Commit graph

45 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Liav A b55199c227 Kernel: Move TTY-related code to a new subdirectory under Devices
The TTY subsystem is represented with unix devices, so it should be
under the Devices directory like the Audio, Storage, GPU and HID
subsystems.
2023-09-09 12:08:59 -06:00
Liav A 1b04726c85 Kernel: Move all tasks-related code to the Tasks subdirectory 2023-06-04 21:32:34 +02:00
Andreas Kling e219662ce0 Kernel: Mark sys$setpgid as not needing the big lock
This function is already serialized by access to process protected data.
2023-04-05 11:37:27 +02:00
Andreas Kling 84ac957d7a Kernel: Make Credentials the authority on process SID
The SID was duplicated between the process credentials and protected
data. And to make matters worse, the credentials SID was not updated in
sys$setsid.

This patch fixes this by removing the SID from protected data and
updating the credentials SID everywhere.
2023-04-05 11:37:27 +02:00
Andreas Kling f764b8b113 Kernel: Mark sys$setsid as not needing the big lock
This function is now serialized by access to the process group list,
and to the current process's protected data.
2023-04-05 11:37:27 +02:00
Andreas Kling 3e30d9bc99 Kernel: Make ProcessGroup a ListedRefCounted and fix two races
This closes two race windows:

- ProcessGroup removed itself from the "all process groups" list in its
  destructor. It was possible to walk the list between the last unref()
  and the destructor invocation, and grab a pointer to a ProcessGroup
  that was about to get deleted.

- sys$setsid() could end up creating a process group that already
  existed, as there was a race window between checking if the PGID
  is used, and actually creating a ProcessGroup with that PGID.
2023-04-05 11:37:27 +02:00
Andreas Kling e69b2572a6 Kernel: Move Process's TTY pointer into protected data 2023-04-05 11:37:27 +02:00
Andreas Kling 1e2ef59965 Kernel: Move Process's process group pointer into protected data
Now that it's no longer using LockRefPtr, we can actually move it into
protected data. (LockRefPtr couldn't be stored there because protected
data is immutable at times, and LockRefPtr uses some of its own bits
for locking.)
2023-04-05 11:37:27 +02:00
Andreas Kling 1c77803845 Kernel: Stop using *LockRefPtr for TTY
TTY was only stored in Process::m_tty, so make that a SpinlockProtected.
2023-04-05 11:37:27 +02:00
Andreas Kling 350e5f9261 Kernel: Remove ancient InterruptDisabler in sys$setsid
This was some pre-SMP historical artifact.
2023-04-05 11:37:27 +02:00
Andreas Kling 41f5598516 Kernel: Make sys$getsid not require the big lock
Reorganize the code slightly to avoid creating a TOCTOU bug, then mark
the syscall as not needing the big lock anymore.
2023-04-04 10:33:42 +02:00
Andreas Kling 1382439267 Kernel: Mark sys$getpgrp as not needing the big lock
Access to the process's process group is already serialized by
SpinlockProtected.
2023-04-04 10:33:42 +02:00
Andreas Kling 2ddd69260c Kernel: Mark sys$getpgid as not needing the big lock
Access to the process's process group is already serialized by
SpinlockProtected.
2023-04-04 10:33:42 +02:00
Andreas Kling 83b409083b Kernel: Stop using *LockRefPtr for ProcessGroup
Had to wrap Process::m_pg in a SpinlockProtected for this to be safe.
2023-04-04 10:33:42 +02:00
Liav A 16b6e644d7 Kernel: Require "stdio" pledge promise when calling get_root_session_id 2023-01-13 13:41:30 +01:00
Andreas Kling 5dcc58d54a Kernel+LibCore: Make %sid path parsing not take ages
Before this patch, Core::SessionManagement::parse_path_with_sid() would
figure out the root session ID by sifting through /sys/kernel/processes.

That file can take quite a while to generate (sometimes up to 40ms on my
machine, which is a problem on its own!) and with no caching, many of
our programs were effectively doing this multiple times on startup when
unveiling something in /tmp/session/%sid/

While we should find ways to make generating /sys/kernel/processes fast
again, this patch addresses the specific problem by introducing a new
syscall: sys$get_root_session_id(). This extracts the root session ID
by looking directly at the process table and takes <1ms instead of 40ms.

This cuts WebContent process startup time by ~100ms on my machine. :^)
2023-01-10 19:32:31 +01:00
yyny 9ca979846c Kernel: Add sid and pgid to Credentials
There are places in the kernel that would like to have access
to `pgid` credentials in certain circumstances.

I haven't found any use cases for `sid` yet, but `sid` and `pgid` are
both changed with `sys$setpgid`, so it seemed sensical to add it.

