This commit is contained in:
Anish Athalye 2018-09-25 12:22:51 -04:00
parent 2d1187aa3c
commit a9d7717cc4
44 changed files with 1899 additions and 8 deletions

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@ -138,6 +138,8 @@ $(OBJDIR)/.vars.%: FORCE
# Include Makefrags for subdirectories # Include Makefrags for subdirectories
include boot/Makefrag include boot/Makefrag
include kern/Makefrag include kern/Makefrag
include lib/Makefrag
include user/Makefrag
QEMUOPTS = -drive file=$(OBJDIR)/kern/kernel.img,index=0,media=disk,format=raw -serial mon:stdio -gdb tcp::$(GDBPORT) QEMUOPTS = -drive file=$(OBJDIR)/kern/kernel.img,index=0,media=disk,format=raw -serial mon:stdio -gdb tcp::$(GDBPORT)
@ -298,6 +300,22 @@ myapi.key:
#handin-prep: #handin-prep:
# @./handin-prep # @./handin-prep
# For test runs
prep-%:
$(V)$(MAKE) "INIT_CFLAGS=${INIT_CFLAGS} -DTEST=`case $* in *_*) echo $*;; *) echo user_$*;; esac`" $(IMAGES)
run-%-nox-gdb: prep-% pre-qemu
$(QEMU) -nographic $(QEMUOPTS) -S
run-%-gdb: prep-% pre-qemu
$(QEMU) $(QEMUOPTS) -S
run-%-nox: prep-% pre-qemu
$(QEMU) -nographic $(QEMUOPTS)
run-%: prep-% pre-qemu
$(QEMU) $(QEMUOPTS)
# This magic automatically generates makefile dependencies # This magic automatically generates makefile dependencies
# for header files included from C source files we compile, # for header files included from C source files we compile,

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@ -1,2 +1,2 @@
LAB=2 LAB=3
PACKAGEDATE=Wed Sep 12 14:51:29 EDT 2018 PACKAGEDATE=Tue Sep 25 12:21:10 EDT 2018

135
grade-lab3 Executable file
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@ -0,0 +1,135 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
from gradelib import *
r = Runner(save("jos.out"),
stop_breakpoint("readline"))
@test(10)
def test_divzero():
r.user_test("divzero")
r.match('Incoming TRAP frame at 0xefffff..',
'TRAP frame at 0xf.......',
' trap 0x00000000 Divide error',
' eip 0x008.....',
' ss 0x----0023',
'.00001000. free env 00001000',
no=['1/0 is ........!'])
@test(10)
def test_softint():
r.user_test("softint")
r.match('Welcome to the JOS kernel monitor!',
'Incoming TRAP frame at 0xefffffbc',
'TRAP frame at 0xf.......',
' trap 0x0000000d General Protection',
' eip 0x008.....',
' ss 0x----0023',
'.00001000. free env 0000100')
@test(10)
def test_badsegment():
r.user_test("badsegment")
r.match('Incoming TRAP frame at 0xefffffbc',
'TRAP frame at 0xf.......',
' trap 0x0000000d General Protection',
' err 0x00000028',
' eip 0x008.....',
' ss 0x----0023',
'.00001000. free env 0000100')
end_part("A")
@test(5)
def test_faultread():
r.user_test("faultread")
r.match('.00001000. user fault va 00000000 ip 008.....',
'Incoming TRAP frame at 0xefffffbc',
'TRAP frame at 0xf.......',
' trap 0x0000000e Page Fault',
' err 0x00000004.*',
'.00001000. free env 0000100',
no=['I read ........ from location 0!'])
@test(5)
def test_faultreadkernel():
r.user_test("faultreadkernel")
r.match('.00001000. user fault va f0100000 ip 008.....',
'Incoming TRAP frame at 0xefffffbc',
'TRAP frame at 0xf.......',
' trap 0x0000000e Page Fault',
' err 0x00000005.*',
'.00001000. free env 00001000',
no=['I read ........ from location 0xf0100000!'])
@test(5)
def test_faultwrite():
r.user_test("faultwrite")
r.match('.00001000. user fault va 00000000 ip 008.....',
'Incoming TRAP frame at 0xefffffbc',
'TRAP frame at 0xf.......',
' trap 0x0000000e Page Fault',
' err 0x00000006.*',
'.00001000. free env 0000100')
@test(5)
def test_faultwritekernel():
r.user_test("faultwritekernel")
r.match('.00001000. user fault va f0100000 ip 008.....',
'Incoming TRAP frame at 0xefffffbc',
'TRAP frame at 0xf.......',
' trap 0x0000000e Page Fault',
' err 0x00000007.*',
'.00001000. free env 0000100')
@test(5)
def test_breakpoint():
r.user_test("breakpoint")
r.match('Welcome to the JOS kernel monitor!',
'Incoming TRAP frame at 0xefffffbc',
'TRAP frame at 0xf.......',
' trap 0x00000003 Breakpoint',
' eip 0x008.....',
' ss 0x----0023',
no=['.00001000. free env 00001000'])
@test(5)
def test_testbss():
r.user_test("testbss")
r.match('Making sure bss works right...',
'Yes, good. Now doing a wild write off the end...',
'.00001000. user fault va 00c..... ip 008.....',
'.00001000. free env 0000100')
@test(5)
def test_hello():
r.user_test("hello")
r.match('.00000000. new env 00001000',
'hello, world',
'i am environment 00001000',
'.00001000. exiting gracefully',
'.00001000. free env 00001000',
'Destroyed the only environment - nothing more to do!')
@test(5)
def test_buggyhello():
r.user_test("buggyhello")
r.match('.00001000. user_mem_check assertion failure for va 00000001',
'.00001000. free env 00001000')
@test(5)
def test_buggyhello2():
r.user_test("buggyhello2")
r.match('.00001000. user_mem_check assertion failure for va 0....000',
'.00001000. free env 00001000',
no=['hello, world'])
@test(5)
def test_evilhello():
r.user_test("evilhello")
r.match('.00001000. user_mem_check assertion failure for va f0100...',
'.00001000. free env 00001000')
end_part("B")
run_tests()

59
inc/env.h Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,59 @@
/* See COPYRIGHT for copyright information. */
#ifndef JOS_INC_ENV_H
#define JOS_INC_ENV_H
#include <inc/types.h>
#include <inc/trap.h>
#include <inc/memlayout.h>
typedef int32_t envid_t;
// An environment ID 'envid_t' has three parts:
//
// +1+---------------21-----------------+--------10--------+
// |0| Uniqueifier | Environment |
// | | | Index |
// +------------------------------------+------------------+
// \--- ENVX(eid) --/
//
// The environment index ENVX(eid) equals the environment's index in the
// 'envs[]' array. The uniqueifier distinguishes environments that were
// created at different times, but share the same environment index.
//
// All real environments are greater than 0 (so the sign bit is zero).
// envid_ts less than 0 signify errors. The envid_t == 0 is special, and
// stands for the current environment.
#define LOG2NENV 10
#define NENV (1 << LOG2NENV)
#define ENVX(envid) ((envid) & (NENV - 1))
// Values of env_status in struct Env
enum {
ENV_FREE = 0,
ENV_DYING,
ENV_RUNNABLE,
ENV_RUNNING,
ENV_NOT_RUNNABLE
};
// Special environment types
enum EnvType {
ENV_TYPE_USER = 0,
};
struct Env {
struct Trapframe env_tf; // Saved registers
struct Env *env_link; // Next free Env
envid_t env_id; // Unique environment identifier
envid_t env_parent_id; // env_id of this env's parent
enum EnvType env_type; // Indicates special system environments
unsigned env_status; // Status of the environment
uint32_t env_runs; // Number of times environment has run
// Address space
pde_t *env_pgdir; // Kernel virtual address of page dir
};
#endif // !JOS_INC_ENV_H

