Made getsockopt() and setsockopt() virtual so we can handle them in the
various Socket subclasses. The subclasses map kinda nicely to "levels".
This will allow us to implement things like "traceroute", although..
I spent some time trying to do that, but then hit a wall when it turned
out that the user-mode networking in QEMU doesn't preserve TTL in the
ICMP packets passing through.
The fchdir() function is equivalent to chdir() except that the
directory that is to be the new current working directory is
specified by a file descriptor.
MAXPATHLEN defines the longest permissable path length after expanding
symbolic links. It is used to allocate a temporary buffer from the buffer
pool in which to do the name expansion, hence should be a power of two.
On UNIX MAXPATHLEN has the same size as PATH_MAX.
After some very confused debugging, I discovered that GNU make has a
main() function with this signature:
int main(int argc, char** argv, char** envp)
Apparently this is a non-standard but widely supported thing, so let's
do the same in Serenity so make works as expected.
This fixes an issue where you had to do "make PATH=..." instead of make
just picking up PATH from the environment. :^)
Now that the kernel supports thread-local storage, we can declare errno
with the __thread keyword, which causes it to be per-thread.
This should fix all the stupid issues that happen when many threads use
the same errno. :^)
We were already borrowing a getopt() from the BSD family until the day
we write our own. This patch borrows a slightly more modern one so we
also get getopt_long().
Fixes#190.
See also #91 for the desire to eventually NIH our own getopt()..
This was a workaround to be able to build on case-insensitive file
systems where it might get confused about <string.h> vs <String.h>.
Let's just not support building that way, so String.h can have an
objectively nicer name. :^)
Rewrite this function to go from left-to-right instead of right-to-left
since this allows us to accumulate valid characters before encountering
any invalid ones.
This fixes parsing of strings emitted by GCC, like "1, %0|%0, %1}". :^)
It is now possible to unmount file systems from the VFS via `umount`.
It works via looking up the `fsid` of the filesystem from the `Inode`'s
metatdata so I'm not sure how fragile it is. It seems to work for now
though as something to get us going.
This patch adds the mprotect() syscall to allow changing the protection
flags for memory regions. We don't do any region splitting/merging yet,
so this only works on whole mmap() regions.
Added a "crash -r" flag to verify that we crash when you attempt to
write to read-only memory. :^)
In the userspace, this mimics the Linux pipe2() syscall;
in the kernel, the Process::sys$pipe() now always accepts
a flags argument, the no-argument pipe() syscall is now a
userspace wrapper over pipe2().
It is now possible to mount ext2 `DiskDevice` devices under Serenity on
any folder in the root filesystem. Currently any user can do this with
any permissions. There's a fair amount of assumptions made here too,
that might not be too good, but can be worked on in the future. This is
a good start to allow more dynamic operation under the OS itself.
It is also currently impossible to unmount and such, and devices will
fail to mount in Linux as the FS 'needs to be cleaned'. I'll work on
getting `umount` done ASAP to rectify this (as well as working on less
assumption-making in the mount syscall. We don't want to just be able
to mount DiskDevices!). This could probably be fixed with some `-t`
flag or something similar.
Furthermore, fread() has already handled EOF, so there's no need to do
it again. If we read a character, return it, otherwise return EOF.
Note that EOF means "EOF or error" here.
We had some kernel-specific gizmos in AK that should really just be in the
Kernel subdirectory instead. The only thing remaining after moving those
was mmx_memcpy() which I moved to the ARCH(i386)-specific section of
LibC/string.cpp.
Processes can now have an icon assigned, which is essentially a 16x16 RGBA32
bitmap exposed as a shared buffer ID.
You set the icon ID by calling set_process_icon(int) and the icon ID will be
exposed through /proc/all.
To make this work, I added a mechanism for making shared buffers globally
accessible. For safety reasons, each app seals the icon buffer before making
it global.
Right now the first call to GWindow::set_icon() is what determines the
process icon. We'll probably change this in the future. :^)
This one is a bit mysterious. I can't find any authoritative answer on what
the correct behavior is, but it seems reasonable to me that free() doesn't
step on errno, since it returns "void" and thus the caller won't know to
inspect errno anyway.