Commit graph

775 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Liav A
7718842829 Kernel/VirtIO: Ensure proper error propagation in core methods
Simplify core methods in the VirtIO bus handling code by ensuring proper
error propagation. This makes initialization of queues, handling changes
in device configuration, and other core patterns more readable as well.

It also allows us to remove the obnoxious pattern of checking for
boolean "success" and if we get false answer then returning an actual
errno code.
2023-09-24 19:54:23 -06:00
Liav A
d61c23569e Kernel/VirtIO: Introduce the concept of transport options
The VirtIO specification defines many types of devices with different
purposes, and it also defines 3 possible transport mediums where devices
could be connected to the host machine.

We only care about the PCIe transport, but this commit puts the actual
foundations for supporting the lean MMIO transport too in the future.

To ensure things are kept abstracted but still functional, the VirtIO
transport code is responsible for what is deemed as related to an actual
transport type - allocation of interrupt handlers and tinkering with low
level transport-related registers, etc.
2023-09-16 14:04:17 -06:00
Hendiadyoin1
a2810d3cf8 Kernel: Use Processor::wait_check in loops waiting for HW to respond
This gives the processor the hint that it is in a hot loop and allows us
to do other work in between
2023-09-15 11:07:35 -06:00
kleines Filmröllchen
12e534c8c6 Kernel: Implement Nagle’s Algorithm
This is an initial implementation, about as basic as intended by the
RFC, and not configurable from userspace at the moment. It should reduce
the amount of low-sized packets sent, reducing overhead and thereby
network traffic.
2023-08-28 00:28:15 +02:00
kleines Filmröllchen
ed966a80e2 Kernel/Net: Use monotonic time for TCP times
These were using real time as a mistake before; changing the system time
during ongoing TCP connections shouldn’t break them.
2023-08-28 00:28:15 +02:00
Liav A
3f63be949a Kernel/Net: Don't allocate memory for adapters' names
Instead, use a FixedStringBuffer to store a string with up to 16 chars.
2023-08-12 11:48:48 -06:00
Liav A
d8b514873f Kernel: Use FixedStringBuffer for fixed-length strings in syscalls
Using the kernel stack is preferable, especially when the examined
strings should be limited to a reasonable length.

This is a small improvement, because if we don't actually move these
strings then we don't need to own heap allocations for them during the
syscall handler function scope.

In addition to that, some kernel strings are known to be limited, like
the hostname string, for these strings we also can use FixedStringBuffer
to store and copy to and from these buffers, without using any heap
allocations at all.
2023-08-09 21:06:54 -06:00
Liav A
3fd4997fc2 Kernel: Don't allocate memory for names of processes and threads
Instead, use the FixedCharBuffer class to ensure we always use a static
buffer storage for these names. This ensures that if a Process or a
Thread were created, there's a guarantee that setting a new name will
never fail, as only copying of strings should be done to that static
storage.

The limits which are set are 32 characters for processes' names and 64
characters for thread names - this is because threads' names could be
more verbose than processes' names.
2023-08-09 21:06:54 -06:00
Sergey Bugaev
ddafc5dc98 Kernel/Net: Make a debug message more detailed
It helps to see which socket it is talking about here, especially if you
can cross-reference it with other socket logging.
2023-07-29 16:51:58 -06:00
Sergey Bugaev
95bcffd713 Kernel/Net: Rework ephemeral port allocation
Currently, ephemeral port allocation is handled by the
allocate_local_port_if_needed() and protocol_allocate_local_port()
methods. Actually binding the socket to an address (which means
inserting the socket/address pair into a global map) is performed either
in protocol_allocate_local_port() (for ephemeral ports) or in
protocol_listen() (for non-ephemeral ports); the latter will fail with
EADDRINUSE if the address is already used by an existing pair present in
the map.

