Release notes for version 19.11

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===============================================
Release notes for the Genode OS Framework 19.11
===============================================
Genode Labs
On our [https://genode.org/about/road-map - road map] for this year, we stated
"bridging worlds" as our guiding theme of 2019. The current release pays
tribute to this ambition on several accounts.
First, acknowledging the role of POSIX in the real world outside the heavens
of Genode, the release vastly improves our (optional) C runtime with respect
to the emulation of POSIX signals, execve, and ioctl calls. With the line of
work described in Section [C runtime with improved POSIX compatibility], we
hope to greatly reduce the friction when porting and hosting existing
application software directly on Genode.
Second, we identified the process of porting or developing application
software worth improving. Our existing tools were primarily geared to
operating-system development, not application development. Application
developers demand different work flows and tools, including the freedom to use
a build system of their choice.
Section [New tooling for bridging existing build systems with Genode]
introduces our new take on this productivity issue.
Third, in cases where the porting of software to Genode is considered
infeasible, virtualization comes to the rescue. With the current release, a
new virtual machine monitor for the 64-bit ARM architecture enters the
framework. It is presented in Section [Virtualization of 64-bit ARM platforms].
As another goal for 2019, we envisioned a solution for block-level device
encryption, which is a highly anticipated feature among Genode users. We are
proud to present the preliminary result of our year-long development in
Section [Preliminary block-device encrypter].
Preliminary block-device encrypter
##################################
Over the past year, we worked on implementing a block-device encryption
component that makes use of the
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPARK_(programming_language) - SPARK]
programming language for its core logic. In contrast to common
block-device encryption techniques where normally is little done besides
the encryption of the on-disk blocks, the _consistent block encrypter (CBE)_
aims for more. It combines multiple techniques to ensure integrity -
the detection of unauthorized modifications of the block-device -
and robustness against data loss. Robustness is achieved by keeping snapshots
of old states of the device that remain unaffected by the further operation of
the device. A copy-on-write mechanism (only the differential changes to the
last snapshot are stored) is employed to maintain this snapshot history with
low overhead. To be able to access all states of the device in the same manner,
some kind of translation from virtual blocks to blocks on the device is needed.
Hash-trees, where each node contains the hash of its sub-nodes, combine the
aspect of translating blocks and ensuring their integrity in an elegant way.
During the tree traversal, the computed hash of each node can be easily checked
against the hash stored in the parent node.
The CBE does not perform any cryptography by itself but delegates
cryptographic operations to another entity. It neither knows nor cares about
the used algorithm. Of all the nodes in the virtual block device (VBD), only
the leaf nodes, which contain the data, are encrypted. All other nodes, which
only contain meta-data, are stored unencrypted.
Design
------
As depicted in Figure [cbe_trees], all information describing the various
parts of the CBE is stored in the superblock. The referenced VBD is a set of
several hash trees, each representing a certain device state including the
current working state. Only the tree of the current working state is used to
write data to the block device. All other trees represent snapshots of older
states and are immutable. Each stored device state has a generation number
that provides the chronological order of the states.
As you can see, in the depicted situation, there exist four device states - the
snapshot with generation 3 is the oldest, followed by two newer snapshots and
generation 6 that marks the working state of the virtual device. The tree with
generation 6 is the current working tree. Each tree contains all changes done
to the VBD since the previous generation (for generation 6 the red nodes). All
parts of a tree that didn't change since the previous generation are references
into older trees (for generation 6 the gray nodes). Note that in the picture,
nodes that are not relevant for generation 6 are omitted to keep it manageable.
The actual data blocks of the virtual device are the leaf nodes of the trees,
shown as squares.
[image cbe_trees]
Whenever a block request from the client would override data blocks in
generation 6 that are still referenced from an older generation, new blocks for
storing the changes are needed. Here is where the so-called _Free Tree_ enters
the picture. This tree contains and manages the spare blocks. Spare blocks are
a certain amount of blocks that the CBE has in addition to the number of blocks
needed for initializing the virtual device. So, after having initialized a
virtual device, they remain unused and are only referenced by the Free Tree.
