Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
AnotherTest
688e54eac7 Kernel: Distinguish between new and old process groups with equal pgids
This does not add any behaviour change to the processes, but it ties a
TTY to an active process group via TIOCSPGRP, and returns the TTY to the
kernel when all processes in the process group die.
Also makes the TTY keep a link to the original controlling process' parent (for
SIGCHLD) instead of the process itself.
2020-08-19 21:21:34 +02:00
AnotherTest
29035b55b2 Kernel: Allow moving a process to a new pgrp via setpgid() 2020-08-12 11:41:18 +02:00
Ben Wiederhake
7bdf54c837 Kernel: PID/PGID typing
This compiles, and fixes two bugs:
- setpgid() confusion (see previous commit)
- tcsetpgrp() now allows to set a non-empty process group even if
  the group leader has already died. This makes Serenity slightly
  more POSIX-compatible.
2020-08-10 11:51:45 +02:00
Ben Wiederhake
f5744a6f2f Kernel: PID/TID typing
This compiles, and contains exactly the same bugs as before.
The regex 'FIXME: PID/' should reveal all markers that I left behind, including:
- Incomplete conversion
- Issues or things that look fishy
- Actual bugs that will go wrong during runtime
2020-08-10 11:51:45 +02:00
Tom
538b985487 Kernel: Remove ProcessInspectionHandle and make Process RefCounted
By making the Process class RefCounted we don't really need
ProcessInspectionHandle anymore. This also fixes some race
conditions where a Process may be deleted while still being
used by ProcFS.

Also make sure to acquire the Process' lock when accessing
regions.

Last but not least, there's no reason why a thread can't be
scheduled while being inspected, though in practice it won't
happen anyway because the scheduler lock is held at the same
time.
2020-08-02 17:15:11 +02:00
Andreas Kling
949aef4aef Kernel: Move syscall implementations out of Process.cpp
This is something I've been meaning to do for a long time, and here we
finally go. This patch moves all sys$foo functions out of Process.cpp
and into files in Kernel/Syscalls/.

It's not exactly one syscall per file (although it could be, but I got
a bit tired of the repetitive work here..)

This makes hacking on individual syscalls a lot less painful since you
don't have to rebuild nearly as much code every time. I'm also hopeful
that this makes it easier to understand individual syscalls. :^)
2020-07-30 23:40:57 +02:00