* B_ABSOLUTE_REAL_TIME_TIMEOUT is used for kernel timers, and
must be used for absolute timeout values, rather than the
B_ABSOLUTE_TIMEOUT flag. Discovered whilst implementing
`pthread_timedjoin_np`.
Change-Id: I37ae057073ff5efeecc00406b132abf51bebbdc2
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/5100
Reviewed-by: Fredrik Holmqvist <fredrik.holmqvist@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Commit checker robot <no-reply+buildbot@haiku-os.org>
Based on hamishm's original patch from 2015, but heavily modified,
refactored, and reworked.
From the original commit message:
> When an object is deleted, a B_EVENT_INVALID event is delivered,
> and the object is unregistered from the queue.
>
> The special event flag B_EVENT_ONE_SHOT can be passed in when adding
> an object so that the object is automatically unregistered when an
> event is delivered.
Modifications to the original change include:
* Removed the public interface (syscalls remain private for the moment)
* Event list queueing/dequeueing almost entirely rewritten, including:
- Clear events field when dequeueing.
- Have B_EVENT_QUEUED actually indicate whether the event has been
appended to the linked list (or not), based around lock state.
The previous logic was prone to races and double-insertions.
- "Modify" is now just "Deselect + Select" performed at once;
previously it could cause use-after-frees.
- Unlock for deselect only once at the end of dequeue.
- Handle INVALID events still in the queue upon destruction,
fixing memory leaks.
* Deduplified code with wait_for_objects.
* Use of C++ virtual dispatch instead of C-style enum + function calls,
and BReferenceable plus destructors for teardown.
* Removed select/modify/delete flags. Select/Modify are now the same
operation on the syscall interface, and "Delete" is done when 0
is passed for "events". Additionally, the events selected can be fetched
by passing -1 for "events".
* Implemented level-triggered mode.
* Use of BStackOrHeapArray and other convenience routines in syscalls.
Change-Id: I1d2f094fd981c95215a59adbc087523c7bbbe40b
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/6745
Tested-by: Commit checker robot <no-reply+buildbot@haiku-os.org>
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
- Stored the additional start time of each team, expressed by
milliseconds since boot.
- Added more fields to the `team_info` structure. These field
include those provided by the `get_extended_team_info` syscall as
well as the newly introduced `start_time`.
- Extended the `_kern_get_team_info` system call to receive an
additional `size_t` argument. If this size is smaller than or
equal to the size of the old `team_info` structure, the newly
added attributes will not be retrieved.
Change-Id: I22ee6b91ad2ee3b66a7f770036c79a718c5f115c
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/6390
Tested-by: Commit checker robot <no-reply+buildbot@haiku-os.org>
Reviewed-by: Jessica Hamilton <jessica.l.hamilton@gmail.com>
* This will be needed for the following commit that implements
`pthread_tryjoin_np` and `pthread_timedjoin_np`.
Change-Id: Idccb1aa588d6d10825294d14925d9bd046b65f19
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/5098
Tested-by: Commit checker robot <no-reply+buildbot@haiku-os.org>
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
On sparc, the minimal page size we can use is 8K. Since B_PAGE_SIZE and
PAGESIZE defines were hardcoded to 4K, this resulted in a lot of
confusion in all code trying to manipulate pages.
- Remove cpu.h from headers/private/kernel/arch/*. It dates back from
NewOS and was not used anymore since our kernel uses B_PAGE_SIZE
(PAGE_SIZE was the only thing defined in this header).
- Add posix/arch/*/limits.h with the arch specific page size and include
it from the main limits.h.
- Adjust bios_ia32/debug.cpp which was the only place using the
PAGE_SIZE constant from the deleted headers.
- Change OS.h to define B_PAGE_SIZE to be the same as POSIX PAGESIZE.
- Define PAGESIZE in the build header if the host OS doesn't.
Change-Id: I8c3732cf952ea3c2f088aa16d216678fbf198b96
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/c/haiku/+/3558
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
It now lives in OS.h. The idea is that this will now be
accessible to userland applications, so userland memory
is protected from access by other processes, just as
kernel memory is.
No functional change (the constants are still the same,
though I've changed some to use shifts to make clear
which bits are allocated are which are unused.)
This should have been done along with the time_t change, but I forgot
to check this then.
Technically this breaks ABI against BeOS, but:
1. BeOS used an int32, so we'd already slightly broken ABI here
2. Only one thing at HaikuArchives (VMwareAddons) and one recipe at HaikuPorts
(samba) uses this function at all.