56
inc/lib.h Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,56 @@
// Main public header file for our user-land support library,
// whose code lives in the lib directory.
// This library is roughly our OS's version of a standard C library,
// and is intended to be linked into all user-mode applications
// (NOT the kernel or boot loader).
#ifndef JOS_INC_LIB_H
#define JOS_INC_LIB_H 1
#include <inc/types.h>
#include <inc/stdio.h>
#include <inc/stdarg.h>
#include <inc/string.h>
#include <inc/error.h>
#include <inc/assert.h>
#include <inc/env.h>
#include <inc/memlayout.h>
#include <inc/syscall.h>
#define USED(x) (void)(x)
// main user program
void umain(int argc, char **argv);
// libmain.c or entry.S
extern const char *binaryname;
extern const volatile struct Env *thisenv;
extern const volatile struct Env envs[NENV];
extern const volatile struct PageInfo pages[];
// exit.c
void exit(void);
// readline.c
char* readline(const char *buf);
// syscall.c
void sys_cputs(const char *string, size_t len);
int sys_cgetc(void);
envid_t sys_getenvid(void);
int sys_env_destroy(envid_t);
/* File open modes */
#define O_RDONLY 0x0000 /* open for reading only */
#define O_WRONLY 0x0001 /* open for writing only */
#define O_RDWR 0x0002 /* open for reading and writing */
#define O_ACCMODE 0x0003 /* mask for above modes */
#define O_CREAT 0x0100 /* create if nonexistent */
#define O_TRUNC 0x0200 /* truncate to zero length */
#define O_EXCL 0x0400 /* error if already exists */
#define O_MKDIR 0x0800 /* create directory, not regular file */
#endif // !JOS_INC_LIB_H

13
inc/syscall.h Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
#ifndef JOS_INC_SYSCALL_H
#define JOS_INC_SYSCALL_H
/* system call numbers */
enum {
SYS_cputs = 0,
SYS_cgetc,
SYS_getenvid,
SYS_env_destroy,
NSYSCALLS
};
#endif /* !JOS_INC_SYSCALL_H */

80
inc/trap.h Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,80 @@
#ifndef JOS_INC_TRAP_H
#define JOS_INC_TRAP_H
// Trap numbers
// These are processor defined:
#define T_DIVIDE 0 // divide error
#define T_DEBUG 1 // debug exception
#define T_NMI 2 // non-maskable interrupt
#define T_BRKPT 3 // breakpoint
#define T_OFLOW 4 // overflow
#define T_BOUND 5 // bounds check
#define T_ILLOP 6 // illegal opcode
#define T_DEVICE 7 // device not available
#define T_DBLFLT 8 // double fault
/* #define T_COPROC 9 */ // reserved (not generated by recent processors)
#define T_TSS 10 // invalid task switch segment
#define T_SEGNP 11 // segment not present
#define T_STACK 12 // stack exception
#define T_GPFLT 13 // general protection fault
#define T_PGFLT 14 // page fault
/* #define T_RES 15 */ // reserved
#define T_FPERR 16 // floating point error
#define T_ALIGN 17 // aligment check
#define T_MCHK 18 // machine check
#define T_SIMDERR 19 // SIMD floating point error
// These are arbitrarily chosen, but with care not to overlap
// processor defined exceptions or interrupt vectors.
#define T_SYSCALL 48 // system call
#define T_DEFAULT 500 // catchall
#define IRQ_OFFSET 32 // IRQ 0 corresponds to int IRQ_OFFSET
// Hardware IRQ numbers. We receive these as (IRQ_OFFSET+IRQ_WHATEVER)
#define IRQ_TIMER 0
#define IRQ_KBD 1
#define IRQ_SERIAL 4
#define IRQ_SPURIOUS 7
#define IRQ_IDE 14
#define IRQ_ERROR 19
#ifndef __ASSEMBLER__
#include <inc/types.h>
struct PushRegs {
/* registers as pushed by pusha */
uint32_t reg_edi;
uint32_t reg_esi;
uint32_t reg_ebp;
uint32_t reg_oesp; /* Useless */
uint32_t reg_ebx;
uint32_t reg_edx;
uint32_t reg_ecx;
uint32_t reg_eax;
} __attribute__((packed));
struct Trapframe {
struct PushRegs tf_regs;
uint16_t tf_es;
uint16_t tf_padding1;
uint16_t tf_ds;
uint16_t tf_padding2;
uint32_t tf_trapno;
/* below here defined by x86 hardware */
uint32_t tf_err;
uintptr_t tf_eip;
uint16_t tf_cs;
uint16_t tf_padding3;
uint32_t tf_eflags;
/* below here only when crossing rings, such as from user to kernel */
uintptr_t tf_esp;
uint16_t tf_ss;
uint16_t tf_padding4;
} __attribute__((packed));
#endif /* !__ASSEMBLER__ */
#endif /* !JOS_INC_TRAP_H */

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@ -36,7 +36,20 @@ KERN_SRCFILES := kern/entry.S \
KERN_SRCFILES := $(wildcard $(KERN_SRCFILES)) KERN_SRCFILES := $(wildcard $(KERN_SRCFILES))
# Binary program images to embed within the kernel. # Binary program images to embed within the kernel.
KERN_BINFILES := # Binary files for LAB3
KERN_BINFILES := user/hello \
user/buggyhello \
user/buggyhello2 \
user/evilhello \
user/testbss \
user/divzero \
user/breakpoint \
user/softint \
user/badsegment \
user/faultread \
user/faultreadkernel \
user/faultwrite \
user/faultwritekernel
KERN_OBJFILES := $(patsubst %.c, $(OBJDIR)/%.o, $(KERN_SRCFILES)) KERN_OBJFILES := $(patsubst %.c, $(OBJDIR)/%.o, $(KERN_SRCFILES))
KERN_OBJFILES := $(patsubst %.S, $(OBJDIR)/%.o, $(KERN_OBJFILES)) KERN_OBJFILES := $(patsubst %.S, $(OBJDIR)/%.o, $(KERN_OBJFILES))

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@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
#include <inc/mmu.h> #include <inc/mmu.h>
#include <inc/memlayout.h> #include <inc/memlayout.h>
#include <inc/trap.h>
# Shift Right Logical # Shift Right Logical
#define SRL(val, shamt) (((val) >> (shamt)) & ~(-1 << (32 - (shamt)))) #define SRL(val, shamt) (((val) >> (shamt)) & ~(-1 << (32 - (shamt))))

