genode/doc/release_notes-19-08.txt

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===============================================
Release notes for the Genode OS Framework 19.08
===============================================
Genode Labs
The stated theme of this year's [https://genode.org/about/road-map - road map]
is "bridging worlds", which expresses our ambition to smoothen the practical
use of Genode-based systems such as Sculpt OS. The current release pays
tribute to this ambition by addressing a great number of practical concerns:
How to accommodate the staggering variety of keyboard layouts out there?
(Section [Flexible keyboard layouts])
How can the system gracefully respond when confronted with exotic USB devices?
(Section [Storage-stack improvements])
How to set the system time from within the system? How does SNTP fit in here?
(Section [General system time concept])
How to approach the remote administration of the system?
(Section [Enhanced SSH terminal])
How to copy and paste text securely between mutually distrusting subsystems?
(Section [Clipboard])
Or how to overcome the captive portal of a Hotel WiFi with Sculpt OS?
(Section [Disposable VM for handling captive portals])
By providing answers to those questions, we believe to make Genode - and Sculpt
OS in particular - generally more useful.
As another take on "bridging worlds", we continue our effort to bring the rich
Sculpt OS software stack to the 64-bit ARM world, in particular to our most
loved SoC family, namely NXP i.MX. Section [64-bit ARM and NXP i.MX8] reports
on our progress in this direction.
Under the hood, there are a few exciting developments that will greatly reduce
the effort of running existing software on Genode. In particular, Genode's
(entirely optional) C runtime has gained the ability to emulate the
traditional execve and fork mechanisms.
(Section [Consolidation of the C runtime and Noux]) This will eventually
alleviate the need for our present noux runtime environment to the benefits of
better performance and increased flexibility.
Further highlights of Genode 19.08 are a major update of Qt5 to version 5.13
(Section [Updated Qt5]) and the continuation of our kernel-agnostic
virtualization story (Section [Virtualization]).
Flexible keyboard layouts
#########################
Genode is used worldwide in a multilingual context beyond Germany and common
technical realms of English. Therefore, we had to address localized
keyboard-input handling for quite some time now and introduced the
_input-filter_ component in
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/17.02#Input-event_filter - 17.02].
The component merges input streams and applies several forms of input
transformations, in particular the application of keyboard layouts to
supplement the input-event stream with character events.
But as we are by no means localization experts, our solution, while performing
a solid job for selected layouts, also had some quirks and rough edges when it
came to French or even Swiss German. First, our oversimplified notion of
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caps_Lock - Caps Lock] as _just a pressed Shift_
_key_ is plain wrong but part of all our character-generator configurations.
We just missed this drawback because none of our developers uses Caps Lock
regularly. Further, US English and Germany layouts work very well without
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_key - dead keys], but crossing any German
border (except the Austrian) is impossible without support for key sequences
composing special characters. The French keyboard layout in Genode tried to
alleviate the lack of compose sequences by adding an additional Circumflex
modifier and character mapping, which unfortunately is not standard.
[image keyboard_stack]
Beginning at this state of affairs, we researched common practice in
international keyboard-input handling, sought a quasi-standard source for
layout configurations, and addressed the drawbacks mentioned before. During
our research we found out that no current implementation is void of critique
and, therefore, decided to look more into X11/XKB as our open-source
quasi-standard solution, but always had an eye on the proprietary world.
The handling of key events in X11/XKB happens on three layers.
:Key codes: On the key-code layer, the device driver programs the
keyboard and generates a stream of key-code (i.e., scan-code)
events, which represent the physical location of the actual key on
the keyboard.
:Key symbols: These key codes are mapped to key symbols, which
represent the label imprinted on the key. So, the key code producing
US English _Q_ (QWERTY keyboard) generates _A_ on a French keyboard
(AZERTY). Modifiers like Shift, AltGr, and Caps Lock are included in
the key-symbol mapping. Additionally, some layouts map key codes to
dead key symbols, which start the before-mentioned compose
sequences. Key repeat is also implemented as key-symbol repeat
actually.
:Characters: On top of this stack, the key symbols are mapped to
characters represented as Unicode codepoints or UTF-8 strings.
