Moving the DeviceManagement initialization, which is only needed by
userland in the first place, to after interrupt and time management
initialization (like other things that require randomness) allows the
SipHash initialization to access good randomness without problems.
Note: There currently is another, unrelated boot problem on aarch64,
which is not caused by SipHash as far as we know. This commit therefore
only fixes the SipHash regression.
According to multiboot spec if flag for framebuffer isn't
set then corresponding fields are invalid. In reality they're set
to 0 but let's be defensive.
The VirtIO specification defines many types of devices with different
purposes, and it also defines 3 possible transport mediums where devices
could be connected to the host machine.
We only care about the PCIe transport, but this commit puts the actual
foundations for supporting the lean MMIO transport too in the future.
To ensure things are kept abstracted but still functional, the VirtIO
transport code is responsible for what is deemed as related to an actual
transport type - allocation of interrupt handlers and tinkering with low
level transport-related registers, etc.
Instead, use the FixedCharBuffer class to ensure we always use a static
buffer storage for these names. This ensures that if a Process or a
Thread were created, there's a guarantee that setting a new name will
never fail, as only copying of strings should be done to that static
storage.
The limits which are set are 32 characters for processes' names and 64
characters for thread names - this is because threads' names could be
more verbose than processes' names.
Instead of having a single available memory range that encompasses the
whole 0x00000000-0x3EFFFFFF range of physical memory, create a separate
reserved entry for the RAM range used by the VideoCore. This fixes a
crash that happens when we try to allocate physical pages in the GPU's
reserved range.
This will eventually be replaced with parsing the data from the device
tree, but for now, this should solve some of the recurring CI failures.
Like the HID, Audio and Storage subsystem, the Graphics subsystem (which
handles GPUs technically) exposes unix device files (typically in /dev).
To ensure consistency across the repository, move all related files to a
new directory under Kernel/Devices called "GPU".
Also remove the redundant "GPU" word from the VirtIO driver directory,
and the word "Graphics" from GraphicsManagement.{h,cpp} filenames.
This has KString, KBuffer, DoubleBuffer, KBufferBuilder, IOWindow,
UserOrKernelBuffer and ScopedCritical classes being moved to the
Kernel/Library subdirectory.
Also, move the panic and assertions handling code to that directory.
The Storage subsystem, like the Audio and HID subsystems, exposes Unix
device files (for example, in the /dev directory). To ensure consistency
across the repository, we should make the Storage subsystem to reside in
the Kernel/Devices directory like the two other mentioned subsystems.
While the PL011-based UART0 is currently reserved for the kernel
console, UART1 is free to be exposed to the userspace as `/dev/ttyS0`.
This will be used as the stdout of `run-tests-and-shutdown.sh` when
testing the AArch64 kernel.
This logo was actually used as a first sign of life in the very early
days of the aarch64 port.
Now that we boot into the graphical mode of the system just fine there's
no need to keep this.
Since multiboot_modules_count is set to 0, we can safely set the
multiboot_modules pointer to 0 (null pointer), as we don't use multiboot
on aarch64 anyway.
This reuses the existing `RPi::Mailbox` interface to read the command
line via a VideoCore-specific mailbox message. This will have to be
replaced if that interface starts being smarter, as this is needed very
early, and nothing guarantees that a smarter Mailbox interface wouldn't
need to allocate or log, which is a no-no during early boot.
As the response string can be arbitrarily long, it's the caller's job to
provide a long enough buffer for `Mailbox::query_kernel_command_line`.
This commit chose 512 bytes, as it provides a large enough headroom over
the 150-200 characters implicitly added by the VC firmware.
The portable way would be to parse the `/chosen/bootargs` property of
the device tree, but we currently lack the scaffolding for doing that.
Support for this in QEMU relies on a patch that has not yet been
accepted upstream, but is available via our `Toolchain/BuildQEMU.sh`
script. It should, however, work on bare metal.
Tested-By: Timon Kruiper <timonkruiper@gmail.com>
The Raspberry Pi's mailbox interface does not guarantee that the
returned command line is null-terminated. This commit removes that
assumption from the current code, allowing the next commit to add
support for reading it on the Pi.
This also lets us eliminate a few manual `strlen()` calls :^)
Some hardware/software configurations crash KVM as soon as we try to
start Serenity. The exact cause is currently unknown, so just fully
revert it for now.
This reverts commit 897c4e5145.
Process created performance events for kernel processes are only ever
emitted for the kernel processes that exist when profiling is enabled.
Any new kernel processes created after profiling is enabled will not
have corresponding process created performance events, so all kernel
processes should be created before enabling profiling.
NetworkTask was the only kernel process being created after enabling
profiling, so we now just create it before enabling profiling. This
fixes an issue where Profiler was failing to parse boot profiles as a
result of NetworkTask not having a process created event.
The new baked image is a Prekernel and a Kernel baked together now, so
essentially we no longer need to pass the Prekernel as -kernel and the
actual kernel image as -initrd to QEMU, leaving the option to pass an
actual initrd or initramfs module later on with multiboot.
- Instead of taking the first new thread as an out-parameter, we now
bundle the process and its first thread in a struct and use that
as the return value.
- Make all Process factory functions return ErrorOr. Use this to convert
some places to more TRY().
- Drop the "try_" prefix on Process factory functions.