In Linux, `man 7 credentials` also mentions both the session id and
process group id, so this isn't unprecedented.
2023-01-03 18:13:11 +01:00
Liav A 5e062414c1 Kernel: Add support for jails
Our implementation for Jails resembles much of how FreeBSD jails are
working - it's essentially only a matter of using a RefPtr in the
Process class to a Jail object. Then, when we iterate over all processes
in various cases, we could ensure if either the current process is in
jail and therefore should be restricted what is visible in terms of
PID isolation, and also to be able to expose metadata about Jails in
/sys/kernel/jails node (which does not reveal anything to a process
which is in jail).

A lifetime model for the Jail object is currently plain simple - there's
simpy no way to manually delete a Jail object once it was created. Such
feature should be carefully designed to allow safe destruction of a Jail
without the possibility of releasing a process which is in Jail from the
actual jail. Each process which is attached into a Jail cannot leave it
until the end of a Process (i.e. when finalizing a Process). All jails
are kept being referenced in the JailManagement. When a last attached
process is finalized, the Jail is automatically destroyed.
2022-11-05 18:00:58 -06:00
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
Timothy Flynn 97d15e9b8f Kernel: Do not require 'proc' promise in getsid() and getpgid()
These only require 'stdio' according to:
https://man.openbsd.org/pledge.2
2022-10-03 13:48:03 +02:00
Andreas Kling 8ed06ad814 Kernel: Guard Process "protected data" with a spinlock
This ensures that both mutable and immutable access to the protected
data of a process is serialized.

Note that there may still be multiple TOCTOU issues around this, as we
have a bunch of convenience accessors that make it easy to introduce
them. We'll need to audit those as well.
2022-08-21 12:25:14 +02:00
Linus Groh 146903a3b5 Kernel: Require semicolon after VERIFY_{NO_,}PROCESS_BIG_LOCK_ACQUIRED
This matches out general macro use, and specifically other verification
macros like VERIFY(), VERIFY_NOT_REACHED(), VERIFY_INTERRUPTS_ENABLED(),
and VERIFY_INTERRUPTS_DISABLED().
2022-08-17 22:56:51 +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
Brian Gianforcaro 54b9a4ec1e Kernel: Handle promise violations in the syscall handler
Previously we would crash the process immediately when a promise
violation was found during a syscall. This is error prone, as we
don't unwind the stack. This means that in certain cases we can
leak resources, like an OwnPtr / RefPtr tracked on the stack. Or
even leak a lock acquired in a ScopeLockLocker.

To remedy this situation we move the promise violation handling to
the syscall handler, right before we return to user space. This
allows the code to follow the normal unwind path, and grantees
there is no longer any cleanup that needs to occur.

The Process::require_promise() and Process::require_no_promises()
functions were modified to return ErrorOr<void> so we enforce that
the errors are always propagated by the caller.
2021-12-29 18:08:15 +01:00
Brian Gianforcaro bad6d50b86 Kernel: Use Process::require_promise() instead of REQUIRE_PROMISE()
This change lays the foundation for making the require_promise return
an error hand handling the process abort outside of the syscall
implementations, to avoid cases where we would leak resources.

It also has the advantage that it makes removes a gs pointer read
to look up the current thread, then process for every syscall. We
can instead go through the Process this pointer in most cases.
2021-12-29 18:08:15 +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
Andreas Kling 98dc08fe56 Kernel: Use KResultOr better in ProcessGroup construction
This allows us to use TRY() more.
2021-09-06 01:55:27 +02:00
Andreas Kling ac85fdeb1c Kernel: Handle ProcessGroup allocation failures better
- Rename create* => try_create*
- Don't null out existing process group on allocation failure
2021-09-04 23:11:04 +02:00
Liav A 01b79910b3 Kernel/Process: Move protected values to the end of the object
The compiler can re-order the structure (class) members if that's
necessary, so if we make Process to inherit from ProcFSExposedComponent,
even if the declaration is to inherit first from ProcessBase, then from
ProcFSExposedComponent and last from Weakable<Process>, the members of
class ProcFSExposedComponent (including the Ref-counted parts) are the
first members of the Process class.

This problem made it impossible to safely use the current toggling
method with the write-protection bit on the ProcessBase members, so
instead of inheriting from it, we make its members the last ones in the
Process class so we can safely locate and modify the corresponding page
write protection bit of these values.

We make sure that the Process class doesn't expand beyond 8192 bytes and
the protected values are always aligned on a page boundary.
2021-08-12 20:57:32 +02:00
Andreas Kling 5acb7e4eba Kernel: Remove outdated FIXME about ProcessHandle
ProcessHandle hasn't been a thing since Process became ref-counted.
2021-08-07 12:29:26 +02:00
Jean-Baptiste Boric 08891e82a5 Kernel: Migrate process list locking to ProtectedValue
The existing recursive spinlock is repurposed for profiling only, as it
was shared with the process list.
2021-08-07 11:48:00 +02:00
Brian Gianforcaro 9201a06027 Kernel: Annotate all syscalls with VERIFY_PROCESS_BIG_LOCK_ACQUIRED
Before we start disabling acquisition of the big process lock for
specific syscalls, make sure to document and assert that all the
lock is held during all syscalls.
2021-07-20 03:21:14 +02:00
Gunnar Beutner 2a78bf8596 Kernel: Fix the return type for syscalls
The Process::Handler type has KResultOr<FlatPtr> as its return type.
Using a different return type with an equally-sized template parameter
sort of works but breaks once that condition is no longer true, e.g.
for KResultOr<int> on x86_64.

