Commit Graph

127 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andreas Kling
4b7a89911c Kernel: Remove some unnecessary casts to uintptr_t
VirtualAddress is constructible from uintptr_t and const void*.
PhysicalAddress is constructible from uintptr_t but not const void*.
2020-01-20 13:13:03 +01:00
Andreas Kling
a246e9cd7e Use uintptr_t instead of u32 when storing pointers as integers
uintptr_t is 32-bit or 64-bit depending on the target platform.
This will help us write pointer size agnostic code so that when the day
comes that we want to do a 64-bit port, we'll be in better shape.
2020-01-20 13:13:03 +01:00
Andreas Kling
1d02ac35fc Kernel: Limit Thread::raw_backtrace() to the max profiler stack size
Let's avoid walking overly long stacks here, since kmalloc() is finite.
2020-01-19 13:54:09 +01:00
Andreas Kling
87583aea9c Kernel: Use copy_from_user() when appropriate during thread backtracing 2020-01-19 10:33:26 +01:00
Andreas Kling
94ca55cefd Meta: Add license header to source files
As suggested by Joshua, this commit adds the 2-clause BSD license as a
comment block to the top of every source file.

For the first pass, I've just added myself for simplicity. I encourage
everyone to add themselves as copyright holders of any file they've
added or modified in some significant way. If I've added myself in
error somewhere, feel free to replace it with the appropriate copyright
holder instead.

Going forward, all new source files should include a license header.
2020-01-18 09:45:54 +01:00
Andreas Kling
65cb406327 Kernel: Allow unlocking a held Lock with interrupts disabled
This is needed to eliminate a race in Thread::wait_on() where we'd
otherwise have to wait until after unlocking the process lock before
we can disable interrupts.
2020-01-13 18:56:46 +01:00
Andreas Kling
41376d4662 Kernel: Fix Lock racing to the WaitQueue
There was a time window between releasing Lock::m_lock and calling into
the lock's WaitQueue where someone else could take m_lock and bring two
threads into a deadlock situation.

Fix this issue by holding Lock::m_lock until interrupts are disabled by
either Thread::wait_on() or WaitQueue::wake_one().
2020-01-12 19:04:16 +01:00
Andreas Kling
a885719af5 Kernel: Keep SMAP protection enabled in Thread::backtrace_impl() 2020-01-12 10:47:01 +01:00
Andreas Kling
f6c0fccc01 Kernel: Fix busted backtraces when a thread backtraces itself
When the current thread is backtracing itself, we now start walking the
stack from the current EBP register value, instead of the TSS one.

Now SystemMonitor always appears to be running Thread::backtrace() when
sampled, which makes perfect sense. :^)
2020-01-12 10:19:37 +01:00
Andreas Kling
8c5cd97b45 Kernel: Fix kernel null deref on process crash during join_thread()
The join_thread() syscall is not supposed to be interruptible by
signals, but it was. And since the process death mechanism piggybacked
on signal interrupts, it was possible to interrupt a pthread_join() by
killing the process that was doing it, leading to confusing due to some
assumptions being made by Thread::finalize() for threads that have a
pending joiner.

This patch fixes the issue by making "interrupted by death" a distinct
block result separate from "interrupted by signal". Then we handle that
state in join_thread() and tidy things up so that thread finalization
doesn't get confused by the pending joiner being gone.

Test: Tests/Kernel/null-deref-crash-during-pthread_join.cpp
2020-01-10 19:23:45 +01:00
Andreas Kling
17ef5bc0ac Kernel: Rename {ss,esp}_if_crossRing to userspace_{ss,esp}
These were always so awkwardly named.
2020-01-09 18:02:01 +01:00
Andreas Kling
e23f05a157 Kernel: Remove unused variable Thread::m_userspace_stack_region 2020-01-09 12:31:18 +01:00
Andreas Kling
f6691ad26e Kernel: Fix SMAP violation in thread signal dispatch 2020-01-05 18:19:26 +01:00
Andreas Kling
9eef39d68a Kernel: Start implementing x86 SMAP support
Supervisor Mode Access Prevention (SMAP) is an x86 CPU feature that
prevents the kernel from accessing userspace memory. With SMAP enabled,
trying to read/write a userspace memory address while in the kernel
will now generate a page fault.

Since it's sometimes necessary to read/write userspace memory, there
are two new instructions that quickly switch the protection on/off:
STAC (disables protection) and CLAC (enables protection.)
These are exposed in kernel code via the stac() and clac() helpers.

There's also a SmapDisabler RAII object that can be used to ensure
that you don't forget to re-enable protection before returning to
userspace code.

