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2009-03-08be consistent: no underscores in function namesrsc1-6/+6
2008-10-15check cp->killed before returning to user from a timer interruptkolya1-0/+4
2007-09-27interrupts during system callsrsc1-1/+1
"It just works."
2007-09-27Final word on the locking fiasco?rsc1-5/+0
Change pushcli / popcli so that they can never turn on interrupts unexpectedly. That is, if interrupts are on, then pushcli(); popcli(); turns them off and back on, but if they are off to begin with, then pushcli(); popcli(); is a no-op. I think our fundamental mistake was having a primitive (release and then popcli nee spllo) that could turn interrupts on at unexpected moments instead of being explicit about when we want to start allowing interrupts. With the new semantics, all the manual fiddling of ncli to force interrupts off in certain sections goes away. In return, we must explicitly mark the places where we want to enable interrupts unconditionally, by calling sti(). There is only one: inside the scheduler loop.
2007-09-27rename splhi/spllo to pushcli/popclirsc1-2/+2
2007-09-27now spllo is okayrsc1-8/+2
2007-09-27kernel SMP interruptibility fixes.rsc1-3/+9
Last year, right before I sent xv6 to the printer, I changed the SETGATE calls so that interrupts would be disabled on entry to interrupt handlers, and I added the nlock++ / nlock-- in trap() so that interrupts would stay disabled while the hw handlers (but not the syscall handler) did their work. I did this because the kernel was otherwise causing Bochs to triple-fault in SMP mode, and time was short. Robert observed yesterday that something was keeping the SMP preemption user test from working. It turned out that when I simplified the lapic code I swapped the order of two register writes that I didn't realize were order dependent. I fixed that and then since I had everything paged in kept going and tried to figure out why you can't leave interrupts on during interrupt handlers. There are a few issues. First, there must be some way to keep interrupts from "stacking up" and overflowing the stack. Keeping interrupts off the whole time solves this problem -- even if the clock tick handler runs long enough that the next clock tick is waiting when it finishes, keeping interrupts off means that the handler runs all the way through the "iret" before the next handler begins. This is not really a problem unless you are putting too many prints in trap -- if the OS is doing its job right, the handlers should run quickly and not stack up. Second, if xv6 had page faults, then it would be important to keep interrupts disabled between the start of the interrupt and the time that cr2 was read, to avoid a scenario like: p1 page faults [cr2 set to faulting address] p1 starts executing trapasm.S clock interrupt, p1 preempted, p2 starts executing p2 page faults [cr2 set to another faulting address] p2 starts, finishes fault handler p1 rescheduled, reads cr2, sees wrong fault address Alternately p1 could be rescheduled on the other cpu, in which case it would still see the wrong cr2. That said, I think cr2 is the only interrupt state that isn't pushed onto the interrupt stack atomically at fault time, and xv6 doesn't care. (This isn't entirely hypothetical -- I debugged this problem on Plan 9.) Third, and this is the big one, it is not safe to call cpu() unless interrupts are disabled. If interrupts are enabled then there is no guarantee that, between the time cpu() looks up the cpu id and the time that it the result gets used, the process has not been rescheduled to the other cpu. For example, the very commonly-used expression curproc[cpu()] (aka the macro cp) can end up referring to the wrong proc: the code stores the result of cpu() in %eax, gets rescheduled to the other cpu at just the wrong instant, and then reads curproc[%eax]. We use curproc[cpu()] to get the current process a LOT. In that particular case, if we arranged for the current curproc entry to be addressed by %fs:0 and just use a different %fs on each CPU, then we could safely get at curproc even with interrupts disabled, since the read of %fs would be atomic with the read of %fs:0. Alternately, we could have a curproc() function that disables interrupts while computing curproc[cpu()]. I've done that last one. Even in the current kernel, with interrupts off on entry to trap, interrupts are enabled inside release if there are no locks held. Also, the scheduler's idle loop must be interruptible at times so that the clock and disk interrupts (which might make processes runnable) can be handled. In addition to the rampant use of curproc[cpu()], this little snippet from acquire is wrong on smp: if(cpus[cpu()].nlock == 0) cli(); cpus[cpu()].nlock++; because if interrupts are off then we might call cpu(), get rescheduled to a different cpu, look at cpus[oldcpu].nlock, and wrongly decide not to disable interrupts on the new cpu. The fix is to always call cli(). But this is wrong too: if(holding(lock)) panic("acquire"); cli(); cpus[cpu()].nlock++; because holding looks at cpu(). The fix is: cli(); if(holding(lock)) panic("acquire"); cpus[cpu()].nlock++; I've done that, and I changed cpu() to complain the first time it gets called with interrupts disabled. (It gets called too much to complain every time.) I added new functions splhi and spllo that are like acquire and release but without the locking: void splhi(void) { cli(); cpus[cpu()].nsplhi++; } void spllo(void) { if(--cpus[cpu()].nsplhi == 0) sti(); } and I've used those to protect other sections of code that refer to cpu() when interrupts would otherwise be disabled (basically just curproc and setupsegs). I also use them in acquire/release and got rid of nlock. I'm not thrilled with the names, but I think the concept -- a counted cli/sti -- is sound. Having them also replaces the nlock++/nlock-- in trap.c and main.c, which is nice. Final note: it's still not safe to enable interrupts in the middle of trap() between lapic_eoi and returning to user space. I don't understand why, but we get a fault on pop %es because 0x10 is a bad segment descriptor (!) and then the fault faults trying to go into a new interrupt because 0x8 is a bad segment descriptor too! Triple fault. I haven't debugged this yet.