The procedure obviously includes key symbols that have no character
representation (e.g. Control and Alt). Key symbols forming a valid compose
sequence generate characters on this level (e.g., dead-key circumflex plus
e generates ê).
We limited our research to Western keyboard-input handling and only had a
blink into the direction of Chinese-Japanese-Korean (CJK) and advanced input
methods (IM). This simplification is supported by the fact that CJK can also
be based on the mechanisms mentioned with some limitations only. Nevertheless,
we do not expect to never touch this topic again.
After doing our homework of keyboard-input handling, we worked on squeezing
all available layout information out of X11/XKB, which resulted in a small
tool residing in _tool/xkb2ifcfg_. For those wondering, the name is just a
silly acronym for _XKB to input-filter_ _configuration_ that pays tribute to
the boringness of this task. After building the tool by a run of 'make' in the
tool path, it can be used as follows. Please make sure you have libxkbcommon
development packages installed beforehand.
! xkb2ifcfg generate <layout> <variant> <locale>
!
! xkb2ifcfg generate us euro en_US.UTF-8
! xkb2ifcfg generate de nodeadkeys de_DE.UTF-8
If the parameter combination is available, xkb2ifcfg prints a input-filer
chargen configuration for the selected layout to standard output. Valid
'layout' and 'variant' options can be figured out from the LAYOUTS section in
'man 7 xkeyboard-config', where 'variant' strings are depicted in parentheses
after the layout (e.g., 'us(euro)'). The 'locale' option has the standard
locale syntax (see /usr/share/i18n/locales). The tool needs all three
parameters to gather the correct key-map and compose-sequence information. The
generated chargen configurations include '<map>' and '<key>' nodes
corresponding to significant modifier states and '<sequence>' nodes (described
later). For simplicity of the generator, the '<key>' nodes always use the
'code="..."' attribute, but also have a comment with the UTF-8 character
appended.
! <key name="KEY_MINUS" code="0x00df"/> <!-- ß -->
Last, we addressed the improvement of the input-filter character generator and
the actual chargen configuration files in Genode. Therefore, we specified the
modifier configuration assumed by the standard chargen files as '<mod1>'
corresponds to Shift, '<mod2>' to Control, '<mod3>' to AltGr, and '<mod4>' to
Caps Lock.
! <mod1> <key name="KEY_LEFTSHIFT"/> <key name="KEY_RIGHTSHIFT"/> </mod1>
! <mod2> <key name="KEY_LEFTCTRL"/> <key name="KEY_RIGHTCTRL"/> </mod2>
! <mod3> <key name="KEY_RIGHTALT"/> </mod3> <!-- AltGr -->
! <mod4> <rom name="capslock"/> </mod4>
As outlined above, the '<key>' nodes generated by xkb2ifcfg always use the
'code' attribute for the Unicode codepoint. Because of this and because UTF-8
also refers to codepoints, we deprecated the 'b0/b1/b2/b3' attributes for
character definition with this release.
The chargen is also extended by the '<sequence>' configuration node. A
sequence node permits the definition of dead-key/composing character
sequences. With such sequences, the character is not generated instantly on
key press but only after the sequence is completed. If an unfinished sequence
can't be completed due to an unmatched character, the sequence is aborted and
no character is generated. We support sequences of up to four characters at
the moment.
For example, the French AZERTY
[https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/globalization/keyboards/kbdfr.html - keyboard layout]
has a dead key for Circumflex Accent _^_ right of the _P_ key (which is
bracket left _[_ on US keyboards). When Circumflex is pressed no visible
character should be generated instantly but the accent must be combined with a
follow-up character (e.g., Circumflex plus _a_ generates _â_).
Dead keys can be defined in the '<key>' nodes of any '<map>' by using
codepoints not used for direct output, for example, Combining Diacritical
Marks beginning at U+0300. The French Circumflex example can be configured
like follows.