There used to be a bug where for listen() without an explicit bind(),
the port allocation would conflict with itself: first an ephemeral port
would get allocated and inserted into the map, and then
protocol_listen() would check again for the port being free, find the
just-created map entry, and error out. This was fixed in commit
01e5af487f by passing an additional flag
did_allocate_port into protocol_listen() which specifies whether the
port was just allocated, and skipping the check in protocol_listen() if
the flag is set.

However, this only helps if the socket is bound to an ephemeral port
inside of this very listen() call. But calling bind(sin_port = 0) from
userspace should succeed and bind to an allocated ephemeral port, in the
same was as using an unbound socket for connect() does. The port number
can then be retrieved from userspace by calling getsockname (), and it
should be possible to either connect() or listen() on this socket,
keeping the allocated port number. Also, calling bind() when already
bound (either explicitly or implicitly) should always result in EINVAL.

To untangle this, introduce an explicit m_bound state in IPv4Socket,
just like LocalSocket has already. Once a socket is bound, further
attempt to bind it fail. Some operations cause the socket to implicitly
get bound to an (ephemeral) address; this is implemented by the new
ensure_bound() method. The protocol_allocate_local_port() method is
gone; it is now up to a protocol to assign a port to the socket inside
protocol_bind() if it finds that the socket has local_port() == 0.

protocol_bind() is now called in more cases, such as inside listen() if
the socket wasn't bound before that.
2023-07-29 16:51:58 -06:00
kleines Filmröllchen
021fb3ea05 Kernel/Tasks: Allow Kernel processes to be shut down
Since we never check a kernel process's state like a userland process,
it's possible for a kernel process to ignore the fact that someone is
trying to kill it, and continue running. This is not desireable if we
want to properly shutdown all processes, including Kernel ones.
2023-07-15 00:12:01 +02:00
Kirill Nikolaev
6cdb1f0415 Kernel: Add an initial implementation of virtio-net driver
It can be exercised by setting
    SERENITY_ETHERNET_DEVICE_TYPE=virtio-net-pci.
2023-07-11 00:49:11 -06:00
Timothy Flynn
c911781c21 Everywhere: Remove needless trailing semi-colons after functions
This is a new option in clang-format-16.
2023-07-08 10:32:56 +01:00
Timothy Flynn
aff81d318b Everywhere: Run clang-format
The following command was used to clang-format these files:

    clang-format-16 -i $(find . \
        -not \( -path "./\.*" -prune \) \
        -not \( -path "./Base/*" -prune \) \
        -not \( -path "./Build/*" -prune \) \
        -not \( -path "./Toolchain/*" -prune \) \
        -not \( -path "./Ports/*" -prune \) \
        -type f -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.h")
2023-07-08 10:32:56 +01:00
Pierre Delagrave
55faff80df Kernet/Net: Close a TCP connection using FIN|ACK instead of just FIN
When initiating a connection termination, the FIN should be sent with
a ACK from the last received segment even if that ACK already been sent.
2023-06-29 05:58:03 +02:00
Optimoos
e72894f23d Kernel/TCPSocket: Read window size from peer
During receive_tcp_packet(), we now set m_send_window_size for the
socket if it is different from the default.

This removes one FIXME from TCPSocket.h.
2023-06-19 13:20:36 +02:00
Tim Ledbetter
586b47cede Kernel: Put loopback adapter debug spam behind a flag
This significantly increases loopback adapter speed in normal use.
2023-06-18 08:50:33 +01:00
Liav A
336fb4f313 Kernel: Move InterruptDisabler to the Interrupts subdirectory 2023-06-04 21:32:34 +02:00
Liav A
8f21420a1d Kernel: Move all boot-related code to the new Boot subdirectory 2023-06-04 21:32:34 +02:00
Liav A
7c0540a229 Everywhere: Move global Kernel pattern code to Kernel/Library directory
This has KString, KBuffer, DoubleBuffer, KBufferBuilder, IOWindow,
UserOrKernelBuffer and ScopedCritical classes being moved to the
Kernel/Library subdirectory.