Therefore, in case the VBD needs new blocks, it consults the Free Tree (red
arrow).
In the depicted situation, writing the first data block (red square) would
require allocating 4 new blocks as all nodes in the branch leading to the
corresponding leaf node - including the leaf node itself - have to be written.
In contrast, writing the second data block would require allocating only one
new block as the inner nodes (red circles) now already exist. Subsequent write
requests affecting only the new blocks will not trigger further block
allocations because they still belong to the current generation and will be
changed in-place. To make them immutable we have to create a new snapshot.
The blocks in generation 5 that were replaced by the change to generation 6
(blue nodes) are not needed for the working state of the virtual device
anymore. They are therefore, in exchange for the allocated blocks, added to
the Free Tree. But don't be fooled by the name, they are not free for
allocation yet, but marked as "reserved" only. This means, they are
potentially still part of a snapshot (as is the case in our example) but the
Free Tree shall keep checking, because once all snapshots that referenced the
blue blocks have disappeared, they become free blocks and can be allocated
again.
To create a new snapshot, we first have to make all changes done to the VBDs
working state as well as the Free Tree persistent by writing all corresponding
blocks to the block-device. After that, the new superblock state is written to
the block-device. To safeguard this operation, the CBE always maintains several
older states of the superblock on the block device. In case writing the new
state of the superblock fails, the CBE could fall back to the last state that,
in our example, would contain only generations 3, 4, and 5. Finally, the
current generation of the superblock in RAM is incremented by one (in the
example to generation 7). Thereby, generation 6 becomes immutable.
A question that remains is when to create snapshots. Triggering a snapshot
according to some heuristics inside the CBE might result in unnecessary
overhead. For instance, the inner nodes of the tree change frequently during a
sequential operation. We might not want them to be re-allocated all the time.
Therefore, the creation of a snapshot must be triggered explicitly from the
outside world. This way, we can accommodate different strategies, for
instance, client-triggered, time-based, or based on the amount of data
written.
When creating a snapshot, it can be specified whether it shall be disposable
or persistent. A disposable snapshot will be removed automatically by the CBE
in two situations, either
* When there are not enough usable nodes in the Free Tree left to
satisfy a write request, or
* When creating a new snapshot and all slots in the superblock that might
reference snapshots are already occupied.
A persistent snapshot, or quarantine snapshot, on the other hand will never be
removed automatically. Its removal must be requested explicitly.
During initialization, the CBE selects the most recent superblock and reads the
last generation value from it. The current generation (or working state
generation) is then set to the value incremented by one. Since all old blocks,
that are still referenced by a snapshot, are never changed again, overall
consistency is guaranteed for every generation whose superblock was stored
safely on disk.
Implementation
--------------
Although we aimed for a SPARK implementation of the CBE, we saw several
obstacles with developing it in SPARK right from the beginning. These obstacles
mainly came from the fact that none of us was experienced in designing
complex software in SPARK. So we started by conducting a rapid design-space
exploration using our mother tongue (C++) while using only language features
that can be mapped 1:1 to SPARK concepts. Additionally, we applied a clear
design methodology that allowed us to keep implementation-to-test cycles
small and perform a seamless and gradual translation into SPARK:
* _Control flow_
The core logic of the CBE is a big state machine that doesn't block. On each
external event, the state machine gets poked to update itself accordingly.
C++ can call SPARK but SPARK never calls C++. The SPARK code therefore
evolves as self-contained library.
* _Modularity_
The complex state machine of the CBE as a whole is split-up into smaller
manageable sub-state-machines, working independently from each other. These
modules don't call each other directly. Instead, an additional superior
module handles the interplay. This is done by constantly iterating over all
modules with the following procedure until no further progress can be made:
# Try to enter requests of other modules into the current one
# Poke the state machine of the current module
# The current module may have generated requests - Try to enter them into
the targeted modules
# The current module may have finished requests - Acknowledge them at the
modules they came from
Each module is represented through a class (C++) respectively a package with
a private state record (SPARK).