THis patch also adds copy_to_user(), copy_from_user() and memset_user()
which are the "correct" way of doing things. These functions allow us
to briefly disable protection for a specific purpose, and then turn it
back on immediately after it's done. Going forward all kernel code
should be moved to using these and all uses of SmapDisabler are to be
considered FIXME's.

Note that we're not realizing the full potential of this feature since
I've used SmapDisabler quite liberally in this initial bring-up patch.
2020-01-05 18:14:51 +01:00
Andreas Kling
3a27790fa7 Kernel: Use Thread::from_tid() in more places 2020-01-04 18:56:04 +01:00
Andreas Kling
32ec1e5aed Kernel: Mask kernel addresses in backtraces and profiles
Addresses outside the userspace virtual range will now show up as
0xdeadc0de in backtraces and profiles generated by unprivileged users.
2020-01-02 20:51:31 +01:00
Andreas Kling
f598bbbb1d Kernel: Prevent executing I/O instructions in userspace
All threads were running with iomapbase=0 in their TSS, which the CPU
interprets as "there's an I/O permission bitmap starting at offset 0
into my TSS".

Because of that, any bits that were 1 inside the TSS would allow the
thread to execute I/O instructions on the port with that bit index.

Fix this by always setting the iomapbase to sizeof(TSS32), and also
setting the TSS descriptor's limit to sizeof(TSS32), effectively making
the I/O permissions bitmap zero-length.

This should make it no longer possible to do I/O from userspace. :^)
2020-01-01 17:31:41 +01:00
Andreas Kling
fd740829d1 Kernel: Switch to eagerly restoring x86 FPU state on context switch
Lazy FPU restore is well known to be vulnerable to timing attacks,
and eager restore is a lot simpler anyway, so let's just do it eagerly.
2020-01-01 16:54:21 +01:00
Andreas Kling
54d182f553 Kernel: Remove some unnecessary leaking of kernel pointers into dmesg
There's a lot more of this and we need to stop printing kernel pointers
anywhere but the debug console.
2019-12-31 01:22:00 +01:00
Andreas Kling
610f3ad12f Kernel: Add a basic thread boosting mechanism
This patch introduces a syscall:

    int set_thread_boost(int tid, int amount)

You can use this to add a permanent boost value to the effective thread
priority of any thread with your UID (or any thread in the system if
you are the superuser.)

This is quite crude, but opens up some interesting opportunities. :^)
2019-12-30 19:23:13 +01:00
Andreas Kling
50677bf806 Kernel: Refactor scheduler to use dynamic thread priorities
Threads now have numeric priorities with a base priority in the 1-99
range.

Whenever a runnable thread is *not* scheduled, its effective priority
is incremented by 1. This is tracked in Thread::m_extra_priority.
The effective priority of a thread is m_priority + m_extra_priority.

When a runnable thread *is* scheduled, its m_extra_priority is reset to
zero and the effective priority returns to base.

This means that lower-priority threads will always eventually get
scheduled to run, once its effective priority becomes high enough to
exceed the base priority of threads "above" it.

The previous values for ThreadPriority (Low, Normal and High) are now
replaced as follows:

    Low -> 10
    Normal -> 30
    High -> 50

In other words, it will take 20 ticks for a "Low" priority thread to
get to "Normal" effective priority, and another 20 to reach "High".

This is not perfect, and I've used some quite naive data structures,
but I think the mechanism will allow us to build various new and
interesting optimizations, and we can figure out better data structures
later on. :^)
2019-12-30 18:46:17 +01:00
Andreas Kling
9e55bcb7da Kernel: Make kernel memory regions be non-executable by default
From now on, you'll have to request executable memory specifically
if you want some.
2019-12-25 22:41:34 +01:00
Andreas Kling
52deb09382 Kernel: Enable PAE (Physical Address Extension)
Introduce one more (CPU) indirection layer in the paging code: the page
directory pointer table (PDPT). Each PageDirectory now has 4 separate
PageDirectoryEntry arrays, governing 1 GB of VM each.

A really neat side-effect of this is that we can now share the physical
page containing the >=3GB kernel-only address space metadata between
all processes, instead of lazily cloning it on page faults.

This will give us access to the NX (No eXecute) bit, allowing us to
prevent execution of memory that's not supposed to be executed.
2019-12-25 13:35:57 +01:00
Conrad Pankoff
0fdbe08637 Kernel: Fix debug message and kernel stack region names in thread setup 2019-12-24 01:28:38 +01:00
Conrad Pankoff
0cb89f5927 Kernel: Mark kernel stack regions as... stack regions 2019-12-24 01:28:38 +01:00
Conrad Pankoff
b557aab884 Kernel: Move ring0 stacks out of kmalloc_eternal
This allows us to use all the same fun memory protection features as the
rest of the system for ring0 processes. Previously a ring0 process could
over- or underrun its stack and nobody cared, since kmalloc_eternal is the
wild west of memory.
2019-12-24 01:28:38 +01:00
Conrad Pankoff
3aaeff483b Kernel: Add a size argument to validate_read_from_kernel 2019-12-24 01:28:38 +01:00
Andreas Kling
523fd6533e Kernel: Unlock the Process when exit()ing
If there are more threads in a process when exit()ing, we need to give
them a chance to unwind any kernel stacks. This means we have to unlock
the process lock before giving control to the scheduler.