! <mod1>
! <key name="KEY_LEFTSHIFT"/> <key name="KEY_RIGHTSHIFT"/>
! </mod1>
! <map>
! <key name="KEY_Q" code="0x0061"/> <!-- a -->
! <key name="KEY_LEFTBRACE" code="0x0302"/> <!-- dead_circumflex -->
! </map>
! <map mod1="true">
! <key name="KEY_Q" code="0x0041"/> <!-- A -->
! </map>
! <sequence first="0x0302" second="0x0061" code="0x00e2"/> <!-- â -->
! <sequence first="0x0302" second="0x0041" code="0x00c2"/> <!-- Â -->
Fortunately, the configuration is automatically generated by xkb2ifcfg, but
admittedly quite extensive. Therefore, we manually amended the chargen
configurations before adding them to Genode, which also gave us the chance to
apply some adjustments like follows for AltGr in Swiss German.
! <map mod1="false" mod2="false" mod3="true" mod4="false">
! <key name="KEY_1" code="0x00a6"/> <!-- ¦ (*) -->
! <key name="KEY_4" code="0x00b0"/> <!-- ° (*) -->
! <key name="KEY_5" code="0x00a7"/> <!-- § (*) -->
! </map>
Beside the advanced input methods mentioned before, there are still loose ends
we are going to address in the upcoming releases. For example, the current key
handling in our Qt5 back end maps localized key symbols incorrectly (think
AZERTY vs. QWERTY) in combination with shortcuts like Ctrl-A.
64-bit ARM and NXP i.MX8
########################
64-bit ARM support in our custom base-hw kernel
-----------------------------------------------
By introducing rudimentary Raspberry Pi 3 support on top of the Fiasco.OC
kernel in the previous release, the first ARM 64-bit support has entered the
Genode OS framework. We continued pursuing the ARM 64-bit path and introduce
support for Raspberry Pi 3 as well as the i.MX8 evaluation kit (EVK), this
time using our own base-hw kernel.
Noteworthy additions in the base-hw kernel are support for the AARCH64 system
level architecture, and the use of the modern GIC v3 interrupt controller on
top of the i.MX8 EVK board. In comparison to the GICv2, GICv3 adds support for
more than eight CPUs, more than 1020 interrupt IDs, and offers fast register
access to the CPU interface, instead of memory-mapped I/O access. Minor
changes had to be made to the page-table implementation of ARMv7 with Large
Physical Address Extension (LPAE) to re-use it for ARMv8. Moreover, the
internal kernel API for TLB maintenance needed to be changed slightly for all
ARM platforms.
We expanded our regular testing infrastructure with two AARCH64 platforms,
namely Raspberry Pi 3 via Qemu and the NXP i.MX8 EVK board as physical
hardware. Both platforms are driven with a single CPU core only at the moment.
Network driver for i.MX7 and i.MX8
----------------------------------
We updated the 'fec' network driver to version 4.16.3, which adds support for
i.MX7 and i.MX8 SoCs. This makes i.MX8 a viable platform for Genode-based
networking scenarios.
Enhanced packaging and test infrastructure for ARMv8
----------------------------------------------------
Besides the improved base-hw kernel, we enabled additional infrastructure for
ARMv8 platforms. For example, noux packages - like _coreutils_, _bash_ - are
now available, the standard C++ library is in place, and support for Genode's
port of the Linux TCP/IP stack is enabled.
Additionally, ARMv8 is now regularly tested within our nightly
_depot_autopilot_ runs.
Base framework and OS-level infrastructure
##########################################
Tracing
=======
Support for fast tracing has been built into Genode for a long time. However,
the stakes to take advantage of this feature remained high because convenience
functions were not in place. With the current release, we added the support
for easy trace setups through a VFS plugin. The plugin is called _vfs_trace_
and can be mounted into a Genode component as follows:
!<config>
! <vfs>
! <trace ram=32MB/>
! </vfs>
!</config>
This configuration will create a trace file system at the root of the VFS. The
_ram_ attribute is mandatory and determines the maximum size of all trace
buffers. The file system forms a recursive directory structure that represents
the parent/child relationship of running components, whereas the leaf
directories represent single threads within a component. Each leaf directory
currently contains three files:
:'enable': Start or stop the tracing of a thread by writing "true" or "false"
into the file.
:'buffer_size': Allows for the configuration of the trace-buffer size for the
thread in the usual Genode format (e.g. 5M, 512K, 1024).
:'trace_buffer': This read-only file contains the current content of the trace
buffer. Each trace entry can only be read once, after that only new entries
appear. "tail -f" can also be used to display continuous output.
