genode/repos/base-sel4/lib/mk/spec/x86_32/syscall-sel4.mk

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2014-10-15 18:11:17 +02:00
#
# Create prerequisites for building Genode for seL4
#
# Prior building Genode programs for seL4, the kernel bindings needed are
# symlinked to the build directory.
#
#
# We do this also in the first build stage to ensure that the kernel
# port, if missing, is added to the missing-ports list of this stage.
#
LIBSEL4_DIR := $(call select_from_ports,sel4)/src/kernel/sel4/libsel4
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LIBSEL4_AUTO:= $(call select_from_ports,sel4)/src/kernel/sel4/configs/pc99
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#
# Execute the rules in this file only at the second build stage when we know
# about the complete build settings, e.g., the 'CROSS_DEV_PREFIX'.
#
ifeq ($(called_from_lib_mk),yes)
#
# Make seL4 kernel API headers available to the Genode build system
#
# We have to create symbolic links of the content of seL4's 'include/sel4' and
# 'include_arch/<arch>/sel4' directories into our local build directory.
#
sel4: update to version 2.1 This patch updates seL4 from the experimental branch of one year ago to the master branch of version 2.1. The transition has the following implications. In contrast to the experimental branch, the master branch has no way to manually define the allocation of kernel objects within untyped memory ranges. Instead, the kernel maintains a built-in allocation policy. This policy rules out the deallocation of once-used parts of untyped memory. The only way to reuse memory is to revoke the entire untyped memory range. Consequently, we cannot share a large untyped memory range for kernel objects of different protection domains. In order to reuse memory at a reasonably fine granularity, we need to split the initial untyped memory ranges into small chunks that can be individually revoked. Those chunks are called "untyped pages". An untyped page is a 4 KiB untyped memory region. The bootstrapping of core has to employ a two-stage allocation approach now. For creating the initial kernel objects for core, which remain static during the entire lifetime of the system, kernel objects are created directly out of the initial untyped memory regions as reported by the kernel. The so-called "initial untyped pool" keeps track of the consumption of those untyped memory ranges by mimicking the kernel's internal allocation policy. Kernel objects created this way can be of any size. For example the phys CNode, which is used to store page-frame capabilities is 16 MiB in size. Also, core's CSpace uses a relatively large CNode. After the initial setup phase, all remaining untyped memory is turned into untyped pages. From this point on, new created kernel objects cannot exceed 4 KiB in size because one kernel object cannot span multiple untyped memory regions. The capability selectors for untyped pages are organized similarly to those of page-frame capabilities. There is a new 2nd-level CNode (UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE) that is dimensioned according to the maximum amount of physical memory (1M entries, each entry representing 4 KiB). The CNode is organized such that an index into the CNode directly corresponds to the physical frame number of the underlying memory. This way, we can easily determine a untyped page selector for any physical addresses, i.e., for revoking the kernel objects allocated at a specific physical page. The downside is the need for another 16 MiB chunk of meta data. Also, we need to keep in mind that this approach won't scale to 64-bit systems. We will eventually need to replace the PHYS_CORE_CNODE and UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE by CNode hierarchies to model a sparsely populated CNode. The size constrain of kernel objects has the immediate implication that the VM CSpaces of protection domains must be organized via several levels of CNodes. I.e., as the top-level CNode of core has a size of 2^12, the remaining 20 PD-specific CSpace address bits are organized as a 2nd-level 2^4 padding CNode, a 3rd-level 2^8 CNode, and several 4th-level 2^8 leaf CNodes. The latter contain the actual selectors for the page tables and page-table entries of the respective PD. As another slight difference from the experimental branch, the master branch requires the explicit assignment of page directories to an ASID pool. Besides the adjustment to the new seL4 version, the patch introduces a dedicated type for capability selectors. Previously, we just used to represent them as unsigned integer values, which became increasingly confusing. The new type 'Cap_sel' is a PD-local capability selector. The type 'Cnode_index' is an index into a CNode (which is not generally not the entire CSpace of the PD). Fixes #1887
2016-02-03 14:50:44 +01:00
SEL4_ARCH_INCLUDES := simple_types.h types.h constants.h objecttype.h \
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functions.h syscalls.h invocation.h deprecated.h \
types_gen.h faults.h
2014-10-15 18:11:17 +02:00