Ideally the syscall handlers would also take FlatPtrs as their args
so we can get rid of the reinterpret_cast for the function pointer
but I didn't quite feel like cleaning that up as well.
2021-06-28 22:29:28 +02:00
Hendiadyoin1 7ca3d413f7 Kernel: Pull apart CPU.h
This does not add any functional changes
2021-06-24 00:38:23 +02:00
Brian Gianforcaro bb91bed576 Kernel: Make ProcessGroup::find_or_create API OOM safe
Make ProcessGroup::find_or_create & ProcessGroup::create OOM safe, by
moving to adopt_ref_if_nonnull.
2021-05-20 08:10:07 +02:00
Brian Gianforcaro 1682f0b760 Everything: Move to SPDX license identifiers in all files.
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 *
2021-04-22 11:22:27 +02:00
Andreas Kling 90c0f9664e Kernel: Don't keep protected Process data in a separate allocation
The previous architecture had a huge flaw: the pointer to the protected
data was itself unprotected, allowing you to overwrite it at any time.

This patch reorganizes the protected data so it's part of the Process
class itself. (Actually, it's a new ProcessBase helper class.)

We use the first 4 KB of Process objects themselves as the new storage
location for protected data. Then we make Process objects page-aligned
using MAKE_ALIGNED_ALLOCATED.

This allows us to easily turn on/off write-protection for everything in
the ProcessBase portion of Process. :^)

Thanks to @bugaevc for pointing out the flaw! This is still not perfect
but it's an improvement.
2021-03-11 14:21:49 +01:00
Andreas Kling cbcf891040 Kernel: Move select Process members into protected memory
Process member variable like m_euid are very valuable targets for
kernel exploits and until now they have been writable at all times.

This patch moves m_euid along with a whole bunch of other members
into a new Process::ProtectedData struct. This struct is remapped
as read-only memory whenever we don't need to write to it.

This means that a kernel write primitive is no longer enough to
overwrite a process's effective UID, you must first unprotect the
protected data where the UID is stored. :^)
2021-03-10 22:30:02 +01:00
Andreas Kling ac71775de5 Kernel: Make all syscall functions return KResultOr<T>
This makes it a lot easier to return errors since we no longer have to
worry about negating EFOO errors and can just return them flat.
2021-03-01 13:54:32 +01:00
AnotherTest 688e54eac7 Kernel: Distinguish between new and old process groups with equal pgids
This does not add any behaviour change to the processes, but it ties a
TTY to an active process group via TIOCSPGRP, and returns the TTY to the
kernel when all processes in the process group die.
Also makes the TTY keep a link to the original controlling process' parent (for
SIGCHLD) instead of the process itself.
2020-08-19 21:21:34 +02:00
AnotherTest 29035b55b2 Kernel: Allow moving a process to a new pgrp via setpgid() 2020-08-12 11:41:18 +02:00
Ben Wiederhake 7bdf54c837 Kernel: PID/PGID typing
This compiles, and fixes two bugs:
- setpgid() confusion (see previous commit)
- tcsetpgrp() now allows to set a non-empty process group even if
  the group leader has already died. This makes Serenity slightly
  more POSIX-compatible.
2020-08-10 11:51:45 +02:00
Ben Wiederhake f5744a6f2f Kernel: PID/TID typing
This compiles, and contains exactly the same bugs as before.
The regex 'FIXME: PID/' should reveal all markers that I left behind, including:
- Incomplete conversion
- Issues or things that look fishy
- Actual bugs that will go wrong during runtime
2020-08-10 11:51:45 +02:00
Tom 538b985487 Kernel: Remove ProcessInspectionHandle and make Process RefCounted
By making the Process class RefCounted we don't really need
ProcessInspectionHandle anymore. This also fixes some race
conditions where a Process may be deleted while still being
used by ProcFS.

Also make sure to acquire the Process' lock when accessing
regions.

Last but not least, there's no reason why a thread can't be
scheduled while being inspected, though in practice it won't
happen anyway because the scheduler lock is held at the same
time.
2020-08-02 17:15:11 +02:00
Andreas Kling 949aef4aef Kernel: Move syscall implementations out of Process.cpp
This is something I've been meaning to do for a long time, and here we
finally go. This patch moves all sys$foo functions out of Process.cpp
and into files in Kernel/Syscalls/.

It's not exactly one syscall per file (although it could be, but I got
a bit tired of the repetitive work here..)

This makes hacking on individual syscalls a lot less painful since you
don't have to rebuild nearly as much code every time. I'm also hopeful
that this makes it easier to understand individual syscalls. :^)
2020-07-30 23:40:57 +02:00