463
kern/env.c Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,463 @@
/* See COPYRIGHT for copyright information. */
#include <inc/x86.h>
#include <inc/mmu.h>
#include <inc/error.h>
#include <inc/string.h>
#include <inc/assert.h>
#include <inc/elf.h>
#include <kern/env.h>
#include <kern/pmap.h>
#include <kern/trap.h>
#include <kern/monitor.h>
struct Env *envs = NULL; // All environments
struct Env *curenv = NULL; // The current env
static struct Env *env_free_list; // Free environment list
// (linked by Env->env_link)
#define ENVGENSHIFT 12 // >= LOGNENV
// Global descriptor table.
//
// Set up global descriptor table (GDT) with separate segments for
// kernel mode and user mode. Segments serve many purposes on the x86.
// We don't use any of their memory-mapping capabilities, but we need
// them to switch privilege levels.
//
// The kernel and user segments are identical except for the DPL.
// To load the SS register, the CPL must equal the DPL. Thus,
// we must duplicate the segments for the user and the kernel.
//
// In particular, the last argument to the SEG macro used in the
// definition of gdt specifies the Descriptor Privilege Level (DPL)
// of that descriptor: 0 for kernel and 3 for user.
//
struct Segdesc gdt[] =
{
// 0x0 - unused (always faults -- for trapping NULL far pointers)
SEG_NULL,
// 0x8 - kernel code segment
[GD_KT >> 3] = SEG(STA_X | STA_R, 0x0, 0xffffffff, 0),
// 0x10 - kernel data segment
[GD_KD >> 3] = SEG(STA_W, 0x0, 0xffffffff, 0),
// 0x18 - user code segment
[GD_UT >> 3] = SEG(STA_X | STA_R, 0x0, 0xffffffff, 3),
// 0x20 - user data segment
[GD_UD >> 3] = SEG(STA_W, 0x0, 0xffffffff, 3),
// 0x28 - tss, initialized in trap_init_percpu()
[GD_TSS0 >> 3] = SEG_NULL
};
struct Pseudodesc gdt_pd = {
sizeof(gdt) - 1, (unsigned long) gdt
};
//
// Converts an envid to an env pointer.
// If checkperm is set, the specified environment must be either the
// current environment or an immediate child of the current environment.
//
// RETURNS
// 0 on success, -E_BAD_ENV on error.
// On success, sets *env_store to the environment.
// On error, sets *env_store to NULL.
//
int
envid2env(envid_t envid, struct Env **env_store, bool checkperm)
{
struct Env *e;
// If envid is zero, return the current environment.
if (envid == 0) {
*env_store = curenv;
return 0;
}
// Look up the Env structure via the index part of the envid,
// then check the env_id field in that struct Env
// to ensure that the envid is not stale
// (i.e., does not refer to a _previous_ environment
// that used the same slot in the envs[] array).
e = &envs[ENVX(envid)];
if (e->env_status == ENV_FREE || e->env_id != envid) {
*env_store = 0;
return -E_BAD_ENV;
}
// Check that the calling environment has legitimate permission
// to manipulate the specified environment.
// If checkperm is set, the specified environment
// must be either the current environment
// or an immediate child of the current environment.
if (checkperm && e != curenv && e->env_parent_id != curenv->env_id) {
*env_store = 0;
return -E_BAD_ENV;
}
*env_store = e;
return 0;
}
// Mark all environments in 'envs' as free, set their env_ids to 0,
// and insert them into the env_free_list.
// Make sure the environments are in the free list in the same order
// they are in the envs array (i.e., so that the first call to
// env_alloc() returns envs[0]).
//
void
env_init(void)
{
// Set up envs array
// LAB 3: Your code here.
// Per-CPU part of the initialization
env_init_percpu();
}
// Load GDT and segment descriptors.
void
env_init_percpu(void)
{
lgdt(&gdt_pd);
// The kernel never uses GS or FS, so we leave those set to
// the user data segment.
asm volatile("movw %%ax,%%gs" : : "a" (GD_UD|3));
asm volatile("movw %%ax,%%fs" : : "a" (GD_UD|3));
// The kernel does use ES, DS, and SS. We'll change between
// the kernel and user data segments as needed.
asm volatile("movw %%ax,%%es" : : "a" (GD_KD));
asm volatile("movw %%ax,%%ds" : : "a" (GD_KD));
asm volatile("movw %%ax,%%ss" : : "a" (GD_KD));
// Load the kernel text segment into CS.
asm volatile("ljmp %0,$1f\n 1:\n" : : "i" (GD_KT));
// For good measure, clear the local descriptor table (LDT),
// since we don't use it.
lldt(0);
}
//
// Initialize the kernel virtual memory layout for environment e.
// Allocate a page directory, set e->env_pgdir accordingly,
// and initialize the kernel portion of the new environment's address space.
// Do NOT (yet) map anything into the user portion
// of the environment's virtual address space.
//
// Returns 0 on success, < 0 on error. Errors include:
// -E_NO_MEM if page directory or table could not be allocated.
//
static int
env_setup_vm(struct Env *e)
{
int i;
struct PageInfo *p = NULL;
// Allocate a page for the page directory
if (!(p = page_alloc(ALLOC_ZERO)))
return -E_NO_MEM;
// Now, set e->env_pgdir and initialize the page directory.
//
// Hint:
// - The VA space of all envs is identical above UTOP
// (except at UVPT, which we've set below).
// See inc/memlayout.h for permissions and layout.
// Can you use kern_pgdir as a template? Hint: Yes.
// (Make sure you got the permissions right in Lab 2.)
// - The initial VA below UTOP is empty.
// - You do not need to make any more calls to page_alloc.
// - Note: In general, pp_ref is not maintained for
// physical pages mapped only above UTOP, but env_pgdir
// is an exception -- you need to increment env_pgdir's
// pp_ref for env_free to work correctly.
// - The functions in kern/pmap.h are handy.
// LAB 3: Your code here.
// UVPT maps the env's own page table read-only.
// Permissions: kernel R, user R
e->env_pgdir[PDX(UVPT)] = PADDR(e->env_pgdir) | PTE_P | PTE_U;
return 0;
}
//
// Allocates and initializes a new environment.
// On success, the new environment is stored in *newenv_store.
//
// Returns 0 on success, < 0 on failure. Errors include:
// -E_NO_FREE_ENV if all NENV environments are allocated
// -E_NO_MEM on memory exhaustion
//
int
env_alloc(struct Env **newenv_store, envid_t parent_id)
{
int32_t generation;
int r;
struct Env *e;
if (!(e = env_free_list))
return -E_NO_FREE_ENV;
// Allocate and set up the page directory for this environment.
if ((r = env_setup_vm(e)) < 0)
return r;
// Generate an env_id for this environment.
generation = (e->env_id + (1 << ENVGENSHIFT)) & ~(NENV - 1);
if (generation <= 0) // Don't create a negative env_id.
generation = 1 << ENVGENSHIFT;
e->env_id = generation | (e - envs);
// Set the basic status variables.
e->env_parent_id = parent_id;
e->env_type = ENV_TYPE_USER;
e->env_status = ENV_RUNNABLE;
e->env_runs = 0;
// Clear out all the saved register state,
// to prevent the register values
// of a prior environment inhabiting this Env structure
// from "leaking" into our new environment.
memset(&e->env_tf, 0, sizeof(e->env_tf));
// Set up appropriate initial values for the segment registers.
// GD_UD is the user data segment selector in the GDT, and
// GD_UT is the user text segment selector (see inc/memlayout.h).
// The low 2 bits of each segment register contains the
// Requestor Privilege Level (RPL); 3 means user mode. When
// we switch privilege levels, the hardware does various
// checks involving the RPL and the Descriptor Privilege Level
// (DPL) stored in the descriptors themselves.
e->env_tf.tf_ds = GD_UD | 3;
e->env_tf.tf_es = GD_UD | 3;
e->env_tf.tf_ss = GD_UD | 3;
e->env_tf.tf_esp = USTACKTOP;
e->env_tf.tf_cs = GD_UT | 3;
// You will set e->env_tf.tf_eip later.
// commit the allocation
env_free_list = e->env_link;
*newenv_store = e;
cprintf("[%08x] new env %08x\n", curenv ? curenv->env_id : 0, e->env_id);
return 0;
}
//
// Allocate len bytes of physical memory for environment env,
// and map it at virtual address va in the environment's address space.
// Does not zero or otherwise initialize the mapped pages in any way.
// Pages should be writable by user and kernel.
// Panic if any allocation attempt fails.
//
static void
region_alloc(struct Env *e, void *va, size_t len)
{
// LAB 3: Your code here.
// (But only if you need it for load_icode.)
//
// Hint: It is easier to use region_alloc if the caller can pass
// 'va' and 'len' values that are not page-aligned.
// You should round va down, and round (va + len) up.
// (Watch out for corner-cases!)
}
//
// Set up the initial program binary, stack, and processor flags
// for a user process.
// This function is ONLY called during kernel initialization,
// before running the first user-mode environment.
//
// This function loads all loadable segments from the ELF binary image
// into the environment's user memory, starting at the appropriate
// virtual addresses indicated in the ELF program header.
// At the same time it clears to zero any portions of these segments
// that are marked in the program header as being mapped
// but not actually present in the ELF file - i.e., the program's bss section.
//
// All this is very similar to what our boot loader does, except the boot
// loader also needs to read the code from disk. Take a look at
// boot/main.c to get ideas.
//
// Finally, this function maps one page for the program's initial stack.
//
// load_icode panics if it encounters problems.
// - How might load_icode fail? What might be wrong with the given input?
//
static void
load_icode(struct Env *e, uint8_t *binary)
{
// Hints:
// Load each program segment into virtual memory
// at the address specified in the ELF segment header.
// You should only load segments with ph->p_type == ELF_PROG_LOAD.
// Each segment's virtual address can be found in ph->p_va
// and its size in memory can be found in ph->p_memsz.
// The ph->p_filesz bytes from the ELF binary, starting at
// 'binary + ph->p_offset', should be copied to virtual address
// ph->p_va. Any remaining memory bytes should be cleared to zero.
// (The ELF header should have ph->p_filesz <= ph->p_memsz.)
// Use functions from the previous lab to allocate and map pages.
//
// All page protection bits should be user read/write for now.
// ELF segments are not necessarily page-aligned, but you can
// assume for this function that no two segments will touch
// the same virtual page.
//
// You may find a function like region_alloc useful.
//
// Loading the segments is much simpler if you can move data
// directly into the virtual addresses stored in the ELF binary.
// So which page directory should be in force during
// this function?
//
// You must also do something with the program's entry point,
// to make sure that the environment starts executing there.
// What? (See env_run() and env_pop_tf() below.)
// LAB 3: Your code here.
// Now map one page for the program's initial stack
// at virtual address USTACKTOP - PGSIZE.
// LAB 3: Your code here.
}
//
// Allocates a new env with env_alloc, loads the named elf
// binary into it with load_icode, and sets its env_type.
// This function is ONLY called during kernel initialization,
// before running the first user-mode environment.
// The new env's parent ID is set to 0.
//
void
env_create(uint8_t *binary, enum EnvType type)
{
// LAB 3: Your code here.
}
//
// Frees env e and all memory it uses.
//
void
env_free(struct Env *e)
{
pte_t *pt;
uint32_t pdeno, pteno;
physaddr_t pa;
// If freeing the current environment, switch to kern_pgdir
// before freeing the page directory, just in case the page
// gets reused.
if (e == curenv)
lcr3(PADDR(kern_pgdir));
// Note the environment's demise.
cprintf("[%08x] free env %08x\n", curenv ? curenv->env_id : 0, e->env_id);
// Flush all mapped pages in the user portion of the address space
static_assert(UTOP % PTSIZE == 0);
for (pdeno = 0; pdeno < PDX(UTOP); pdeno++) {
// only look at mapped page tables
if (!(e->env_pgdir[pdeno] & PTE_P))
continue;
// find the pa and va of the page table
pa = PTE_ADDR(e->env_pgdir[pdeno]);
pt = (pte_t*) KADDR(pa);
// unmap all PTEs in this page table
for (pteno = 0; pteno <= PTX(~0); pteno++) {
if (pt[pteno] & PTE_P)
page_remove(e->env_pgdir, PGADDR(pdeno, pteno, 0));
}
// free the page table itself
e->env_pgdir[pdeno] = 0;
page_decref(pa2page(pa));
}
// free the page directory
pa = PADDR(e->env_pgdir);
e->env_pgdir = 0;
page_decref(pa2page(pa));
// return the environment to the free list
e->env_status = ENV_FREE;
e->env_link = env_free_list;
env_free_list = e;
}
//
// Frees environment e.
//
void
env_destroy(struct Env *e)
{
env_free(e);
cprintf("Destroyed the only environment - nothing more to do!\n");
while (1)
monitor(NULL);
}
//
// Restores the register values in the Trapframe with the 'iret' instruction.
// This exits the kernel and starts executing some environment's code.
//
// This function does not return.
//
void
env_pop_tf(struct Trapframe *tf)
{
asm volatile(
"\tmovl %0,%%esp\n"
"\tpopal\n"
"\tpopl %%es\n"
"\tpopl %%ds\n"
"\taddl $0x8,%%esp\n" /* skip tf_trapno and tf_errcode */
"\tiret\n"
: : "g" (tf) : "memory");
panic("iret failed"); /* mostly to placate the compiler */
}
//
// Context switch from curenv to env e.
// Note: if this is the first call to env_run, curenv is NULL.
//
// This function does not return.
//
void
env_run(struct Env *e)
{
// Step 1: If this is a context switch (a new environment is running):
// 1. Set the current environment (if any) back to
// ENV_RUNNABLE if it is ENV_RUNNING (think about
// what other states it can be in),
// 2. Set 'curenv' to the new environment,
// 3. Set its status to ENV_RUNNING,
// 4. Update its 'env_runs' counter,
// 5. Use lcr3() to switch to its address space.
// Step 2: Use env_pop_tf() to restore the environment's
// registers and drop into user mode in the
// environment.
// Hint: This function loads the new environment's state from
// e->env_tf. Go back through the code you wrote above
// and make sure you have set the relevant parts of
// e->env_tf to sensible values.
// LAB 3: Your code here.
panic("env_run not yet implemented");
}