sel4: update to version 2.1 This patch updates seL4 from the experimental branch of one year ago to the master branch of version 2.1. The transition has the following implications. In contrast to the experimental branch, the master branch has no way to manually define the allocation of kernel objects within untyped memory ranges. Instead, the kernel maintains a built-in allocation policy. This policy rules out the deallocation of once-used parts of untyped memory. The only way to reuse memory is to revoke the entire untyped memory range. Consequently, we cannot share a large untyped memory range for kernel objects of different protection domains. In order to reuse memory at a reasonably fine granularity, we need to split the initial untyped memory ranges into small chunks that can be individually revoked. Those chunks are called "untyped pages". An untyped page is a 4 KiB untyped memory region. The bootstrapping of core has to employ a two-stage allocation approach now. For creating the initial kernel objects for core, which remain static during the entire lifetime of the system, kernel objects are created directly out of the initial untyped memory regions as reported by the kernel. The so-called "initial untyped pool" keeps track of the consumption of those untyped memory ranges by mimicking the kernel's internal allocation policy. Kernel objects created this way can be of any size. For example the phys CNode, which is used to store page-frame capabilities is 16 MiB in size. Also, core's CSpace uses a relatively large CNode. After the initial setup phase, all remaining untyped memory is turned into untyped pages. From this point on, new created kernel objects cannot exceed 4 KiB in size because one kernel object cannot span multiple untyped memory regions. The capability selectors for untyped pages are organized similarly to those of page-frame capabilities. There is a new 2nd-level CNode (UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE) that is dimensioned according to the maximum amount of physical memory (1M entries, each entry representing 4 KiB). The CNode is organized such that an index into the CNode directly corresponds to the physical frame number of the underlying memory. This way, we can easily determine a untyped page selector for any physical addresses, i.e., for revoking the kernel objects allocated at a specific physical page. The downside is the need for another 16 MiB chunk of meta data. Also, we need to keep in mind that this approach won't scale to 64-bit systems. We will eventually need to replace the PHYS_CORE_CNODE and UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE by CNode hierarchies to model a sparsely populated CNode. The size constrain of kernel objects has the immediate implication that the VM CSpaces of protection domains must be organized via several levels of CNodes. I.e., as the top-level CNode of core has a size of 2^12, the remaining 20 PD-specific CSpace address bits are organized as a 2nd-level 2^4 padding CNode, a 3rd-level 2^8 CNode, and several 4th-level 2^8 leaf CNodes. The latter contain the actual selectors for the page tables and page-table entries of the respective PD. As another slight difference from the experimental branch, the master branch requires the explicit assignment of page directories to an ASID pool. Besides the adjustment to the new seL4 version, the patch introduces a dedicated type for capability selectors. Previously, we just used to represent them as unsigned integer values, which became increasingly confusing. The new type 'Cap_sel' is a PD-local capability selector. The type 'Cnode_index' is an index into a CNode (which is not generally not the entire CSpace of the PD). Fixes #1887
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ARCH_INCLUDES := objecttype.h types.h constants.h functions.h deprecated.h \
pfIPC.h syscalls.h exIPC.h invocation.h simple_types.h
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INCLUDES := objecttype.h types.h bootinfo.h bootinfo_types.h errors.h \
constants.h messages.h sel4.h macros.h simple_types.h types_gen.h \
syscall.h invocation.h shared_types_gen.h debug_assert.h \
shared_types.h sel4.h deprecated.h autoconf.h syscalls.h faults.h
PLAT_API_INCLUDES := constants.h
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Disambiguate kernel-specific file names This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries. Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4 build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'. This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet. As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux, nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to make this feature easily available. This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused for many years now. Issue #2190
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INCLUDE_SYMLINKS += $(addprefix include/sel4/, $(INCLUDES))
INCLUDE_SYMLINKS += $(addprefix include/sel4/arch/, $(ARCH_INCLUDES))
INCLUDE_SYMLINKS += $(addprefix include/sel4/sel4_arch/,$(SEL4_ARCH_INCLUDES))
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INCLUDE_SYMLINKS += $(addprefix include/sel4/plat/api/, $(PLAT_API_INCLUDES))
Disambiguate kernel-specific file names This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries. Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4 build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'. This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet. As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux, nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to make this feature easily available. This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused for many years now. Issue #2190
2016-12-10 01:30:38 +01:00
INCLUDE_SYMLINKS += include/interfaces/sel4_client.h
