This creates all interfaces when the device is enumerated, with a link
to the configuration that it is a part of. As such, a new class,
`USBInterface` has been introduced to express this state.
Some other parts of the USB stack may require us to perform a control
transfer. Instead of abusing `friend` to expose the default pipe, let's
just expose it via a function.
This also introduces a new class, `USBConfiguration` that stores a
configuration. The device, when instructed, sets this configuration and
holds a pointer to it so we have a record of what configuration is
currently active.
In most cases it's safe to abort the requested operation and go forward,
however, in some places it's not clear yet how to handle these failures,
therefore, we use the MUST() wrapper to force a kernel panic for now.
This is mainly useful when adding an HostController but due to OOM
condition, we abort temporary Vector insertion of a DeviceIdentifier
and then exit the iteration loop to report back the error if occured.
Instead, hold the lock while we copy the contents to a stack-based
Vector then iterate on it without any locking.
Because we rely on heap allocations, we need to propagate errors back
in case of OOM condition, therefore, both PCI::enumerate API function
and PCI::Access::add_host_controller_and_enumerate_attached_devices use
now a ErrorOr<void> return value to propagate errors. OOM Error can only
occur when enumerating the m_device_identifiers vector under a spinlock
and trying to expand the temporary Vector which will be used locklessly
to actually iterate over the PCI::DeviceIdentifiers objects.
Reading from /proc/pci assumes we have PCI enabled and also enumerated.
However, if PCI is disabled for some reason, we can't allow the user to
read from it as there's no valuable data we can supply.
To declare that we don't have a PCI bus in the system we do two things:
1. Probe IO ports before enabling access -
In case we are using the QEMU ISA-PC machine type, IO probing results in
floating bus condition (returning 0xFF values), thus, we know we don't
have PCI bus on the system.
2. Allow the user to specify to not use the PCI bus at all in the kernel
commandline.
This change allow the user to request the kernel to not use any PCI
resources/devices at all.
Also, don't try to initialize devices that rely on PCI if disabled.
We already init receive buffer if we have singleport console, but if
we have multiport console that dynamically allocates ports we never
initted their receive buffers.
There can only be a limited number of functions (only 8).
Also, consider the start bus of the PCI domain when trying to enumerate
other host bridges on bus 0, device 0, functions 1-7 (function 0 is the
main host bridge).
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.
Two classes are added - HostBridge and MemoryBackedHostBridge, which
both derive from HostController class. This allows the kernel to map
different busses from different PCI domains in the same time. Each
HostController implementation doesn't take the Address object to address
PCI devices but instead we take distinct numbers of the PCI bus, device
and function as it allows us to specify arbitrary PCI domains in the
Address structure and still to get the correct PCI devices. This also
matches the hardware behavior of PCI domains - the host bridge merely
takes memory operations or IO operations and translates them to
addressing of three components - PCI bus, device and function.
These changes also greatly simplify how enumeration of Host Bridges work
now - scanning of the hardware depends on what the Host bridges can do
for us, so in case we have multiple host bridges that expose a memory
mapped region or IO ports to access PCI configuration space, we simply
let the code of the host bridge to figure out how to fetch data for us.
Another semantical change is that a PCI domain structure is no longer
attached to a PhysicalAddress, so even in the case that the machine
doesn't implement PCI domains, we still treat that machine to contain 1
PCI domain to treat that one host bridge in the same way, like with a
machine with one or more PCI domains.
The function `KString::must_create()` can only be enforced
during early boot (that is, when `g_in_early_boot` is true), hence
the use of this function during runtime causes a `VERIFY` to assert,
leading to a Kernel Panic.
We should instead use `TRY()` along with `try_create()` to prevent
this from crashing whenever a USB device is inserted into the system,
and we don't have enough memory to allocate the device's KString.
Add a basic NVMe driver support to serenity
based on NVMe spec 1.4.
The driver can support multiple NVMe drives (subsystems).
But in a NVMe drive, the driver can support one controller
with multiple namespaces.
Each core will get a separate NVMe Queue.
As the system lacks MSI support, PIN based interrupts are
used for IO.
Tested the NVMe support by replacing IDE driver
with the NVMe driver :^)
This was a premature optimization from the early days of SerenityOS.
The eternal heap was a simple bump pointer allocator over a static
byte array. My original idea was to avoid heap fragmentation and improve
data locality, but both ideas were rooted in cargo culting, not data.
We would reserve 4 MiB at boot and only ended up using ~256 KiB, wasting
the rest.
This patch replaces all kmalloc_eternal() usage by regular kmalloc().
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.