This large commit address several issues
- removed 386 directory: Jehanne is 64bit only
- simplified kernel options management
- rewritten boot process
- ported memory related stuff from 9front's 9/pc64
- removed devacpi
- removed old code
- deep refactor of awake syscall
- removed MCACHE support for mount
- fix libc's setjmp/longjmp
This commit introduce a special rendezvous point at (void*)~0 that
cannot be reached by any process, since it's not added to the
rendezvous group.
This turns the rendezvous syscall to a cheap way to block until
either a note or a wakeup from awake(2) occurs.
This new feature is used in libc's sleep: the test qa/kern/fork_chain
has shown that using a stack address as rendezvous point is not safe enougth
for sleep, since two different process forked from the same function can
call sleep with the same base pointer. This lead the wakeup variable in
jehanne_sleep to have the same address on both process.
TODO add a test that show this behaviour in the old code.
To enable -O2 compilation we have to disable some optimizations:
- strict-aliasing (TODO: introduce required unions to enable this)
- aggressive-loop-optimizations
- array-bounds
Affected builds are
- sys/src/cmd/dossrv/build.json
- sys/src/cmd/ip/build.json
- sys/src/lib/authsrv/build.json
- sys/src/lib/memdraw/build.json
With this commit all functions declared in libc.h have been renamed
with the "jehanne_" prefix. This is done for several reason:
- it removes conflicts during symbol resolution when linking
standard C libraries like newlib or musl
- it allows programs depending on a standard C library to directly
link to a library depending on our non standard libc (eg libsec).
To ease transiction two files are provided:
- sys/include/lib9.h that can be included instead of <libc.h> to use
the old names (via a simple set of macros)
- sys/src/lib/c/lib9.c that can be compiled with a program where the
macro provided by lib9.h are too dumb (see for example rc or grep).
In the kernel port/lib.h has been modified accordingly and some of
the functions it directly provides has been renamed too (eg malloc
in qmalloc.c and print in devcons.c).