This turned out way better than the old code. ELF loading is now quite
straightforward, and we don't need the weird concept of subregions anymore.
Next step is to respect the is_writable flag.
This was the fix:
-process.m_page_directory[0] = m_kernel_page_directory[0];
-process.m_page_directory[1] = m_kernel_page_directory[1];
+process.m_page_directory->entries[0] = m_kernel_page_directory->entries[0];
+process.m_page_directory->entries[1] = m_kernel_page_directory->entries[1];
I spent a good two hours scratching my head, not being able to figure out why
user process page directories felt they had ownership of page tables in the
kernel page directory.
It was because I was copying the entire damn kernel page directory into
the process instead of only sharing the two first PDE's. Dang!
This took me a couple hours. :^)
The ELF loading code now allocates a single region for the entire
file and creates virtual memory mappings for the sections as needed.
Very nice!
I also added a generator cache to FileHandle. This way, multiple
reads to a generated file (i.e in a synthfs) can transparently
handle multiple calls to read() without the contents changing
between calls.
The cache is discarded at EOF (or when the FileHandle is destroyed.)