Commit graph

282 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Thomas Queiroz 07f1aad3dd Kernel: Add missing VERIFY in MM::allocate_committed_physical_page 2022-12-07 16:31:16 +00:00
Thomas Queiroz c681330450 Kernel: Don't panic if MemoryManager::find_free_physical_page fails 2022-12-07 16:31:16 +00:00
Linus Groh d26aabff04 Everywhere: Run clang-format 2022-12-03 23:52:23 +00:00
Liav A 5e062414c1 Kernel: Add support for jails
Our implementation for Jails resembles much of how FreeBSD jails are
working - it's essentially only a matter of using a RefPtr in the
Process class to a Jail object. Then, when we iterate over all processes
in various cases, we could ensure if either the current process is in
jail and therefore should be restricted what is visible in terms of
PID isolation, and also to be able to expose metadata about Jails in
/sys/kernel/jails node (which does not reveal anything to a process
which is in jail).

A lifetime model for the Jail object is currently plain simple - there's
simpy no way to manually delete a Jail object once it was created. Such
feature should be carefully designed to allow safe destruction of a Jail
without the possibility of releasing a process which is in Jail from the
actual jail. Each process which is attached into a Jail cannot leave it
until the end of a Process (i.e. when finalizing a Process). All jails
are kept being referenced in the JailManagement. When a last attached
process is finalized, the Jail is automatically destroyed.
2022-11-05 18:00:58 -06:00
Jesse Buhagiar c962cfdc28 Kernel: Reintroduce ScopedAddressSpaceSwitcher to aarch64 build 2022-10-18 13:08:25 +02:00
Timon Kruiper 9827c11d8b Kernel: Move InterruptDisabler out of Arch directory
The code in this file is not architecture specific, so it can be moved
to the base Kernel directory.
2022-10-17 20:11:31 +02:00
Timon Kruiper c2e410195a Kernel/aarch64: Set up pointer to kernel page directory
The MemoryManager uses this pointer to adds its newly created page
tables to the kernel page directory.
2022-10-01 14:09:01 +02:00
Timon Kruiper a62732ee2f Kernel/aarch64: Only identity map kernel image, instead of all of RAM
For the initial page tables we only need to identity map the kernel
image, the rest of the memory will be managed by the MemoryManager. The
linker script is updated to get the kernel image start and end
addresses.
2022-10-01 14:09:01 +02:00
Timon Kruiper 424a974e01 Kernel: Don't reserve Low Memory (0-1MB) on non-x86 architectures
This memory is only reserved on x86(-64) and is usable on other
architectures.
2022-10-01 14:09:01 +02:00
Liav A 0a793a7fa3 Kernel/FileSystem: Remove the locking of a Inode mutex in InodeVMObjects
We no longer require to lock the m_inode_lock in the SharedInodeVMObject
code as the methods write_bytes and read_bytes of the Inode class do
this for us now.
2022-09-26 22:06:10 +03:00
Liav A 60b088b89a Kernel: Send SIGBUS to threads that use after valid Inode mmaped range
According to Dr. POSIX, we should allow to call mmap on inodes even on
ranges that currently don't map to any actual data. Trying to read or
write to those ranges should result in SIGBUS being sent to the thread
that did violating memory access.

To implement this restriction, we simply check if the result of
read_bytes on an Inode returns 0, which means we have nothing valid to
map to the program, hence it should receive a SIGBUS in that case.
2022-09-26 20:00:34 +03:00
Liav A 6e26e9fb29 Revert "Kernel: Send SIGBUS to threads that use after valid Inode mmaped range"
This reverts commit 0c675192c9.
2022-09-24 13:49:40 +02:00
Liav A 05ba034000 Kernel: Introduce the IOWindow class
This class is intended to replace all IOAddress usages in the Kernel
codebase altogether. The idea is to ensure IO can be done in
arch-specific manner that is determined mostly in compile-time, but to
still be able to use most of the Kernel code in non-x86 builds. Specific
devices that rely on x86-specific IO instructions are already placed in
the Arch/x86 directory and are omitted for non-x86 builds.

The reason this works so well is the fact that x86 IO space acts in a
similar fashion to the traditional memory space being available in most
CPU architectures - the x86 IO space is essentially just an array of
bytes like the physical memory address space, but requires x86 IO
instructions to load and store data. Therefore, many devices allow host
software to interact with the hardware registers in both ways, with a
noticeable trend even in the modern x86 hardware to move away from the
old x86 IO space to exclusively using memory-mapped IO.

