This also adds the sys_settime() kernel call which allows for the adjusting
of the clock named realtime in the kernel. The existing sys_stime()
function is still needed for a separate job (setting the boottime). The
boottime is set in the readclock driver. The sys_settime() interface is
meant to be flexible and will support both clock_settime() and adjtime()
when adjtime() is implemented later.
settimeofday() was adjusted to use the clock_settime() interface.
One side note discovered during testing: uptime(1) (part of the last(1)),
uses wtmp to determine boottime (not Minix's times(2)). This leads `uptime`
to report odd results when you set the time to a time prior to boottime.
This isn't a new bug introduced by my changes. It's been there for a while.
In order to make it more clear that ticks should be used for timers
and realtime should be used for timestamps / displaying the date/time,
getuptime() was renamed to getticks() and getuptime2() was renamed to
getuptime().
Servers, drivers, libraries, tests, etc that use getuptime()/getuptime2()
have been updated. In instances where a realtime was calculated, the
calculation was changed to use realtime.
System calls clock_getres() and clock_gettime() were added to PM/libc.
Do not hardcode warning and optimisation flags, otherwise the
main options (i.e. DBG, CPPFLAGS) will not work as expected.
You can still provide specific default by using DBG?=<value>.
Doing so leaves the opportunity to override the setting from the
commandline, while the default value from the build system is
then ignored for that particular package.
When crosscompiling, and using build.sh, adding -V DBG=<value> has
this same effect as make DBG=<value>.
Change-Id: Ic610e4d33b945acad64571e1431f1814291e2d84
REQ_PEEK behaves just like REQ_READ except that it does not copy
data anywhere, just obtains the blocks from the FS into the cache.
To be used by the future mmap implementation.
Change-Id: I1b56de304f0a7152b69a72c8962d04258adb44f9
Remove old versions of system calls and system calls that don't have
a libc api interface anymore (dup, dup2, creat).
VFS still contains support for old system call numbers for the new stat
system calls (i.e., 65, 66, 67) to keep supporting old binaries built for
MINIX 3.2.1 (prior to the release).
Change-Id: I721779b58a50c7eeae20669de24658d55d69b25b
Make the frclock functions similar to the tsc utility functions. This
way, we can call frclock functions from the framebuffer driver which
will use frclock on ARM and tsc on X86.
Also, frclock_64_to_micros computed seconds, not microseconds
Change-Id: I6718ae0fb7db050794f6f032205923e1a32dc1ac
. ldivmod, uldivmod were passing the modulo argument pointer
in R4, which is bogus, as qdivrem expects it on the stack as
per the EABI, causing essentially 'random' memory to be trampled
by qdivrem. fix by pushing R4 before the call.
. also add these functions to -minc so -lminc clients can be
linked without -lgcc
Change-Id: I90b0b28b51a188c93da5de6afb108224749ea794
* Generalize GPIO handling.
* Add libs to configure gpio's clocks and pads
* Add Interrupt handling.
* Introduce mmio.h and log.h
Change-Id: I928e4c807d15031de2eede4b3ecff62df795f8ac
if an exec() fails partway through reading in the sections, the target
process is already gone and a defunct process remains. sanity checking
the binary beforehand helps that.
test10 mutilates binaries and exec()s them on purpose; making an exec()
fail cleanly in such cases seems like acceptable behaviour.
fixes test10 on ARM.
Change-Id: I1ed9bb200ce469d4d349073cadccad5503b2fcb0
. kernel: signal handler args for ARM
. kernel: sanity check return address (LSB indicates thumb mode)
. libc: properly retrieve signal mask for ARM
together fix test37 on ARM.
Change-Id: I4e00f754c50104ed85c7fdf8ec5ad54568f20a81
Also did some cleanup in ash sources, to make minix modifications
more obvious, as well as some simplifications (by removing code which
is never compiled)
Removed EDITLINE support, use libedit, which does the termcap/terminfo
handling.
Change-Id: I19f7f425ed6a61298844631f9d7f3173cf7f30c0
The Cycle CouNTer on ARM cannot be used reliably as it wraps around
rather quickly and can be altered by user space (on Minix). Furthermore,
it's buggy when wrapping and is not implemented at all on the Linaro
Beagleboard emulator.
This patch programs GPTIMER10 as a free running clock at 1.625 MHz (it
doesn't generate interrupts). It's memory mapped into every process,
which enables libsys to provide micro_delay().
Change-Id: Iba004c6c62976762fe154ea390d69e518eec1531
A few kernel and calling convention adjustments to make sigsend and
sigreturn work for arm.
. provide a arch_proc_setcontext for earm in kernel
. set LR in context of signal handler to provide a proper
return address (to __sigreturn)
. change __sigreturn to retrieve the sigcontext pointer
from the sigframe struct and pass it to _sigreturn() in r0
Change-Id: Icd135a70595382c79d11d8dd9876f6a6f1df41f8
. make vm tell kernel virtual locations of mappings
. makes _minix_kerninfo feature work
. fix for mappings being larger than what 1 pde can address
(e.g. devices memory requested on arm)
. still requires a special case for devices memory for the
kernel, which has to switch to virtual addressing
Change-Id: I2e94090aa432346fa4da0edeba72f0b7406c2ad7
On ARM we can't yet globally map pages into every process. So now that
we correctly receive the pointer to the globally mapped kern_info
struct, we have to ignore it on ARM because attempting to dereference
the pointer yields a segfault.
Due to the ABI we are using we have to use the earm architecture
moniker for the build system to behave correctly. This involves
then some headers to move around.
There is also a few related Makefile updates as well as minor
source code corrections.