This now takes a stack pointer as an argument with TLS
and random offsets accounted for properly.
Based on #24467 authored by Flavio Ceolin.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
- simplify dummy thread initialization to a kswap.h
inline function
- use the same inline function for both early boot and
SMP setup
- add a note on necessity of the dummy thread even if
a custom swap to main is implemented
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Several reviewers agreed that DT_HAS_NODE_STATUS_OKAY(...) was an
undesirable API for the following reasons:
- it's inconsistent with the rest of the DT_NODE_HAS_FOO names
- DT_NODE_HAS_FOO_BAR_BAZ(node) was agreed upon as a shorthand
for macros which are equivalent to
DT_NODE_HAS_FOO(node) && DT_NODE_HAS_BAR(node) &&
- DT_NODE_HAS_BAZ(node), and DT_HAS_NODE_STATUS_OKAY is an odd duck
- DT_NODE_HAS_STATUS(..., okay) was viewed as more readable anyway
- it is seen as a somewhat aesthetically challenged name
Replace all users with DT_NODE_HAS_STATUS(..., okay), which is
semantically equivalent.
This is mostly done with sed, but a few remaining cases were done by
hand, along with whitespace, docs, and comment changes. These special
cases include the Nordic SOC static assert files.
Signed-off-by: Martí Bolívar <marti.bolivar@nordicsemi.no>
C++ is documented to be supported in applications, so it should be
supported in SYS_INIT() functions run at the application init level.
Signed-off-by: Peter Bigot <peter.bigot@nordicsemi.no>
When the device driver model got introduced, there were no concept of
SYS_INIT() which can be seen as software service. These were introduced
afterwards and reusing the device infrastructure for simplicity.
However, it meant to allocate a bit too much for something that only
required an initialization function to be called at right time.
Thus refactoring the devices structures relevantly:
- introducing struct init_entry which is a generic init end-point
- struct deviceconfig is removed and struct device owns everything now.
- SYS_INIT() generates only a struct init_entry via calling
INIT_ENTRY_DEFINE()
- DEVICE_AND_API_INIT() generates a struct device and calls
INIT_ENTRY_DEFINE()
- init objects sections are in ROM
- device objects sections are in RAM (but will end up in ROM once they
will be 'constified')
It also generate a tiny memory gain on both ROM and RAM, which is nice.
Perhaps kernel/device.c could be renamed to something more relevant.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Bursztyka <tomasz.bursztyka@linux.intel.com>
Rename DT_HAS_NODE to DT_HAS_NODE_STATUS_OKAY so the semantics are
clear. As going forward DT_HAS_NODE will report if a NODE exists
regardless of its status.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Convert various DT_CCM_* macros to use DT_CHOSEN(zephyr_ccm) and
associated macros from devicetree.h.
We remove CCM references from cortex_a and cortex_r linker scripts as
its only a feature on Cortex-M STM32 SoCs.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Convert various DT_DTCM_* macros to use DT_CHOSEN(zephyr_dtcm) and
associated macros from devicetree.h.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Replace CONFIG_ENTROPY_NAME with DT_CHOSEN_ZEPHYR_ENTROPY_LABEL. We now
set zephyr,entropy in the chosen node of the device tree to the entropy
device.
This allows us to remove CONFIG_ENTROPY_NAME from dts_fixup.h. Also
remove any other stale ENTROPY related defines in dts_fixup.h files.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
This adds a sys init level which allows device and sys_init
to be done after SMP initialization, z_smp_init(), when all
cores are up and running.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
The set of interrupt stacks is now expressed as an array. We
also define the idle threads and their associated stacks this
way. This allows for iteration in cases where we have multiple
CPUs.
There is now a centralized declaration in kernel_internal.h.
On uniprocessor systems, z_interrupt_stacks has one element
and can be used in the same way as _interrupt_stack.
The IRQ stack for CPU 0 is now set in init.c instead of in
arch code.