Therefore, the IOWindow class encapsulates both methods for x86 builds.
The idea is to allow PCI devices to be used in either way in x86 builds,
so when trying to map an IOWindow on a PCI BAR, the Kernel will try to
find the proper method being declared with the PCI BAR flags.
For old PCI hardware on non-x86 builds this might turn into a problem as
we can't use port mapped IO, so the Kernel will gracefully fail with
ENOTSUP error code if that's the case, as there's really nothing we can
do within such case.

For general IO, the read{8,16,32} and write{8,16,32} methods are
available as a convenient API for other places in the Kernel. There are
simply no direct 64-bit IO API methods yet, as it's not needed right now
and is not considered to be Arch-agnostic too - the x86 IO space doesn't
support generating 64 bit cycle on IO bus and instead requires two 2
32-bit accesses. If for whatever reason it appears to be necessary to do
IO in such manner, it could probably be added with some neat tricks to
do so. It is recommended to use Memory::TypedMapping struct if direct 64
bit IO is actually needed.
2022-09-23 17:22:15 +01:00
Liav A 6bafbd64e2 Kernel/Memory: Introduce a method to allocate TypedMapping on the heap
This will be used later on to allocate such structure on the heap when
it is necessary to do so.
2022-09-23 17:22:15 +01:00
Liav A d5ee03ef5b Kernel/x86: Move RTC and CMOS code to x86 arch-specific subdirectory
The RTC and CMOS are currently only supported for x86 platforms and use
specific x86 instructions to produce only certain x86 plaform operations
and results, therefore, we move them to the Arch/x86 specific directory.
2022-09-20 18:43:05 +01:00
Liav A 0c675192c9 Kernel: Send SIGBUS to threads that use after valid Inode mmaped range
According to Dr. POSIX, we should allow to call mmap on inodes even on
ranges that currently don't map to any actual data. Trying to read or
write to those ranges should result in SIGBUS being sent to the thread
that did violating memory access.
2022-09-16 14:55:45 +03:00
Liav A 3ad0e1a1d5 Kernel: Handle mmap requests on zero-length data file inodes safely 2022-09-16 14:55:45 +03:00
Filiph Sandström 7e1e208d08 Kernel: Add basic aarch64 support to MemoryManager
FIXME: There's still a lot to do like for example, port `quickmap_page`.
This does however get us further into the boot process than before.
2022-09-12 00:56:44 +01:00
Idan Horowitz 12300b7d0b Kernel: Dump OOM debug info after releasing the MM global data lock
Otherwise we would be holding the MM global data lock and the Process
address space locks in reversed order to the rest of the system, which
can lead to deadlocks.
2022-08-27 21:54:13 +03:00
Timon Kruiper e8aff0c1c8 Kernel: Use InterruptsState in Spinlock code
This commit updates the lock function from Spinlock and
RecursiveSpinlock to return the InterruptsState of the processor,
instead of the processor flags. The unlock functions would only look at
the interrupt flag of the processor flags, so we now use the
InterruptsState enum to clarify the intent, and such that we can use the
same Spinlock code for the aarch64 build.

To not break the build, all the call sites are updated aswell.
2022-08-26 12:51:57 +02:00
Andreas Kling a3b2b20782 Kernel: Remove global MM lock in favor of SpinlockProtected
Globally shared MemoryManager state is now kept in a GlobalData struct
and wrapped in SpinlockProtected.