sel4: update to version 2.1 This patch updates seL4 from the experimental branch of one year ago to the master branch of version 2.1. The transition has the following implications. In contrast to the experimental branch, the master branch has no way to manually define the allocation of kernel objects within untyped memory ranges. Instead, the kernel maintains a built-in allocation policy. This policy rules out the deallocation of once-used parts of untyped memory. The only way to reuse memory is to revoke the entire untyped memory range. Consequently, we cannot share a large untyped memory range for kernel objects of different protection domains. In order to reuse memory at a reasonably fine granularity, we need to split the initial untyped memory ranges into small chunks that can be individually revoked. Those chunks are called "untyped pages". An untyped page is a 4 KiB untyped memory region. The bootstrapping of core has to employ a two-stage allocation approach now. For creating the initial kernel objects for core, which remain static during the entire lifetime of the system, kernel objects are created directly out of the initial untyped memory regions as reported by the kernel. The so-called "initial untyped pool" keeps track of the consumption of those untyped memory ranges by mimicking the kernel's internal allocation policy. Kernel objects created this way can be of any size. For example the phys CNode, which is used to store page-frame capabilities is 16 MiB in size. Also, core's CSpace uses a relatively large CNode. After the initial setup phase, all remaining untyped memory is turned into untyped pages. From this point on, new created kernel objects cannot exceed 4 KiB in size because one kernel object cannot span multiple untyped memory regions. The capability selectors for untyped pages are organized similarly to those of page-frame capabilities. There is a new 2nd-level CNode (UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE) that is dimensioned according to the maximum amount of physical memory (1M entries, each entry representing 4 KiB). The CNode is organized such that an index into the CNode directly corresponds to the physical frame number of the underlying memory. This way, we can easily determine a untyped page selector for any physical addresses, i.e., for revoking the kernel objects allocated at a specific physical page. The downside is the need for another 16 MiB chunk of meta data. Also, we need to keep in mind that this approach won't scale to 64-bit systems. We will eventually need to replace the PHYS_CORE_CNODE and UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE by CNode hierarchies to model a sparsely populated CNode. The size constrain of kernel objects has the immediate implication that the VM CSpaces of protection domains must be organized via several levels of CNodes. I.e., as the top-level CNode of core has a size of 2^12, the remaining 20 PD-specific CSpace address bits are organized as a 2nd-level 2^4 padding CNode, a 3rd-level 2^8 CNode, and several 4th-level 2^8 leaf CNodes. The latter contain the actual selectors for the page tables and page-table entries of the respective PD. As another slight difference from the experimental branch, the master branch requires the explicit assignment of page directories to an ASID pool. Besides the adjustment to the new seL4 version, the patch introduces a dedicated type for capability selectors. Previously, we just used to represent them as unsigned integer values, which became increasingly confusing. The new type 'Cap_sel' is a PD-local capability selector. The type 'Cnode_index' is an index into a CNode (which is not generally not the entire CSpace of the PD). Fixes #1887
2016-02-03 14:50:44 +01:00
all: $(INCLUDE_SYMLINKS)
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#
# Plain symlinks to existing headers
#
Disambiguate kernel-specific file names This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries. Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4 build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'. This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet. As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux, nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to make this feature easily available. This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused for many years now. Issue #2190
2016-12-10 01:30:38 +01:00
include/sel4/sel4_arch/%.h: $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/sel4_arch_include/ia32/sel4/sel4_arch/%.h
sel4: update to version 2.1 This patch updates seL4 from the experimental branch of one year ago to the master branch of version 2.1. The transition has the following implications. In contrast to the experimental branch, the master branch has no way to manually define the allocation of kernel objects within untyped memory ranges. Instead, the kernel maintains a built-in allocation policy. This policy rules out the deallocation of once-used parts of untyped memory. The only way to reuse memory is to revoke the entire untyped memory range. Consequently, we cannot share a large untyped memory range for kernel objects of different protection domains. In order to reuse memory at a reasonably fine granularity, we need to split the initial untyped memory ranges into small chunks that can be individually revoked. Those chunks are called "untyped pages". An untyped page is a 4 KiB untyped memory region. The bootstrapping of core has to employ a two-stage allocation approach now. For creating the initial kernel