xv6/Notes

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2006-06-22 15:51:57 +00:00
bochs 2.2.6:
./configure --enable-smp --enable-disasm --enable-debugger --enable-all-optimizations --enable-4meg-pages --enable-global-pages --enable-pae --disable-reset-on-triple-fault
2006-07-11 01:07:40 +00:00
bochs CVS after 2.2.6:
./configure --enable-smp --enable-disasm --enable-debugger --enable-all-optimizations --enable-4meg-pages --enable-global-pages --enable-pae
2006-06-22 15:51:57 +00:00
2006-06-12 15:22:12 +00:00
bootmain.c doesn't work right if the ELF sections aren't
sector-aligned. so you can't use ld -N. and the sections may also need
to be non-zero length, only really matters for tiny "kernels".
kernel loaded at 1 megabyte. stack same place that bootasm.S left it.
kinit() should find real mem size
and rescue useable memory below 1 meg
no paging, no use of page table hardware, just segments
no user area: no magic kernel stack mapping
so no copying of kernel stack during fork
though there is a kernel stack page for each process
no kernel malloc(), just kalloc() for user core
user pointers aren't valid in the kernel
setting up first process
we do want a process zero, as template
but not runnable
just set up return-from-trap frame on new kernel stack
fake user program that calls exec
map text read-only?
shared text?
what's on the stack during a trap or sys call?
PUSHA before scheduler switch? for callee-saved registers.
segment contents?
what does iret need to get out of the kernel?
how does INT know what kernel stack to use?
are interrupts turned on in the kernel? probably.
per-cpu curproc
one tss per process, or one per cpu?
one segment array per cpu, or per process?
pass curproc explicitly, or implicit from cpu #?
e.g. argument to newproc()?
2006-06-15 16:02:20 +00:00
hmm, you need a global curproc[cpu] for trap() &c
2006-06-12 15:22:12 +00:00
test stack expansion
test running out of memory, process slots
we can't really use a separate stack segment, since stack addresses
need to work correctly as ordinary pointers. the same may be true of
data vs text. how can we have a gap between data and stack, so that
both can grow, without committing 4GB of physical memory? does this
mean we need paging?
what's the simplest way to add the paging we need?
one page table, re-write it each time we leave the kernel?
page table per process?
probably need to use 0-0xffffffff segments, so that
both data and stack pointers always work
so is it now worth it to make a process's phys mem contiguous?
or could use segment limits and 4 meg pages?
but limits would prevent using stack pointers as data pointers
how to write-protect text? not important?
perhaps have fixed-size stack, put it in the data segment?
oops, if kernel stack is in contiguous user phys mem, then moving
users' memory (e.g. to expand it) will wreck any pointers into the
kernel stack.
2006-06-13 15:50:06 +00:00
do we need to set fs and gs? so user processes can't abuse them?
setupsegs() may modify current segment table, is that legal?
trap() ought to lgdt on return, since currently only done in swtch()
protect hardware interrupt vectors from user INT instructions?
2006-06-13 22:08:20 +00:00
2006-06-27 14:35:53 +00:00
test out-of-fd cases for creating pipe.
test pipe reader closes then write
test two readers, two writers.
test children being inherited by grandparent &c
some sleep()s should be interruptible by kill()
cli/sti in acquire/release should nest!
in case you acquire two locks
what would need fixing if we got rid of kernel_lock?
console output
proc_exit() needs lock on proc *array* to deallocate
kill() needs lock on proc *array*
allocator's free list
global fd table (really free-ness)
sys_close() on fd table
fork on proc list, also next pid
hold lock until public slots in proc struct initialized
locks
init_lock
sequences CPU startup
proc_table_lock
also protects next_pid
per-fd lock *just* protects count read-modify-write
also maybe freeness?
memory allocator
printf
wakeup needs proc_table_lock
so we need recursive locks?
or you must hold the lock to call wakeup?
if locks contain proc *, they can't be used at interrupt time
only proc_table_lock will be used at interrupt time?
maybe it doesn't matter if we use curproc?
in general, the table locks protect both free-ness and
public variables of table elements
in many cases you can use table elements w/o a lock
e.g. if you are the process, or you are using an fd
why can't i get a lock in console code?
always triple fault
lock code shouldn't call cprintf...