The filtering also exposed the risk that a process be killed or
swapped while on the list of VM memory requests. These cases are
now handled properly as well.
Change-Id: Ibd3897b34abdf33bce19d37b8e5f65fbd0fd9316
- Update proc to select restart policy for VM
- Update testrelpol to test the supported modes of recovery for VM
- Small code cleanups in testrelpol as well.
Change-Id: I6958e100865c2429b9435f3f7cc7d018046378c3
A missing check to see whether the range being transferred is sane
(with a starting address lower than an ending address) caused extra
memory to be marked erroneously as copy-on-write for some processes,
ultimately resulting in pagefaults on the stack during live update
rollback.
Change-Id: I1516b509b485379606d8df05b8a0f514896a0f19
If the stack is not mapped at the VM_DATATOP (e.g. booted with
ac_layout = 1), there might be some more regions hiding above
the stack. We also have to transfer those.
Change-Id: Idf3b94a36fcec8a10ace2f6dffe816faf0a88f60
. make sure the priv id etc is maintained so
future privctl talk about the right thing
. solves broken IPC after update
Change-Id: I17ed0212c22d634e6db1e80f8dcb2fb8bffe82c6
The 'memory' service has holes in its data section, which causes
problems during state transfer. Since VM cannot handle page faults
during a multicomponent-with-VM live update, the state transfer must
ensure that no page faults occur during copying. Therefore, we now
query VM about the regions to copy, thus skipping holes. While the
solution is not ideal, it is sufficiently generic that it can be used
for the data section state transfer of all processes, and possibly
for state transfer of other regions in the future as well.
Change-Id: I2a71383a18643ebd36956c396fbd22c8fd137202
Two bugs fixed wrt vm restartability.
. make sure pagetable data is only allocated
using dynamic data instead of static spare pages
(bootstrap pages). They are needed for bootstrap
but now repeat some of the initialization so only
dynamic data remains. This solves the problem of
physical addresses changing (as static pages are
re-allocated for the new instance) after update.
. pt_ptalloc has to be specified in bytes instead of
pde slot numbers. leaving pt_pt NULL causes mapping
transfers to fail because NULL happens to be mapped in
then and updates then happen there.
. added some sanity checks against the above happening.
The new state is that VM can update many times, but the system
isn't fully reliable afterwards yet.
Change-Id: I7313602c740cdae8590589132291116ed921aed7
. make arch-independent, and local to proc.c, reduce code duplication
. make vm_suspend public but unduplicated in proc.c
. ask VM for handling once, 2nd time SIGSEGV process
. remove debug printfs
. test case for bogus sendrec() address argument
Change-Id: I3893758910c01de60b8fe3e50edd594296a0b73e
Allow extra space for in-band metadata when allocating cache blocks.
Edited by David van Moolenbroek: since this effectively halves the
potential size of the typical file system cache, do this only when
compiling with instrumentation.
Change-Id: I0840af6420899ede2d5bb7539e79c0a456b5128d
Edited by David van Moolenbroek to deallocate the guard page as well.
Note that while the new approach is better in theory (previously, the
hole could end up being filled by another allocated page), guard page
protection is now broken in practice, because VM does not support
setting specific page permissions (in this case, PROT_NONE).
Change-Id: I882624f5d152d3ebe82fca649cbad85aa4931780
If arguments are provided, the services list to test is set from those,
instead of initializing it with every currently running service.
If such arguments are present, also skip LiveUpdate tests.
Change-Id: I14f874666a610072a5ff4a60516e59cf04dc9e31
VM used to call sendrec to send a boot-time RS_INIT reply to RS, but
RS could run into a pagefault at the same time, thus spawning a
message to VM, resulting in a deadlock. We resolve this situation by
making VM acknowledge RS_INIT asynchronously at boot time, while
retaining the synchronous sendrec for subsequent RS_INIT responses.
Change-Id: I3cb72d7f8d6b9bfdc59a85958ada739c37fa3bde
The following services have been updated to support stateful restarts:
- Drivers: tty
- Filesystems: isofs, mfs, pfs, libvtreefs-based file servers
- System servers: tty, ds, pm, vfs, vm
Change-Id: Ie84baa3ba1774047b3ae519808fe4116928edabb
Previously, RS would clean up dead services only when it is idle.