As an example, tracing is started by writing _true_ to the _enable_ file:
! echo "true" > enable
The trace buffer can then be displayed using Unix tools like _tail_
! tail -f trace_buffer
which provides a continuous output.
Additionally, we have added the _trace_ function to _base/log.h_ that
facilitates identical functionality as _Genode::log_
! Genode::trace("Tracepoint value: ", value);
In order to enable tracing, the parent must provide the "TRACE" service. For a
real world example on Sculpt OS, please refer to this
[https://genodians.org/ssumpf/2019-06-18-trace_fs - Genodians article].
With the _vfs_trace_ plugin in place, we removed the outdated _trace_fs_.
Consolidation of the C runtime and Noux
=======================================
On our [https://genode.org/about/road-map#August_-_Release_19.08 - road map],
we vaguely hinted at our plan for the "consolidation" of the noux runtime,
which is actually meant as a polite way of announcing that we are going to
remove it. We introduced the
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/11.02#Noux_-_an_execution_environment_for_the_GNU_userland - Noux runtime]
in 2011 as a way to execute command-line-based GNU software directly on
Genode. It has served us well over the years and is - in fact - a crucial
ingredient of Sculpt OS and other system scenarios such as the Genodians.org
web server. Noux supplements Genode with two valuable assets, namely a
flexible and expandable virtual file system (VFS) layer, and the
implementation of the
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/12.02#Noux_support_for_fork_semantics - Unix way]
to spawn applications ('fork' and 'execve').
In the
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/17.02#Enhanced_VFS_infrastructure - meantime],
noux' VFS implementation has become independent from the noux runtime and is
now prominently employed by Genode's C runtime and the VFS server component.
Genode's C runtime became more and more complete, alleviating the use of noux
as POSIX compatibility layer except for programs that depended on a working
implementation of 'fork' and 'execve'.
The current release fills this remaining gap in Genode's C runtime by
providing 'fork', 'execve', and cousins such as 'wait4' and 'getpid' as
regular parts of the libc. This will eventually make noux redundant.
Note that this change does *NOT* make Genode reliant on POSIX. The C runtime
including the Unix features are entirely optional.
As one stepping stone of this undertaking, noux applications, which previously
had to be compiled for noux, have become binary compatible with the regular C
runtime. So one can execute programs like 'bash' directly as a Genode
component without any friction.
There are a few collateral improvements of Genode's dynamic linker and the C
runtime on the account of the new 'fork' and 'execve' implementation. E.g., in
addition to the already supported 'stdin', 'stdout', and 'stderr'
configuration, the libc can be instructed to initialize arbitrary file
descriptors as follows:
! <config>
! ...
! <libc ...>
! <fd id="3" path="/dev/log" writeable="yes" readable="no" seek="10"/>
! ...
! </libc>
! </config>
The libc-based implementation of 'fork' and 'execve' can be tried out via
the new _ports/run/bash.run_ script. Note that there are still a number of
limitations such as the lack of signal and ioctl handling. Pipes are not
supported, and shebangs ('#!') are not interpreted yet. That said, once those
missing pieces come into place, we can fade out the use of noux within Genode.
General system time concept
===========================
Briefly speaking, up to now there has been no notion of an overall concept of
system time in Genode. Components that need to have access to some kind of
real time are either configured locally, e.g., libc-based components access a
configured "device" (/dev/rtc), which just might be an inline file system
containing an artificial timestamp or the VFS RTC plugin, while other
components query some RTC session directly. Most of the time, this session is
provided by the 'rtc_drv' on x86 machines, which is somewhat costly as reading
the RTC via I/O ports takes time and is therefore done scarcely. For example,
the libc will query an RTC source only once and uses this initial value to
interpolate the current time. However, for executing long-running components,
it will be necessary to adjust the clock to compensate for any occurring clock
drift or to correct a misconfigured clock in general. In addition it is
desirable to be able to use a remote time source, e.g., an NTP-server, to
synchronize the system time.
To address this, we came up with the following concept:
[image system_rtc]
The new "System RTC" component, located at
_repos/libports/src/server/system_rtc_, acts as proxy for the RTC service in
front of the actual RTC driver. It uses the driver to get the initial RTC
value and then uses a timer session (via the timeout framework) to locally
interpolate the time. In contrast to querying the RTC driver, querying the
System RTC is fast.