objects for core, which remain static during the entire lifetime of the system, kernel objects are created directly out of the initial untyped memory regions as reported by the kernel. The so-called "initial untyped pool" keeps track of the consumption of those untyped memory ranges by mimicking the kernel's internal allocation policy. Kernel objects created this way can be of any size. For example the phys CNode, which is used to store page-frame capabilities is 16 MiB in size. Also, core's CSpace uses a relatively large CNode. After the initial setup phase, all remaining untyped memory is turned into untyped pages. From this point on, new created kernel objects cannot exceed 4 KiB in size because one kernel object cannot span multiple untyped memory regions. The capability selectors for untyped pages are organized similarly to those of page-frame capabilities. There is a new 2nd-level CNode (UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE) that is dimensioned according to the maximum amount of physical memory (1M entries, each entry representing 4 KiB). The CNode is organized such that an index into the CNode directly corresponds to the physical frame number of the underlying memory. This way, we can easily determine a untyped page selector for any physical addresses, i.e., for revoking the kernel objects allocated at a specific physical page. The downside is the need for another 16 MiB chunk of meta data. Also, we need to keep in mind that this approach won't scale to 64-bit systems. We will eventually need to replace the PHYS_CORE_CNODE and UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE by CNode hierarchies to model a sparsely populated CNode. The size constrain of kernel objects has the immediate implication that the VM CSpaces of protection domains must be organized via several levels of CNodes. I.e., as the top-level CNode of core has a size of 2^12, the remaining 20 PD-specific CSpace address bits are organized as a 2nd-level 2^4 padding CNode, a 3rd-level 2^8 CNode, and several 4th-level 2^8 leaf CNodes. The latter contain the actual selectors for the page tables and page-table entries of the respective PD. As another slight difference from the experimental branch, the master branch requires the explicit assignment of page directories to an ASID pool. Besides the adjustment to the new seL4 version, the patch introduces a dedicated type for capability selectors. Previously, we just used to represent them as unsigned integer values, which became increasingly confusing. The new type 'Cap_sel' is a PD-local capability selector. The type 'Cnode_index' is an index into a CNode (which is not generally not the entire CSpace of the PD). Fixes #1887
2016-02-03 14:50:44 +01:00
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
$(VERBOSE)ln -sf $< $@
Disambiguate kernel-specific file names This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries. Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4 build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'. This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet. As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux, nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to make this feature easily available. This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused for many years now. Issue #2190
2016-12-10 01:30:38 +01:00
include/sel4/arch/%.h: $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/arch_include/x86/sel4/arch/%.h
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
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$(VERBOSE)ln -sf $< $@
Disambiguate kernel-specific file names This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries. Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4 build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'. This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet. As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux, nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to make this feature easily available. This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused for many years now. Issue #2190
2016-12-10 01:30:38 +01:00
include/sel4/autoconf.h: $(LIBSEL4_AUTO)/autoconf.h
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
$(VERBOSE)ln -sf $< $@
Disambiguate kernel-specific file names This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries. Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4 build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'. This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet. As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux, nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to make this feature easily available. This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused for many years now. Issue #2190
2016-12-10 01:30:38 +01:00
include/sel4/%.h: $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/include/sel4/%.h
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
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$(VERBOSE)ln -sf $< $@
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include/sel4/plat/api/%.h: $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/sel4_plat_include/pc99/sel4/plat/api/%.h
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
$(VERBOSE)ln -sf $< $@
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#
# Generated headers
#
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include/sel4/%.pbf: $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/include/sel4/%.bf include/sel4/autoconf.h