* _No global state_
There are no static (C++) or package (SPARK) variables. All state is kept in
members of objects (C++) respectively records (SPARK). All packages are pure
and sub-programs have no side-effects. Therefore, memory management and
communication with other components is left to OS glue-code outside the
core logic.
This approach worked out well. Module by module, we were able to translate the
C++ prototype to SPARK without long untested phases, rendering all regression
bugs manageable. In Genode, the CBE library is currently integrated through
the CBE-VFS plugin. Figure [cbe_modules] depicts its current structure and the
integration via VFS plugin.
[image cbe_modules]
The green and blue boxes each represent an Ada/SPARK package. The translation
to SPARK started at the bottom of the picture moving up to the more abstract
levels until it reached the Library module. This is the module that handles
the interplay of all other modules. Its interface is the front end of the CBE
library. So, all green packages are now completely written in SPARK and
together form the CBE library. Positioned above, the CXX library in blue is
brought in by a separate library and exports the CBE interface to C++. This
way, the CBE can also be used in other environments including pure SPARK
programs. The CXX Library package is not written in SPARK but Ada and performs
all the conversions and checks required to meet the preconditions set by the
SPARK packages below.
At the C++ side, we have the VFS plugin. Even at this level, the already
mentioned procedure applies: The plugin continuously tries to enter requests
coming from the VFS client (above) into the CBE (below), pokes the CBE state
machine, and puts thereby generated block/crypto requests of the CBE into the
corresponding back-ends (left). This process is repeated until there is no
further progress without waiting for an external event.
Current state
-------------
In its current state, the CBE library is still pretty much in flux and is not
meant for productive use.
As the Free Tree does not employ copy-on-write semantics for its meta-data, a
crash, software- or hardware-wise, will corrupt the tree structure and renders
the CBE unusable on the next start.
This issue is subject to ongoing work. That being said, there are
components that, besides being used for testing, show how the interface of the
CBE library lends itself to be integrated in components in different ways. At
the moment, there are two components making use of the CBE library as
block-device provider.
The first one is the aforementioned CBE-VFS plugin. Besides r/w access to the
working tree and r/o access to all persistent snapshots, it also provides a
management interface where persistent snapshots can be created or discarded.
Its current layout is illustrated by Figure [cbe_vfs]. The VFS plugin
generates three top directories in its root directory. The first one is the
_control_ directory. It contains several pseudo files for managing the CBE:
[image cbe_vfs]
:'key': set a key by writing a string into the file.
:'create_snapshot': writing 'true' to this file will attempt to create
a new snapshot. (Eventually the snapshot will
appear in the 'snapshots' directory if it could be
created successfully.)
:'discard_snapshot': writing a snapshot ID into this file will discard
the snapshot
The second is the 'current' directory. It gives access to the current
working tree of the CBE and contains the following file:
:'data': this file represents the virtual block device and gives
read and write access to the data stored by the CBE.
The third and last is the 'snapshots' directory. For each persistent snapshot,
there is a sub-directory named after the ID of the snapshot. This directory,
like the 'current' directory, contains a 'data' file. This file, however,
gives only read access to the data belonging to the snapshot.
The CBE-VFS plugin itself uses the VFS to access the underlying block device.
It utilizes the file specified in its configuration. Here is a '<vfs>'
snippet that shows a configured CBE-VFS plugin where the block device is
provided by the block VFS plugin.
! <vfs>
! <dir name="dev">
! <block name="block"/>
! <cbe name="cbe" block="/dev/block"/>
! </dir>
! </vfs>
An exemplary ready-to-use run script can be found in the CBE repository
at _run/cbe_vfs_snaps.run_. This run script uses a bash script to
automatically perform a few operations on the CBE using the VFS plugin.