The extern definition of the main thread stack is now removed,
this doesn't need to be in a header.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This function had a to sys_rand_get() even without random source. As
Zephyr is built with linkage garbage collection and this function is
called only if either ENTROPY_HAS_DRIVER or TEST_RANDOM_GENERATOR is
enabled and these options automatically enable a random source.
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
Use of the _current_cpu pointer cannot be done safely in a preemptible
context. If a thread is preempted and migrates to another CPU, the
old CPU record will be wrong.
Add a validation assert to the expression that catches incorrect
usages, and fix up the spots where it was wrong (most important being
a few uses of _current outside of locks, and the arch_is_in_isr()
implementation).
Note that the resulting _current expression now requires locking and
is going to be somewhat slower. Longer term it's going to be better
to augment the arch API to allow SMP architectures to implement a
faster "get current thread pointer" action than this default.
Note also that this change means that "_current" is no longer
expressible as an lvalue (long ago, it was just a static variable), so
the places where it gets assigned now assign to _current_cpu->current
instead.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
Only dump data when we are interested in the analysing coverage. By
default just collect the data.
CONFIG_COVERAGE_DUMP is used to control this behaviour.
This will help speed up sanitycheck and will avoid lots of noise in the
log when some tests with coverage enabled failed. Dumping data to
console is also suspected to be one of the reason why qemu hangs in CI.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
The original implementation left this function hidden in init.h which
prevented it from showing up in documentation. Move it to kernel.h,
and document it consistent with the other functions that allow caller
customization based on context.
Signed-off-by: Peter Bigot <peter.bigot@nordicsemi.no>
We have been using thread, th and t for thread variables making the code
less readable, especially when we use t for timeouts and other time
related variables. Just use thread where possible and keep things
consistent.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Just use printk directly instead of going over defines.
For some reason, this change lets us pass on master when running
tests/kernel/timer/timer_monotonic test. This test started failing after
rc2 was tagged, just because the changing git version string passing to
BUILD_VERSION. This is still under investigation.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
In some platforms the size of size_t can be different of 4 bytes. Use
sys_rand_get to proper fill this variable.
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
Promote the private z_arch_* namespace, which specifies
the interface between the core kernel and the
architecture code, to a new top-level namespace named
arch_*.
This allows our documentation generation to create
online documentation for this set of interfaces,
and this set of interfaces is worth treating in a
more formal way anyway.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
The main and idle threads, and their associated stacks,
were being referenced in various parts of the kernel
with no central definition. Expose these in kernel_internal.h
and namespace with z_ appropriately.
The main and idle threads were being defined statically,
with another variable exposed to contain their pointer
value. This wastes a bit of memory and isn't accessible
to user threads anyway, just expose the actual thread
objects.
Redundance MAIN_STACK_SIZE and IDLE_STACK_SIZE defines
in init.c removed, just use the Kconfigs they derive
from.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
These are renamed to z_timestamp_main and z_timestamp_idle,
and now specified in kernel_internal.h.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This is part of the core kernel -> architecture interface and
has been renamed z_arch_kernel_init().
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Our thread struct gets initialized piecewise in a bunch of locations
(this is sort of a design flaw). The is_idle field, which was
introduced to identify idle threads in SMP (where there can be more
than one), was correctly set for idle threads but was being left
uninitialized elsewhere, and in a tiny handful of cases was turning up
nonzero.
The case in pipes. was particularly vexsome, as that isn't a thread at
all but one of the "dummy" threads used for timeouts (another design
flaw IMHO).
Get this right everywhere.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
The boot time measurement sample was giving bogus values on x86: an
assumption was made that the system timer is in sync with the CPU TSC,
which is not the case on most x86 boards.
Boot time measurements are no longer permitted unless the timer source
is the local APIC. To avoid issues of TSC scaling, the startup datum
has been forced to 0, which is in line with the ARM implementation
(which is the only other platform which supports this feature).