Fixes #891 (together with all of the other "no more main thread" work.)
2019-12-22 12:38:01 +01:00
Andreas Kling
f4978b2be1 Kernel: Use IntrusiveList to make WaitQueue allocation-free :^) 2019-12-22 12:38:01 +01:00
Andreas Kling
4b8851bd01 Kernel: Make TID's be unique PID's
This is a little strange, but it's how I understand things should work.

The first thread in a new process now has TID == PID.
Additional threads subsequently spawned in that process all have unique
TID's generated by the PID allocator. TIDs are now globally unique.
2019-12-22 12:38:01 +01:00
Andreas Kling
16812f0f98 Kernel: Get rid of "main thread" concept
The idea of all processes reliably having a main thread was nice in
some ways, but cumbersome in others. More importantly, it didn't match
up with POSIX thread semantics, so let's move away from it.

This thread gets rid of Process::main_thread() and you now we just have
a bunch of Thread objects floating around each Process.

When the finalizer nukes the last Thread in a Process, it will also
tear down the Process.

There's a bunch of more things to fix around this, but this is where we
get started :^)
2019-12-22 12:37:58 +01:00
Andreas Kling
3012b224f0 Kernel: Fix intermittent assertion failure in sys$exec()
While setting up the main thread stack for a new process, we'd incur
some zero-fill page faults. This was to be expected, since we allocate
a huge stack but lazily populate it with physical pages.

The problem is that page fault handlers may enable interrupts in order
to grab a VMObject lock (or to page in from an inode.)

During exec(), a process is reorganizing itself and will be in a very
unrunnable state if the scheduler should interrupt it and then later
ask it to run again. Which is exactly what happens if the process gets
pre-empted while the new stack's zero-fill page fault grabs the lock.

This patch fixes the issue by creating new main thread stacks before
disabling interrupts and going into the critical part of exec().
2019-12-18 23:03:23 +01:00
Andreas Kling
7a64f55c0f Kernel: Fix get_register_dump_from_stack() after IRQ entry changes
I had to change the layout of RegisterDump a little bit to make the new
IRQ entry points work. This broke get_register_dump_from_stack() which
was expecting the RegisterDump to be badly aligned due to a goofy extra
16 bits which are no longer there.
2019-12-15 17:58:53 +01:00
Andreas Kling
b32e961a84 Kernel: Implement a simple process time profiler
The kernel now supports basic profiling of all the threads in a process
by calling profiling_enable(pid_t). You finish the profiling by calling
profiling_disable(pid_t).

This all works by recording thread stacks when the timer interrupt
fires and the current thread is in a process being profiled.
Note that symbolication is deferred until profiling_disable() to avoid
adding more noise than necessary to the profile.

A simple "/bin/profile" command is included here that can be used to
start/stop profiling like so:

    $ profile 10 on
    ... wait ...
    $ profile 10 off

After a profile has been recorded, it can be fetched in /proc/profile

There are various limits (or "bugs") on this mechanism at the moment:

- Only one process can be profiled at a time.
- We allocate 8MB for the samples, if you use more space, things will
  not work, and probably break a bit.
- Things will probably fall apart if the profiled process dies during
  profiling, or while extracing /proc/profile
2019-12-11 20:36:56 +01:00
Andrew Kaster
9058962712 Kernel: Allow setting thread names
The main thread of each kernel/user process will take the name of
the process. Extra threads will get a fancy new name
"ProcessName[<tid>]".

Thread backtraces now list the thread name in addtion to tid.

Add the thread name to /proc/all (should it get its own proc
file?).

Add two new syscalls, set_thread_name and get_thread_name.
2019-12-08 14:09:29 +01:00
Andreas Kling
8bb98aa31b Kernel: Use a WaitQueue to implement finalizer wakeup
This gets rid of the special "Lurking" thread state and replaces it
with a generic WaitQueue :^)
2019-12-01 19:17:17 +01:00
Andreas Kling
5859e16e53 Kernel: Use a dedicated thread state for wait-queued threads
Instead of using the generic block mechanism, wait-queued threads now
go into the special Queued state.