During shutdown, all services are marked with the 'exiting' flag,
and these flags lead RS to conclude it is not idle. Therefore, at
shutdown time, no services were cleaned up anymore, leading to
deadlock situations. For example, VFS could end up waiting for a
service that was already dead, or one driver could end up waiting
for an interrupt on a line shared with another dead driver.
While it may be possible to ignore RS_EXITING when checking idle
status, other flags may have the same ultimate effect. Therefore,
this patch skips the idle check altogether when in shutdown mode.
Change-Id: I071fa9545da1d43c5e5c2e0bc2b6c173e3bb57c3
While in a multicomponent live update that includes RS, the new RS
instance may receive heartbeat replies which, after a rollback, the
old RS instance will then never see. As a result, the rolled-back
RS instance may end up killing well-behaving services.
Change-Id: I0f0af283c33502d5d55b27e353b62aec2e301285
Add support for compact address layout. This feature can be enabled
through the ac_layout=1 boot option.
Change-Id: Ie20b808fce32b5c54d0a7e7210e0084a540e9613
Some select queries require a response from device drivers. If a
select call is nonblocking (with a zero timeout), the response to
the caller may have to be deferred until all involved drivers have
responded to the initial query. This is handled just fine.
However, if the select call has a timeout that is so short that it
triggers before all the involved drivers have responded, the
resulting alarm would be discarded, possibly resulting in the call
blocking forever. This fix changes the alarm handler such that if
the alarm triggers too early, the select call is further handled
as though it was nonblocking.
This fix resolves a test77 deadlock on really slow systems.
Change-Id: Ib487c8fe436802c3e11c57355ae0c8480721f06e
- ping(1) triggers warnings about unimplemented exceptions for select;
even if there could be a useful implementation (which is doubtful),
the warnings are not helping anyone right now;
- the clock_t data type has changed.
Change-Id: Ie5b1383e7657e8501f63bb4b9d255c6502567a15
Fix /dev/tty-related issues in tmux(1) by hardcoding the PTY major
in VFS in addition to the TTY major. Even though this is exactly
what we did NOT want to have to do, the actual fix for this issue
is going to take a little longer.
Change-Id: I24c75eaf688b9ebd28e931f2e445b8442cfdac78
The previous approach of storing pointers to messages structures for
thread-blocking sendrec operations relied on several assumptions,
which if violated could lead to odd cases of memory corruption.
With this patch, VFS resets pointers right after use, avoiding that
any dangling pointers are accidentally dereferenced later. This
approach was already used in some cases, but not all of them.
Change-Id: I752d994ea847b46228bd2ccf4e537deceb78fbaf
For dynamically linked executables, the interpreter is passed a
file descriptor of the binary being executed. To this end, VFS
opens the target executable, but opening the file fails if it is
not readable, even when it is executable. With this patch, when
opening the executable, it verifies the X bit rather than the R
bit on the file, thus allowing the execution of dynamically
linked binaries that are executable but not readable.
Add test86 to verify correctness.
Change-Id: If3514add6a33b33d52c05a0a627d757bff118d77
- do not use timers when there is only ever one timer;
- do not include kernel header files for no reason;
- do not reply to notifications ever.
Change-Id: I5817e22c1b46c4e30e5135069df318af0b4f87fd
This patch changes the prefetch API so that file systems must now
provide a set of block numbers, rather than a set of buffers. The
result is a leaner and more well-defined API; linear computation of
the range of blocks to prefetch; duplicates no longer interfering
with the prefetch process; guaranteed inclusion of the block needed
next into the prefetch range; and, limits and policy decisions better
established by libminixfs now actually being moved into libminixfs.
Change-Id: I7e44daf2d2d164bc5e2f1473ad717f3ff0f0a77f
- The lmfs_get_block*(3) API calls may now return an error. The idea
is to encourage a next generation of file system services to do a
better job at dealing with block read errors than the MFS-derived
implementations do. These existing file systems have been changed
to panic immediately upon getting a block read error, in order to
let unchecked errors cause corruption. Note that libbdev already
retries failing I/O operations a few times first.
