The scheduler expects m_select_timeout to act as a deadline. That is, it
should contain the time that a task should wake at -- but we were
directly copying the time from userspace, which meant that it always
returned virtually immediately.
At the same time, fix CEventLoop to not rely on the broken select behavior
by subtracting the current time from the time of the nearest timer.
Based on the description I read, this syscall doesn't seem completely
reasonable, but let's at least return a number that is likely to change
between invocations in case somebody depends on that happening.
These functions were doing exactly the same thing for range allocation, so
share that code in an allocate_range() helper.
Region allocation will now also fail if range allocation fails, which means
that mmap() can actually fail without falling apart. Exciting times!
This replaces the previous virtual address allocator which was basically
just "m_next_address += size;"
With this in place, virtual addresses can get reused, which cuts down on
the number of page tables created. When we implement ASLR some day, we'll
probably have to do page table deallocation, but for now page tables are
only deallocated once the process dies.
Stash away the ELFLoader used to load an executable in Process so we can use
it for symbolicating userspace addresses later on. This will make debugging
userspace programs a lot nicer. :^)
This patch moves away from using kmalloc memory for thread kernel stacks.
This reduces pressure on kmalloc (16 KB per thread adds up fast) and
prevents kernel stack overflow from scribbling all over random unrelated
kernel memory.
Make the Socket functions take a FileDescriptor& rather than a socket role
throughout the code. Also change threads to block on a FileDescriptor,
rather than either an fd index or a Socket.
We were only destroying the main thread when a process died, leaving any
secondary threads around. They couldn't run, but because they were still
in the global thread list, strange things could happen since they had some
now-stale pointers to their old process.
Calling systrace(pid) gives you a file descriptor with a stream of the
syscalls made by a peer process. The process must be owned by the same
UID who calls systrace(). :^)
I was originally implementing signals by looking at some man page about
sigaction() to see how it works. It seems like the restorer thingy is
system-specific and not required by POSIX, so let's get rid of it.
If connect() is called on a non-blocking socket, it will "fail" immediately
with -EINPROGRESS. After that, you select() on the socket and wait for it to
become writable.