Afterwards it will drop the user into a shell where further operations
can be performed manually, e.g.:
! dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/cbe/current/data bs=4K
The second component is the CBE server. In contrast to the CBE-VFS plugin,
it is just a simple block-session proxy component that uses a block connection
as back end to access a block-device. It provides a front-end block session to
its client, creates disposable snapshots every few seconds, and uses the
'External_Crypto' library to encrypt the data blocks using AES-CBC-ESSIV. The
used key is a plain passphrase. The following snippet illustrates its
configuration:
! <start name="cbe">
! <resource name="RAM" quantum="4M"/>
! <provides><service name="Block"/></provides>
! <config sync_interval="5" passphrase="All your base are belong to us"/>
! </start>
The _run/cbe.run_ run script in the CBE repository showcases the use of the
CBE server.
Both run scripts will create the initial CBE state in a RAM-backed
block device that is then accessed by the CBE server or the CBE-VFS
plugin.
The run-script and the code itself can be found on the
[https://github.com/cnuke/cbe/tree/cbe_19.11 - cbe/cbe_19.11] branch on
GitHub. If you intend to try it out, you have to checkout
the corresponding
[https://github.com/cnuke/genode/tree/cbe_19.11 - genode/cbe_19.11]
branch in the Genode repository as well.
Future plans
------------
Besides addressing the current shortcomings and getting the CBE library
production-ready so that it can be used in Sculpt, there are still
a few features that are currently unimplemented. For one we would like
to add support for making it possible to resize the VBD as well as the
Free Tree. For now the geometry is fixed at initialization time and cannot
be changed afterwards. Furthermore, we would like to enable re-keying,
i.e., changing the used cryptographic key and re-encrypting the tree
set of the VBD afterwards. In addition to implementing those features, the
overall tooling for the CBE needs to be improved. E.g., there is currently
no proper initialization component. For now, we rely on a component
that was built merely as a test vehicle to generate the initial trees.
Virtualization of 64-bit ARM platforms
######################################
Genode has a long history regarding support of all kinds of
virtualization-related techniques including
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/9.11#Paravirtualized_Linux_on_Genode_OKL4 - para-virtualization],
[https://genode.org/documentation/articles/trustzone - TrustZone],
hardware-assisted virtualization on
[https://genode.org/documentation/articles/arm_virtualization - ARM],
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/13.02#Full_virtualization_on_NOVA_x86 - x86],
up to the full virtualization stack of
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/14.02#VirtualBox_on_top_of_the_NOVA_microhypervisor - VirtualBox].
We regard those techniques as welcome stop-gap solutions for using non-trivial
existing software stacks on top of Genode's clean-slate OS architecture. The
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/19.05#Kernel-agnostic_virtual-machine_monitors - recent]
introduction of a kernel-agnostic interface to control virtual machines (VM)
ushered a new level for the construction respectively porting of
virtual-machine monitors (VMM). By introducing a new ARMv8-compliant VMM
developed from scratch, we continue this line of work.
The new VMM builds upon our existing proof-of-concept (PoC) implementation for
ARMv7 as introduced in release
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/15.02#Virtualization_on_ARM - 15.02].
In contrast to the former PoC implementation, however, it aims to be complete
to a greater extent. Currently, it comprises device models for the following
virtual hardware:
* RAM
* System Bus
* CPU
* Generic Interrupt Controller v2 and v3
* Generic Timer
* PL011 UART (limited)
* Pass-through devices
The VMM is able to load diverse 64-bit Linux kernels including
Device-Tree-Binary (DTB) and Initramfs. Currently, the implementation uses a
fixed memory layout for the guest-physical memory view, which needs to be
reflected by the DTB used by the guest OS. An example device-tree source file
can be found at _repos/os/src/server/vmm/spec/arm_v8/virt.dts_. The actual VMM
is located in the same directory.
Although support for multi-core VMs is already considered internally, it is
not yet finished. Further outstanding features that are already in development
are Virtio device model support for networking and console. As the first - and
by now only - back end, we tied the VMM to the ARMv8 broadened Kernel-agnostic
VM-session interface as implemented by Genode's custom base-hw kernel. As a
side effect of this work, we consolidated the generic VM session interface
slightly. The RPC call to create a new virtual-CPU now returns an identifier
for identification.