35
kern/env.h Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
/* See COPYRIGHT for copyright information. */
#ifndef JOS_KERN_ENV_H
#define JOS_KERN_ENV_H
#include <inc/env.h>
extern struct Env *envs; // All environments
extern struct Env *curenv; // Current environment
extern struct Segdesc gdt[];
void env_init(void);
void env_init_percpu(void);
int env_alloc(struct Env **e, envid_t parent_id);
void env_free(struct Env *e);
void env_create(uint8_t *binary, enum EnvType type);
void env_destroy(struct Env *e); // Does not return if e == curenv
int envid2env(envid_t envid, struct Env **env_store, bool checkperm);
// The following two functions do not return
void env_run(struct Env *e) __attribute__((noreturn));
void env_pop_tf(struct Trapframe *tf) __attribute__((noreturn));
// Without this extra macro, we couldn't pass macros like TEST to
// ENV_CREATE because of the C pre-processor's argument prescan rule.
#define ENV_PASTE3(x, y, z) x ## y ## z
#define ENV_CREATE(x, type) \
do { \
extern uint8_t ENV_PASTE3(_binary_obj_, x, _start)[]; \
env_create(ENV_PASTE3(_binary_obj_, x, _start), \
type); \
} while (0)
#endif // !JOS_KERN_ENV_H

View File

@ -8,6 +8,8 @@
#include <kern/console.h> #include <kern/console.h>
#include <kern/pmap.h> #include <kern/pmap.h>
#include <kern/kclock.h> #include <kern/kclock.h>
#include <kern/env.h>
#include <kern/trap.h>
void void
@ -29,9 +31,20 @@ i386_init(void)
// Lab 2 memory management initialization functions // Lab 2 memory management initialization functions
mem_init(); mem_init();
// Drop into the kernel monitor. // Lab 3 user environment initialization functions
while (1) env_init();
monitor(NULL); trap_init();
#if defined(TEST)
// Don't touch -- used by grading script!
ENV_CREATE(TEST, ENV_TYPE_USER);
#else
// Touch all you want.
ENV_CREATE(user_hello, ENV_TYPE_USER);
#endif // TEST*
// We only have one user environment for now, so just run it.
env_run(&envs[0]);
} }

