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.
We don't actually need the va_list and other stdarg definitions in the
kernel, because we actually don't use the "pure" printf interface in any
kernel code at all, but we retain the snprintf declaration because the
libstdc++ library still need it to be declared and extern'ed.
This step would ideally not have been necessary (increases amount of
refactoring and templates necessary, which in turn increases build
times), but it gives us a couple of nice properties:
- SpinlockProtected inside Singleton (a very common combination) can now
obtain any lock rank just via the template parameter. It was not
previously possible to do this with SingletonInstanceCreator magic.
- SpinlockProtected's lock rank is now mandatory; this is the majority
of cases and allows us to see where we're still missing proper ranks.
- The type already informs us what lock rank a lock has, which aids code
readability and (possibly, if gdb cooperates) lock mismatch debugging.
- The rank of a lock can no longer be dynamic, which is not something we
wanted in the first place (or made use of). Locks randomly changing
their rank sounds like a disaster waiting to happen.
- In some places, we might be able to statically check that locks are
taken in the right order (with the right lock rank checking
implementation) as rank information is fully statically known.
This refactoring even more exposes the fact that Mutex has no lock rank
capabilites, which is not fixed here.
Only use the Bochs debug output if we compile a x86 build since bochs
debug output relies on x86 specific instructions.
We also remove the CONSOLE_OUT_TO_BOCHS_DEBUG_PORT flag as we always
compile bochs debug output for x86 builds and we always want to include
the bochs debug output capability as it is very handy and doesn't hurt
bare metal hardware or do any other problem besides taking a small
amount of CPU cycles.
kprintf should not really care about the hardware-specific details of
each UART or serial port out there, so instead of using x86 specific
instructions, let's ensure that we will compile only the relevant code
for debug output for a targeted-specific platform.
Change the name of set_serial_debug(bool on_or_off) to
set_serial_debug_enabled(bool desired_state). This is to make the names
more expressive and less unclear as to what the function does, as it
only sets the enabled state.
Likewise, change the name of get_serial_debug() to
is_serial_debug_enabled() in order to make clear from the name that
this is simply the state of s_serial_debug_enabled.
Change the name of serial_debug to s_serial_debug_enabled since this is
a static bool describing this state.
Finally, change the signature of set_serial_debug_enabled to return a
bool, as this is more logical and understandable.
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.
If the bootloader that loaded us is providing a framebuffer details from
the Multiboot protocol then we can instantiate a framebuffer console.
Otherwise, we should use a text mode console, assuming that the BIOS and
the bootloader didn't try to modeset the screen resolution so we have is
a VGA 80x25 text mode being displayed on screen.
Since "boot_framebuffer_console" is no longer a good representative as a
global variable name, it's changed to g_boot_console to match the fact
that it can be assigned with a text mode console and not framebuffer
console if needed.
The global variable use in these functions is super thread-unsafe and
means that any concurrent calls to sprintf or fprintf in a process
could race with each other and end up writing unexpected results.
We can just replace the function + global variable with a lambda that
captures the relevant argument when calling printf_internal instead.
Instead of seeing a black screen until GraphicsManagement was fully
initialized, this allows us to see the console output much earlier.
So, if the bootloader provided us with a framebuffer, set up a console
as early as possible.
This variant of dbgputstr does not lock the global log lock, as it is
called before the current or any other processor was initialized,
meaning that:
A) The $gs base was not setup yet, so we cannot enter into critical
sections, and as a result we cannot use SpinLocks
B) No other processors may try to print at the same time anyway
This adds a dbgputch() alongside dbgputstr() in kstdio.h. The function
already existed as the static function debugger_out(). It has now been
exposed to users of kstdio.h.
This simple driver simply finds a device in a device definitions list
and then sets up a SerialDevice instance based on the definition.
The driver currently only supports "WCH CH382 2S" pci serial boards,
as that is the only device available for me to test with, but most
other pci serial devices should be as easily addable as adding a
board_definitions entry.
As we removed the support of VBE modesetting that was done by GRUB early
on boot, we need to determine if we can modeset the resolution with our
drivers, and if not, we should enable text mode and ensure that
SystemServer knows about it too.
Also, SystemServer should first check if there's a framebuffer device
node, which is an indication that text mode was not even if it was
requested. Then, if it doesn't find it, it should check what boot_mode
argument the user specified (in case it's self-test). This way if we
try to use bochs-display device (which is not VGA compatible) and
request a text mode, it will not honor the request and will continue
with graphical mode.
Also try to print critical messages with mininum memory allocations
possible.
In LibVT, We make the implementation flexible for kernel-specific
methods that are implemented in ConsoleImpl class.
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
The kernel no longer needs sprintf (which might, in theory, overflow),
so we can hide the C++ declaration and make the function uncallable
from within the kernel.
However, libstdc++ still links against it, as libstdc++ uses it for
demangling, from AK::demangle().
This enables a nice warning in case a function becomes dead code. Also, in case
of signal_trampoline_dummy, marking it external (non-static) prevents it from
being 'optimized away', which would lead to surprising and weird linker errors.
I found these places by using -Wmissing-declarations.
The Kernel still shows these issues, which I think are false-positives,
but don't want to touch:
- Kernel/Arch/i386/CPU.cpp:1081:17: void Kernel::enter_thread_context(Kernel::Thread*, Kernel::Thread*)
- Kernel/Arch/i386/CPU.cpp:1170:17: void Kernel::context_first_init(Kernel::Thread*, Kernel::Thread*, Kernel::TrapFrame*)
- Kernel/Arch/i386/CPU.cpp:1304:16: u32 Kernel::do_init_context(Kernel::Thread*, u32)
- Kernel/Arch/i386/CPU.cpp:1347:17: void Kernel::pre_init_finished()
- Kernel/Arch/i386/CPU.cpp:1360:17: void Kernel::post_init_finished()
No idea, not gonna touch it.
- Kernel/init.cpp:104:30: void Kernel::init()
- Kernel/init.cpp:167:30: void Kernel::init_ap(u32, Kernel::Processor*)
- Kernel/init.cpp:184:17: void Kernel::init_finished(u32)
Called by boot.S.
- Kernel/init.cpp:383:16: int Kernel::__cxa_atexit(void (*)(void*), void*, void*)
- Kernel/StdLib.cpp:285:19: void __cxa_pure_virtual()
- Kernel/StdLib.cpp:300:19: void __stack_chk_fail()
- Kernel/StdLib.cpp:305:19: void __stack_chk_fail_local()
Not sure how to tell the compiler that the compiler is already using them.
Also, maybe __cxa_atexit should go into StdLib.cpp?
- Kernel/Modules/TestModule.cpp:31:17: void module_init()
- Kernel/Modules/TestModule.cpp:40:17: void module_fini()
Could maybe go into a new header. This would also provide type-checking for new modules.
This was supposed to be the foundation for some kind of pre-kernel
environment, but nobody is working on it right now, so let's move
everything back into the kernel and remove all the confusion.
As suggested by Joshua, this commit adds the 2-clause BSD license as a
comment block to the top of every source file.
For the first pass, I've just added myself for simplicity. I encourage
everyone to add themselves as copyright holders of any file they've
added or modified in some significant way. If I've added myself in
error somewhere, feel free to replace it with the appropriate copyright
holder instead.
Going forward, all new source files should include a license header.