The VMM has a strict dependency on ARM's hardware virtualization support
(EL2), which comprises extensions for the ARMv8-A CPU, ARM's generic timer,
and ARM's GIC. This rules out the Raspberry Pi 3 board as a base platform
because it does not include a GIC but a custom interrupt-controller without
hardware-assisted virtualization of interrupts. To give the new VMM a try, we
recommend using the run script _repos/os/run/vmm_arm.run_ as a starting point
for executing the VMM on top of the i.MX8 Evaluation Kit board.
New tooling for bridging existing build systems with Genode
###########################################################
Genode's development tools are powerful and intimidating at the same time.
Being designed from the perspective of a whole-systems developer, they put
emphasis on the modularity of the code base (separating concerns like
different kernels or system abstraction levels), transitive dependency
tracking between libraries, scripting of a wide variety of system-integration
tasks, and the continuous integration of complete Genode-based
operating-system scenarios. Those tools are a two-edged sword though.
On the one hand, the tools are key for the productivity of seasoned Genode
developers once the potential of the tools is fully understood and leveraged.
For example, during the development of Sculpt OS, we are able to
change an arbitrary line of code in any system component and can test-drive
the resulting Sculpt system on real hardware within a couple of seconds.
As another example, the almost seamless switching from one OS kernel to
another has become a daily routine that we just take for granted without
even thinking about it.
On the other hand, the sophistication of the tools stands in the way of
application developers who are focused on a particular component instead
of the holistic Genode system. In this case, the powerful system-integration
features remain unused but the complexity of the tools and the build system
prevails. Speaking of build systems, this topic is ripe of emotions
anyway. _Developers use to hate build systems._ Forcing Genode's build
system down the throats of application developers is probably not the best
idea to make Genode popular.
This line of thoughts prompted us to re-approach the tooling for Genode from
the perspective of an application developer. The intermediate result is a new
tool called Goa:
:Goa project at GitHub:
[https://github.com/nfeske/goa]
Unlike Genode's regular tools, Goa's work flow is project-centered. A project
is a directory that may contain source code, data, instructions how to
download source codes from a 3rd party, descriptions of system scenarios, or
combinations thereof. Goa is independent from Genode's regular build system.
It combines Genode's package management (depot) with commodity build systems
such a CMake. In addition to building and test-driving application software
directly on a Linux-based development system, Goa is able to aid the process
of exporting and packaging the software in the format expected by Genode
systems like Sculpt OS.
At the current stage, Goa should be considered as work in progress. It's a new
approach and its success is anything but proven. That said, if you are
interested in developing or porting application software for Genode, your
feedback would be especially valuable. As a starting point, you may find the
following introductory article helpful:
:Goa - streamlining the development of Genode applications:
[https://genodians.org/nfeske/2019-11-25-goa]
Base framework and OS-level infrastructure
##########################################
File-system session
===================
The file-system session interface received a much anticipated update.
Writing modification times
--------------------------
The new operation WRITE_TIMESTAMP allows a client to update the modification
time of a file-system node. The time is defined by the client to keep
file-system servers free from time-related concerns. The VFS server implements
the operation by forwarding it to the VFS plugin interface. At present, this
new interface is implemented by the rump VFS plugin to store modification
times on EXT2 file systems.
Enhanced file-status info
-------------------------
The status of a file-system node as returned by the 'File_system::Status'
operation has been revisited. First, we replaced the fairly opaque "mode" bits -
which were an ad-hoc attempt to stay compatible with Unix - with the explicit
notion of 'readable', 'writeable', and 'executable' attributes. We completely
dropped the notion of users and groups. Second, we added the distinction
between *continuous* and *transactional* files to allow for the robust
implementation of continuous write operations across component boundaries. A
continuous file can be written-to via a sequence of arbitrarily sized chunks
of data. For such files, a client can split a large write operation into any
number of smaller operations in accordance to the size of the used I/O
buffers. In contrast, a write to a transactional file is regarded as a
distinct operation. The canonical example of a transactional file is a
socket-control pseudo file.