If it turns out some critical BeOS app uses this, then I guess we can enclose
GCC2 guards around it, but since I can't find any evidence of that, I'm
pushing it without them for now.
* Fix incorrect cpu vendor name mapping
* Add additional CPU architectures
* Add additional CPU vendors
* Rework PowerPC arch_system_info passing
PVR back for cpu model
This field forces kernel to track each CPU load all the time. It is not
a problem with the current scheduler on a multicore systems, but on
single core machnies or with any other future scheduler this field may
become just an unnecessary burden. It isn't difficult for an application
to compute CPU load by itself when it needs it.
* My BeagleBone gcc defines __ARMEL__ but not
__ARM__ which breaks the native tool builds
* As ARM was originally Little Endian, we assume
__ARM__ means as such.
* Look for Big Endian ARM and define the needed big
endian preprocessors
* If at least one image is either B_HAIKU_ABI_GCC_2_ANCIENT or
B_HAIKU_ABI_GCC_2_BEOS almost all areas are marked as executable.
* B_EXECUTE_AREA and B_STACK_AREA are made public. The former is enforced since
the introduction of DEP and apps need it to correctly set area protection.
The latter is currently needed only to recognize stack areas and fix their
protection in compatibility mode, but may also be useful if an app wants
to use sigaltstack from POSIX API.
This address specification is actually not needed since PIC images can be
located anywhere. Only their size is restriced but that is the compiler and
linker concern. Thanks to Alex Smith for pointing that out.
On some 64 bit architectures program and library images have to be mapped in
the lower 2 GB of the address space (due to instruction pointer relative
addressing). Address specification B_RANDOMIZED_IMAGE_ADDRESS ensures that
created area satisfies that requirement.
Randomized equivalent of B_ANY_ADDRESS. When a free space is found (as in
B_ANY_ADDRESS) the base adress is then randomized using _RandomizeAddress
pretty much like it is done in B_RANDOMIZED_BASE_ADDRESS.
B_RAND_BASE_ADDRESS is basically B_BASE_ADDRESS with non-deterministic created
area's base address.
Initial start address is randomized and then the algorithm looks for a large
enough free space in the interval [randomized start, end]. If it fails then
the search is repeated in the interval [original start, randomized start]. In
case it also fails the algorithm falls back to B_ANY_ADDRESS
(B_RANDOMIZED_ANY_ADDRESS when it is implemented) just like B_BASE_ADDRESS does.
Randomization range is limited by kMaxRandomize and kMaxInitialRandomize.
The cookie is used to store the base address of the area that was just
visited. On 64-bit systems, int32 is not sufficient. Therefore, changed
to ssize_t which retains compatibility on x86 while expanding to a
sufficient size on x86_64.
* Some things are currently ifndef'd out completely for x86_64 because
they aren't implemented, there's a few other ifdef's to handle x86_64
differences but most of the code works unchanged.
* Renamed some i386_* functions to x86_*.
* Added a temporary method for setting the current thread on x86_64
(a global variable, not SMP safe). This will be changed to be done
via the GS segment but I've not implemented that yet.
* Map build variables HOST_CPU and HOST_ARCH to x86_64, if it they are
* x86 and
64 bit and define the __x86_64__ C macro instead of __INTEL__ in that
case.
* <OS.h>: Also handle __x86_64__.
* Reorganized the kernel locking related to threads and teams.
* We now discriminate correctly between process and thread signals. Signal
handlers have been moved to teams. Fixes #5679.
* Implemented real-time signal support, including signal queuing, SA_SIGINFO
support, sigqueue(), sigwaitinfo(), sigtimedwait(), waitid(), and the addition
of the real-time signal range. Closes #1935 and #2695.
* Gave SIGBUS a separate signal number. Fixes #6704.
* Implemented <time.h> clock and timer support, and fixed/completed alarm() and
[set]itimer(). Closes #5682.
* Implemented support for thread cancellation. Closes #5686.
* Moved send_signal() from <signal.h> to <OS.h>. Fixes #7554.
* Lots over smaller more or less related changes.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@42116 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
the constraint can be expressed more precisely. ATM B_32_BIT_FULL_LOCK is
implemented as B_32_BIT_CONTIGUOUS when B_HAIKU_PHYSICAL_BITS > 32, though.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@37226 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96
system_time_nsecs(), returning the system time in nanoseconds. The function
is only really implemented for x86. For the other architectures
system_time() * 1000 is returned.
git-svn-id: file:///srv/svn/repos/haiku/haiku/trunk@34543 a95241bf-73f2-0310-859d-f6bbb57e9c96