A small set of members are left outside the GlobalData struct as they
are only set during boot initialization, and then remain constant.
This allows us to access those members without taking any locks.
2022-08-26 01:04:51 +02:00
Andreas Kling 2c72d495a3 Kernel: Use RefPtr instead of LockRefPtr for PhysicalPage
I believe this to be safe, as the main thing that LockRefPtr provides
over RefPtr is safe copying from a shared LockRefPtr instance. I've
inspected the uses of RefPtr<PhysicalPage> and it seems they're all
guarded by external locking. Some of it is less obvious, but this is
an area where we're making continuous headway.
2022-08-24 18:35:41 +02:00
Andreas Kling 5a804b9a1d Kernel: Make PhysicalPage::ref() use relaxed memory order
When incrementing a reference count, it should be sufficient to use
relaxed ordering. Note that unref() still uses acquire-release.
2022-08-24 18:35:41 +02:00
Andreas Kling ac3ea277aa Kernel: Don't take MM lock in ~PageDirectory()
We don't need the MM lock to unregister a PageDirectory from the CR3
map. This is already protected by the CR3 map's own lock.
2022-08-24 14:57:51 +02:00
Andreas Kling 5beed613ca Kernel: Don't take MM lock in MemoryManager::dump_kernel_regions()
We have to hold the region tree lock while dumping its regions anyway,
and taking the MM lock here was unnecessary.
2022-08-24 14:57:51 +02:00
Andreas Kling 05156cac94 Kernel: Don't take MM lock in MemoryManager::enter_address_space()
We're not accessing any of the MM members here. Also remove some
redundant code to update CR3, since it calls activate_page_directory()
which does exactly the same thing.
2022-08-24 14:57:51 +02:00
Andreas Kling 2607a6a4bd Kernel: Update comment about what the MM lock protects 2022-08-24 14:57:51 +02:00
Andreas Kling da24a937f5 Kernel: Don't wrap AddressSpace's RegionTree in SpinlockProtected
Now that AddressSpace itself is always SpinlockProtected, we don't
need to also wrap the RegionTree. Whoever has the AddressSpace locked
is free to poke around its tree.
2022-08-24 14:57:51 +02:00
Andreas Kling d3e8eb5918 Kernel: Make file-backed memory regions remember description permissions
This allows sys$mprotect() to honor the original readable & writable
flags of the open file description as they were at the point we did the
original sys$mmap().

IIUC, this is what Dr. POSIX wants us to do:
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/mprotect.html

Also, remove the bogus and racy "W^X" checking we did against mappings
based on their current inode metadata. If we want to do this, we can do
it properly. For now, it was not only racy, but also did blocking I/O
while holding a spinlock.
2022-08-24 14:57:51 +02:00
Andreas Kling cf16b2c8e6 Kernel: Wrap process address spaces in SpinlockProtected
This forces anyone who wants to look into and/or manipulate an address
space to lock it. And this replaces the previous, more flimsy, manual
spinlock use.

Note that pointers *into* the address space are not safe to use after
you unlock the space. We've got many issues like this, and we'll have
to track those down as wlel.
2022-08-24 14:57:51 +02:00
Andreas Kling d6ef18f587 Kernel: Don't hog the MM lock while unmapping regions
We were holding the MM lock across all of the region unmapping code.
This was previously necessary since the quickmaps used during unmapping
required holding the MM lock.

Now that it's no longer necessary, we can leave the MM lock alone here.
2022-08-24 14:57:51 +02:00
Andreas Kling dc9d2c1b10 Kernel: Wrap RegionTree objects in SpinlockProtected
This makes locking them much more straightforward, and we can remove
a bunch of confusing use of AddressSpace::m_lock. That lock will also
be converted to use of SpinlockProtected in a subsequent patch.
2022-08-24 14:57:51 +02:00
Andreas Kling 6cd3695761 Kernel: Stop taking MM lock while using regular quickmaps
You're still required to disable interrupts though, as the mappings are
per-CPU. This exposed the fact that our CR3 lookup map is insufficiently
protected (but we'll address that in a separate commit.)
2022-08-22 17:56:03 +02:00
Andreas Kling c8375c51ff Kernel: Stop taking MM lock while using PD/PT quickmaps
This is no longer required as these quickmaps are now per-CPU. :^)
2022-08-22 17:56:03 +02:00
Andreas Kling a838fdfd88 Kernel: Make the page table quickmaps per-CPU
While the "regular" quickmap (used to temporarily map a physical page
at a known address for quick access) has been per-CPU for a while,
we also have the PD (page directory) and PT (page table) quickmaps
used by the memory management code to edit page tables. These have been
global, which meant that SMP systems had to keep fighting over them.

This patch makes *all* quickmaps per-CPU. We reserve virtual addresses
for up to 64 CPUs worth of quickmaps for now.