Virtual file-system infrastructure
==================================
First fragments of a front-end API
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The VFS is mostly used indirectly via the C runtime. However, it is also
useful for a few components that use the Genode API directly without any
libc. To accommodate such users of the VFS, we introduced the front-end
API at _os/vfs.h_ that covers a variety of current use cases. Currently, those
use cases revolve around the watching, reading, and parsing of files and
file-system structures - as performed by Sculpt's deployment mechanism.
Writing to files is not covered.
Improved file-watching support
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
All pseudo files that use the VFS-internal 'Readonly_value_file_system'
utility have become able to deliver watch notifications. This change enables
VFS clients to respond to VFS-plugin events (think of terminal resize)
dynamically.
Speaking of the *terminal VFS plugin*, the current release enhances the plugin
in several respects. First, it now delivers status information such as the
terminal size via pseudo files. Second, we equipped the VFS terminal file
system with the ability to detect user interrupts in the incoming data stream,
and propagate this information via the new pseudo file '.terminal/interrupts'.
Each time, the user presses control-c in the terminal, the value stored in
this pseudo file is increased. Thereby, a VFS client can watch this file to
get notified about the occurrences of user interrupts.
VFS plugin for emulating POSIX pipes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We added a new VFS plugin for emulating POSIX pipes. The new plugin creates
pipes between pairs of VFS handles. It replaces the deprecated libc_pipe
plugin. In contrast to the libc_pipe plugin, which was limited to pipes within
one component, the new VFS plugin can also be used to establish pipes between
different components by mounting the plugin at a shared VFS server.
C runtime with improved POSIX compatibility
===========================================
Within Genode, we used to think of POSIX as a legacy that is best avoided.
In fact, the foundational components of the framework do not depend on a
C runtime at all. However, higher up the software stack - at the latest when
3rd-party libraries enter the picture - a working C runtime is unavoidable. In
this statement, the term "working" is rather muddy though. Since we have never
fully embraced POSIX, we were content with cutting corners here and there. For
example, given Genode's architecture, supporting 'fork' and 'execve' seemed
totally out of question because those mechanisms would go against the grain of
Genode.
However, our growing aspiration to bridge the gap between existing popular
applications and Genode made us re-evaluate our stance towards POSIX.
All technical criticism aside, POSIX is immensely useful because it is
a universally accepted stable interface. To dissolve friction between
Genode and popular application software, we have to satisfy the application's
expectations. This ignited a series of developments, in particular
the added support for 'fork' and 'execve' - of all things - in
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/19.08#Consolidation_of_the_C_runtime_and_Noux - Genode 19.08],
which was nothing short of surprising, even to us.
The current release continues this line of development and brings the
following improvements.
Execve
------
The libc's 'execve' implementation got enhanced to evaluate the path of the
executable binary according to the information found on the VFS, in particular
by traversing directories and following symbolic links. This enables the libc
to execute files stored at sub directories of the file system.
Furthermore, 'execve' received handling for *executing shell scripts* by
parsing the shebang marker at the beginning of the executable file. This way,
the 'execve' mechanism of the libc reaches parity with the feature set of the
Noux runtime that we traditionally used to host Unix software on top of
Genode.
Modification-time handling
--------------------------
By default, the libc uses the just added facility for updating the timestamp
of file-system nodes when closing a written-to file, which clears the path
towards using tools like 'make' that rely on file-modifications times.
The libc's mechanism can be explicitly disabled by specifying
! <libc update_mtime="no"...>
This is useful for applications that have no legitimate access to a time
source.
Emulation of 'ioctl' operations via pseudo files
------------------------------------------------
With the current release, we introduce a new scheme of handling ioctl
operations, which maps 'ioctl' calls to pseudo-file accesses, similar to how
the libc already maps socket calls to socket-fs operations.