Cleanups along the way:
As the datum is now assumed zero, some variables are removed and
calculations simplified. The global variables involved in boot time
measurements are moved to the kernel.h header rather than being
redeclared in every place they are referenced. Since none of the
measurements actually use 64-bit precision, the samples are reduced
to 32-bit quantities.
In addition, this feature has been enabled in long mode.
Fixes: #19144
Signed-off-by: Charles E. Youse <charles.youse@intel.com>
This commit adds a DTCM (Device Tightly Coupled Memory) section for
Cortex F7 MCUs. The Address and length is defined in the corresponding
device tree file.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Wachter <alexander.wachter@student.tugraz.at>
move misc/stack.h to debug/stack.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
move misc/gcov.h to debug/gcov.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
move misc/printk.h to sys/printk.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
move misc/dlist.h to sys/dlist.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
move entropy.h to drivers/entropy.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
move tracing.h to debug/tracing.h and
create a shim for backward-compatibility.
No functional changes to the headers.
A warning in the shim can be controlled with CONFIG_COMPAT_INCLUDES.
Related to #16539
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Zephyr has two unrelated build _VERSIONs: KERNEL_VERSION and
BUILD_VERSION. Prefix them slightly differently in BOOT_BANNER so anyone
can instantly zoom in on which one is being used without having to
compare the implementation details of both.
Signed-off-by: Marc Herbert <marc.herbert@intel.com>
LCOV/gcovr doesn't understand what CODE_UNREACHABLE means.
Adding LCOV_EXCL_LINE to the macro definition unfortunately
doesn't work.
Exclude a bit of code which spins endlessly when multi-
threading is disabled that runs after the coverage report
is dumped.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
We don't get any coverage past when we dump the coverage data,
so exclude the end of the function and move setting the main
thread as nonessential to immediately before the coverage dump.
The comment was also amended.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
data copying and bss zero are called from arch code
before z_cstart(), and coverage data gathering doesn't
work properly at that point. Not all arches use this
code anyway, some do it in optimized assembly instead.
Weak main() is also excluded; it does nothing and every
test overrides it.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Change removes tracing hooks before threads are initialized
and thread switched out hook for ARM before first time switching
to main thread.
Signed-off-by: Marek Pieta <Marek.Pieta@nordicsemi.no>
This name collides with one in the bt subsystem, and wasn't named in
proper zephyrese anyway.
Fixes#16604
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
We had both kernel and os as domains covering low level layers, just use
one and fix the issue of the os domain not being registered.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Memory boundaries are declared as extern char arrays which can be used
directly rather than casting their addresses. The cast to u32_t also
breaks 64-bit builds.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <npitre@baylibre.com>
Remove a redundant #ifdef CONFIG_MULTITHREADING guard
for a code block already inside CONFIG_MULTITHREADING.
Add some inline #endif comments for ease of reading.
Signed-off-by: Ioannis Glaropoulos <Ioannis.Glaropoulos@nordicsemi.no>
For architectures with custom swap to main, currently:
- arm
- posix
we are now using K_THREAD_STACK_SIZEOF macro to pass the
main thread stack size to z_arch_switch_to_main_thread().
This does not introduce any behavioral changes for posix;
the K_THREAD_STACK_SIZEOF() simply returns the sizeof()
the stack object. For Arm, this allows us to clean-up one
more occurence of CONFIG_MPU_REQUIRES_POWER_OF_TWO_ALIGNMENT
in kernel_arch_func.h.
Signed-off-by: Ioannis Glaropoulos <Ioannis.Glaropoulos@nordicsemi.no>
This macro is slated for complete removal, as it's not possible
on arches with an MPU stack guard to know the true buffer bounds
without also knowing the runtime state of its associated thread.
As removing this completely would be invasive to where we are
in the 1.14 release, demote to a private kernel Z_ API instead.
The current way that the macro is being used internally will
not cause any undue harm, we just don't want any external code
depending on it.
The final work to remove this (and overhaul stack specification in
general) will take place in 1.15 in the context of #14269Fixes: #14766
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
k_busy_wait() does not work when multithreading is disabled, so do not
try to wait during boot.
