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34 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andreas Kling
673592dea8 Kernel: Stop using *LockRefPtr for FileSystem pointers
There was only one permanent storage location for these: as a member
in the Mount class.

That member is never modified after Mount initialization, so we don't
need to worry about races there.
2023-04-04 10:33:42 +02:00
Marco Cutecchia
425acb513e Kernel: Allow booting from an SD card 2023-04-02 12:43:17 -06:00
Marco Cutecchia
36c5afdfb2 Revert "Revert "Kernel/Storage: Remove the ramdisk implementation""
This reverts commit 187723776a.

This was reverted because it was needed until the aarch64 port
got an SD card driver

Co-authored-by: Ollrogge <nils-ollrogge@outlook.de>
2023-03-25 16:50:36 +00:00
Marco Cutecchia
c91db6ec97 Kernel: Add an SD card driver for the aarch64 port
Co-authored-by: Ollrogge <nils-ollrogge@outlook.de>
2023-03-25 16:50:36 +00:00
Pankaj Raghav
b204da94b0 Kernel/Storage: Use NonnullRefPtr for storage controllers
Storage controllers are initialized during init and are never modified.
NonnullRefPtr can be safely used instead of the NonnullLockRefPtr. This
also fixes one of the UB issue that was there when using an NVMe device
because of NonnullLockRefPtr.

We can add proper locking when we need to modify the storage controllers
after init.
2023-03-15 11:25:59 +01:00
Andreas Kling
7369d0ab5f Kernel: Stop using NonnullLockRefPtrVector 2023-03-06 23:46:36 +01:00
Andreas Kling
0cdd227e9b Kernel: Fix const-correctness issue in StorageManagement
We have to take the StorageDevice as a mutable reference, otherwise
we can't perform any interesting I/O operations on it.
2023-02-21 00:54:04 +01:00
Timon Kruiper
187723776a Revert "Kernel/Storage: Remove the ramdisk implementation"
This reverts commit 4e0f85432a as the
ramdisk code is useful for the bring-up of the aarch64 port. Once the
kernel supports better ram-based filesystems, this code will be removed
again.
2023-02-08 18:19:48 +00:00
Sam Atkins
3cbc0fdbb0 Kernel: Remove declarations for non-existent methods 2023-01-27 20:33:18 +00:00
Liav A
4e0f85432a Kernel/Storage: Remove the ramdisk implementation
Nobody uses this because the x86 prekernel environment is corrupting the
ramdisk image prior to running the actual kernel. In the future we can
ensure that the prekernel doesn't corrupt the ramdisk if we want to
bring support back. In addition to that, we could just use a RAM based
filesystem to load whatever is needed like in Linux, without the need of
additional filesystem driver.

For the mentioned corruption problem, look at issue #9893.
2022-10-03 11:12:35 +02:00
Liav A
2c84466ad8 Kernel/Storage: Introduce new boot device addressing modes
Before of this patch, we supported two methods to address a boot device:
1. Specifying root=/dev/hdXY, where X is a-z letter which corresponds to
a boot device, and Y as number from 1 to 16, to indicate the partition
number, which can be omitted to instruct the kernel to use a raw device
rather than a partition on a raw device.
2. Specifying root=PARTUUID: with a GUID string of a GUID partition. In
case of existing storage device with GPT partitions, this is most likely
the safest option to ensure booting from persistent storage.

While option 2 is more advanced and reliable, the first option has 2
caveats:
1. The string prefix "/dev/hd" doesn't mean anything beside a convention
on Linux installations, that was taken into use in Serenity. In Serenity
we don't mount DevTmpFS before we mount the boot device on /, so the
kernel doesn't really access /dev anyway, so this convention is only a
big misleading relic that can easily make the user to assume we access
/dev early on boot.
2. This convention although resemble the simple linux convention, is
quite limited in specifying a correct boot device across hardware setup
changes, so option 2 was recommended to ensure the system is always
bootable.

With these caveats in mind, this commit tries to fix the problem with
adding more addressing options as well as to remove the first option
being mentioned above of addressing.
To sum it up, there are 4 addressing options:
1. Hardware relative address - Each instance of StorageController is
assigned with a index number relative to the type of hardware it handles
which makes it possible to address storage devices with a prefix of the
commandset ("ata" for ATA, "nvme" for NVMe, "ramdisk" for Plain memory),
and then the number for the parent controller relative hardware index,
another number LUN target_id, and a third number for LUN disk_id.
2. LUN address - Similar to the previous option, but instead we rely on
the parent controller absolute index for the first number.
3. Block device major and minor numbers - by specifying the major and
minor numbers, the kernel can simply try to get the corresponding block
device and use it as the boot device.
4. GUID string, in the same fashion like before, so the user use the
"PARTUUID:" string prefix and add the GUID of the GPT partition.