A device file can be accompanied with a (hidden) directory that is named after
the device file and hosts pseudo files for triggering the various device
operations. For example, for accessing a terminal, the directory structure
looks like this:
! /dev/terminal
! /dev/.terminal/info
! /dev/.terminal/rows
! /dev/.terminal/columns
! /dev/.terminal/interrupts
The 'info' file contains device information in XML format. The type of the XML
node corresponds to the device type. Whenever the libc receives a TIOCGWINSZ
ioctl for _/dev/terminal_, it reads the content of _/dev/.terminal/info_ to
obtain the terminal-size information. In this case, the _info_ file looks as
follows:
! <terminal rows="25" columns="80/>
Following this scheme, VFS plugins can support ioctl operations by providing
an ioctl directory in addition to the actual device file.
Emulation of POSIX signals
--------------------------
Even though there is no notion of POSIX signals at the Genode level, we
can reasonably emulate certain POSIX signals at the libc level. The current
release introduces the first bunch of such emulated signals:
:SIGWINCH: If 'stdout' is connected to a terminal, the libc watches the
terminal's ioctl pseudo file _.terminal/info_. Whenever the terminal
size changes, the POSIX signal SIGWINCH is delivered to the application.
With this improvement, Vim becomes able to dynamically adjust itself
to changed window dimensions when started as a native Genode component
(w/o the Noux runtime environment).
:SIGINT: If 'stdin' is connected to a terminal, the libc watches the
terminal's pseudo file _.terminal/interrupts_. Since, the terminal VFS
plugin modifies the file for each occurred user interrupt (control-c),
the libc is able to reflect such an event as SIGINT signal to the
application.
:Process-local signal delivery: The libc's implementation of 'kill' got
enhanced with the ability to submit signals to the local process.
Support for arbitrarily large write operations
----------------------------------------------
The number of bytes written by a single 'write' call used to be constrained by
the file's underlying I/O buffer size. Even though our libc correctly returned
this information to the application, we found that real-world applications
rarely check the return value of 'write' because partial writes do usually not
occur on popular POSIX systems. Thanks to the added distinction between
continuous and transactional files as described in Section
[File-system session], we became able to improve the libc's write operation to
iterate on partial writes to continuous files until the original write count
is reached. The split of large write operations into small partial writes as
dictated by the VFS infrastructure becomes invisible to the libc-using
application.
Input-event handling
====================
In Genode 19.08, we undertook a comprehensive rework of our keyboard-event
handling in the light of localization and also promised to tie up remaining
loose ends soon.
First, we again dived into our character generators for a thorough check of
our stack of keyboards and fixed remaining inconsistencies in French and
German layouts. En passant, we also increased the default RAM quotas for
the input filter to 1280K in our recipes to cope with the increased
layout-configuration sizes in corner cases.
Next - and more importantly - we subdued the monsters lurking in our Qt5
keyboard back end and enabled transparent support for system-wide keyboard
layout configuration for Qt5 components. One important change during this work
was to move the handling of control key sequences into the clients. For
example, the graphical terminal and Qt5 interpret key events in combination
with the CTRL modifier based on characters and, thus, support CTRL-A with
AZERTY and QWERTY layouts correctly. As a result we removed all CTRL modifier
(mod2) configurations from our character-generator configurations.
Finally we'd like to point out one important change of our rework that
repeatedly led to surprises: For keys without character mappings the reworked
character-generator mechanism emits invalid codepoints in contrast to
codepoints with value 0. For that reason, components interpreting character
events should check 'Codepoint::valid()' to prevent the processing of invalid
characters (and not the frequent pattern of 'codepoint.value != 0').