Also, move the panic and assertions handling code to that directory.
2023-06-04 21:32:34 +02:00
Liav A
490856453d Kernel: Move Random.{h,cpp} code to Security subdirectory 2023-06-04 21:32:34 +02:00
Liav A
1b04726c85 Kernel: Move all tasks-related code to the Tasks subdirectory 2023-06-04 21:32:34 +02:00
kleines Filmröllchen
939600d2d4 Kernel: Use UnixDateTime wherever applicable
"Wherever applicable" = most places, actually :^), especially for
networking and filesystem timestamps.

This includes changes to unzip, which uses DOSPackedTime, since that is
changed for the FAT file systems.
2023-05-24 23:18:07 +02:00
kleines Filmröllchen
213025f210 AK: Rename Time to Duration
That's what this class really is; in fact that's what the first line of
the comment says it is.

This commit does not rename the main files, since those will contain
other time-related classes in a little bit.
2023-05-24 23:18:07 +02:00
Liav A
4617c05a08 Kernel: Move a bunch of generic devices code into new subdirectory 2023-05-19 21:49:21 +02:00
Liav A
7c1f645e27 Kernel/Net: Iron out the locking mechanism across the subsystem
There is a big mix of LockRefPtrs all over the Networking subsystem, as
well as lots of room for improvements with our locking patterns, which
this commit will not pursue, but will give a good start for such work.

To deal with this situation, we change the following things:
- Creating instances of NetworkAdapter should always yield a non-locking
  NonnullRefPtr. Acquiring an instance from the NetworkingManagement
  should give a simple RefPtr,as giving LockRefPtr does not really
  protect from concurrency problems in such case.
- Since NetworkingManagement works with normal RefPtrs we should
  protect all instances of RefPtr<NetworkAdapter> with SpinlockProtected
  to ensure references are gone unexpectedly.
- Protect the so_error class member with a proper spinlock. This happens
  to be important because the clear_so_error() method lacked any proper
  locking measures. It also helps preventing a possible TOCTOU when we
  might do a more fine-grained locking in the Socket code, so this could
  be definitely a start for this.
- Change unnecessary LockRefPtr<PacketWithTimestamp> in the structure
  of OutgoingPacket to a simple RefPtr<PacketWithTimestamp> as the whole
  list should be MutexProtected.
2023-04-14 19:27:56 +02:00
Liav A
bd7d4513bf Kernel/Net: Make the LoopbackAdapter initializer to use ErrorOr pattern
This looks much more nice, and also matches our pattern for other types
of network adapters' initializers.
2023-04-14 19:27:56 +02:00
Liav A
9f011592be Kernel/Net: Convert initializers to return NonnullRefPtr<NetworkAdapter>
There's no need for using NonnullLockRefPtr here.
2023-04-14 19:27:56 +02:00
Arda Cinar
38dc54317c Kernel/Net: Implement SIOCGIFINDEX and SIOCGIFNAME for sockets
These ioctls exist on Linux and can be used to implement libc functions
if_indextoname and if_nametoindex (without needing to parse any JSON).
2023-04-14 12:29:03 +01:00
Andreas Kling
a098266ff5 Kernel: Simplify Process factory functions
- Instead of taking the first new thread as an out-parameter, we now
  bundle the process and its first thread in a struct and use that
  as the return value.

- Make all Process factory functions return ErrorOr. Use this to convert
  some places to more TRY().

- Drop the "try_" prefix on Process factory functions.
2023-04-04 10:33:42 +02:00
Andreas Kling
03cc45e5a2 Kernel: Use RefPtr instead of LockRefPtr for File and subclasses
This was mostly straightforward, as all the storage locations are
guarded by some related mutex.