For the new address modes 1 and 2, the user can choose to also specify a
partition out of the selected boot device. To do that, the user needs to
append the semicolon character and then add the string "partX" where X
is to be changed for the partition number. We start counting from 0, and
therefore the first partition number is 0 and not 1 in the kernel boot
argument.
2022-08-30 00:50:15 +01:00
Andreas Kling
11eee67b85 Kernel: Make self-contained locking smart pointers their own classes
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.
2022-08-20 17:20:43 +02:00
Liav A
1102089f9f Kernel/Storage: Don't hardcode a maximum of 16 partitions per drive
In the near future, we will be able to figure out connections between
storage devices and their partitions, so there's no need to hardcode 16
partitions per storage device - each storage device should be able to
have "infinite" count of partitions in it, and we should be able to use
and figure out about them.
2022-08-14 01:09:03 +01:00
Samuel Bowman
f6ab636d31 Kernel: Move DiskPartition up into Kernel/Storage
Everything in Kernel/Storage/Partition but DiskPartition has been moved
into LibPartiton. This makes the Partition directory unnecessary so
DiskPartition is moved up into Kernel/Storage.
2022-07-21 20:13:44 +01:00
Samuel Bowman
940dde9947 Kernel+LibPartition: Move PartitionTable into LibPartition 2022-07-21 20:13:44 +01:00
Liav A
4744ccbff0 Kernel/Storage: Add LUN address to each StorageDevice
LUN address is essentially how people used to address SCSI devices back
in the day we had these devices more in use. However, SCSI was taken as
an abstraction layer for many Unix and Unix-like systems, so it still
common to see LUN addresses in use. In Serenity, we don't really provide
such abstraction layer, and therefore until now, we didn't use LUNs too.
However (again), this changes, as we want to let users to address their
devices under SysFS easily. LUNs make sense in that regard, because they
can be easily adapted to different interfaces besides SCSI.
For example, for legacy ATA hard drive being connected to the first IDE
controller which was enumerated on the PCI bus, and then to the primary
channel as slave device, the LUN address would be 0:0:1.

To make this happen, we add unique ID number to each StorageController,
which increments by 1 for each new instance of StorageController. Then,
we adapt the ATA and NVMe devices to use these numbers and generate LUN
in the construction time.
2022-07-15 12:29:23 +02:00
Liav A
5ed3f7c6bf Kernel/Storage: Migrate the partition code to use the ErrorOr container
That code used the old AK::Result container, which leads to overly
complicated initialization flow when trying to figure out the correct
partition table type. Instead, when using the ErrorOr container the code
is much simpler and more understandable.
2022-04-28 22:13:54 +02:00
Idan Horowitz
086969277e Everywhere: Run clang-format 2022-04-01 21:24:45 +01:00
Liav A
30eeba1981 Kernel/Storage: Don't try to enumerate PCI adapters if PCI is disabled
If there's no PCI bus, then it's safe to assume that we run on a x86
machine that has an ISA IDE controller in the system. In such case, we
just instantiate a ISAIDEController object that assumes fixed locations
of IDE IO ports.
2022-03-02 18:41:54 +01:00
Pankaj Raghav
d234e6b801 Kernel: Add polling support to NVMe
Add polling support to NVMe so that it does not use interrupt to
complete a IO but instead actively polls for completion. This probably
is not very efficient in terms of CPU usage but it does not use
interrupts to complete a IO which is beneficial at the moment as there
is no MSI(X) support and it can reduce the latency of an IO in a very
fast NVMe device.

The NVMeQueue class has been made the base class for NVMeInterruptQueue
and NVMePollQueue. The factory function `NVMeQueue::try_create` will
return the appropriate queue to the controller based on the polling
boot parameter.

The polling mode can be enabled by adding an extra boot parameter:
`nvme_poll`.
2022-02-02 18:26:59 +01:00
Linus Groh
c05feaaa74 Kernel/Storage: Dump detected devices and partitions before PANIC()'ing
If we panic the kernel for a storage-related reason, we might as well be
helpful and print out a list of detected storage devices and their
partitions to help with debugging.