- The libminixfs block device I/O module (bio.c) now deals properly
with end-of-file conditions on block devices. Since a device or
partition size may not be a multiple of the root file system's block
size, support for partial block retrival has been added, with a new
internal lmfs_get_partial_block(3) call. A new test program,
test85, tests the new handling of EOF conditions when reading,
writing, and memory-mapping a block device.
Change-Id: I05e35b6b8851488328a2679da635ebba0c6d08ce
This patch changes the libminixfs API and implementation such that the
library is at all times aware of how many total and used blocks there
are in the file system. This removes the last upcall of libminixfs
into file systems (fs_blockstats). In the process, make this part of
the libminixfs API a little prettier and more robust. Change file
systems accordingly. Since this change only adds to MFS being unable
to deal with zones and blocks having different sizes, fail to mount
such file systems immediately rather than triggering an assert later.
Change-Id: I078e589c7e1be1fa691cf391bf5dfddd1baf2c86
This removes an implicit requirement for the way the libminixfs API is
to be used, namely that a block is to be marked as dirty only once its
contents have been fully updated, within a single get_block/put_block
window. The requirement may not be appropriate for all file systems.
Change-Id: I6a129d51b1a5e9aec1572039dc7c1c82dd795db5
With this change, the lmfs_get_block*(3) functions allow the caller to
specify that it only wants the block if it is in the cache or the
secondary VM cache. If the block is not found there, the functions
return NULL. Previously, the PREFETCH method would be used to this
end instead, which was both abuse in name and less efficient.
Change-Id: Ieb5a15b67fa25d2008a8eeef9d126ac908fc2395
When VM asks a file system to provide a block to satisfy a page fault
on a file memory mapping, the file system previously had no way to
inform VM that the block is a hole, since there is no corresponding
block on the underlying device. To work around this, MFS and ext2
would actually allocate a block for the hole when asked by VM, which
not only defeats the point of holes in the first place, but also does
not work on read-only file systems. With this patch, a new libminixfs
call allows the file system to inform VM about holes. This issue does
raise the question as to whether the VM cache is using the right data
structures, since there are now two places where we have to fake a
device offset. This will have to be revisited in the future.
The patch changes file systems accordingly, and adds a test to test74.
Change-Id: Ib537d56b3f30a8eb05bc1f63c92b5c7428d18f4c
This patch employs one solution to resolve two independent but related
issues. Both issues are the result of one fundamental aspect of the
way VM's memory mapping works: VM uses its cache to map in blocks for
memory-mapped file regions, and for blocks already in the VM cache, VM
does not go to the file system before mapping them in. To preserve
consistency between the FS and VM caches, VM relies on being informed
about all updates to file contents through the block cache. The two
issues are both the result of VM not being properly informed about
such updates:
1. Once a file system provides libminixfs with an inode association
(inode number + inode offset) for a disk block, this association
is not broken until a new inode association is provided for it.
If a block is freed and reallocated as a metadata (non-inode)
block, its old association is maintained, and may be supplied to
VM's secondary cache. Due to reuse of inodes, it is possible
that the same inode association becomes valid for an actual file
block again. In that case, when that new file is memory-mapped,
under certain circumstances, VM may end up using the metadata
block to satisfy a page fault on the file, due to the stale inode
association. The result is a corrupted memory mapping, with the
application seeing data other than the current file contents
mapped in at the file block.
2. When a hole is created in a file, the underlying block is freed
from the device, but VM is not informed of this update, and thus,
if VM's cache contains the block with its previous inode
association, this block will remain there. As a result, if an
application subsequently memory-maps the file, VM will map in the
old block at the position of the hole, rather than an all-zeroes
block. Thus, again, the result is a corrupted memory mapping.
This patch resolves both issues by making the file system inform the
minixfs library about blocks being freed, so that libminixfs can
break the inode association for that block, both in its own cache and
in the VM cache. Since libminixfs does not know whether VM has the
block in its cache or not, it makes a call to VM for each block being
freed. Thus, this change introduces more calls to VM, but it solves
the correctness issues at hand; optimizations may be introduced
later. On the upside, all freed blocks are now marked as clean,
which should result in fewer blocks being written back to the device,
and the blocks are removed from the caches entirely, which should
result in slightly better cache usage.