The use of old-school associated mutexes instead of MutexProtected
is unfortunate, but the process to modernize such code is ongoing.
2023-03-10 13:15:44 +01:00
Andreas Kling
e6fc7b3ff7 Kernel: Switch LockRefPtr<Inode> to RefPtr<Inode>
The main place where this is a little iffy is in RAMFS where inodes
have a LockWeakPtr to their parent inode. I've left that as a
LockWeakPtr for now.
2023-03-09 21:54:59 +01:00
Andreas Kling
d1371d66f7 Kernel: Use non-locking {Nonnull,}RefPtr for OpenFileDescription
This patch switches away from {Nonnull,}LockRefPtr to the non-locking
smart pointers throughout the kernel.

I've looked at the handful of places where these were being persisted
and I don't see any race situations.

Note that the process file descriptor table (Process::m_fds) was already
guarded via MutexProtected.
2023-03-07 00:30:12 +01:00
Andreas Kling
7369d0ab5f Kernel: Stop using NonnullLockRefPtrVector 2023-03-06 23:46:36 +01:00
Andreas Kling
21db2b7b90 Everywhere: Remove NonnullOwnPtr.h includes 2023-03-06 23:46:35 +01:00
Andreas Kling
359d6e7b0b Everywhere: Stop using NonnullOwnPtrVector
Same as NonnullRefPtrVector: weird semantics, questionable benefits.
2023-03-06 23:46:35 +01:00
Peter Elliott
f20902deb3 Kernel: Support sending filedescriptors with sendmsg(2) and SCM_RIGHTS
This is necessary to support the wayland protocol.
I also moved the CMSG_* macros to the kernel API since they are used in
both kernel and userspace.
this does not break ntpquery/SCM_TIMESTAMP.
2023-02-19 00:37:37 +01:00
Peter Elliott
ae5d7f542c Kernel: Change polarity of weak ownership between Inode and LocalSocket
There was a bug in which bound Inodes would lose all their references
(because localsocket does not reference them), and they would be
deallocated, and clients would get ECONNREFUSED as a result. now
LocalSocket has a strong reference to inode so that the inode will live
as long as the socket, and Inode has a weak reference to the socket,
because if the socket stops being referenced anywhere it should not be
bound.

This still prevents the reference loop that
220b7dd779 was trying to fix.
2023-02-19 00:37:37 +01:00
Liav A
2d1719da73 Kernel/Net: Propagate proper errno codes from determine_network_device
Returning literal strings is not the proper action here, because we
should always assume that error could be propagated back to userland, so
we need to keep a valid errno when returning an Error.
2023-02-10 09:14:20 +00:00
Timothy Flynn
604d5f5bca AK+Everywhere: Do not implicitly copy variables in TRY macros
For example, consider cases where we want to propagate errors only in
specific instances:

    auto result = read_data(); // something like ErrorOr<ByteBuffer>
    if (result.is_error() && result.error().code() != EINTR)
        continue;
    auto bytes = TRY(result);

The TRY invocation will currently copy the byte buffer when the
expression (in this case, just a local variable) is stored into
_temporary_result.

This patch binds the expression to a reference to prevent such copies.
In less trival invocations (such as TRY(some_function()), this will
incur only temporary lifetime extensions, i.e. no functional change.
2023-02-10 09:08:52 +00:00
Timothy Flynn
4a916cd379 Everywhere: Remove needless copies of Error / ErrorOr instances
Either take the underlying objects with release_* methods or move() the
instances around.
2023-02-10 09:08:52 +00:00
Timothy Flynn
bd4bddf31b Kernel: Store socket errors as errno codes rather than ErrorOr values 2023-02-10 09:08:52 +00:00
Iman Seyed
85feab4095 Kernel: Pass ipv4_packet_size to ipv4.set_length()
Instead of `sizeof(IPv4Packet) + payload_size` expression,
pass `ipv4_packet_size` to `ipv4.set_length()`
2023-02-05 22:14:14 +00:00
Sam Atkins
3cbc0fdbb0 Kernel: Remove declarations for non-existent methods 2023-01-27 20:33:18 +00:00
Liav A
1f9d3a3523 Kernel/PCI: Hold a reference to DeviceIdentifier in the Device class
There are now 2 separate classes for almost the same object type:
- EnumerableDeviceIdentifier, which is used in the enumeration code for
  all PCI host controller classes. This is allowed to be moved and
  copied, as it doesn't support ref-counting.
- DeviceIdentifier, which inherits from EnumerableDeviceIdentifier. This
  class uses ref-counting, and is not allowed to be copied. It has a
  spinlock member in its structure to allow safely executing complicated
  IO sequences on a PCI device and its space configuration.
  There's a static method that allows a quick conversion from
  EnumerableDeviceIdentifier to DeviceIdentifier while creating a
  NonnullRefPtr out of it.