$(MSG_CONVERT)$(notdir $@)
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
$(VERBOSE)$(CPP) -P $< >$@
include/sel4/sel4_arch/types.pbf: $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/sel4_arch_include/ia32/sel4/sel4_arch/types.bf include/sel4/autoconf.h
$(MSG_CONVERT)$(notdir $@)
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
$(VERBOSE)$(CPP) -Iinclude/sel4 -I$(LIBSEL4_DIR)/arch_include/x86 -P $< >$@
include/sel4/types_gen.h: include/sel4/types_32.pbf
$(MSG_CONVERT)$(notdir $@)
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
$(VERBOSE)python $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/tools/bitfield_gen.py \
--environment libsel4 "$<" $@
include/sel4/shared_types_gen.h: include/sel4/shared_types_32.pbf
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$(MSG_CONVERT)$(notdir $@)
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
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$(VERBOSE)python $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/tools/bitfield_gen.py \
--environment libsel4 "$<" $@
2017-06-12 12:41:38 +02:00
include/sel4/sel4_arch/types_gen.h: include/sel4/sel4_arch/types.pbf
sel4: update to version 2.1 This patch updates seL4 from the experimental branch of one year ago to the master branch of version 2.1. The transition has the following implications. In contrast to the experimental branch, the master branch has no way to manually define the allocation of kernel objects within untyped memory ranges. Instead, the kernel maintains a built-in allocation policy. This policy rules out the deallocation of once-used parts of untyped memory. The only way to reuse memory is to revoke the entire untyped memory range. Consequently, we cannot share a large untyped memory range for kernel objects of different protection domains. In order to reuse memory at a reasonably fine granularity, we need to split the initial untyped memory ranges into small chunks that can be individually revoked. Those chunks are called "untyped pages". An untyped page is a 4 KiB untyped memory region. The bootstrapping of core has to employ a two-stage allocation approach now. For creating the initial kernel objects for core, which remain static during the entire lifetime of the system, kernel objects are created directly out of the initial untyped memory regions as reported by the kernel. The so-called "initial untyped pool" keeps track of the consumption of those untyped memory ranges by mimicking the kernel's internal allocation policy. Kernel objects created this way can be of any size. For example the phys CNode, which is used to store page-frame capabilities is 16 MiB in size. Also, core's CSpace uses a relatively large CNode. After the initial setup phase, all remaining untyped memory is turned into untyped pages. From this point on, new created kernel objects cannot exceed 4 KiB in size because one kernel object cannot span multiple untyped memory regions. The capability selectors for untyped pages are organized similarly to those of page-frame capabilities. There is a new 2nd-level CNode (UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE) that is dimensioned according to the maximum amount of physical memory (1M entries, each entry representing 4 KiB). The CNode is organized such that an index into the CNode directly corresponds to the physical frame number of the underlying memory. This way, we can easily determine a untyped page selector for any physical addresses, i.e., for revoking the kernel objects allocated at a specific physical page. The downside is the need for another 16 MiB chunk of meta data. Also, we need to keep in mind that this approach won't scale to 64-bit systems. We will eventually need to replace the PHYS_CORE_CNODE and UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE by CNode hierarchies to model a sparsely populated CNode. The size constrain of kernel objects has the immediate implication that the VM CSpaces of protection domains must be organized via several levels of CNodes. I.e., as the top-level CNode of core has a size of 2^12, the remaining 20 PD-specific CSpace address bits are organized as a 2nd-level 2^4 padding CNode, a 3rd-level 2^8 CNode, and several 4th-level 2^8 leaf CNodes. The latter contain the actual selectors for the page tables and page-table entries of the respective PD. As another slight difference from the experimental branch, the master branch requires the explicit assignment of page directories to an ASID pool. Besides the adjustment to the new seL4 version, the patch introduces a dedicated type for capability selectors. Previously, we just used to represent them as unsigned integer values, which became increasingly confusing. The new type 'Cap_sel' is a PD-local capability selector. The type 'Cnode_index' is an index into a CNode (which is not generally not the entire CSpace of the PD). Fixes #1887
2016-02-03 14:50:44 +01:00
$(MSG_CONVERT)$(notdir $@)
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
$(VERBOSE)python $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/tools/bitfield_gen.py \
--environment libsel4 "$<" $@
2017-06-12 12:41:38 +02:00
include/sel4/syscall.h: $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/include/api/syscall.xml $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/include/api/syscall.xsd
2014-10-15 18:11:17 +02:00
$(MSG_CONVERT)$(notdir $@)
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
