Commit graph

52 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Liav A
1f9d3a3523 Kernel/PCI: Hold a reference to DeviceIdentifier in the Device class
There are now 2 separate classes for almost the same object type:
- EnumerableDeviceIdentifier, which is used in the enumeration code for
  all PCI host controller classes. This is allowed to be moved and
  copied, as it doesn't support ref-counting.
- DeviceIdentifier, which inherits from EnumerableDeviceIdentifier. This
  class uses ref-counting, and is not allowed to be copied. It has a
  spinlock member in its structure to allow safely executing complicated
  IO sequences on a PCI device and its space configuration.
  There's a static method that allows a quick conversion from
  EnumerableDeviceIdentifier to DeviceIdentifier while creating a
  NonnullRefPtr out of it.

The reason for doing this is for the sake of integrity and reliablity of
the system in 2 places:
- Ensure that "complicated" tasks that rely on manipulating PCI device
  registers are done in a safe manner. For example, determining a PCI
  BAR space size requires multiple read and writes to the same register,
  and if another CPU tries to do something else with our selected
  register, then the result will be a catastrophe.
- Allow the PCI API to have a united form around a shared object which
  actually holds much more data than the PCI::Address structure. This is
  fundamental if we want to do certain types of optimizations, and be
  able to support more features of the PCI bus in the foreseeable
  future.

This patch already has several implications:
- All PCI::Device(s) hold a reference to a DeviceIdentifier structure
  being given originally from the PCI::Access singleton. This means that
  all instances of DeviceIdentifier structures are located in one place,
  and all references are pointing to that location. This ensures that
  locking the operation spinlock will take effect in all the appropriate
  places.
- We no longer support adding PCI host controllers and then immediately
  allow for enumerating it with a lambda function. It was found that
  this method is extremely broken and too much complicated to work
  reliably with the new paradigm being introduced in this patch. This
  means that for Volume Management Devices (Intel VMD devices), we
  simply first enumerate the PCI bus for such devices in the storage
  code, and if we find a device, we attach it in the PCI::Access method
  which will scan for devices behind that bridge and will add new
  DeviceIdentifier(s) objects to its internal Vector. Afterwards, we
  just continue as usual with scanning for actual storage controllers,
  so we will find a corresponding NVMe controllers if there were any
  behind that VMD bridge.
2023-01-26 23:04:26 +01:00
Liav A
91db482ad3 Kernel: Reorganize Arch/x86 directory to Arch/x86_64 after i686 removal
No functional change.
2022-12-28 11:53:41 +01:00
Liav A
5ff318cf3a Kernel: Remove i686 support 2022-12-28 11:53:41 +01:00
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
Liav A
462802ef0c Kernel/SysFS: Expose file size of ACPI tables in /sys/firmware/acpi
It costs us nothing, and some utilities (such as the known file utility)
rely on the exposed file size (after doing lstat on it), to show
anything useful besides saying the file is "empty".
2022-10-16 17:26:35 +02:00
Liav A
11a5f2c508 Kernel: Initialize primitive class member of ACPISysFSComponent to zero 2022-10-16 17:26:35 +02:00
minus
cf48200e7b Kernel: Make the ACPI DSDT table accessible
Expose the DSDT table in ACPI::Parser and in
/sys/firmware/acpi as a first little step toward
interpreting the AML bytecode from ACPI.
2022-10-12 00:11:36 -06:00
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
1b7b360ca1 Kernel: Move x86-specific IRQ controller code to Arch/x86 directory
The PIC and APIC code are specific to x86 platforms, so move them out of
the general Interrupts directory to Arch/x86/common/Interrupts directory
instead.
2022-09-20 18:43:05 +01:00
Liav A
485d4e01ed Kernel: Move VMWare backdoor communication code to the x86 directory
The VMWare backdoor handling code involves many x86-specific
instructions and therefore should be in the Arch/x86 directory. This
ensures we can easily omit the code in compile-time for non-x86 builds.
2022-09-20 18:43:05 +01:00
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
Liav A
70afa0b171 Kernel/SysFS: Mark SysFSDirectory traverse and lookup methods as final
This enforces us to remove duplicated code across the SysFS code. This
results in great simplification of how the SysFS works now, because we
enforce one way to treat SysFSDirectory objects.
2022-07-15 12:29:23 +02:00
sin-ack
3f3f45580a Everywhere: Add sv suffix to strings relying on StringView(char const*)
Each of these strings would previously rely on StringView's char const*
constructor overload, which would call __builtin_strlen on the string.
Since we now have operator ""sv, we can replace these with much simpler
versions. This opens the door to being able to remove
StringView(char const*).

