I had to move the thread list out of the protected base area of Process
so that it could live with its lock (which needs to be mutable).
Ideally it would live in the protected area, so maybe we can figure out
a way to do that later.
This isn't needed for Process / Thread as they only reference it
by pointer and it's already part of Kernel/Forward.h. So just include
it where the implementation needs to call it.
The way the Process::FileDescriptions::allocate() API works today means
that two callers who allocate back to back without associating a
FileDescription with the allocated FD, will receive the same FD and thus
one will stomp over the other.
Naively tracking which FileDescriptions are allocated and moving onto
the next would introduce other bugs however, as now if you "allocate"
a fd and then return early further down the control flow of the syscall
you would leak that fd.
This change modifies this behavior by tracking which descriptions are
allocated and then having an RAII type to "deallocate" the fd if the
association is not setup the end of it's scope.
This enables further work on implementing KASLR by adding relocation
support to the pre-kernel and updating the kernel to be less dependent
on specific virtual memory layouts.
GCC and Clang allow us to inject a call to a function named
__sanitizer_cov_trace_pc on every edge. This function has to be defined
by us. By noting down the caller in that function we can trace the code
we have encountered during execution. Such information is used by
coverage guided fuzzers like AFL and LibFuzzer to determine if a new
input resulted in a new code path. This makes fuzzing much more
effective.
Additionally this adds a basic KCOV implementation. KCOV is an API that
allows user space to request the kernel to start collecting coverage
information for a given user space thread. Furthermore KCOV then exposes
the collected program counters to user space via a BlockDevice which can
be mmaped from user space.
This work is required to add effective support for fuzzing SerenityOS to
the Syzkaller syscall fuzzer. :^) :^)
This adds a ".profile" extension to perfcore files written by the
Kernel. Also, the process name is now visible in the perfcore filename.
Furthermore, this patch adds error handling for the case where the
filename generated by the Kernel is already taken. In that case, a digit
will be added to the filename (before the extension).
This also adds some more error logging to dump_perfcore().
This implements a simple bootloader that is capable of loading ELF64
kernel images. It does this by using QEMU/GRUB to load the kernel image
from disk and pass it to our bootloader as a Multiboot module.
The bootloader then parses the ELF image and sets it up appropriately.
The kernel's entry point is a C++ function with architecture-native
code.
Co-authored-by: Liav A <liavalb@gmail.com>
We leak a ref() onto every user process when constructing them,
either via Process::create_user_process(), or via Process::sys$fork().
This ref() is balanced by a corresponding unref() in
Thread::WaitBlockCondition::finalize().
Since kernel processes don't have a leaked ref() on them, this led to
an extra Process::unref() on kernel processes during finalization.
This happened during every boot, with the `init_stage2` process.
Found by turning off kfree() scrubbing. :^)
It's possible that another thread might try to exit the process just
about the same time another thread does the same, or a crash happens.
Also, we may not be able to kill all other threads instantly as they
may be blocked in the kernel (though in this case they would get killed
before ever returning back to user mode. So keep track of whether
Process::die was already called and ignore it on subsequent calls.
Fixes#8485
This enables the Lock class to block a thread even while the thread is
working on a BlockCondition. A thread can still only be either blocked
by a Lock or a BlockCondition.
This also establishes a linked list of threads that are blocked by a
Lock and unblocking directly unlocks threads and wakes them directly.
This re-arranges the order of how things are initialized so that we
try to initialize process and thread management earlier. This is
neccessary because a lot of the code uses the Lock class, which really
needs to have a running scheduler in place so that we can properly
preempt.
This also enables us to potentially initialize some things in parallel.
The ProtectedDataMutationScope cannot blindly assume that there is only
exactly one thread at a time that may want to unprotect the Process.
Most of the time the big lock guaranteed this, but there are some cases
such as finalization (among others) where this is not necessarily
guaranteed.
This fixes random panics due to access violations when the
ProtectedDataMutationScope protects the Process instance while another
is still modifying it.
Fixes#8512
The new ProcFS design consists of two main parts:
1. The representative ProcFS class, which is derived from the FS class.
The ProcFS and its inodes are much more lean - merely 3 classes to
represent the common type of inodes - regular files, symbolic links and
directories. They're backed by a ProcFSExposedComponent object, which
is responsible for the functional operation behind the scenes.
2. The backend of the ProcFS - the ProcFSComponentsRegistrar class
and all derived classes from the ProcFSExposedComponent class. These
together form the entire backend and handle all the functions you can
expect from the ProcFS.
The ProcFSExposedComponent derived classes split to 3 types in the
manner of lifetime in the kernel:
1. Persistent objects - this category includes all basic objects, like
the root folder, /proc/bus folder, main blob files in the root folders,
etc. These objects are persistent and cannot die ever.
2. Semi-persistent objects - this category includes all PID folders,
and subdirectories to the PID folders. It also includes exposed objects
like the unveil JSON'ed blob. These object are persistent as long as the
the responsible process they represent is still alive.
3. Dynamic objects - this category includes files in the subdirectories
of a PID folder, like /proc/PID/fd/* or /proc/PID/stacks/*. Essentially,
these objects are always created dynamically and when no longer in need
after being used, they're deallocated.
Nevertheless, the new allocated backend objects and inodes try to use
the same InodeIndex if possible - this might change only when a thread
dies and a new thread is born with a new thread stack, or when a file
descriptor is closed and a new one within the same file descriptor
number is opened. This is needed to actually be able to do something
useful with these objects.
The new design assures that many ProcFS instances can be used at once,
with one backend for usage for all instances.
The types for asm_signal_trampoline and asm_signal_trampoline_end
were incorrect. They both point into the text segment but they're
not really functions.
This commit converts naked `new`s to `AK::try_make` and `AK::try_create`
wherever possible. If the called constructor is private, this can not be
done, so we instead now use the standard-defined and compiler-agnostic
`new (nothrow)`.
This adds just enough stubs to make the kernel compile on x86_64. Obviously
it won't do anything useful - in fact it won't even attempt to boot because
Multiboot doesn't support ELF64 binaries - but it gets those compiler errors
out of the way so more progress can be made getting all the missing
functionality in place.