2014-10-15 18:11:17 +02:00
$(VERBOSE)python $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/tools/syscall_header_gen.py \
--xml $< --libsel4_header $@
Disambiguate kernel-specific file names This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries. Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4 build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'. This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet. As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux, nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to make this feature easily available. This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused for many years now. Issue #2190
2016-12-10 01:30:38 +01:00
include/sel4/invocation.h: $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/include/interfaces/sel4.xml
2014-10-16 20:29:41 +02:00
$(MSG_CONVERT)$(notdir $@)
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
2014-10-16 20:29:41 +02:00
$(VERBOSE)python $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/tools/invocation_header_gen.py \
--xml $< --libsel4 --dest $@
Disambiguate kernel-specific file names This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries. Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4 build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'. This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet. As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux, nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to make this feature easily available. This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused for many years now. Issue #2190
2016-12-10 01:30:38 +01:00
include/sel4/sel4_arch/invocation.h: $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/sel4_arch_include/ia32/interfaces/sel4arch.xml
sel4: update to version 2.1 This patch updates seL4 from the experimental branch of one year ago to the master branch of version 2.1. The transition has the following implications. In contrast to the experimental branch, the master branch has no way to manually define the allocation of kernel objects within untyped memory ranges. Instead, the kernel maintains a built-in allocation policy. This policy rules out the deallocation of once-used parts of untyped memory. The only way to reuse memory is to revoke the entire untyped memory range. Consequently, we cannot share a large untyped memory range for kernel objects of different protection domains. In order to reuse memory at a reasonably fine granularity, we need to split the initial untyped memory ranges into small chunks that can be individually revoked. Those chunks are called "untyped pages". An untyped page is a 4 KiB untyped memory region. The bootstrapping of core has to employ a two-stage allocation approach now. For creating the initial kernel objects for core, which remain static during the entire lifetime of the system, kernel objects are created directly out of the initial untyped memory regions as reported by the kernel. The so-called "initial untyped pool" keeps track of the consumption of those untyped memory ranges by mimicking the kernel's internal allocation policy. Kernel objects created this way can be of any size. For example the phys CNode, which is used to store page-frame capabilities is 16 MiB in size. Also, core's CSpace uses a relatively large CNode. After the initial setup phase, all remaining untyped memory is turned into untyped pages. From this point on, new created kernel objects cannot exceed 4 KiB in size because one kernel object cannot span multiple untyped memory regions. The capability selectors for untyped pages are organized similarly to those of page-frame capabilities. There is a new 2nd-level CNode (UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE) that is dimensioned according to the maximum amount of physical memory (1M entries, each entry representing 4 KiB). The CNode is organized such that an index into the CNode directly corresponds to the physical frame number of the underlying memory. This way, we can easily determine a untyped page selector for any physical addresses, i.e., for revoking the kernel objects allocated at a specific physical page. The downside is the need for another 16 MiB chunk of meta data. Also, we need to keep in mind that this approach won't scale to 64-bit systems. We will eventually need to replace the PHYS_CORE_CNODE and UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE by CNode hierarchies to model a sparsely populated CNode. The size constrain of kernel objects has the immediate implication that the VM CSpaces of protection domains must be organized via several levels of CNodes. I.e., as the top-level CNode of core has a size of 2^12, the remaining 20 PD-specific CSpace address bits are organized as a 2nd-level 2^4 padding CNode, a 3rd-level 2^8 CNode, and several 4th-level 2^8 leaf CNodes. The latter contain the actual selectors for the page tables and page-table entries of the respective PD. As another slight difference from the experimental branch, the master branch requires the explicit assignment of page directories to an ASID pool. Besides the adjustment to the new seL4 version, the patch introduces a dedicated type for capability selectors. Previously, we just used to represent them as unsigned integer values, which became increasingly confusing. The new type 'Cap_sel' is a PD-local capability selector. The type 'Cnode_index' is an index into a CNode (which is not generally not the entire CSpace of the PD). Fixes #1887
