Previously there was a mix of returning plain strings and returning
explicit string views using `operator ""sv`. This change switches them
all to standardized on `operator ""sv` as it avoids a call to strlen.
This allows us to remove the PCI::get_interrupt_line API function. As a
result, this removes a bunch of not so great patterns that we used to
cache PCI interrupt line in many IRQHandler derived classes instead of
just using interrupt_number method of IRQHandler class.
Because we were holding a strong ref to the OpenFileDescription in
LocalSocket and a strong ref to the LocalSocket in Inode, we were
creating a reference cycle in the event of the socket being cleaned up
after the file description did (i.e. unlinking the file before closing
the socket), because the file description never got destructed.
The TimeWait state is intended to prevent another socket from taking the
address tuple in case any packets are still in transit after the final
close. Since this state never delivers packets to userspace, it doesn't
make sense to keep the receive buffer around.
This was a mistake in the move away from KBuffer-as-a-value type.
We need to check `packet` here, not `packet->data`.
Regressed in b300f9aa2f.
Fixes#9888.
This was a weird KBuffer API that assumed failure was impossible.
This patch converts it to a modern KResultOr<NonnullOwnPtr<KBuffer>> API
and updates the two clients to the new style.
Sockets remember their last error code in the SO_ERROR field, so we need
to take special care to remember this when returning an error.
This patch adds a SOCKET_TRY() that works like TRY() but also calls
set_so_error() on the failure path.
There's probably a lot more code that should be using this, but that's
outside the scope of this patch.
We don't really have anywhere to propagate the error in NetworkTask at
the moment, since it runs in its own kernel thread and has no direct
userspace caller.
A couple of things were changed:
1. Semantic changes - PCI segments are now called PCI domains, to better
match what they are really. It's also the name that Linux gave, and it
seems that Wikipedia also uses this name.
We also remove PCI::ChangeableAddress, because it was used in the past
but now it's no longer being used.
2. There are no WindowedMMIOAccess or MMIOAccess classes anymore, as
they made a bunch of unnecessary complexity. Instead, Windowed access is
removed entirely (this was tested, but never was benchmarked), so we are
left with IO access and memory access options. The memory access option
is essentially mapping the PCI bus (from the chosen PCI domain), to
virtual memory as-is. This means that unless needed, at any time, there
is only one PCI bus being mapped, and this is changed if access to
another PCI bus in the same PCI domain is needed. For now, we don't
support mapping of different PCI buses from different PCI domains at the
same time, because basically it's still a non-issue for most machines
out there.
2. OOM-safety is increased, especially when constructing the Access
object. It means that we pre-allocating any needed resources, and we try
to find PCI domains (if requested to initialize memory access) after we
attempt to construct the Access object, so it's possible to fail at this
point "gracefully".
3. All PCI API functions are now separated into a different header file,
which means only "clients" of the PCI subsystem API will need to include
that header file.
4. Functional changes - we only allow now to enumerate the bus after
a hardware scan. This means that the old method "enumerate_hardware"
is removed, so, when initializing an Access object, the initializing
function must call rescan on it to force it to find devices. This makes
it possible to fail rescan, and also to defer it after construction from
both OOM-safety terms and hotplug capabilities.
This expands the reach of error propagation greatly throughout the
kernel. Sadly, it also exposes the fact that we're allocating (and
doing other fallible things) in constructors all over the place.
This patch doesn't attempt to address that of course. That's work for
our future selves.
This commit moves the KResult and KResultOr objects to Kernel/API to
signify that they may now be freely used by userspace code at points
where a syscall-related error result is to be expected. It also exposes
KResult and KResultOr to the global namespace to make it nicer to use
for userspace code.
NetworkOrdered is a non trivial type, and it's undefined behavior to
cast a random pointer to it and then pretend it's that type.
Instead just call AK::convert_between_host_and_network_endian on the
individual u16*. This suppresses static analysis warnings.
I don't think there was a "bug" in the previous code, it worked, but
it was very brittle.