Capabilities will be shared among collection of threads. A pager
will have a right to share its own capabilities with its space,
its thread group and its container.
Currently sharing is possible with only all of the caps. Next,
it will be support for cap splitting, granting, and partial sharing
and granting.
Any thread that touches a utcb inside the kernel now properly checks
whether the utcb is mapped on its owner, and whether the mapped physical
address matches that of the current thread's tables. If not the tables
are updated.
This way, even though page tables become incoherent on utcb address
change situations (such as fork() exit(), execve()) they get updated
as they are referenced.
Since mappings are added only conditionally, caches are flushed only
when an update is necessary.
- Compiles and Codezero runs as normal without touching mutex implementation
- Mutex implementation needs testing.
The mutex control syscall allows userspace programs to declare any virtual
address as a mutex lock and ask for help from the kernel syscall
for resolving locking contentions.
- Proper releasing of user pmd and pgds when a space is not used.
- Proper releasing of task, space ids.
- At occasions a starting thread gets bogus SPSR, this needs investigating.
- At a very rare occasion arch_setup_new_thread() had a kernel data abort during
register copying from one task to another. Needs investigating.
- Fixed potential concurrency bugs due to preemption being enabled.
- Introduced a new address space structure to better account for
address spaces and page tables.
- Currently executes fine up to forking. Will investigate.
Paging-in requests seem to work.
TODO:
- Remove far/fsr information in pager and abstract away these details in c0.
- Add a npages field to page fault ipc so that multiple pages can be paged-in.
Added routines that check whether a user pointer is accessible by the kernel,
and if not ask the pager to map-in those pages. I haven't implemented yet the
bit that asks the pager for paging-in.