- Sep 06, 2006
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rsc authored
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- Aug 29, 2006
- Aug 10, 2006
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rtm authored
so fast interrupts overflow the kernel stack fix: cli() before lapic_eoi()
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- Aug 09, 2006
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rtm authored
fix acquire() to cli() *before* incrementing nlock make T_SYSCALL a trap gate, not an interrupt gate sadly, various crashes if you hold down a keyboard key...
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- Aug 08, 2006
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rtm authored
give cpu1 a TSS and gdt for when it enters scheduler() and a pseudo proc[] entry for each cpu cpu0 waits for each other cpu to start up read() for files
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- Jul 29, 2006
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rtm authored
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- Jul 16, 2006
- Jul 15, 2006
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rsc authored
New scheduler. Removed cli and sti stack in favor of tracking number of locks held on each CPU and explicit conditionals in spinlock.c.
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rtm authored
wakeup1() assumes you hold proc_table_lock sleep(chan, lock) provides atomic sleep-and-release to wait for condition ugly code in swtch/scheduler to implement new sleep fix lots of bugs in pipes, wait, and exit fix bugs if timer interrupt goes off in schedule() console locks per line, not per byte
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- Jul 12, 2006
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rtm authored
exit had acquire where I meant release swtch now checks that you hold no locks
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rtm authored
nesting cli/sti: release shouldn't always enable interrupts separate setup of lapic from starting of other cpus, so cpu() works earlier flag to disable locking in console output make locks work even when curproc==0 (still crashes in clock interrupt)
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- Jul 11, 2006
- Jul 10, 2006
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rsc authored
Linux 2.4 box using gcc 3.4.6 don't seem to follow the same conventions as the i386-jos-elf-gcc compilers. Can run make 'TOOLPREFIX=' or edit the Makefile. curproc[cpu()] can now be NULL, indicating that no proc is running. This seemed safer to me than having curproc[0] and curproc[1] both pointing at proc[0] potentially. The old implementation of swtch depended on the stack frame layout used inside swtch being okay to return from on the other stack (exactly the V6 you are not expected to understand this). It also could be called in two contexts: at boot time, to schedule the very first process, and later, on behalf of a process, to sleep or schedule some other process. I split this into two functions: scheduler and swtch. The scheduler is now a separate never-returning function, invoked by each cpu once set up. The scheduler looks like: scheduler() { setjmp(cpu.context); pick proc to schedule blah blah blah longjmp(proc.context) } The new swtch is intended to be called only when curproc[cpu()] is not NULL, that is, only on behalf of a user proc. It does: swtch() { if(setjmp(proc.context) == 0) longjmp(cpu.context) } to save the current proc context and then jump over to the scheduler, running on the cpu stack. Similarly the system call stubs are now in assembly in usys.S to avoid needing to know the details of stack frame layout used by the compiler. Also various changes in the debugging prints.
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- Jul 06, 2006
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kaashoek authored
user program that makes a blocking system call
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- Jun 28, 2006
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kaashoek authored
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- Jun 26, 2006
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rtm authored
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- Jun 22, 2006
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rtm authored
curproc array
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- Jun 21, 2006
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kaashoek authored
and plan 9 code, at least boots and gets into C code.
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