The reason for doing this is for the sake of integrity and reliablity of
the system in 2 places:
- Ensure that "complicated" tasks that rely on manipulating PCI device
  registers are done in a safe manner. For example, determining a PCI
  BAR space size requires multiple read and writes to the same register,
  and if another CPU tries to do something else with our selected
  register, then the result will be a catastrophe.
- Allow the PCI API to have a united form around a shared object which
  actually holds much more data than the PCI::Address structure. This is
  fundamental if we want to do certain types of optimizations, and be
  able to support more features of the PCI bus in the foreseeable
  future.

This patch already has several implications:
- All PCI::Device(s) hold a reference to a DeviceIdentifier structure
  being given originally from the PCI::Access singleton. This means that
  all instances of DeviceIdentifier structures are located in one place,
  and all references are pointing to that location. This ensures that
  locking the operation spinlock will take effect in all the appropriate
  places.
- We no longer support adding PCI host controllers and then immediately
  allow for enumerating it with a lambda function. It was found that
  this method is extremely broken and too much complicated to work
  reliably with the new paradigm being introduced in this patch. This
  means that for Volume Management Devices (Intel VMD devices), we
  simply first enumerate the PCI bus for such devices in the storage
  code, and if we find a device, we attach it in the PCI::Access method
  which will scan for devices behind that bridge and will add new
  DeviceIdentifier(s) objects to its internal Vector. Afterwards, we
  just continue as usual with scanning for actual storage controllers,
  so we will find a corresponding NVMe controllers if there were any
  behind that VMD bridge.
2023-01-26 23:04:26 +01:00
Andrew Kaster
100fb38c3e Kernel+Userland: Move LibC/sys/ioctl_numbers to Kernel/API/Ioctl.h
This header has always been fundamentally a Kernel API file. Move it
where it belongs. Include it directly in Kernel files, and make
Userland applications include it via sys/ioctl.h rather than directly.
2023-01-21 10:43:59 -07:00
Andrew Kaster
f5d253dcfa Everywhere: Fully qualify IsLvalueReference in TRY() macros
If USING_AK_GLOBALLY is not defined, the name IsLvalueReference might
not be available in the global namespace. Follow the pattern established
in LibTest to fully qualify AK types in macros to avoid this problem.
2023-01-15 00:56:31 +00:00
Timothy Flynn
afc0e461e1 AK+Everywhere: Disallow returning a reference from a fallible expression
This will silently make a copy. Rather than masking this behavior, let's
explicitly disallow it.
2023-01-13 18:50:47 -05:00
Arda Cinar
037744e62a Kernel/Net: Get the correct interface type in SIOCGIFHWADDR ioctl
When calling ioctl on a socket with SIOCGIFHWADDR, return the correct
physical interface type. This value was previously hardcoded to
ARPHRD_ETHER (Ethernet), and now can also return ARPHRD_LOOPBACK for the
loopback adapter.
2023-01-13 15:44:04 +01:00
MacDue
969aacd627 Kernel: AK: Fix ignored .to_string() errors in IPv4Socket 2023-01-12 23:29:57 +00:00