View File

@ -4,12 +4,21 @@
#include <inc/assert.h> #include <inc/assert.h>
#include <kern/kdebug.h> #include <kern/kdebug.h>
#include <kern/pmap.h>
#include <kern/env.h>
extern const struct Stab __STAB_BEGIN__[]; // Beginning of stabs table extern const struct Stab __STAB_BEGIN__[]; // Beginning of stabs table
extern const struct Stab __STAB_END__[]; // End of stabs table extern const struct Stab __STAB_END__[]; // End of stabs table
extern const char __STABSTR_BEGIN__[]; // Beginning of string table extern const char __STABSTR_BEGIN__[]; // Beginning of string table
extern const char __STABSTR_END__[]; // End of string table extern const char __STABSTR_END__[]; // End of string table
struct UserStabData {
const struct Stab *stabs;
const struct Stab *stab_end;
const char *stabstr;
const char *stabstr_end;
};
// stab_binsearch(stabs, region_left, region_right, type, addr) // stab_binsearch(stabs, region_left, region_right, type, addr)
// //
@ -123,8 +132,24 @@ debuginfo_eip(uintptr_t addr, struct Eipdebuginfo *info)
stabstr = __STABSTR_BEGIN__; stabstr = __STABSTR_BEGIN__;
stabstr_end = __STABSTR_END__; stabstr_end = __STABSTR_END__;
} else { } else {
// Can't search for user-level addresses yet! // The user-application linker script, user/user.ld,
panic("User address"); // puts information about the application's stabs (equivalent
// to __STAB_BEGIN__, __STAB_END__, __STABSTR_BEGIN__, and
// __STABSTR_END__) in a structure located at virtual address
// USTABDATA.
const struct UserStabData *usd = (const struct UserStabData *) USTABDATA;
// Make sure this memory is valid.
// Return -1 if it is not. Hint: Call user_mem_check.
// LAB 3: Your code here.
stabs = usd->stabs;
stab_end = usd->stab_end;
stabstr = usd->stabstr;
stabstr_end = usd->stabstr_end;
// Make sure the STABS and string table memory is valid.
// LAB 3: Your code here.
} }
// String table validity checks // String table validity checks

View File

@ -10,6 +10,7 @@
#include <kern/console.h> #include <kern/console.h>
#include <kern/monitor.h> #include <kern/monitor.h>
#include <kern/kdebug.h> #include <kern/kdebug.h>
#include <kern/trap.h>
#define CMDBUF_SIZE 80 // enough for one VGA text line #define CMDBUF_SIZE 80 // enough for one VGA text line
@ -115,6 +116,8 @@ monitor(struct Trapframe *tf)
cprintf("Welcome to the JOS kernel monitor!\n"); cprintf("Welcome to the JOS kernel monitor!\n");
cprintf("Type 'help' for a list of commands.\n"); cprintf("Type 'help' for a list of commands.\n");
if (tf != NULL)
print_trapframe(tf);
while (1) { while (1) {
buf = readline("K> "); buf = readline("K> ");

View File

@ -8,6 +8,7 @@
#include <kern/pmap.h> #include <kern/pmap.h>
#include <kern/kclock.h> #include <kern/kclock.h>
#include <kern/env.h>
// These variables are set by i386_detect_memory() // These variables are set by i386_detect_memory()
size_t npages; // Amount of physical memory (in pages) size_t npages; // Amount of physical memory (in pages)
@ -150,6 +151,10 @@ mem_init(void)
// Your code goes here: // Your code goes here:
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Make 'envs' point to an array of size 'NENV' of 'struct Env'.
// LAB 3: Your code here.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Now that we've allocated the initial kernel data structures, we set // Now that we've allocated the initial kernel data structures, we set
// up the list of free physical pages. Once we've done so, all further // up the list of free physical pages. Once we've done so, all further
@ -173,6 +178,14 @@ mem_init(void)
// - pages itself -- kernel RW, user NONE // - pages itself -- kernel RW, user NONE
// Your code goes here: // Your code goes here:
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Map the 'envs' array read-only by the user at linear address UENVS
// (ie. perm = PTE_U | PTE_P).
// Permissions:
// - the new image at UENVS -- kernel R, user R
// - envs itself -- kernel RW, user NONE
// LAB 3: Your code here.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Use the physical memory that 'bootstack' refers to as the kernel // Use the physical memory that 'bootstack' refers to as the kernel
// stack. The kernel stack grows down from virtual address KSTACKTOP. // stack. The kernel stack grows down from virtual address KSTACKTOP.
@ -430,6 +443,51 @@ tlb_invalidate(pde_t *pgdir, void *va)
invlpg(va); invlpg(va);
} }
static uintptr_t user_mem_check_addr;
//
// Check that an environment is allowed to access the range of memory
// [va, va+len) with permissions 'perm | PTE_P'.
// Normally 'perm' will contain PTE_U at least, but this is not required.
// 'va' and 'len' need not be page-aligned; you must test every page that
// contains any of that range. You will test either 'len/PGSIZE',
// 'len/PGSIZE + 1', or 'len/PGSIZE + 2' pages.
//
// A user program can access a virtual address if (1) the address is below
// ULIM, and (2) the page table gives it permission. These are exactly
// the tests you should implement here.
//
// If there is an error, set the 'user_mem_check_addr' variable to the first
// erroneous virtual address.
//
// Returns 0 if the user program can access this range of addresses,
// and -E_FAULT otherwise.
//
int
user_mem_check(struct Env *env, const void *va, size_t len, int perm)
{
// LAB 3: Your code here.
return 0;
}
//
// Checks that environment 'env' is allowed to access the range
// of memory [va, va+len) with permissions 'perm | PTE_U | PTE_P'.
// If it can, then the function simply returns.
// If it cannot, 'env' is destroyed and, if env is the current
// environment, this function will not return.
//
void
user_mem_assert(struct Env *env, const void *va, size_t len, int perm)
{
if (user_mem_check(env, va, len, perm | PTE_U) < 0) {
cprintf("[%08x] user_mem_check assertion failure for "
"va %08x\n", env->env_id, user_mem_check_addr);
env_destroy(env); // may not return
}
}
// -------------------------------------------------------------- // --------------------------------------------------------------
// Checking functions. // Checking functions.
@ -595,6 +653,10 @@ check_kern_pgdir(void)
for (i = 0; i < n; i += PGSIZE) for (i = 0; i < n; i += PGSIZE)
assert(check_va2pa(pgdir, UPAGES + i) == PADDR(pages) + i); assert(check_va2pa(pgdir, UPAGES + i) == PADDR(pages) + i);
// check envs array (new test for lab 3)
n = ROUNDUP(NENV*sizeof(struct Env), PGSIZE);
for (i = 0; i < n; i += PGSIZE)
assert(check_va2pa(pgdir, UENVS + i) == PADDR(envs) + i);
// check phys mem // check phys mem
for (i = 0; i < npages * PGSIZE; i += PGSIZE) for (i = 0; i < npages * PGSIZE; i += PGSIZE)
@ -611,6 +673,7 @@ check_kern_pgdir(void)
case PDX(UVPT): case PDX(UVPT):
case PDX(KSTACKTOP-1): case PDX(KSTACKTOP-1):
case PDX(UPAGES): case PDX(UPAGES):
case PDX(UENVS):
assert(pgdir[i] & PTE_P); assert(pgdir[i] & PTE_P);
break; break;
default: default:

View File

@ -8,6 +8,7 @@
#include <inc/memlayout.h> #include <inc/memlayout.h>
#include <inc/assert.h> #include <inc/assert.h>
struct Env;
extern char bootstacktop[], bootstack[]; extern char bootstacktop[], bootstack[];
@ -62,6 +63,9 @@ void page_decref(struct PageInfo *pp);
void tlb_invalidate(pde_t *pgdir, void *va); void tlb_invalidate(pde_t *pgdir, void *va);
int user_mem_check(struct Env *env, const void *va, size_t len, int perm);
void user_mem_assert(struct Env *env, const void *va, size_t len, int perm);
static inline physaddr_t static inline physaddr_t
page2pa(struct PageInfo *pp) page2pa(struct PageInfo *pp)
{ {