The RTC driver and the System RTC are bundled up together in the new
_drivers-rtc-pc_ package. The runtime of this package requests two ROM modules
used to update the RTC value. The first one, named 'system_set_rtc', is used
to update the proxy component while the second one, called 'hw_set_rtc', is
used by the RTC driver to write the value into the battery-backed RTC. A
separate component, potentially accessing a remote time source, may generate
these ROMs to adjust the time in the package's runtime.
The new native *SNTP* client at _repos/libports/src/app/sntp_client_ is such a
component. It periodically requests the current time from a given SNTP server
and generates a report. The report produced by the component contains the time
as UTC/GMT. Depending on the system policy, it can be used to update the time
of the System RTC and/or instruct the driver to set the RTC value.
To propagate such changes to RTC values, the RTC session was enhanced by the
new 'set' signal. A client of the session can install a signal handler to
adapt its own time when necessary. Based on this, the time back end of the
libc was changed to instantiate a watch handler for the RTC device, which,
when triggered, will cause the libc to re-read the RTC value.
This constellation should, under normal operation, allow for second to
sub-second granularity updates of the overall system time and avoid drifting
away from network time.
Accessing SMBIOS tables
=======================
The System Management BIOS (SMBIOS) is a specification that allows for reading
management information produced by the BIOS of a system as a collection of
data structures in memory. It has the potential to eliminate the need for the
operating system to probe hardware for discovering present devices and their
characteristics. Nowadays, the SMBIOS specification is implemented widely in
PC systems, which includes modern UEFI systems as well. The data structures
are referred to as _tables_ or _records_ by public documentation.
The new native SMBIOS decoder at _os/src/app/smbios_decoder_ can be used on
x86 to parse SMBIOS tables and report gathered information in a human-readable
way. Besides general table information like number and size of structures,
etc., the component supports complete parsing of SMBIOS structures of types
"BIOS", "System", and "Baseboard".
The component is free from any code for acquiring an SMBIOS table through
means like the bootloader or BIOS information. It expects a table to be
present through a regular Genode ROM session with a 'smbios_table' label. This
way, the underlying system is required to find, select, and save the raw table
on startup and create a ROM module out of it. This is currently achieved on
NOVA and base-hw through an interplay of kernel, the core component, and the
ACPI driver and was tested for legacy BIOSes as well as UEFI systems.
Clipboard
=========
Genode introduced a principle copy-and-paste mechanism already
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/15.11#Copy_and_paste - four years ago].
However, originally created as a part of a tech demo, the mechanism remained
unused in our day to day Genode work. This changed now. We took the
integration of copy-and-paste support in Sculpt OS as an opportunity to revive
and refine the existing mechanism and supplement it with the features needed
to make it practical for daily use. We believe that the result aligns ease of
use nicely with security. The concept is described in a
[https://genodians.org/nfeske/2019-07-03-copy-paste - dedicated article]
at Genodians.org.
On a technical level, the existing clipboard component has received a new
option that allows for dynamic information-flow policies based on user
interactivity (keyboard focus, activity). When setting the config attribute
'match_labels="yes"', the clipboard performs plausibility checks for copy and
paste operations against the focus of the Nitpicker GUI server. All aspects of
the clipboard policy - including information-flow policies - have become
reconfigurable.
To make window-manager clients compatible with the clipboard's dynamic policy,
the window manager got enhanced with the ability to proxy the interaction with
the clipboard. GUI clients in turn - in particular the graphical *terminal* -
became able to interact with the clipboard. With the '<config>' attribute
'copy="yes"' specified, the terminal allows the user to select text to be
reported to a "clipboard" report. The selection mode is activated by holding
the left shift key. While the selection mode is active, the text position
under the mouse pointer is highlighted and the user can select text via the
left mouse button. Upon release of the mouse button, the selection is
reported. Vice versa, with the '<config>' attribute 'paste="yes"' specified,
the terminal allows the user to paste the content of a "clipboard" ROM session
to the terminal client by pressing the middle mouse button.
Finally, we integrated those new abilities into Sculpt OS and into several
installable packages, including virtual machines, the noux-system package,
and graphical Qt5-based applications.