2007-09-26various comment and print tweaksrsc1-6/+7
2007-09-25oops, interrupts on in syscall traps doesn't work after allrtm1-1/+1
2007-09-25tell SETGATE to leave interrupts on for T_SYSCALLrtm1-2/+2
panic if unknown fault with CPL=0 (i.e. in kernel)
2007-08-28delete proc_ on proc_exit, proc_wait, proc_killrsc1-3/+3
2007-08-28more consistent spacingrsc1-1/+1
2007-08-28nitsrsc1-4/+0
2007-08-28do not call proc_exit until lock droppedrsc1-20/+18
2007-08-27delete unnecessary #include linesrsc1-2/+1
2007-08-27Replace yield system call with sleep.rsc1-16/+26
2007-08-22PDF at http://am.lcs.mit.edu/~rsc/xv6.pdfrsc1-4/+4
Various changes made while offline. + bwrite sector argument is redundant; use b->sector. + reformatting of files for nicer PDF page breaks + distinguish between locked, unlocked inodes in type signatures + change FD_FILE to FD_INODE + move userinit (nee proc0init) to proc.c + move ROOTDEV to param.h + always parenthesize sizeof argument
2007-08-14formattingrsc1-3/+3
2007-08-10add notersc1-0/+1
2007-08-10avoid assignments in declarationsrsc1-6/+5
2007-08-10Make cp a magic symbol.rsc1-1/+0
2007-08-08add DPL_USER constantrsc1-2/+2
2007-08-08save process name for debuggingrsc1-3/+3
2006-09-08tweakrsc1-0/+1
2006-09-08make trap fit on one pagersc1-12/+6
2006-09-07no recursive interruptsrsc1-31/+34
2006-09-07more commentsrsc1-5/+9
2006-09-06wrap long linesrsc1-2/+2
2006-09-06no /* */ commentsrsc1-1/+1
2006-09-06standardize various * conventionsrsc1-2/+2
2006-09-06spacing fixes: no tabs, 2-space indents (for rtm)rsc1-1/+1
2006-09-04a few nitskaashoek1-1/+1
2006-09-03nitskaashoek1-5/+9
2006-08-29i broke sbrk, fix itrtm1-1/+0
2006-08-29clean up stale error checks and panicsrtm1-45/+0
delete unused functions a few comments
2006-08-25kill user process when it generates an unhandled trap (e.g., 13)kaashoek1-1/+3
fix bug in test code of malloc
2006-08-19chdirkaashoek1-1/+1
cd in shell nits in mkdir, ls, etc.
2006-08-16proc[0] can sleep(), at least after it gets to main00()rtm1-0/+2
proc[0] calls iget(rootdev, 1) before forking init
2006-08-15no more proc[] entry per cpu for idle looprtm1-3/+4
each cpu[] has its own gdt and tss no per-proc gdt or tss, re-write cpu's in scheduler (you win, cliff) main0() switches to cpu[0].mpstack
2006-08-10interrupts could be recursive since lapic_eoi() called before rtirtm1-0/+20
so fast interrupts overflow the kernel stack fix: cli() before lapic_eoi()
2006-08-10low-level keyboard input (not hooked up to /dev yet)rtm1-3/+13
fix acquire() to cli() *before* incrementing nlock make T_SYSCALL a trap gate, not an interrupt gate sadly, various crashes if you hold down a keyboard key...
2006-08-08fix race in holding() check in acquire()rtm1-7/+9
give cpu1 a TSS and gdt for when it enters scheduler() and a pseudo proc[] entry for each cpu cpu0 waits for each other cpu to start up read() for files
2006-07-17standarize on unix-like lowercase struct namesrsc1-2/+2
2006-07-17add uint and standardize on typedefs instead of unsignedrsc1-3/+3
2006-07-17goodbye PushRegsrsc1-1/+1
2006-07-17nitpicksrsc1-4/+4
2006-07-16Eliminate annoying Pseudodesc structure.rsc1-2/+1
Eliminate unnecessary parts of mmu.h.
2006-07-16standardize on not using foo_ prefix in struct foorsc1-4/+4
2006-07-16Don't kill process when inside kernel.rsc1-3/+10
2006-07-16remove non-idiomatic increment/decrementrsc1-5/+0