80
kern/syscall.c Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,80 @@
/* See COPYRIGHT for copyright information. */
#include <inc/x86.h>
#include <inc/error.h>
#include <inc/string.h>
#include <inc/assert.h>
#include <kern/env.h>
#include <kern/pmap.h>
#include <kern/trap.h>
#include <kern/syscall.h>
#include <kern/console.h>
// Print a string to the system console.
// The string is exactly 'len' characters long.
// Destroys the environment on memory errors.
static void
sys_cputs(const char *s, size_t len)
{
// Check that the user has permission to read memory [s, s+len).
// Destroy the environment if not.
// LAB 3: Your code here.
// Print the string supplied by the user.
cprintf("%.*s", len, s);
}
// Read a character from the system console without blocking.
// Returns the character, or 0 if there is no input waiting.
static int
sys_cgetc(void)
{
return cons_getc();
}
// Returns the current environment's envid.
static envid_t
sys_getenvid(void)
{
return curenv->env_id;
}
// Destroy a given environment (possibly the currently running environment).
//
// Returns 0 on success, < 0 on error. Errors are:
// -E_BAD_ENV if environment envid doesn't currently exist,
// or the caller doesn't have permission to change envid.
static int
sys_env_destroy(envid_t envid)
{
int r;
struct Env *e;
if ((r = envid2env(envid, &e, 1)) < 0)
return r;
if (e == curenv)
cprintf("[%08x] exiting gracefully\n", curenv->env_id);
else
cprintf("[%08x] destroying %08x\n", curenv->env_id, e->env_id);
env_destroy(e);
return 0;
}
// Dispatches to the correct kernel function, passing the arguments.
int32_t
syscall(uint32_t syscallno, uint32_t a1, uint32_t a2, uint32_t a3, uint32_t a4, uint32_t a5)
{
// Call the function corresponding to the 'syscallno' parameter.
// Return any appropriate return value.
// LAB 3: Your code here.
panic("syscall not implemented");
switch (syscallno) {
default:
return -E_INVAL;
}
}

11
kern/syscall.h Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
#ifndef JOS_KERN_SYSCALL_H
#define JOS_KERN_SYSCALL_H
#ifndef JOS_KERNEL
# error "This is a JOS kernel header; user programs should not #include it"
#endif
#include <inc/syscall.h>
int32_t syscall(uint32_t num, uint32_t a1, uint32_t a2, uint32_t a3, uint32_t a4, uint32_t a5);
#endif /* !JOS_KERN_SYSCALL_H */

218
kern/trap.c Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,218 @@
#include <inc/mmu.h>
#include <inc/x86.h>
#include <inc/assert.h>
#include <kern/pmap.h>
#include <kern/trap.h>
#include <kern/console.h>
#include <kern/monitor.h>
#include <kern/env.h>
#include <kern/syscall.h>
static struct Taskstate ts;
/* For debugging, so print_trapframe can distinguish between printing
* a saved trapframe and printing the current trapframe and print some
* additional information in the latter case.
*/
static struct Trapframe *last_tf;
/* Interrupt descriptor table. (Must be built at run time because
* shifted function addresses can't be represented in relocation records.)
*/
struct Gatedesc idt[256] = { { 0 } };
struct Pseudodesc idt_pd = {
sizeof(idt) - 1, (uint32_t) idt
};
static const char *trapname(int trapno)
{
static const char * const excnames[] = {
"Divide error",
"Debug",
"Non-Maskable Interrupt",
"Breakpoint",
"Overflow",
"BOUND Range Exceeded",
"Invalid Opcode",
"Device Not Available",
"Double Fault",
"Coprocessor Segment Overrun",
"Invalid TSS",
"Segment Not Present",
"Stack Fault",
"General Protection",
"Page Fault",
"(unknown trap)",
"x87 FPU Floating-Point Error",
"Alignment Check",
"Machine-Check",
"SIMD Floating-Point Exception"
};
if (trapno < ARRAY_SIZE(excnames))
return excnames[trapno];
if (trapno == T_SYSCALL)
return "System call";
return "(unknown trap)";
}
void
trap_init(void)
{
extern struct Segdesc gdt[];
// LAB 3: Your code here.
// Per-CPU setup
trap_init_percpu();
}
// Initialize and load the per-CPU TSS and IDT
void
trap_init_percpu(void)
{
// Setup a TSS so that we get the right stack
// when we trap to the kernel.
ts.ts_esp0 = KSTACKTOP;
ts.ts_ss0 = GD_KD;
ts.ts_iomb = sizeof(struct Taskstate);
// Initialize the TSS slot of the gdt.
gdt[GD_TSS0 >> 3] = SEG16(STS_T32A, (uint32_t) (&ts),
sizeof(struct Taskstate) - 1, 0);
gdt[GD_TSS0 >> 3].sd_s = 0;
// Load the TSS selector (like other segment selectors, the
// bottom three bits are special; we leave them 0)
ltr(GD_TSS0);
// Load the IDT
lidt(&idt_pd);
}
void
print_trapframe(struct Trapframe *tf)
{
cprintf("TRAP frame at %p\n", tf);
print_regs(&tf->tf_regs);
cprintf(" es 0x----%04x\n", tf->tf_es);
cprintf(" ds 0x----%04x\n", tf->tf_ds);
cprintf(" trap 0x%08x %s\n", tf->tf_trapno, trapname(tf->tf_trapno));
// If this trap was a page fault that just happened
// (so %cr2 is meaningful), print the faulting linear address.
if (tf == last_tf && tf->tf_trapno == T_PGFLT)
cprintf(" cr2 0x%08x\n", rcr2());
cprintf(" err 0x%08x", tf->tf_err);
// For page faults, print decoded fault error code:
// U/K=fault occurred in user/kernel mode
// W/R=a write/read caused the fault
// PR=a protection violation caused the fault (NP=page not present).
if (tf->tf_trapno == T_PGFLT)
cprintf(" [%s, %s, %s]\n",
tf->tf_err & 4 ? "user" : "kernel",
tf->tf_err & 2 ? "write" : "read",
tf->tf_err & 1 ? "protection" : "not-present");
else
cprintf("\n");
cprintf(" eip 0x%08x\n", tf->tf_eip);
cprintf(" cs 0x----%04x\n", tf->tf_cs);
cprintf(" flag 0x%08x\n", tf->tf_eflags);
if ((tf->tf_cs & 3) != 0) {
cprintf(" esp 0x%08x\n", tf->tf_esp);
cprintf(" ss 0x----%04x\n", tf->tf_ss);
}
}
void
print_regs(struct PushRegs *regs)
{
cprintf(" edi 0x%08x\n", regs->reg_edi);
cprintf(" esi 0x%08x\n", regs->reg_esi);
cprintf(" ebp 0x%08x\n", regs->reg_ebp);
cprintf(" oesp 0x%08x\n", regs->reg_oesp);
cprintf(" ebx 0x%08x\n", regs->reg_ebx);
cprintf(" edx 0x%08x\n", regs->reg_edx);
cprintf(" ecx 0x%08x\n", regs->reg_ecx);
cprintf(" eax 0x%08x\n", regs->reg_eax);
}
static void
trap_dispatch(struct Trapframe *tf)
{
// Handle processor exceptions.
// LAB 3: Your code here.
// Unexpected trap: The user process or the kernel has a bug.
print_trapframe(tf);
if (tf->tf_cs == GD_KT)
panic("unhandled trap in kernel");
else {
env_destroy(curenv);
return;
}
}
void
trap(struct Trapframe *tf)
{
// The environment may have set DF and some versions
// of GCC rely on DF being clear
asm volatile("cld" ::: "cc");
// Check that interrupts are disabled. If this assertion
// fails, DO NOT be tempted to fix it by inserting a "cli" in
// the interrupt path.
assert(!(read_eflags() & FL_IF));
cprintf("Incoming TRAP frame at %p\n", tf);
if ((tf->tf_cs & 3) == 3) {
// Trapped from user mode.
assert(curenv);
// Copy trap frame (which is currently on the stack)
// into 'curenv->env_tf', so that running the environment
// will restart at the trap point.
curenv->env_tf = *tf;
// The trapframe on the stack should be ignored from here on.
tf = &curenv->env_tf;
}
// Record that tf is the last real trapframe so
// print_trapframe can print some additional information.
last_tf = tf;
// Dispatch based on what type of trap occurred
trap_dispatch(tf);
// Return to the current environment, which should be running.
assert(curenv && curenv->env_status == ENV_RUNNING);
env_run(curenv);
}
void
page_fault_handler(struct Trapframe *tf)
{
uint32_t fault_va;
// Read processor's CR2 register to find the faulting address
fault_va = rcr2();
// Handle kernel-mode page faults.
// LAB 3: Your code here.
// We've already handled kernel-mode exceptions, so if we get here,
// the page fault happened in user mode.
// Destroy the environment that caused the fault.
cprintf("[%08x] user fault va %08x ip %08x\n",
curenv->env_id, fault_va, tf->tf_eip);
print_trapframe(tf);
env_destroy(curenv);
}

