I set it up so that TIOCSWINSZ on a master PTY gets forwarded to the slave.
This feels intuitively right. Terminal can then use that to inform the shell
or whoever is inside the slave that the window size has changed.
TIOCSWINSZ also triggers the generation of a SIGWINCH signal. :^)
Now the filesystem is generated on-the-fly instead of manually adding and
removing inodes as processes spawn and die.
The code is convoluted and bloated as I wrote it while sleepless. However,
it's still vastly better than the old ProcFS, so I'm committing it.
I also added /proc/PID/fd/N symlinks for each of a process's open fd's.
FileDescriptor will now keep a pointer to the original inode even after
opening it resolves to a character device.
Fixed up /bin/ls to display major and minor device numbers instead of size
for device files.
Only raw octal modes are supported right now.
This patch also changes mode_t from 32-bit to 16-bit to match the on-disk
type used by Ext2FS.
I also ran into EPERM being errno=0 which was confusing, so I inserted an
ESUCCESS in its place.
(Don't) use this to implement short-form output in ls.
I'm too tired to make a nice column formatting algorithm.
I just wanted something concise when I type "ls".
It only works for sending a signal to a process that's in userspace code.
We implement reception by synthesizing a PUSHA+PUSHF in the receiving process
(operating on values in the TSS.)
The TSS CS:EIP is then rerouted to the signal handler and a tiny return
trampoline is constructed in a dedicated region in the receiving process.
Also hacked up /bin/kill to be able to send arbitrary signals (kill -N PID)
Implemented some syscalls: dup(), dup2(), getdtablesize().
FileHandle is now a retainable, since that's needed for dup()'ed fd's.
I didn't really test any of this beyond a basic smoke check.