Enhanced SSH terminal
=====================
This release paves the way for remotely managing Genode devices over SSH.
Until now, only interactive SSH sessions were supported. It is now possible to
execute commands from a remote SSH client. E.g., 'ssh noux@localhost -p 5555
"ls -hal /bin/"'. For non-interactive sessions, ssh_terminal requires a helper
component. This component is responsible to create the environment for the
command to run in. You can find an example for such a component at
_gems/src/test/exec_terminal_. It starts noux in a sub init and executes the
provided command inside of it. The new _ssh_exec_channel.run_ script gives a
demonstration on how this feature can be used.
This work is a contribution by Sid Hussmann of
[https://gapfruit.com - Gapfruit]. Thanks for this great new feature!
Storage-stack improvements
==========================
The desire of one Genode developer to exchange data via Iomega ZIP drives
between an Atari Falcon and Sculpt OS called for a number of small
improvements across several components of the storage stack.
First, the USB-block driver has been changed to exit on an initialization
failure instead of waiting for another (supported) device. This change enables
the Sculpt manager to detect such conditions and release the USB device
hardware by removing the driver component. Such a failed initialization may
happen with exotic USB-storage devices such as ZIP drives. With the device
released, however, it can be assigned to a virtual machine to access it using
a guest OS with a broader support of devices.
Second, the USB-block driver received new support for issuing the SCSI
START-STOP command at initialization time, thereby overcoming the ZIP-drive
initialization failure.
Third, we enhanced the part-block component with the ability to parse AHDI
partition schemes and detect the GEMDOS variant of FAT as used by Atari TOS.
Fourth, we enabled the Rump VFS plugin to access GEMDOS file systems. The
GEMDOS variant is readily supported by NetBSD's "msdos" file-system driver.
However, it must explicitly be enabled by a mount flag. Hence, we added the
principle ability for passing mount flags to NetBSD file-system drivers and
enabled the MSDOSFSMNT_GEMDOSFS flag based on the VFS plugin's config
attribute 'gemdos="yes"'.
With these changes in place, data can now be exchanged directly between
Atari-formatted disks and Sculpt OS. That said, advanced use cases such as
media changes at runtime are not covered yet.
Updated Ada/SPARK runtime
=========================
Genode's Ada/SPARK runtime is developed and maintained by
[https://componolit.com - Componolit]. Thanks for this excellent
collaboration!
The updated Componolit Ada runtime 1.1.0 increases the proof coverage and
cleans up the source-code structure. SPARK mode is now enabled wherever
possible and unneeded abstractions have been removed. Furthermore, the 64-bit
addition and subtraction have been proven to be free of runtime errors.
As a new feature, the runtime now supports the use of inline assembly in Ada.
The removal of unneeded features such as the incomplete threading support for
the secondary stack has greatly reduced the runtime's complexity while keeping
the current functionality available. Also GNAT.IO has been removed as its
implementation was incomplete and complex. A simpler replacement has been
introduced with 'Componolit.Runtime.Debug'.
Unrelated to Genode, the runtime now supports [https://muen.sk/ - Muen] and
the API/ABI of the runtime has been separated from the GNAT ABI.
Libraries and applications
##########################
Updated Qt5
===========
We updated our Qt5 port to the latest upstream version 5.13.0. Before
preparing the 'qt5' port, please make sure to build and install the updated
Qt5 host tools with the 'tool/tool_chain_qt5' script.
Virtualization
==============
As follow-up of our work on the
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/19.05#Kernel-agnostic_virtual-machine_monitors - kernel agnostic virtual-machine monitor interface]
on x86, we added principle support to run our port of VirtualBox on
Genode/Fiasco.OC. We write _principle_ support, since we managed to get the
VMM running with Fiasco.OC, but unfortunately not all features required by the
VMM are available using the Fiasco.OC kernel, e.g., guest FPU registers, PDPTE
registers, and task-priority support. In practice this means that the VMs with
Windows and Linux come up to a certain point but will fail later whenever the
guest state runs out of synchronization between VMM and hardware. In contrast,
the Seoul VMM runs fine on Fiasco.OC since it does not depend on the mentioned
missing features.
