This service daemon will act as an intermediary between the Inspector
program and the inspectable programs it wants to inspect.
Programs can make themselves available for inspection by connecting
to /tmp/portal/inspectables using the Core::EventLoop RPC protocol.
After looking closely at this, I realized that we've been running
all the service processes under separate user accounts even though
there's actually no need to.
Since we already use pledge() and unveil() to limit the scope and
access of these programs, separating them to another UID doesn't
achieve anything meaningful. So let's bring them back to the "anon"
user account and simplify things.
Programs affected:
- ImageDecoder
- RequestServer
- WebContent
- WebSocket
Longer term, I'd like for all of these to get spawned for the current
desktop user somehow, possibly by some kind of session manager, or
perhaps by the Browser program itself. But for now they remain under
SystemServer's control.
I can't say I like starting yet another thing on boot... but now that
LookupServer provides mDNS (and optionaly DNS) services to other hosts,
we have to start it on boot, not when the first local client connects.
We had some inconsistencies before:
- Sometimes "The", sometimes "the"
- Sometimes trailing ".", sometimes no trailing "."
I picked the most common one (lowecase "the", trailing ".") and applied
it to all copyright headers.
By using the exact same string everywhere we can ensure nothing gets
missed during a global search (and replace), and that these
inconsistencies are not spread any further (as copyright headers are
commonly copied to new files).
The current ProtocolServer was really only used for requests, and with
the recent introduction of the WebSocket service, long-lasting
connections with another server are not part of it. To better reflect
this, this commit renames it to RequestServer.
This commit also changes the existing 'protocol' portal to 'request',
the existing 'protocol' user and group to 'request', and most mentions
of the 'download' aspect of the request to 'request' when relevant, to
make everything consistent across the system.
Note that LibProtocol still exists as-is, but the more generic Client
class and the more specific Download class have both been renamed to a
more accurate RequestClient and Request to match the new names.
This commit only change names, not behaviors.
The WebSocket service isolates communication with a WebSocket to its
own isolated process. Similar to other isolating services, it has its
own user and group.
This is useful for CI where we don't want to spend a minute and a half
benchmarking Vector::append, and we don't have a good way to pass
test-specific arguments yet. :)
With this patch the window manager related functionality is split out
onto a new endpoint pair named WindowManagerServer/Client. This allows
window manager functionality to be potentially privilege separated in
the future. To this end, a new client named WMConnectionClient
is used to maintain a window manager connection. When a process
connects to the endpoint and greets the WindowServer as a window manager
(via Window::make_window_manager(int)), they're subscribed to the events
they requested via the WM event mask.
This patch also removes the hardcoding of the Taskbar WindowType to
receive WM events automatically. However, being a window manager still
requires having an active window, at the moment.
Build a new version of Serenity in CI that doesn't have all the debug
symbols on, or we'd be waiting a very long time to boot.
Insert a TestRunner entry into SystemServer.ini that will run a shell
script that runs tests in /bin and /usr/Tests and shuts down the system
in the new self-test boot mode. Also make sure enough basic services are
started in self-test such that the tests will actually run properly.
LookupServer can now itself server as a DNS server! To service DNS clients, it
uses the exact same lookup logic as it does for LibIPC clients. Namely, it will
synthesize records for data from /etc/hosts on its own (you can use this to
configure host names for your domain!), and forward other questions to
configured upstream DNS servers. On top of that, it implements its own caching,
so once a DNS resource record has been obtained from an upstream server,
LookupServer will cache it locally for faster future lookups.
The DNS server part of LookupServer is disabled by default, because it requires
you to run it as root (for it to bind to the port 53) and on boot, and we don't
want either by default. If you want to try it, modify SystemServer.ini like so:
[LookupServer]
Socket=/tmp/portal/lookup
SocketPermissions=666
Priority=low
KeepAlive=1
User=root
BootModes=text,graphical
and enable server mode in LookupServer.ini like so:
[DNS]
Nameservers=...
EnableServer=1
If in the future we implement socket takeover for IP sockets, these limitations
may be lifted.
This patch adds SymbolServer, a service daemon that provides
symbolication of ELF binaries. It has a very simple IPC API at the
moment that only turns addresses into symbol names.
This can be used to implement symbolication without having to do
in-process ELF parsing yourself. :^)
Since it is owned by root anyway, there is no need for 'additional security' to prevent
modification of that directory. This makes it easier to quickly export files from
Serenity. Fixes#5152.
Until someone has time to implement something for not showing the
very first network change at boot, let's turn off notifications for
network changes by default altogether. Having to dismiss this
notification at every boot gets old fast.
This patch moves the user account password hashes from /etc/passwd,
where they were world-readable, to /etc/shadow, where only root can
access them.
The Core::Account class is extended to support both authentication
against, and modification of /etc/shadow.
The default password for "anon" as of this commit is "foo" :^)
The DevFS along with DevPtsFS give a complete solution for populating
device nodes in /dev. The main purpose of DevFS is to eliminate the
need of device nodes generation when building the system.
Later on, DevFS will assist with exposing disk partition nodes.
This adds the ability to specify cursor attributes as part of their
file names, which allows us to remove hard coded values like the hot
spot from the code. The attributes can be specified between the last
two dots of the file name. Each attribute begins with a character,
followed by one or more digits that specify a uint value.
Supported attributes:
x: The x-coordinate of the cursor hotspot
y: The y-coordinate of the cursor hotspot
f: The number of animated frames horizontally in the image
t: The number of milliseconds per frame
For example, the filename wait.f14t100.png specifies that the image
contains 14 frames that should be cycled through at a rate of 100ms.
The hotspot is not specified, so it defaults to the center.
HackStudio no longer has dedicated project files, so let's get rid of
the *.hsp file concept. It'll eventually produce some files again,
but they won't be the same kind of "project" files.
This moves file extension to icon mappings from compile time macros to an
INI config file (/etc/FileIconProvider.ini), so file icons can easily be
customized and extended :^)
I also switched the format from a static file extension (".foo") to
glob-like patterns ("*.foo", using StringUtils::matches()), which allows
us to assign icons to specific exactly matching file names, like many
IDEs do - e.g. "CMakeLists.txt" or ".prettierrc".