Fixes#14454
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Update reserved function names starting with one underscore, replacing
them as follows:
'_k_' with 'z_'
'_K_' with 'Z_'
'_handler_' with 'z_handl_'
'_Cstart' with 'z_cstart'
'_Swap' with 'z_swap'
This renaming is done on both global and those static function names
in kernel/include and include/. Other static function names in kernel/
are renamed by removing the leading underscore. Other function names
not starting with any prefix listed above are renamed starting with
a 'z_' or 'Z_' prefix.
Function names starting with two or three leading underscores are not
automatcally renamed since these names will collide with the variants
with two or three leading underscores.
Various generator scripts have also been updated as well as perf,
linker and usb files. These are
drivers/serial/uart_handlers.c
include/linker/kobject-text.ld
kernel/include/syscall_handler.h
scripts/gen_kobject_list.py
scripts/gen_syscall_header.py
Signed-off-by: Patrik Flykt <patrik.flykt@intel.com>
Some init tasks may use some bss app memory areas and
expect them to be zeroed out. Do this much earlier
in the boot process, before any of the init tasks
run.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This is an integral part of userspace and cannot be used
on its own. Fold into the main userspace configuration.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
User mode needs to be able to read this value in
compiler generated function prologues/epilogues.
Special handling in init.c for arches that use
_data_copy. This happens before _Cstart() gets
called. We need to make sure that the compiler
stack canary checks in _data_copy itself do not
fail.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Instead of having to enable ramfunc support manually, just make it
transparently available to users, keeping the MPU region disabled if not
used to not waste a MPU region. This however wastes 24 bytes of code
area when the MPU is disabled and 48 bytes when it is enabled, and
probably a dozen of CPU cycles during boot. I believe it is something
acceptable.
Note that when XIP is used, code is already in RAM, so the __ramfunc
keyword does nothing, but does not generate an error.
Signed-off-by: Aurelien Jarno <aurelien@aurel32.net>
The linker file defines the __ramfunc_ram_size symbols to get the size
of the __ramfunc_ram section. Use that instead of computing the value at
runtime from the start and end symbols. This saves 16 bytes of code with
CONFIG_RAM_FUNCTION=y.
Signed-off-by: Aurelien Jarno <aurelien@aurel32.net>
Using __ramfunc to places a function in RAM instead of Flash.
Code that for example reprograms flash at runtime can't execute
from flash, in that case must placing code into RAM.
This commit create a new section named '.ramfunc' in link scripts,
all functions has __ramfunc keyword saved in thats sections and
will load from flash to sram after the system booted.
Fixes: #10253
Signed-off-by: qianfan Zhao <qianfanguijin@163.com>
These functions, for good design reason, take a locking key to
atomically release along with the context swtich. But there's still a
common pattern in code to do a switch unconditionally by passing
irq_lock() directly. On SMP that's a little hurtful as it spams the
global lock. Provide an _unlocked() variant for
_Swap/_reschedule/_pend_curr for simplicity and efficiency.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
We want a _Swap() variant that can atomically release/restore a
spinlock state in addition to the legacy irqlock. The function as it
was is now named "_Swap_irqlock()", while _Swap() now refers to a
spinlock and takes two arguments. The former will be going away once
existing users (not that many! Swap() is an internal API, and the
long port away from legacy irqlocking is going to be happening mostly
in drivers) are ported to spinlocks.
Obviously on uniprocessor setups, these produce identical code. But
SMP requires that the correct API be used to maintain the global lock.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
Since we know do DTS before Kconfig we should try and remove dts from
creating Kconfig namespaced symbols and leave that to Kconfig. So
rename CONFIG_CCM_<FOO> to DT_CCM_<FOO>.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
This was never a long-term solution, more of a gross hack
to get test cases working until we could figure out a good
end-to-end solution for memory domains that generated
appropriate linker sections. Now that we have this with
the app shared memory feature, and have converted all tests
to remove it, delete this feature.