NIC router
==========
The NIC router has received the ability to report the link state of its NIC
interfaces (downlinks and uplinks). To control this mechanism, there are two
new boolean attributes 'link_state' and 'link_state_triggers' in the <report>
tag of the NIC router configuration. If the former is set to "true", the report
will contain the current link state for each interface:
! <domain name="domain1">
! <interface label="uplink1" link_state="false"/>
! <interface label="downlink1" link_state="true"/>
! </domain>
! <domain name="domain2">
! <interface label="downlink2" link_state="true"/>
! </domain>
The second attribute decides whether to trigger a report update each time the
link state of an interface changes. By default, both attributes are set to
"false".
Device drivers
==============
Platform driver on x86
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
During our enablement of Genode on a
[https://genodians.org/chelmuth/2019-10-21-sculpt-elitebook - recent notebook],
we spotted some PC platform shortcomings, we address with this release. Most
prominently we added support for
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PCI_configuration_space#Bus_enumeration - 64-bit PCI base address registers]
to the x86 platform driver. This allows the use of PCI devices that are
assigned to physical I/O-memory regions beyond 4 GiB by the boot firmware.
Wireless driver
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We added the firmware images for the 5000 and 9000 series of Intel wireless
devices to the firmware white-list in the _wifi_drv_ component. Such devices
as 5100AGN, 5300AGN and 5350AGN as well as 9461, 9462 and 9560 should now be
usable on Genode.
Libraries and applications
##########################
VirtualBox improvements
=======================
The GUI handling of our VirtualBox port got improved to react on window-size
changes more instantly. The effect is that an interactive adjustment of the
window size, e.g., on Sculpt, becomes quickly visible to the user. Still, the
VM may take some time to adjust to the resolution change, which ultimately
depends on the behavior of the driver of the VirtualBox guest additions.
Updated 3rd-party software
==========================
With the addition of the 64-bit ARM architecture (AARCH64) with the
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/19.05#Broadened_CPU_architecture_support_and_updated_tool_chain - 19.05]
release, it became necessary to update the libraries the Genode tool chain
(gcc) depends on in order to support AARCH64 properly. This concerns the GNU
multi precision arithmetic library (gmp), which has been updated from version
4.3.2 to 6.1.2, as well as the libraries that depend on it: Multi precision
floating point (mpfr) and multi precision complex arithmetic (mpc). All those
old versions did not offer support for the AARCH64 architecture, which is a
requirement to make Genode self hosting. Targets for building binutils and GCC
within Genode for AARCH64 are in place, GNU make is in place, and even code
coverage (gcov) has been added. This work puts AARCH64 in line with other
supported CPU architectures and emphasizes our interest in the ARM 64-bit
architecture.
Platforms
#########
Execution on bare hardware (base-hw)
====================================
With the previous release, Genode's base-hw kernel got extended to support the
ARMv8-A architecture in principle. The first hardware supported was the
Raspberry Pi 3 as well as the i.MX8 evaluation kit (EVK). But only a single
CPU-core was usable at that time. Now, we lifted this limitation. On both
boards, all four CPU-cores are available henceforth.
Removed components
##################
The current release removes the following components:
:gems/src/app/launcher:
The graphical launcher remained unused for a few years now. It is not
suitable for systems as flexible as Sculpt OS.
:os/src/app/cli_monitor:
CLI monitor was a runtime environment with a custom command-line interface
to start and stop subsystems. It was part of the user interface of our
first take on a Genode-based desktop OS called
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/15.11#Genode_as_desktop_OS - Turmvilla].
Nowadays, we use standard command-line tools like Vim to edit init
configurations dynamically, which is more flexible and - at the same time -
alleviates the need for a custom CLI. The CLI-monitor component was too
limited for use cases like Sculpt anyway.
Along with the CLI monitor, we removed the ancient (and untested for long
time) _terminal_mux.run_ script, which was the only remaining user of the CLI
monitor.
:fatfs_fs, rump_fs, and libc_fatfs plugin:
The stand-alone file-system servers fatfs_fs and rump_fs as well as the
fatfs libc plugin have been superseded by the fatfs and rump VFS plugins.
The stand-alone servers can be replaced by using the VFS server plus the
corresponding VFS plugin as a drop-in replacement.