Note that all quickmaps are still protected by the MM lock, and we'll
have to fix that too, before seeing any real throughput improvements.
2022-08-22 17:56:03 +02:00
Andreas Kling 11eee67b85 Kernel: Make self-contained locking smart pointers their own classes
Until now, our kernel has reimplemented a number of AK classes to
provide automatic internal locking:

- RefPtr
- NonnullRefPtr
- WeakPtr
- Weakable

This patch renames the Kernel classes so that they can coexist with
the original AK classes:

- RefPtr => LockRefPtr
- NonnullRefPtr => NonnullLockRefPtr
- WeakPtr => LockWeakPtr
- Weakable => LockWeakable

The goal here is to eventually get rid of the Lock* classes in favor of
using external locking.
2022-08-20 17:20:43 +02:00
Andreas Kling e475263113 AK+Kernel: Add AK::AtomicRefCounted and use everywhere in the kernel
Instead of having two separate implementations of AK::RefCounted, one
for userspace and one for kernelspace, there is now RefCounted and
AtomicRefCounted.
2022-08-20 17:15:52 +02:00
kleines Filmröllchen 4314c25cf2 Kernel: Require lock rank for Spinlock construction
All users which relied on the default constructor use a None lock rank
for now. This will make it easier to in the future remove LockRank and
actually annotate the ranks by searching for None.
2022-08-19 20:26:47 -07:00
Liav A a1a1462a22 Kernel/Memory: Use scope guard to remove a region if we failed to map it 2022-08-19 15:26:04 +03:00
Andreas Kling 5ada38f9c3 Kernel: Reduce time under VMObject lock while handling zero faults
We only need to hold the VMObject lock while inspecting and/or updating
the physical page array in the VMObject.
2022-08-19 12:52:48 +02:00
Andreas Kling a84d893af8 Kernel/x86: Re-enable interrupts ASAP when handling page faults
As soon as we've saved CR2 (the faulting address), we can re-enable
interrupt processing. This should make the kernel more responsive under
heavy fault loads.
2022-08-19 12:14:57 +02:00
Andreas Kling 4bc3745ce6 Kernel: Make Region's physical page accessors safer to use
Region::physical_page() now takes the VMObject lock while accessing the
physical pages array, and returns a RefPtr<PhysicalPage>. This ensures
that the array access is safe.

Region::physical_page_slot() now VERIFY()'s that the VMObject lock is
held by the caller. Since we're returning a reference to the physical
page slot in the VMObject's physical page array, this is the best we
can do here.
2022-08-18 19:20:33 +02:00
Andreas Kling b560442fe1 Kernel: Don't hog VMObject lock when remapping a region page
We really only need the VMObject lock when accessing the physical pages
array, so once we have a strong pointer to the physical page we want to
remap, we can give up the VMObject lock.

This fixes a deadlock I encountered while building DOOM on SMP.
2022-08-18 18:56:35 +02:00
Andreas Kling 10399a258f Kernel: Move Region physical page accessors out of line 2022-08-18 18:52:34 +02:00
Andreas Kling c14dda14c4 Kernel: Add a comment about what the MM lock protects 2022-08-18 18:52:34 +02:00
Andreas Kling 75348bdfd3 Kernel: Don't require MM lock for Region::set_page_directory()
The MM lock is not required for this, it's just a simple ref-counted
pointer assignment.
2022-08-18 18:52:34 +02:00
Andreas Kling 27c1135d30 Kernel: Don't remap all regions from Region::remap_vmobject_page()
When handling a page fault, we only need to remap the faulting region in
the current process. There's no need to traverse *all* regions that map
the same VMObject and remap them cross-process as well.

Those other regions will get remapped lazily by their own page fault
handlers eventually. Or maybe they won't and we avoided some work. :^)
2022-08-18 18:52:34 +02:00
Andreas Kling 45e6123de8 Kernel: Shorten time under spinlocks while handling inode faults
- Instead of holding the VMObject lock across physical page allocation
  and quick-map + copy, we now only hold it when updating the VMObject's
  physical page slot.
2022-08-18 18:52:34 +02:00
Mike Akers de980de0e4 Kernel: Lock the inode before writing in SharedInodeVMObject::sync
We ensure that when we call SharedInodeVMObject::sync we lock the inode
lock before calling Inode virtual write_bytes method directly to avoid
assertion on the unlocked inode lock, as it was regressed recently. This
is not a complete fix as the need to lock from each path before calling
the write_bytes method should be avoided because it can lead to
hard-to-find bugs, and this commit only fixes the problem temporarily.
2022-08-16 16:54:03 +02:00
dylanbobb 8180211431 Kernel: Release 1 page instead of all pages when starved for pages
Previously, when starved for pages, *all* clean file-backed memory
would be released, which is quite excessive.

This patch instead releases just 1 page, since only 1 page is needed
to satisfy the request to `allocate_physical_page()`
2022-08-16 01:13:17 +02:00