A 16-bit device number or id further distinguishes a device on the
system in addition to the device type. This is meant to be used for
the very first identification of the device for further probing. Any
further info is available by userspace mapping and probing.
Followed the kernel physical memory reservation convention
with devices. Devices that are possessable by userspace
are created as boot-time capabilities and placed under the kernel
resources devmem_free capability list. Any userspace container
that is defined with the possession of the device would delete the
device capability making it unavailable to further requests.
cinfo array is now freed along with other init memory.
bootmem allocator memory is reduced to be completely used up.
free boot memory now prints the used free memory as well.
In the former case, when a child was exiting there was a risk of being preempted while it
was also taken away from the runqueue. In this situatuion, it may not have had
the chance of waking up the parent in case if it waits for the child to exit.
This was also true for suspend & resume so they were patched also.
It is not very straightforward to reach a capabilities list. We
now use a single function to find out a capability by its id and
its list, since the two are used frequently together (i.e. cap
removal and destruction)
Implemented a protocol between a client and its pager to
request and get a capability to ipc to another client of the pager.
Pager first ensures the request is valid from its client.
It then tries to use a greater capability that it possesses, to
produce a new capability that the client requested. Once the kernel
validates the correct one and replicates/reduces it to client's
need, it grants it to the client.
Thread ids now contain their container ids in the top 2 nibbles.
Threads on other containers can be addressed by changing those
two nibbles. The addressing of inter-container threads are
subject to capabilities.
VIRTMEM and PHYSMEM are theoretically separate resources to be
protected than a MAP resource, which is meant to protect the syscall
privileges.
In practice MAP is always used together with a VIRTMEM and a PHYSMEM
resource, therefore reach VIRTMEM/PHYSMEM resource is now merged with
the MAP capability, combining the micro-permission bits.
We still have to have the pager structs because they possess intermediate
data during boot up such as for transferring of capability lists to
boot stack one-by-one, and then to newly generated ktcbs.
Previously all pending events were handled on return of exceptions
in process context. This was causing threads that run in userspace
and take no exceptions not handle their pending events indefinitely.
Now scheduler handles them in irq context as well.
Pagers kill all children but suspend themselves.
Currently not straightforward for a pager to delete its own tcb and quit.
It should take all allocator locks without sleeping, remove itself from
scheduler queue and then delete itself and quit. This is not so easy now
as some allocation locks are mutexes. (Address space lock, ktcb/space
allocators etc.)
An easier approach would be to have a kernel thread or a superior thread
that would delete the pager
Reiterating again to simplify:
Working:
- Pager issues destroy, client also issues exit
they work in sync.
Missing
- Pager killing itself
- Pager killing all children while killing itself
- Pager waiting on children
One is related to the time distribution when a new child is created.
If the parent has one tick left, then both child and parent received
zero tick. When combined with
current_irq_nest_count = 1
voluntary_preempt = 0
values, this caused the scheduler from being invoked.
Second is related to the overall time distribution. When a thread
runs out of time, its new time slice is calculated by the below
formula:
new_timeslice = (thread_prio * SCHED_TICKS) / total_prio
If we consider total_prio is equal to the sum of the priorities of
all the threads in the system, it imposes a problem of getting
zero tick. In the new scenario, total_prio is equal to the priority
types in the system so it is fixed. Every thread gets a timeslice
in proportion of their priorities. Thus, there is no risk of taking
zero tick.