Our main working items have been the completion of transfer of the available
guest registers and control flow synchronization improvements between VMM and
Fiasco.OC kernel. Additionally, the usage of priorities for VirtualBox's
pthreads in the VMM had to be disabled. Finally, some tests for VirtualBox
with Genode/Fiasco.OC are enabled for nightly regular testing now.
As a side topic, we added support for using the VirtualBox
[https://forums.virtualbox.org/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=82299&start=15 - CPU profile]
feature, which allows for presenting a different CPUID to the VM than the one
of the real CPU. This can help when running Windows 7 on a Kaby Lake or newer
CPU, which are considered _unsupported hardware_ and reason enough not to
receive security updates from Microsoft. The feature can be used on Genode by
adding the 'CpuProfile' attribute to the '<CPU>' XML node in the .vbox file,
like:
! <CPU CpuProfile="Intel Core i7-5600U">
Disposable VM for handling captive portals
==========================================
It is common that WiFi networks require the user to interact with a specific
web page before gaining access to full network functionality. Such captive
portal pages are completely individual to the accessed network and not limited
in the use of common web techniques. Therefore, their handling is best be done
using a fully-featured web browser like Mozilla Firefox.
This is where, in a Genode-based desktop system like Sculpt, a disposable VM
for hosting a minimal browser setup becomes desirable. Its goal is to unlock a
network for the native Genode surroundings with as little inconvenience as
possible just to be thrown away afterwards without any side effects on the
system.
Now, one could use the Firefox appliance VM of Sculpt (see the
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/18.05 - release notes] or the
[http://genodians.org/alex-ab/2019-03-06-disposal-browser-vm - Genodians article])
for this. But this VM aims for a long-term browsing experience which, in the
context of mere captive-portal handling, brings some drawbacks like a much
higher RAM consumption or the required sessions for USB detection and shared
folders.
Furthermore, in the captive portal VM, there's no need for managing windows or
browser tabs. The one browser tab needed can always be shown in fullscreen. It
is also unnecessary for the browser to maintain a content cache or remember
user data. This can reduce resource consumption.
[image captive_portal_vm]
The VM we came up with is provided as package for Sculpt by Martin Stein
(depot user 'mstein'). You'll possibly need to manually add Martin's
[https://github.com/genodelabs/genode/tree/master/depot/mstein - depot key and download location]
to your Sculpt depot directory. After enabling this user, the captive portal
VM can be found in the Sculpt menu under "Depot -> mstein -> Virtual
Machines -> vbox5-nova-captive-portal".
The VM is based on a TinyCore 10 Linux with Xserver, i3 WM, and a tailored
Firefox browser. The package runtime doesn't need access to your file system,
it merely loads some ROMs into a RAM FS, so, it will completely forget any
changes made during a session. Therefore, it's also safe to simply remove an
instance via the Leitzentrale component-view once you don't need it anymore.
The guest additions are also included to make the VM window resizable.
Build system and tools
######################
At Genode Labs, we have used _tool/autopilot_ for the steering of tests in our
Continuous Integration workflow for almost a decade now. This implied various
improvements over the years and with the completion of our work on
[https://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/19.05#Unified_build_directories_for_ARM - unified build directories]
it was time to amend this handy tool once again. Unified build directories
support building all components for one CPU architecture in one directory
saving the build server from the redundant work we previously had with
board-specific directories. With the new notion of boards during builds, the
definition of the target platform when integrating Genode system scenarios is
now a triplet of _CPU architecture_, _board_, and _kernel_. This is reflected
in the new '-t <architecture-board-kernel>' command line option, which
instructs autopilot to generate a build directory for _architecture_ and
execute tests for the _board-kernel_ combination.
! autopilot -t x86_64-pc-sel4 -t x86_64-pc-nova -r run/log
The known options for '-k kernel' and '-p platform' are still supported with
the small change that the platform must now be defined as
_architecture-board_.
! autopilot -p x86_64-pc -k sel4 -k nova -r run/log
Autopilot now also documents the hidden feature to propagate custom 'RUN_OPTs'
via the 'RUN_OPT_AUTOPILOT' environment variable to the run tool executed.
Besides that, the tool always appends 'RUN_OPT' with '--autopilot'.
! RUN_OPT_AUTOPILOT="--depot-dir /data/depot" autopilot ...