This patch is necessary but not sufficient to resolve the situation
with respect to memory mapping of file holes in general. Therefore,
this patch extends test 74 with a (rather particular but effective)
test for the first issue, but not yet with a test for the second one.
This fixes#90.
Change-Id: Iad8b134d2f88a884f15d3fc303e463280749c467
There are currently no devices out there that require this change.
The change is merely needed to support subsequent changes.
Change-Id: I64214c5f46ff4a2260815d15c15e4a17709b9036
There is no reason to keep these tightly coupled data structures
separate. Moreover, there is no reason to have a union of file
descriptor and file pointer, since the second can be derived from
the first. The result are somewhat cleaner VFS internals.
Change-Id: I854da7d8291177878eecfc3077ef0a9e0cc82aaa
This barrier ensures that all fields of an asynchronously sent
message are properly initialized before the message is marked as
valid.
Change-Id: I7b9590c11c4e040c8f992f1dd2581e54201bf214
If an asynchronous message is delivered during an ipc_receive(2) call,
but a failure occurred while copying out the status to the sending
process, then the receiving process would be left in an inconsistent
state, leading to a kernel crash shortly after.
For now, we fix this by altogether ignoring errors while copying out
the status field to the sending process. While this resolves the
kernel crash, it is hardly ideal, since it will likely cause the same
message to be delivered repeatedly. It would be better to disable
asynchronous communication from the sender process altogether, but this
solution requires more changes and thus more testing.
Change-Id: Ib00bf01ad29cdd10a5dee731d4788254d9037a76
Previously, there was a tiny chance that tickdelay(3) would return
early or that it would fail to reinstate a previous alarm.
- sys_setalarm(2) now returns TMR_NEVER instead of 0 for the time
left if no previous alarm was set;
- sys_setalarm(2) now also returns the current time, to allow the
caller to determine whether it got an alarm notification for the
alarm it set or for a previous alarm that has just gone off;
- tickdelay(3) now makes use of these facilities.
Change-Id: Id4f8fe19a61ca8574f43131964e6f0317f613f49
The previous approach of including libraries through the parent
directory's Makefile.inc created linking issues, with libchardriver
not finding snprintf in certain cases. The new approach of including
libraries through the driver's only Makefile is the one used by all
other drivers.
Change-Id: I96e6308e12e54f0fce8ecf58bd061269860d4355
The primary reason for the import is a likely GPL taint of the
original MINIX3 syslogd. As a result, this import may still
have some rough edges.
Change-Id: I5c8d26eca10fc2dd50ecc9eab44a1d483cf068a9
- report correct number of bytes written;
- correctly return partial writes on failure;
- do not overwrite result if there is a pending read.
Change-Id: I92aeeaee1eccb47c2aa2b6666a2f560c3cb17f42
This resolves a problem with ioctl(NIOCGETHSTAT) hanging forever
as identified by Erik van der Kouwe, and possibly many other corner
cases.
Change-Id: I2350c882dc6a0862e16454ec6b6c320d78780bcd
This test connects to a remote HTTP server to retrieve files, using various
chunk sizes and concurrency settings to exercise the network stack. The test
is only performed is USENETWORK=yes. This test requires the following URLs to
remain available: http://test82.minix3.org/test1.txt and
http://test82.minix3.org/test2.bin. The former contains a 'Hello world'
message followed by a newline, the latter all 16-bit values in increasing
order, using big-endian notation.
Change-Id: I696106482fb1658f9657be2b6845a1b37a3d6172
These new tests are largely based on the code from test 56 (UDS). Common code
is moved into a separate file common-socket.c. In some instances the tests
are too strict for TCP/UDP sockets, which may not always react instantly to
whatever happens on the other side (even locally). For these cases, the
ignore_* fields in struct socket_test_info indicate that there needs to be
an exception. There are also tests where it seems the functionality of inet
is either incorrect or incomplete with regard to the POSIX standard. In these
cases, the bug_* fields are used to document the issues while avoiding
failure of the test.
Change-Id: Ia860deb4559d42608790451936b1aade866faebc