23
kern/trap.h Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
/* See COPYRIGHT for copyright information. */
#ifndef JOS_KERN_TRAP_H
#define JOS_KERN_TRAP_H
#ifndef JOS_KERNEL
# error "This is a JOS kernel header; user programs should not #include it"
#endif
#include <inc/trap.h>
#include <inc/mmu.h>
/* The kernel's interrupt descriptor table */
extern struct Gatedesc idt[];
extern struct Pseudodesc idt_pd;
void trap_init(void);
void trap_init_percpu(void);
void print_regs(struct PushRegs *regs);
void print_trapframe(struct Trapframe *tf);
void page_fault_handler(struct Trapframe *);
void backtrace(struct Trapframe *);
#endif /* JOS_KERN_TRAP_H */

55
kern/trapentry.S Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,55 @@
/* See COPYRIGHT for copyright information. */
#include <inc/mmu.h>
#include <inc/memlayout.h>
#include <inc/trap.h>
###################################################################
# exceptions/interrupts
###################################################################
/* TRAPHANDLER defines a globally-visible function for handling a trap.
* It pushes a trap number onto the stack, then jumps to _alltraps.
* Use TRAPHANDLER for traps where the CPU automatically pushes an error code.
*
* You shouldn't call a TRAPHANDLER function from C, but you may
* need to _declare_ one in C (for instance, to get a function pointer
* during IDT setup). You can declare the function with
* void NAME();
* where NAME is the argument passed to TRAPHANDLER.
*/
#define TRAPHANDLER(name, num) \
.globl name; /* define global symbol for 'name' */ \
.type name, @function; /* symbol type is function */ \
.align 2; /* align function definition */ \
name: /* function starts here */ \
pushl $(num); \
jmp _alltraps
/* Use TRAPHANDLER_NOEC for traps where the CPU doesn't push an error code.
* It pushes a 0 in place of the error code, so the trap frame has the same
* format in either case.
*/
#define TRAPHANDLER_NOEC(name, num) \
.globl name; \
.type name, @function; \
.align 2; \
name: \
pushl $0; \
pushl $(num); \
jmp _alltraps
.text
/*
* Lab 3: Your code here for generating entry points for the different traps.
*/
/*
* Lab 3: Your code here for _alltraps
*/

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OBJDIRS += lib
LIB_SRCFILES := lib/console.c \
lib/libmain.c \
lib/exit.c \
lib/panic.c \
lib/printf.c \
lib/printfmt.c \
lib/readline.c \
lib/string.c \
lib/syscall.c
LIB_OBJFILES := $(patsubst lib/%.c, $(OBJDIR)/lib/%.o, $(LIB_SRCFILES))
LIB_OBJFILES := $(patsubst lib/%.S, $(OBJDIR)/lib/%.o, $(LIB_OBJFILES))
$(OBJDIR)/lib/%.o: lib/%.c $(OBJDIR)/.vars.USER_CFLAGS
@echo + cc[USER] $<
@mkdir -p $(@D)
$(V)$(CC) -nostdinc $(USER_CFLAGS) -c -o $@ $<
$(OBJDIR)/lib/%.o: lib/%.S $(OBJDIR)/.vars.USER_CFLAGS
@echo + as[USER] $<
@mkdir -p $(@D)
$(V)$(CC) -nostdinc $(USER_CFLAGS) -c -o $@ $<
$(OBJDIR)/lib/libjos.a: $(LIB_OBJFILES)
@echo + ar $@
$(V)$(AR) r $@ $(LIB_OBJFILES)

25
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#include <inc/string.h>
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
cputchar(int ch)
{
char c = ch;
// Unlike standard Unix's putchar,
// the cputchar function _always_ outputs to the system console.
sys_cputs(&c, 1);
}
int
getchar(void)
{
int r;
// sys_cgetc does not block, but getchar should.
while ((r = sys_cgetc()) == 0)
;
return r;
}

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lib/entry.S Normal file
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#include <inc/mmu.h>
#include <inc/memlayout.h>
.data
// Define the global symbols 'envs', 'pages', 'uvpt', and 'uvpd'
// so that they can be used in C as if they were ordinary global arrays.
.globl envs
.set envs, UENVS
.globl pages
.set pages, UPAGES
.globl uvpt
.set uvpt, UVPT
.globl uvpd
.set uvpd, (UVPT+(UVPT>>12)*4)
// Entrypoint - this is where the kernel (or our parent environment)
// starts us running when we are initially loaded into a new environment.
.text
.globl _start
_start:
// See if we were started with arguments on the stack
cmpl $USTACKTOP, %esp
jne args_exist
// If not, push dummy argc/argv arguments.
// This happens when we are loaded by the kernel,
// because the kernel does not know about passing arguments.
pushl $0
pushl $0
args_exist:
call libmain
1: jmp 1b

9
lib/exit.c Normal file
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#include <inc/lib.h>
void
exit(void)
{
sys_env_destroy(0);
}

28
lib/libmain.c Normal file
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// Called from entry.S to get us going.
// entry.S already took care of defining envs, pages, uvpd, and uvpt.
#include <inc/lib.h>
extern void umain(int argc, char **argv);
const volatile struct Env *thisenv;
const char *binaryname = "<unknown>";
void
libmain(int argc, char **argv)
{
// set thisenv to point at our Env structure in envs[].
// LAB 3: Your code here.
thisenv = 0;
// save the name of the program so that panic() can use it
if (argc > 0)
binaryname = argv[0];
// call user main routine
umain(argc, argv);
// exit gracefully
exit();
}

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lib/panic.c Normal file
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#include <inc/lib.h>
/*
* Panic is called on unresolvable fatal errors.
* It prints "panic: <message>", then causes a breakpoint exception,
* which causes JOS to enter the JOS kernel monitor.
*/
void
_panic(const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, ...)
{
va_list ap;
va_start(ap, fmt);
// Print the panic message
cprintf("[%08x] user panic in %s at %s:%d: ",
sys_getenvid(), binaryname, file, line);
vcprintf(fmt, ap);
cprintf("\n");
// Cause a breakpoint exception
while (1)
asm volatile("int3");
}

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// Implementation of cprintf console output for user environments,
// based on printfmt() and the sys_cputs() system call.
//
// cprintf is a debugging statement, not a generic output statement.
// It is very important that it always go to the console, especially when
// debugging file descriptor code!
#include <inc/types.h>
#include <inc/stdio.h>
#include <inc/stdarg.h>
#include <inc/lib.h>
// Collect up to 256 characters into a buffer
// and perform ONE system call to print all of them,
// in order to make the lines output to the console atomic
// and prevent interrupts from causing context switches
// in the middle of a console output line and such.
struct printbuf {
int idx; // current buffer index
int cnt; // total bytes printed so far
char buf[256];
};
static void
putch(int ch, struct printbuf *b)
{
b->buf[b->idx++] = ch;
if (b->idx == 256-1) {
sys_cputs(b->buf, b->idx);
b->idx = 0;
}
b->cnt++;
}
int
vcprintf(const char *fmt, va_list ap)
{
struct printbuf b;
b.idx = 0;
b.cnt = 0;
vprintfmt((void*)putch, &b, fmt, ap);
sys_cputs(b.buf, b.idx);
return b.cnt;
}
int
cprintf(const char *fmt, ...)
{
va_list ap;
int cnt;
va_start(ap, fmt);
cnt = vcprintf(fmt, ap);
va_end(ap);
return cnt;
}