To date all userspace APIs have been tagged as 'experimental'
which sidesteps deprecation policies.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This adds a simple implementation of SMP CPU affinity to Zephyr. The
API is simple and doesn't try to invent abstractions like "cpu sets".
Each thread has an enable/disable flag associated with each CPU in the
system, and the bits can be turned on and off (for threads that are
not currently runnable, of course) using an easy three-function API.
Because the implementation picked requires enumerating runnable
threads in priority order looking for one that match the current CPU,
this is not a good fit for the SCALABLE or MULTIQ scheduler backends,
so it currently can be enabled only for SCHED_DUMB (which is the
default anyway). Fancier algorithms do exist, but even the best of
them scale as O(N_CPUS), so aren't quite constant time and often
require significant memory overhead to keep separate lists for
different cpus/sets.
The intended use here is for apps that want to "pin" threads to
specific CPUs for latency control, or conversely to prevent certain
threads from taking time on specific CPUs to leave them free for fast
response.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
When under SMP, _current is a macro that indirects to a CPU-specific
address, and that trick won't work until kernel_arch_init() has
returned.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
For historical reasons, some architectures had a valid _current thread
pointer at initialization time and others didn't. So the scheduler
logic had a test that checks _current vs. NULL every time it needed to
check premption, when this was only a workaround for initialization
state.
Fix things so that there is a dummy thread always (and clean up the
code to do a struct assignment instead of a memset of bare memory),
and we can remove that test from the scheduler hot path.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
This patch provides support for generating Code coverage reports.
The prj.conf needs to enable CONFIG_COVERAGE. Once enabled, the
code coverage data dump now comes via UART.
This data dump on the UART is triggered once the main
thread exits.
Next step is to save this data dump on file. Then run
scripts/gen_gcov_files.py with the serial console log as argument.
The last step would be be to run the gcovr. Use the following cmd
gcovr -r . --html -o gcov_report/coverage.html --html-details
Currently supported architectures are ARM and x86.
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
The main function is just a weak function that should be override by the
applications if they need. Just adding a nop instructions to explicitly
says that this function does nothing.
MISRA-C rule 2.2
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
This patch splits the text section into 2 parts. The first section
will have some info regarding vector tables and debug info. The
second section will have the complete text section.
This is needed to force the required functions and data variables
the correct locations.
This is due to the behavior of the linker. The linker will only link
once and hence this text section had to be split to make room
for the generated linker script.
Added a new Kconfig CODE_DATA_RELOCATION which when enabled will
invoke the script, which does the required relocation.
Added hooks inside init.c for bss zeroing and data copy operations.
Needed when we have to copy data from ROM to required memory type.
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
The comment explaining why _IntLibInit was being invoked was left in
place after the invocation itself was removed. Remove it too.
Signed-off-by: Peter A. Bigot <pab@pabigot.com>
There were many platforms where this function was doing nothing. Just
merging its functionality with _PrepC function.
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
According with MISRA-C an object should be defined in a block scope if
it is used in a single function.
MISRA-C rule 8.9
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
There is a struct and a macro called _ready_q, this is error
prone. Just removing it.
MISRA-C rule 5.4
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
Added k_thread_name_set() and enable thread name setting when declaring
static threads. This is enabled only when THREAD_MONITOR is used. System
threads get a name by default.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
The Kconfig option CONFIG_BUILD_TIMESTAMP became unused when
BUILD_VERSION was introduced, but it's option and parts of it's
implementation was not completely cleaned from the repository.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Bøe <sebastian.boe@nordicsemi.no>
MISRA C requires that every controlling expression of and if or while
statement have a boolean type.
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
The return of memset is never checked. This patch explicitly ignore
the return to avoid MISRA-C violations.
The only directory excluded directory was ext/* since it contains
only imported code.
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
This reverts commit 17e9d623b4.