Reasons for such a panic include:
- No boot device with the given name found
- No boot device with the given UUID found
- Failing to open the root filesystem after determining a boot device
2022-01-26 21:34:26 +00:00
Pankaj Raghav
9ae2285675 Kernel: Make enumerate_disk_partitions function not const
The enumerate_disk_partitions function doesn't need to be const. Remove
the constness and use the newly added `add_partition` function.
2022-01-09 20:18:37 -08:00
Andreas Kling
ac7ce12123 Kernel: Remove the kmalloc_eternal heap :^)
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().
2021-12-28 21:02:38 +01:00
Liav A
9eb08bdb0f Kernel: Make major and minor numbers to be DistinctNumerics
This helps avoid confusion in general, and make constructors, methods
and code patterns much more clean and understandable.
2021-12-23 23:02:39 +01:00
Brian Gianforcaro
836c22ea13 Kernel: Remove AK::String usage from Storage/StorageManagement.cpp 2021-10-03 13:36:10 +02:00
Ali Mohammad Pur
5a0cdb15b0 AK+Everywhere: Reduce the number of template parameters of IntrusiveList
This makes the user-facing type only take the node member pointer, and
lets the compiler figure out the other needed types from that.
2021-09-10 18:05:46 +03:00
Liav A
fb7b4caa57 Kernel/Storage: Implement basic AHCI hotplug support
This is really a basic support for AHCI hotplug events, so we know how
to add a node representing the device in /sys/dev/block and removing it
according to the event type (insertion/removal).

This change doesn't take into account what happens if the device was
mounted or a read/write operation is being handled.

For this to work correctly, StorageManagement now uses the Singleton
container, as it might be accessed simultaneously from many CPUs
for hotplug events. DiskPartition holds a WeakPtr instead of a RefPtr,
to allow removal of a StorageDevice object from the heap.
StorageDevices are now stored and being referenced to via an
IntrusiveList to make it easier to remove them on hotplug event.

In future changes, all of the stated above might change, but for now,
this commit represents the least amount of changes to make everything
to work correctly.
2021-09-08 00:42:20 +02:00
Andreas Kling
d53d9d3677 Kernel: Rename FS => FileSystem
This matches our common naming style better.
2021-07-11 00:20:38 +02:00
Brian Gianforcaro
1682f0b760 Everything: Move to SPDX license identifiers in all files.
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.

See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers

This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.

 ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
2021-04-22 11:22:27 +02:00
Jean-Baptiste Boric
a73bd0fff8 Kernel: Remove type from StorageDevice class 2021-04-13 21:52:34 +02:00
Liav A
b59e45e65c Kernel: Use global mechanism to determine minor number of Storage Device 2021-03-05 11:29:34 +01:00
Liav A
9dc8bea3e7 Kernel: Allow to boot from a partition with partition UUID
Instead of specifying the boot argument to be root=/dev/hdXY, now
one can write root=PARTUUID= with the right UUID, and if the partition
is found, the kernel will boot from it.

This feature is mainly used with GUID partitions, and is considered to
be the most reliable way for the kernel to identify partitions.
2021-01-01 22:59:48 +01:00
Liav A
72b1998f0d Kernel: Introduce a new partitioning subsystem
The partitioning code was very outdated, and required a full refactor.
The new subsystem removes duplicated code and uses more AK containers.

The most important change is that all implementations of the
PartitionTable class conform to one interface, which made it possible
to remove unnecessary code in the EBRPartitionTable class.

Finding partitions is now done in the StorageManagement singleton,
instead of doing so in init.cpp.

Also, now we don't try to find partitions on demand - the kernel will
try to detect if a StorageDevice is partitioned, and if so, will check
what is the partition table, which could be MBR, GUID or EBR.
Then, it will create DiskPartitionMetadata object for each partition
that is available in the partition table. This object will be used
by the partition enumeration code to create a DiskPartition with the
correct minor number.
2020-12-27 23:07:44 +01:00
Liav A
469f20d4ee Kernel: Introduce the StorageManagement class
The StorageManagement class has 2 roles:
1. During boot, it should find all storage controllers in the machine,
and then determine what is the boot device.
2. Later on boot, it is a registrar of all storage controllers and
storage devices. Thus, it could be used to show information about these
devices when implemented.

This change allows the user to specify a boot driver other than /dev/hda
and if it's connected in the machine - it will boot.
2020-12-21 00:19:21 +01:00