loading boot images via OpenOCD
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
OpenOCD is an open-source JTAG debugger that supports a wide range of low-cost
|
|
JTAG debug interfaces. We enhanced the run tool with the new target mode
|
|
"jtag-serial" and the corresponding options '--jtag-debugger' and
|
|
'--jtag-board'. In the "jtag" mode, the run tool invokes OpenOCD to load the
|
|
result of a run script to the target.
|
|
|
|
For example, to use the Olimex JTAG debug interface with the Raspberry Pi
|
|
(see [https://github.com/dwelch67/raspberrypi/tree/master/armjtag] for
|
|
more information about connecting JTAG to the board), the following lines
|
|
must be added to the _<build-dir>/etc/build.conf_ file:
|
|
|
|
! RUN_OPT += --target jtag --target serial
|
|
! RUN_OPT += --jtag-debugger interface/olimex-arm-usb-ocd-h.cfg
|
|
! RUN_OPT += --jtag-board ./raspi.cfg
|
|
|
|
In this example, the board-specific OpenOCD configuration is provided via the
|
|
file _<build-dir>/raspi.cfg_. For reference, the following OpenOCD board
|
|
configuration works for the Raspberry Pi:
|
|
|
|
! telnet_port 4444
|
|
! adapter_khz 6000
|
|
!
|
|
! if { [info exists CHIPNAME] } {
|
|
! set _CHIPNAME $CHIPNAME
|
|
! } else {
|
|
! set _CHIPNAME raspi
|
|
! }
|
|
!
|
|
! reset_config none
|
|
!
|
|
! if { [info exists CPU_TAPID ] } {
|
|
! set _CPU_TAPID $CPU_TAPID
|
|
! } else {
|
|
! set _CPU_TAPID 0x07b7617F
|
|
! }
|
|
! jtag newtap $_CHIPNAME arm -irlen 5 -expected-id $_CPU_TAPID
|
|
!
|
|
! set _TARGETNAME $_CHIPNAME.arm
|
|
!
|
|
! target create $_TARGETNAME arm11 -chain-position $_TARGETNAME
|
|
|
|
With this configuration in place, Genode scenarios can be executed on the
|
|
Raspberry Pi with the usual work flow when using run scripts.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Booting from a GRUB2 disk image with an ext2 partition
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
By default, the run tool produces an ISO image when executed for one of the
|
|
x86-based platforms. The resulting ISO image can be passed to Qemu (the
|
|
default behaviour) or it can be written to a CD or an USB stick to be used as
|
|
boot medium on a real machine.
|
|
|
|
The downside of the ISO-image approach is that the file system cannot
|
|
be modified by the running Genode system. Real-world system scenarios
|
|
call for a way to boot from an USB stick with an ordinary file system.
|
|
The new target mode "disk" accommodates such use cases. It can be
|
|
enabled by adding the following line to your _<build-dir>/etc/build.conf_
|
|
file:
|
|
|
|
! RUN_OPT += --target disk
|
|
|
|
The resulting disk image contains one ext2 partition with the binaries of
|
|
the GRUB2 boot loader and the run scenario. The default disk size is
|
|
calculated to fit all binaries, but it is configurable via the option
|
|
'--disk-size <size in MiB>' in the 'RUN_OPT' variable.
|
|
|
|
The feature depends on the GRUB2 boot loader, which is contained in binary
|
|
form at _tool/grub2-head.img_ but may also be compiled manually by executing
|
|
_tool/create_grub2_. The script generates a disk image prepared for one
|
|
partition, which contains files for GRUB2. All image-preparation steps that
|
|
require super-user privileges are conducted by this script, which needs to be
|
|
executed only once. To avoid the need for super-user privileges during the
|
|
normal work flow, we use Rump kernel tools to populate the disk image with
|
|
files. Those tools can be installed via the _tool/tool_chain_rump_ script.
|
|
|
|
After executing a run script, however, super-user privileges are needed to
|
|
write the entire image to a physical disk:
|
|
|
|
! sudo dd if=<image file> of=<device> bs=8M conv=fsync
|
|
|
|
|
|
XML syntax validation of the init configuration
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The init process provides very little diagnostic feedback when it encounters a
|
|
configuration with an invalid syntax. To ease the spotting of such mistakes,
|
|
we included an automated call of xmllint into the regular work flow. When
|
|
installed, xmllint will check the Genode config file when executing the
|
|
'install_config' step of a run script.
|
|
|
|
|