2016-02-03 14:50:44 +01:00
$(MSG_CONVERT)$(notdir $@)
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
$(VERBOSE)python $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/tools/invocation_header_gen.py \
--xml $< --libsel4 --sel4_arch --dest $@
sel4: update to version 2.1 This patch updates seL4 from the experimental branch of one year ago to the master branch of version 2.1. The transition has the following implications. In contrast to the experimental branch, the master branch has no way to manually define the allocation of kernel objects within untyped memory ranges. Instead, the kernel maintains a built-in allocation policy. This policy rules out the deallocation of once-used parts of untyped memory. The only way to reuse memory is to revoke the entire untyped memory range. Consequently, we cannot share a large untyped memory range for kernel objects of different protection domains. In order to reuse memory at a reasonably fine granularity, we need to split the initial untyped memory ranges into small chunks that can be individually revoked. Those chunks are called "untyped pages". An untyped page is a 4 KiB untyped memory region. The bootstrapping of core has to employ a two-stage allocation approach now. For creating the initial kernel objects for core, which remain static during the entire lifetime of the system, kernel objects are created directly out of the initial untyped memory regions as reported by the kernel. The so-called "initial untyped pool" keeps track of the consumption of those untyped memory ranges by mimicking the kernel's internal allocation policy. Kernel objects created this way can be of any size. For example the phys CNode, which is used to store page-frame capabilities is 16 MiB in size. Also, core's CSpace uses a relatively large CNode. After the initial setup phase, all remaining untyped memory is turned into untyped pages. From this point on, new created kernel objects cannot exceed 4 KiB in size because one kernel object cannot span multiple untyped memory regions. The capability selectors for untyped pages are organized similarly to those of page-frame capabilities. There is a new 2nd-level CNode (UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE) that is dimensioned according to the maximum amount of physical memory (1M entries, each entry representing 4 KiB). The CNode is organized such that an index into the CNode directly corresponds to the physical frame number of the underlying memory. This way, we can easily determine a untyped page selector for any physical addresses, i.e., for revoking the kernel objects allocated at a specific physical page. The downside is the need for another 16 MiB chunk of meta data. Also, we need to keep in mind that this approach won't scale to 64-bit systems. We will eventually need to replace the PHYS_CORE_CNODE and UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE by CNode hierarchies to model a sparsely populated CNode. The size constrain of kernel objects has the immediate implication that the VM CSpaces of protection domains must be organized via several levels of CNodes. I.e., as the top-level CNode of core has a size of 2^12, the remaining 20 PD-specific CSpace address bits are organized as a 2nd-level 2^4 padding CNode, a 3rd-level 2^8 CNode, and several 4th-level 2^8 leaf CNodes. The latter contain the actual selectors for the page tables and page-table entries of the respective PD. As another slight difference from the experimental branch, the master branch requires the explicit assignment of page directories to an ASID pool. Besides the adjustment to the new seL4 version, the patch introduces a dedicated type for capability selectors. Previously, we just used to represent them as unsigned integer values, which became increasingly confusing. The new type 'Cap_sel' is a PD-local capability selector. The type 'Cnode_index' is an index into a CNode (which is not generally not the entire CSpace of the PD). Fixes #1887
2016-02-03 14:50:44 +01:00
Disambiguate kernel-specific file names This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries. Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4 build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'. This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet. As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux, nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to make this feature easily available. This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused for many years now. Issue #2190
2016-12-10 01:30:38 +01:00
include/sel4/arch/invocation.h: $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/arch_include/x86/interfaces/sel4arch.xml
2014-10-16 20:29:41 +02:00
$(MSG_CONVERT)arch/$(notdir $@)
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
2014-10-16 20:29:41 +02:00
$(VERBOSE)python $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/tools/invocation_header_gen.py \
--xml $< --libsel4 --arch --dest $@