No functional changes.
2022-07-12 23:11:35 +02:00
Tim Schumacher
3b3af58cf6 Kernel: Annotate all KBuffer and DoubleBuffer with a custom name 2022-07-12 00:55:31 +01:00
Liav A
9c6834698f Kerenl/Firmware: Add map_ebda and map_bios methods in the original place
In a previous commit I moved everything into the new subdirectories in
FileSystem/SysFS directory without trying to actually make changes in
the code itself too much. Now it's time to split the code to make it
more readable and understandable, hence this change occurs now.
2022-06-17 11:01:27 +02:00
Liav A
290eb53cb5 Kernel/SysFS: Stop cluttering the codebase with pieces of SysFS parts
Instead, start to put everything in one place to resemble the directory
structure of the SysFS when actually using it.
2022-06-17 11:01:27 +02:00
Timon Kruiper
a4534678f9 Kernel: Implement InterruptDisabler using generic Processor functions
Now that the code does not use architectural specific code, it is moved
to the generic Arch directory and the paths are modified accordingly.
2022-06-02 13:14:12 +01:00
Liav A
02566d8091 Kernel: Move VMWareBackdoor to new directory in the Firmware directory 2022-04-20 19:21:32 +02:00
Idan Horowitz
086969277e Everywhere: Run clang-format 2022-04-01 21:24:45 +01:00
Liav A
ae2ec45e78 Kernel: Allow SysFS components to have non-zero size
This is important for dmidecode because it does an fstat on the DMI
blobs, trying to figure out their size. Because we already know the size
of the blobs when creating the SysFS components, there's no performance
penalty whatsoever, and this allows dmidecode to not use the /dev/mem
device as a fallback.
2022-04-01 11:27:19 +02:00
Liav A
66ff60db07 Kernel: Declare DMI SysFS BIOS classes as final 2022-04-01 11:27:19 +02:00
Liav A
338b4b27eb Kernel: Declare blob sizes of SysFS BIOS classes as const 2022-04-01 11:27:19 +02:00
Liav A
96aae59e9c Kernel: Initialize primitive data members of SysFS BIOS classes 2022-04-01 11:27:19 +02:00
Lenny Maiorani
c6acf64558 Kernel: Change static constexpr variables to constexpr where possible
Function-local `static constexpr` variables can be `constexpr`. This
can reduce memory consumption, binary size, and offer additional
compiler optimizations.

These changes result in a stripped x86_64 kernel binary size reduction
of 592 bytes.
2022-02-09 21:04:51 +00:00
Idan Horowitz
d5189b6677 Kernel: Replace {String => KString}::formatted in ACPISysFSDirectory 2022-01-21 16:27:21 +01:00
Idan Horowitz
fdfdb5bd1c Kernel: Make ACPI reboot OOM-fallible 2022-01-21 16:27:21 +01:00
Idan Horowitz
3945e239e1 Kernel: Don't populate the ACPI SysFS directory with a disabled ACPI
This would cause a nullptr dereference on ACPI::Parser::the().
2022-01-18 21:00:46 +02:00
Idan Horowitz
fb3e46e930 Kernel: Make map_typed() & map_typed_writable() fallible using ErrorOr
This mostly just moved the problem, as a lot of the callers are not
capable of propagating the errors themselves, but it's a step in the
right direction.
2022-01-13 22:40:25 +01:00
Idan Horowitz
e2e5d4da16 Kernel: Make map_bios() and map_ebda() fallible using ErrorOr 2022-01-13 22:40:25 +01:00
mjz19910
3102d8e160 Everywhere: Fix many spelling errors 2022-01-07 10:56:59 +01:00
Brian Gianforcaro
6c66311ade Kernel: Use MUST + Vector::try_empend instead of Vector::empend
In preparation for making Vector::empend unavailable during
compilation of the Kernel.
2022-01-05 14:04:18 +01:00
Brian Gianforcaro
24066ba5ef Kernel: Use MUST + Vector::try_append instead of Vector::append
In preparation for making Vector::append unavailable during
compilation of the Kernel.
2022-01-05 14:04:18 +01:00
Tom
10efbfb09e Kernel: Scan ACPI memory ranges for the RSDP table
On some systems the ACPI RSDP table may be located in ACPI reserved
memory ranges rather than in the EBDA or BIOS areas.
2022-01-04 17:46:36 +00:00
Tom
e70aa690d2 Kernel: Fix determining EBDA size
The first byte of the EBDA structure contains the size of the EBDA
in 1 KiB units. We were incorrectly using the word at offset 0x413
of the BDA which specifies the number of KiB before the EBDA structure.
2022-01-04 17:46:36 +00:00
Guilherme Goncalves
33b78915d3 Kernel: Propagate overflow errors from Memory::page_round_up
Fixes #11402.
2021-12-28 23:08:50 +01:00
Liav A
52e01b46eb Kernel: Move Multi Processor Parser code to a separate directory 2021-12-23 23:18:58 -08:00
Liav A
bbdb55126c Kernel/SysFS: Don't allocate ACPISysFS components in constructors
Instead defer it to a method to be called after the construction of
ACPISysFSDirectory.
2021-12-14 09:01:33 +01:00
Liav A
381fdaa163 Kernel/SysFS: Make it clear that some components must be created in boot
Using the phrase "create" doesn't give information on whether the object
must be allocated or a failure to do so can be handled gracefully.
Therefore, we must use better phrase for such purpose, so "must_create"
for the allocate-and-construct static methods is definitely good choice.
2021-12-14 09:01:33 +01:00
Liav A
478f543899 Kernel/SysFS: Prevent allocation for component name during construction
Instead, allocate before constructing the object and pass NonnullOwnPtr
of KString to the object if needed. Some classes can determine their
names as they have a known attribute to look for or have a static name.
2021-12-14 09:01:33 +01:00
Daniel Bertalan
4a81b33c07 Everywhere: Fix -Winconsistent-missing-override warnings from Clang
This option is already enabled when building Lagom, so let's enable it
for the main build too. We will no longer be surprised by Lagom Clang
CI builds failing while everything compiles locally.