This fixes an issue where signal dispatch would unblock a wait-queued
thread (because signal dispatch unblocks blocked threads) and cause
confusion since the thread only expected to be awoken by the queue.
2019-12-01 16:02:58 +01:00
Andreas Kling
f067730f6b Kernel: Add a WaitQueue for Thread queueing/waking and use it for Lock
The kernel's Lock class now uses a proper wait queue internally instead
of just having everyone wake up regularly to try to acquire the lock.

We also keep the donation mechanism, so that whenever someone tries to
take the lock and fails, that thread donates the remainder of its
timeslice to the current lock holder.

After unlocking a Lock, the unlocking thread calls WaitQueue::wake_one,
which unblocks the next thread in queue.
2019-12-01 12:07:43 +01:00
Andreas Kling
f75a6b9daa Kernel: Demangle kernel C++ symbols correctly again
I broke this while implementing module linking. Also move the actual
demangling work to AK, in AK::demangle(const char*)
2019-11-29 14:59:15 +01:00
Andreas Kling
e34ed04d1e Kernel+LibPthread+LibC: Create secondary thread stacks in userspace
Have pthread_create() allocate a stack and passing it to the kernel
instead of this work happening in the kernel. The more of this we can
do in userspace, the better.

This patch also unexposes the raw create_thread() and exit_thread()
syscalls since they are now only used by LibPthread anyway.
2019-11-17 17:29:20 +01:00
Andreas Kling
794758df3a Kernel: Implement some basic stack pointer validation
VM regions can now be marked as stack regions, which is then validated
on syscall, and on page fault.

If a thread is caught with its stack pointer pointing into anything
that's *not* a Region with its stack bit set, we'll crash the whole
process with SIGSTKFLT.

Userspace must now allocate custom stacks by using mmap() with the new
MAP_STACK flag. This mechanism was first introduced in OpenBSD, and now
we have it too, yay! :^)
2019-11-17 12:15:43 +01:00
Andreas Kling
73d6a69b3f Kernel: Release the big process lock while yielding in sys$yield()
Otherwise, a thread calling sched_yield() will prevent other threads
in that process from entering the kernel.
2019-11-16 12:18:59 +01:00
Andreas Kling
cb5021419e Kernel: Move Thread::m_joinee_exit_value into the JoinBlocker
There's no need for this to be a permanent Thread member. Just use a
reference in the JoinBlocker instead.
2019-11-14 21:04:34 +01:00
Andreas Kling
69efa3f630 Kernel+LibPthread: Implement pthread_join()
It's now possible to block until another thread in the same process has
exited. We can also retrieve its exit value, which is whatever value it
passed to pthread_exit(). :^)
2019-11-14 20:58:23 +01:00
Sergey Bugaev
1e1ddce9d8 Kernel: Unwind kernel stacks before dying
While executing in the kernel, a thread can acquire various resources
that need cleanup, such as locks and references to RefCounted objects.
This cleanup normally happens on the exit path, such as in destructors
for various RAII guards. But we weren't calling those exit paths when
killing threads that have been executing in the kernel, such as threads
blocked on reading or sleeping, thus causing leaks.

This commit changes how killing threads works. Now, instead of killing
a thread directly, one is supposed to call thread->set_should_die(),
which will unblock it and make it unwind the stack if it is blocked
in the kernel. Then, just before returning to the userspace, the thread
will automatically die.
2019-11-14 20:05:58 +01:00
Andreas Kling
083c5f8b89 Kernel: Rework Process::Priority into ThreadPriority
Scheduling priority is now set at the thread level instead of at the
process level.

This is a step towards allowing processes to set different priorities
for threads. There's no userspace API for that yet, since only the main
thread's priority is affected by sched_setparam().
2019-11-06 16:30:06 +01:00
Andreas Kling
49635e62fa LibELF: Move AK/ELF/ into Libraries/LibELF/
Let's arrange things like this instead. It didn't feel right for all of
the ELF handling code to live in AK.
2019-11-06 13:42:38 +01:00
Drew Stratford
5efbb4ae95 Kernel: Fix bug in Thread::dispatch_signal().
dispatch_signal() expected a RegisterDump on the kernel stack. However
in certain cases, like just after a clone, this was not the case and
dispatch_signal() would instead write to an incorrect user stack pointer.

We now use the threads TSS in situations where the RegisterDump may not
be valid, fixing the issue.
2019-11-04 10:12:59 +01:00
Drew Stratford
44f22c99ef Thread.cpp: add method get_RegisterDump_from_stack().
This refactors some the RegisterDump code from dispatch_signal
into a stand-alone function, allowing for better reuse.
2019-11-04 10:12:59 +01:00
Andreas Kling
cc68654a44 Kernel+LibC: Implement clock_gettime() and clock_nanosleep()
Only the CLOCK_MONOTONIC clock is supported at the moment, and it only
has millisecond precision. :^)
2019-11-02 19:34:06 +01:00