This implements a simple bootloader that is capable of loading ELF64
kernel images. It does this by using QEMU/GRUB to load the kernel image
from disk and pass it to our bootloader as a Multiboot module.
The bootloader then parses the ELF image and sets it up appropriately.
The kernel's entry point is a C++ function with architecture-native
code.
Co-authored-by: Liav A <liavalb@gmail.com>
Instead of each PhysicalPage knowing whether it comes from the
supervisor pages or from the user pages, we can just check in both
sets when freeing a page.
It's just a handful of pointer range checks, nothing expensive.
We had an inconsistency in valid user addresses. is_user_range() was
checking against the kernel base address, but previous changes caused
the maximum valid user addressable range to be 32 MiB below that.
This patch stops mmap(MAP_FIXED) of a range between these two bounds
from panic-ing the kernel in RangeAllocator::allocate_specific.
By moving the PhysicalPage classes out of the kernel heap into a static
array, one for each physical page, we can avoid the added overhead and
easily find them by indexing into an array.
This also wraps the PhysicalPage into a PhysicalPageEntry, which allows
us to re-use each slot with information where to find the next free
page.
Userland faulted on the very first instruction before because the
PML4T/PDPT/etc. weren't marked as user-accessible. For some reason
x86 doesn't care about that.
Also, we need to provide an appropriate userspace stack segment
selector to iretq.
Problem:
- `static` variables consume memory and sometimes are less
optimizable.
- `static const` variables can be `constexpr`, usually.
- `static` function-local variables require an initialization check
every time the function is run.
Solution:
- If a global `static` variable is only used in a single function then
move it into the function and make it non-`static` and `constexpr`.
- Make all global `static` variables `constexpr` instead of `const`.
- Change function-local `static const[expr]` variables to be just
`constexpr`.
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 *
We were only 448 KiB away from filling up the old slot size we reserve
for the kernel above the 3 GiB mark. This expands the slot to 16 MiB,
which allows us to continue booting the kernel until somebody takes
the time to improve our loader.
(...and ASSERT_NOT_REACHED => VERIFY_NOT_REACHED)
Since all of these checks are done in release builds as well,
let's rename them to VERIFY to prevent confusion, as everyone is
used to assertions being compiled out in release.
We can introduce a new ASSERT macro that is specifically for debug
checks, but I'm doing this wholesale conversion first since we've
accumulated thousands of these already, and it's not immediately
obvious which ones are suitable for ASSERT.
There's no real system here, I just added it to various functions
that I don't believe we ever want to call after initialization
has finished.
With these changes, we're able to unmap 60 KiB of kernel text
after init. :^)
This patch adds Space, a class representing a process's address space.
- Each Process has a Space.
- The Space owns the PageDirectory and all Regions in the Process.
This allows us to reorganize sys$execve() so that it constructs and
populates a new Space fully before committing to it.
Previously, we would construct the new address space while still
running in the old one, and encountering an error meant we had to do
tedious and error-prone rollback.
Those problems are now gone, replaced by what's hopefully a set of much
smaller problems and missing cleanups. :^)
When doing the cast to u64 on the page directory physical address,
the sign bit was being extended. This only beomes an issue when
crossing the 2 GiB boundary. At >= 2 GiB, the physical address
has the sign bit set. For example, 0x80000000.
This set all the reserved bits in the PDPTE, causing a GPF
when loading the PDPT pointer into CR3. The reserved bits are
presumably there to stop you writing out a physical address that
the CPU physically cannot handle, as the size of the reserved bits
is determined by the physical address width of the CPU.
This fixes this by casting to FlatPtr instead. I believe the sign
extension only happens when casting to a bigger type. I'm also using
FlatPtr because it's a pointer we're writing into the PDPTE.
sizeof(FlatPtr) will always be the same size as sizeof(void*).
This also now asserts that the physical address in the PDPTE is
within the max physical address the CPU supports. This is better
than getting a GPF, because CPU::handle_crash tries to do the same
operation that caused the GPF in the first place. That would cause
an infinite loop of GPFs until the stack was exhausted, causing a
triple fault.
As far as I know and tested, I believe we can now use the full 32-bit
physical range without crashing.
Fixes#4584. See that issue for the full debugging story.
MemoryManager cannot use the Singleton class because
MemoryManager::initialize is called before the global constructors
are run. That caused the Singleton to be re-initialized, causing
it to create another MemoryManager instance.
Fixes#3226
The SI prefixes "k", "M", "G" mean "10^3", "10^6", "10^9".
The IEC prefixes "Ki", "Mi", "Gi" mean "2^10", "2^20", "2^30".
Let's use the correct name, at least in code.
Only changes the name of the constants, no other behavior change.
MemoryManager::quickmap_pd and MemoryManager::quickmap_pt can only
be called by one processor at the time anyway, since anything using
these must have the MM lock held. So, no need to inform the other
CPUs to flush their TLBs, we can just flush our own.
- If rdseed is not available, fallback to rdrand.
- If rdrand is not available, block for entropy, or use insecure prng
depending on if user wants fast or good random.
Also, duplicate data in dbg() and klog() calls were removed.
In addition, leakage of virtual address to kernel log is prevented.
This is done by replacing kprintf() calls to dbg() calls with the
leaked data instead.
Also, other kprintf() calls were replaced with klog().
uintptr_t is 32-bit or 64-bit depending on the target platform.
This will help us write pointer size agnostic code so that when the day
comes that we want to do a 64-bit port, we'll be in better shape.
As suggested by Joshua, this commit adds the 2-clause BSD license as a
comment block to the top of every source file.
For the first pass, I've just added myself for simplicity. I encourage
everyone to add themselves as copyright holders of any file they've
added or modified in some significant way. If I've added myself in
error somewhere, feel free to replace it with the appropriate copyright
holder instead.
Going forward, all new source files should include a license header.
This is not ASLR, but it does de-trivialize exploiting the ELF loader
which would previously always parse executables at 0x01001000 in every
single exec(). I've taken advantage of this multiple times in my own
toy exploits and it's starting to feel cheesy. :^)
We now use the regular "user" physical pages for on-demand page table
allocations. This was by far the biggest source of super physical page
exhaustion, so that bug should be a thing of the past now. :^)
We still have super pages, but they are barely used. They remain useful
for code that requires memory with a low physical address.
Fixes#1000.