Furthermore, the stronger `-Wsuggest-override` warning is enabled in
this commit, which enforces the use of the `override` keyword in all
classes, not just those which already have some methods marked as
`override`. This works with both GCC and Clang.
2021-12-11 13:14:15 -08:00
Hendiadyoin1
21c5c4026b Kernel: Mark ACPI::Parser's empty destructor as default 2021-12-09 22:53:42 -08:00
Andreas Kling
8b1108e485 Everywhere: Pass AK::StringView by value 2021-11-11 01:27:46 +01:00
Andreas Kling
5f7d008791 AK+Everywhere: Stop including Vector.h from StringView.h
Preparation for using Error.h from Vector.h. This required moving some
things out of line.
2021-11-10 21:58:58 +01:00
Andreas Kling
79fa9765ca Kernel: Replace KResult and KResultOr<T> with Error and ErrorOr<T>
We now use AK::Error and AK::ErrorOr<T> in both kernel and userspace!
This was a slightly tedious refactoring that took a long time, so it's
not unlikely that some bugs crept in.

Nevertheless, it does pass basic functionality testing, and it's just
real nice to finally see the same pattern in all contexts. :^)
2021-11-08 01:10:53 +01:00
Brian Gianforcaro
2c85f65519 Kernel: Switch BIOSSysFSComponent constructor to AK::StringView
These are constants, they don't need to be dynamically allocated.
Another minor step towards removing `AK::String` from the Kernel
and improving OOM safety.
2021-11-02 11:34:31 +01:00
Liav A
f8489da8ee Kernel/SysFS: Provide a way to "truncate" and "set" mtime on inodes
Normally, trying to truncate a SysFSInode should result in EPERM error.
However, as suggested by Ali (@alimpfard), we can allow the PowerState
node to be "truncated" so one can open that file with O_TRUNC option.
Likewise, we also need to provide a way to set modified time on SysFS
inodes. For most inodes, we should return ENOTIMPL error, but for the
power state switch, we ignore the modified time setting and just return
KSuccess.

These fixes allow to do "echo -n 1 > /sys/firmware/power_state" in Shell
after gaining root permissions, to switch the power state.
2021-10-09 12:07:56 +02:00
Brian Gianforcaro
3a945051fc Kernel: Use operator ""sv in all purpose() implementations
Previously there was a mix of returning plain strings and returning
explicit string views using `operator ""sv`. This change switches them
all to standardized on `operator ""sv` as it avoids a call to strlen.
2021-10-03 13:36:10 +02:00
Liav A
4974727dbb Kernel: Move x86 IO instructions code into the x86 specific folder 2021-10-01 12:27:20 +02:00
Liav A
8d0dbdeaac Kernel+Userland: Introduce a new way to reboot and poweroff the machine
This change removes the halt and reboot syscalls, and create a new
mechanism to change the power state of the machine.
Instead of how power state was changed until now, put a SysFS node as
writable only for the superuser, that with a defined value, can result
in either reboot or poweroff.
In the future, a power group can be assigned to this node (which will be
the GroupID responsible for power management).

This opens an opportunity to permit to shutdown/reboot without superuser
permissions, so in the future, a userspace daemon can take control of
this node to perform power management operations without superuser
permissions, if we enforce different UserID/GroupID on that node.
2021-09-12 11:52:16 +02:00