The AHCI code doesn't rely on x86 IO at all as it only uses memory
mapped IO so we can simply remove the header.
We also simply don't use x86 IO in the Intel graphics driver, so we can
simply remove the include of the x86 IO header there too.
Everything else was a bunch of stale includes to the x86 IO header and
are actually not necessary, so let's remove them to make it easier to
compile non-x86 Kernel builds.
Many code patterns and hardware procedures rely on reliable delay in the
microseconds granularity, and since they are using such delays which are
valid cases, but should not rely on x86 specific code, we allow to
determine in compile time the proper platform-specific code to use to
invoke such delays.
This reworks the way the UHCI schedule is set up to handle interrupt
transfers, creating 11 queue heads each assigned a different
period/latency, so that interrupt transfers can be linked into the
schedule with their specified period more easily.
Modifies the way the UHCI schedule is set up & modified to allow for
multiple transfers of the same type, from one or more devices, to be
queued up and handled simultaneously.
Until now, our kernel has reimplemented a number of AK classes to
provide automatic internal locking:
- RefPtr
- NonnullRefPtr
- WeakPtr
- Weakable
This patch renames the Kernel classes so that they can coexist with
the original AK classes:
- RefPtr => LockRefPtr
- NonnullRefPtr => NonnullLockRefPtr
- WeakPtr => LockWeakPtr
- Weakable => LockWeakable
The goal here is to eventually get rid of the Lock* classes in favor of
using external locking.
Instead of having two separate implementations of AK::RefCounted, one
for userspace and one for kernelspace, there is now RefCounted and
AtomicRefCounted.
All users which relied on the default constructor use a None lock rank
for now. This will make it easier to in the future remove LockRank and
actually annotate the ranks by searching for None.
Currently the SysFS node for USB devices is only initialized for USB
hubs, which means it will cause a kernel crash upon being dereferenced
in a non-hub device. This fixes the problem by making initialization
happen for all USB devices.
Right now the TD and QH descriptor pools look to be susceptible
to a race condition in the event they are accessed simultaneously
by separate threads making USB transfers. This fix does not seem to
add any noticeable overhead.
Each of these strings would previously rely on StringView's char const*
constructor overload, which would call __builtin_strlen on the string.
Since we now have operator ""sv, we can replace these with much simpler
versions. This opens the door to being able to remove
StringView(char const*).
No functional changes.
Currently when allocating buffers for USB transfers, it is done
once for every transfer rather than once upon creation of the
USB device. This commit changes that by moving allocation of buffers
to the USB Pipe class where they can be reused.
This change unifies the naming convention for kernel tasks.
The goal of this change is to:
- Make the task names more descriptive, so users can more
easily understand their purpose in System Monitor.
- Unify the naming convention so they are consistent.
This name was misleading, as it wasn't really "getting" anything. It has
hence been renamed to `enumerate_interfaces` to reflect what it's
actually doing.
This creates all interfaces when the device is enumerated, with a link
to the configuration that it is a part of. As such, a new class,
`USBInterface` has been introduced to express this state.
Some other parts of the USB stack may require us to perform a control
transfer. Instead of abusing `friend` to expose the default pipe, let's
just expose it via a function.
This also introduces a new class, `USBConfiguration` that stores a
configuration. The device, when instructed, sets this configuration and
holds a pointer to it so we have a record of what configuration is
currently active.
Instead, hold the lock while we copy the contents to a stack-based
Vector then iterate on it without any locking.
Because we rely on heap allocations, we need to propagate errors back
in case of OOM condition, therefore, both PCI::enumerate API function
and PCI::Access::add_host_controller_and_enumerate_attached_devices use
now a ErrorOr<void> return value to propagate errors. OOM Error can only
occur when enumerating the m_device_identifiers vector under a spinlock
and trying to expand the temporary Vector which will be used locklessly
to actually iterate over the PCI::DeviceIdentifiers objects.
The function `KString::must_create()` can only be enforced
during early boot (that is, when `g_in_early_boot` is true), hence
the use of this function during runtime causes a `VERIFY` to assert,
leading to a Kernel Panic.
We should instead use `TRY()` along with `try_create()` to prevent
this from crashing whenever a USB device is inserted into the system,
and we don't have enough memory to allocate the device's KString.
This was a premature optimization from the early days of SerenityOS.
The eternal heap was a simple bump pointer allocator over a static
byte array. My original idea was to avoid heap fragmentation and improve
data locality, but both ideas were rooted in cargo culting, not data.
We would reserve 4 MiB at boot and only ended up using ~256 KiB, wasting
the rest.
This patch replaces all kmalloc_eternal() usage by regular kmalloc().
Instead, allocate before constructing the object and pass NonnullOwnPtr
of KString to the object if needed. Some classes can determine their
names as they have a known attribute to look for or have a static name.