sel4: update to version 2.1 This patch updates seL4 from the experimental branch of one year ago to the master branch of version 2.1. The transition has the following implications. In contrast to the experimental branch, the master branch has no way to manually define the allocation of kernel objects within untyped memory ranges. Instead, the kernel maintains a built-in allocation policy. This policy rules out the deallocation of once-used parts of untyped memory. The only way to reuse memory is to revoke the entire untyped memory range. Consequently, we cannot share a large untyped memory range for kernel objects of different protection domains. In order to reuse memory at a reasonably fine granularity, we need to split the initial untyped memory ranges into small chunks that can be individually revoked. Those chunks are called "untyped pages". An untyped page is a 4 KiB untyped memory region. The bootstrapping of core has to employ a two-stage allocation approach now. For creating the initial kernel objects for core, which remain static during the entire lifetime of the system, kernel objects are created directly out of the initial untyped memory regions as reported by the kernel. The so-called "initial untyped pool" keeps track of the consumption of those untyped memory ranges by mimicking the kernel's internal allocation policy. Kernel objects created this way can be of any size. For example the phys CNode, which is used to store page-frame capabilities is 16 MiB in size. Also, core's CSpace uses a relatively large CNode. After the initial setup phase, all remaining untyped memory is turned into untyped pages. From this point on, new created kernel objects cannot exceed 4 KiB in size because one kernel object cannot span multiple untyped memory regions. The capability selectors for untyped pages are organized similarly to those of page-frame capabilities. There is a new 2nd-level CNode (UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE) that is dimensioned according to the maximum amount of physical memory (1M entries, each entry representing 4 KiB). The CNode is organized such that an index into the CNode directly corresponds to the physical frame number of the underlying memory. This way, we can easily determine a untyped page selector for any physical addresses, i.e., for revoking the kernel objects allocated at a specific physical page. The downside is the need for another 16 MiB chunk of meta data. Also, we need to keep in mind that this approach won't scale to 64-bit systems. We will eventually need to replace the PHYS_CORE_CNODE and UNTYPED_CORE_CNODE by CNode hierarchies to model a sparsely populated CNode. The size constrain of kernel objects has the immediate implication that the VM CSpaces of protection domains must be organized via several levels of CNodes. I.e., as the top-level CNode of core has a size of 2^12, the remaining 20 PD-specific CSpace address bits are organized as a 2nd-level 2^4 padding CNode, a 3rd-level 2^8 CNode, and several 4th-level 2^8 leaf CNodes. The latter contain the actual selectors for the page tables and page-table entries of the respective PD. As another slight difference from the experimental branch, the master branch requires the explicit assignment of page directories to an ASID pool. Besides the adjustment to the new seL4 version, the patch introduces a dedicated type for capability selectors. Previously, we just used to represent them as unsigned integer values, which became increasingly confusing. The new type 'Cap_sel' is a PD-local capability selector. The type 'Cnode_index' is an index into a CNode (which is not generally not the entire CSpace of the PD). Fixes #1887
2016-02-03 14:50:44 +01:00
SEL4_CLIENT_H_SRC := $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/sel4_arch_include/ia32/interfaces/sel4arch.xml \
$(LIBSEL4_DIR)/arch_include/x86/interfaces/sel4arch.xml \
$(LIBSEL4_DIR)/include/interfaces/sel4.xml
2014-10-16 20:29:41 +02:00
Disambiguate kernel-specific file names This patch removes possible ambiguities with respect to the naming of kernel-dependent binaries and libraries. It also removes the use of kernel-specific global side effects from the build system. The reach of kernel-specific peculiarities has thereby become limited to the actual users of the respective 'syscall-<kernel>' libraries. Kernel-specific build artifacts are no longer generated at magic places within the build directory (like okl4's includes, or the L4 build directories of L4/Fiasco and Fiasco.OC, or the build directories of various kernels). Instead, such artifacts have been largely moved to the libcache. E.g., the former '<build-dir>/l4/' build directory for the L4 build system resides at '<build-dir>/var/libcache/syscall-foc/build/'. This way, the location is unique to the kernel. Note that various tools are still generated somewhat arbitrarily under '<build-dir>/tool/' as there is no proper formalism for building host tools yet. As the result of this work, it has become possible to use a joint Genode build directory that is usable with all kernels of a given hardware platform. E.g., on x86_32, one can now seamlessly switch between linux, nova, sel4, okl4, fiasco, foc, and pistachio without rebuilding any components except for core, the kernel, the dynamic linker, and the timer driver. At the current stage, such a build directory must still be created manually. A change of the 'create_builddir' tool will follow to make this feature easily available. This patch also simplifies various 'run/boot_dir' plugins by removing the option for an externally hosted kernel. This option remained unused for many years now. Issue #2190
2016-12-10 01:30:38 +01:00
include/interfaces/sel4_client.h: $(SEL4_CLIENT_H_SRC)
2014-10-16 20:29:41 +02:00
$(MSG_CONVERT)$(notdir $@)
$(VERBOSE)mkdir -p $(dir $@)
2014-10-16 20:29:41 +02:00
$(VERBOSE)python $(LIBSEL4_DIR)/tools/syscall_stub_gen.py \
--buffer -a ia32 --word-size 32 -o $@ $(SEL4_CLIENT_H_SRC)
2014-10-15 18:11:17 +02:00
endif