Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Norman Feske
1f4f119b1e Capability quota accounting and trading
This patch mirrors the accounting and trading scheme that Genode employs
for physical memory to the accounting of capability allocations.

Capability quotas must now be explicitly assigned to subsystems by
specifying a 'caps=<amount>' attribute to init's start nodes.
Analogously to RAM quotas, cap quotas can be traded between clients and
servers as part of the session protocol. The capability budget of each
component is maintained by the component's corresponding PD session at
core.

At the current stage, the accounting is applied to RPC capabilities,
signal-context capabilities, and dataspace capabilities. Capabilities
that are dynamically allocated via core's CPU and TRACE service are not
yet covered. Also, the capabilities allocated by resource multiplexers
outside of core (like nitpicker) must be accounted by the respective
servers, which is not covered yet.

If a component runs out of capabilities, core's PD service prints a
warning to the log. To observe the consumption of capabilities per
component in detail, the PD service is equipped with a diagnostic
mode, which can be enabled via the 'diag' attribute in the target
node of init's routing rules. E.g., the following route enables the
diagnostic mode for the PD session of the "timer" component:

  <default-route>
    <service name="PD" unscoped_label="timer">
      <parent diag="yes"/>
    </service>
    ...
  </default-route>

For subsystems based on a sub-init instance, init can be configured
to report the capability-quota information of its subsystems by
adding the attribute 'child_caps="yes"' to init's '<report>'
config node. Init's own capability quota can be reported by adding
the attribute 'init_caps="yes"'.

Fixes #2398
2017-05-31 13:16:06 +02:00
Norman Feske
e44f65f3b2 core: RAM service based on 'Session_object'
This patch reworks the implementation of core's RAM service to make use
of the 'Session_object' and to remove the distinction between the
"metadata" quota and the managed RAM quota. With the new implementation,
the session implicitly allocates its metadata from its own account. So
there is not need to handle 'Out_of_metadata' and 'Quota_exceeded' via
different exceptions. Instead, the new version solely uses the
'Out_of_ram' exception.

Furthermore, the 'Allocator::Out_of_memory' exception has become an alias
for 'Out_of_ram', which simplifies the error handling.

Issue #2398
2017-05-31 13:16:06 +02:00
Norman Feske
028e633af4 base: add 'Session_object' class
The 'Session_object' unifies several aspects of server-component
implementations:

* It keeps track of session quotas and is equipped with standardized
  interfaces (Quota_guard) to upgrade (and in the future potentially
  downgrade) session quotas in a uniform way.

* It follows the pattern of modern RPC objects / signal handlers that
  manage/dissolve themselves at the entrypoint given as constructor
  argument. Thereby, the relationship with its entrypoint is always
  coupled with the lifetime of the session-component object.

* It stores the session label, which was previously done manually by
  most but not all server-component implementations.

* It stores the session 'diag' flag.

* It is equipped with output methods 'diag', 'error', and 'warning'.
  All messages printed from the context of a session component is
  automatically prefixed with the session type and client label.
  Messages passed via 'diag' are only printed if the 'diag' flag of
  the session is set.

Issue #2398
2017-05-31 13:16:06 +02:00