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// System call stubs.
#include <inc/syscall.h>
#include <inc/lib.h>
static inline int32_t
syscall(int num, int check, uint32_t a1, uint32_t a2, uint32_t a3, uint32_t a4, uint32_t a5)
{
int32_t ret;
// Generic system call: pass system call number in AX,
// up to five parameters in DX, CX, BX, DI, SI.
// Interrupt kernel with T_SYSCALL.
//
// The "volatile" tells the assembler not to optimize
// this instruction away just because we don't use the
// return value.
//
// The last clause tells the assembler that this can
// potentially change the condition codes and arbitrary
// memory locations.
asm volatile("int %1\n"
: "=a" (ret)
: "i" (T_SYSCALL),
"a" (num),
"d" (a1),
"c" (a2),
"b" (a3),
"D" (a4),
"S" (a5)
: "cc", "memory");
if(check && ret > 0)
panic("syscall %d returned %d (> 0)", num, ret);
return ret;
}
void
sys_cputs(const char *s, size_t len)
{
syscall(SYS_cputs, 0, (uint32_t)s, len, 0, 0, 0);
}
int
sys_cgetc(void)
{
return syscall(SYS_cgetc, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0);
}
int
sys_env_destroy(envid_t envid)
{
return syscall(SYS_env_destroy, 1, envid, 0, 0, 0, 0);
}
envid_t
sys_getenvid(void)
{
return syscall(SYS_getenvid, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0);
}

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OBJDIRS += user
USERLIBS += jos
$(OBJDIR)/user/%.o: user/%.c $(OBJDIR)/.vars.USER_CFLAGS
@echo + cc[USER] $<
@mkdir -p $(@D)
$(V)$(CC) -nostdinc $(USER_CFLAGS) -c -o $@ $<
$(OBJDIR)/user/%: $(OBJDIR)/user/%.o $(OBJDIR)/lib/entry.o $(USERLIBS:%=$(OBJDIR)/lib/lib%.a) user/user.ld
@echo + ld $@
$(V)$(LD) -o $@ $(ULDFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -nostdlib $(OBJDIR)/lib/entry.o $@.o -L$(OBJDIR)/lib $(USERLIBS:%=-l%) $(GCC_LIB)
$(V)$(OBJDUMP) -S $@ > $@.asm
$(V)$(NM) -n $@ > $@.sym

11
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// program to cause a general protection exception
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
// Try to load the kernel's TSS selector into the DS register.
asm volatile("movw $0x28,%ax; movw %ax,%ds");
}

10
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// program to cause a breakpoint trap
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
asm volatile("int $3");
}

11
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// buggy hello world -- unmapped pointer passed to kernel
// kernel should destroy user environment in response
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
sys_cputs((char*)1, 1);
}

13
user/buggyhello2.c Normal file
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// buggy hello world 2 -- pointed-to region extends into unmapped memory
// kernel should destroy user environment in response
#include <inc/lib.h>
const char *hello = "hello, world\n";
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
sys_cputs(hello, 1024*1024);
}

13
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// buggy program - causes a divide by zero exception
#include <inc/lib.h>
int zero;
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
zero = 0;
cprintf("1/0 is %08x!\n", 1/zero);
}

12
user/evilhello.c Normal file
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// evil hello world -- kernel pointer passed to kernel
// kernel should destroy user environment in response
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
// try to print the kernel entry point as a string! mua ha ha!
sys_cputs((char*)0xf010000c, 100);
}

10
user/faultread.c Normal file
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// buggy program - faults with a read from location zero
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
cprintf("I read %08x from location 0!\n", *(unsigned*)0);
}

10
user/faultreadkernel.c Normal file
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// buggy program - faults with a read from kernel space
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
cprintf("I read %08x from location 0xf0100000!\n", *(unsigned*)0xf0100000);
}

10
user/faultwrite.c Normal file
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// buggy program - faults with a write to location zero
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
*(unsigned*)0 = 0;
}

10
user/faultwritekernel.c Normal file
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// buggy program - faults with a write to a kernel location
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
*(unsigned*)0xf0100000 = 0;
}

9
user/hello.c Normal file
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// hello, world
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
cprintf("hello, world\n");
cprintf("i am environment %08x\n", thisenv->env_id);
}

10
user/softint.c Normal file
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// buggy program - causes an illegal software interrupt
#include <inc/lib.h>
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
asm volatile("int $14"); // page fault
}

27
user/testbss.c Normal file
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// test reads and writes to a large bss
#include <inc/lib.h>
#define ARRAYSIZE (1024*1024)
uint32_t bigarray[ARRAYSIZE];
void
umain(int argc, char **argv)
{
int i;
cprintf("Making sure bss works right...\n");
for (i = 0; i < ARRAYSIZE; i++)
if (bigarray[i] != 0)
panic("bigarray[%d] isn't cleared!\n", i);
for (i = 0; i < ARRAYSIZE; i++)
bigarray[i] = i;
for (i = 0; i < ARRAYSIZE; i++)
if (bigarray[i] != i)
panic("bigarray[%d] didn't hold its value!\n", i);
cprintf("Yes, good. Now doing a wild write off the end...\n");
bigarray[ARRAYSIZE+1024] = 0;
panic("SHOULD HAVE TRAPPED!!!");
}

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/* Simple linker script for JOS user-level programs.
See the GNU ld 'info' manual ("info ld") to learn the syntax. */
OUTPUT_FORMAT("elf32-i386", "elf32-i386", "elf32-i386")
OUTPUT_ARCH(i386)
ENTRY(_start)
SECTIONS
{
/* Load programs at this address: "." means the current address */
. = 0x800020;
.text : {
*(.text .stub .text.* .gnu.linkonce.t.*)
}
PROVIDE(etext = .); /* Define the 'etext' symbol to this value */
.rodata : {
*(.rodata .rodata.* .gnu.linkonce.r.*)
}
/* Adjust the address for the data segment to the next page */
. = ALIGN(0x1000);
.data : {
*(.data)
}
PROVIDE(edata = .);
.bss : {
*(.bss)
}
PROVIDE(end = .);
/* Place debugging symbols so that they can be found by
* the kernel debugger.
* Specifically, the four words at 0x200000 mark the beginning of
* the stabs, the end of the stabs, the beginning of the stabs
* string table, and the end of the stabs string table, respectively.
*/
.stab_info 0x200000 : {
LONG(__STAB_BEGIN__);
LONG(__STAB_END__);
LONG(__STABSTR_BEGIN__);
LONG(__STABSTR_END__);
}
.stab : {
__STAB_BEGIN__ = DEFINED(__STAB_BEGIN__) ? __STAB_BEGIN__ : .;
*(.stab);
__STAB_END__ = DEFINED(__STAB_END__) ? __STAB_END__ : .;
BYTE(0) /* Force the linker to allocate space
for this section */
}
.stabstr : {
__STABSTR_BEGIN__ = DEFINED(__STABSTR_BEGIN__) ? __STABSTR_BEGIN__ : .;
*(.stabstr);
__STABSTR_END__ = DEFINED(__STABSTR_END__) ? __STABSTR_END__ : .;
BYTE(0) /* Force the linker to allocate space
for this section */
}
/DISCARD/ : {
*(.eh_frame .note.GNU-stack .comment)
}
}