Single thread keep introducing more issues, decided to remove the
feature completely and push any required changes for after 1.13.
See #9808
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Now that we call main() with interrupts enabled in !MULTITHREADING, we
need to disable them again for the final fallback "loop-forever
because user code returned" state. Otherwise some architectures will
toss interrupts into a context where we obviously aren't prepared.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
Some applications have a use case for a tiny MULTITHREADING=n build
(which lacks most of the kernel) but still want special-purpose
drivers in that mode that might need to handle interupts. This
creates a chicken and egg problem, as arch code (for obvious reasons)
runs _Cstart() with interrupts disabled, and enables them only on
switching into a newly created thread context. Zephyr does not have a
"turn interrupts on now, please" API at the architecture level.
So this creates one as an arch-specific wrapper around
_arch_irq_unlock(). It's implemented as an optional macro the arch
can define to enable this behavior, falling back to the previous
scheme (and printing a helpful message) if it doesn't find it defined.
Only ARM and x86 are enabled in this patch.
Fixes#8393
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
Define generic interface and hooks for tracing to replace
kernel_event_logger and existing tracing facilities with something more
common.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
memcpy always return a pointer to dest, it can be ignored. Just making
it explicitly so compilers will never raise warnings/errors to this.
Signed-off-by: Flavio Ceolin <flavio.ceolin@intel.com>
Summary: revised attempt at addressing issue 6290. The
following provides an alternative to using
CONFIG_APPLICATION_MEMORY by compartmentalizing data into
Memory Domains. Dependent on MPU limitations, supports
compartmentalized Memory Domains for 1...N logical
applications. This is considered an initial attempt at
designing flexible compartmentalized Memory Domains for
multiple logical applications and, with the provided python
script and edited CMakeLists.txt, provides support for power
of 2 aligned MPU architectures.
Overview: The current patch uses qualifiers to group data into
subsections. The qualifier usage allows for dynamic subsection
creation and affords the developer a large amount of flexibility
in the grouping, naming, and size of the resulting partitions and
domains that are built on these subsections. By additional macro
calls, functions are created that help calculate the size,
address, and permissions for the subsections and enable the
developer to control application data in specified partitions and
memory domains.
Background: Initial attempts focused on creating a single
section in the linker script that then contained internally
grouped variables/data to allow MPU/MMU alignment and protection.
This did not provide additional functionality beyond
CONFIG_APPLICATION_MEMORY as we were unable to reliably group
data or determine their grouping via exported linker symbols.
Thus, the resulting decision was made to dynamically create
subsections using the current qualifier method. An attempt to
group the data by object file was tested, but found that this
broke applications such as ztest where two object files are
created: ztest and main. This also creates an issue of grouping
the two object files together in the same memory domain while
also allowing for compartmenting other data among threads.
Because it is not possible to know a) the name of the partition
and thus the symbol in the linker, b) the size of all the data
in the subsection, nor c) the overall number of partitions
created by the developer, it was not feasible to align the
subsections at compile time without using dynamically generated
linker script for MPU architectures requiring power of 2
alignment.
In order to provide support for MPU architectures that require a
power of 2 alignment, a python script is run at build prior to
when linker_priv_stacks.cmd is generated. This script scans the
built object files for all possible partitions and the names given
to them. It then generates a linker file (app_smem.ld) that is
included in the main linker.ld file. This app_smem.ld allows the
compiler and linker to then create each subsection and align to
the next power of 2.
Usage:
- Requires: app_memory/app_memdomain.h .
- _app_dmem(id) marks a variable to be placed into a data
section for memory partition id.
- _app_bmem(id) marks a variable to be placed into a bss
section for memory partition id.
- These are seen in the linker.map as "data_smem_id" and
"data_smem_idb".
- To create a k_mem_partition, call the macro
app_mem_partition(part0) where "part0" is the name then used to
refer to that partition. This macro only creates a function and
necessary data structures for the later "initialization".
- To create a memory domain for the partition, the macro
app_mem_domain(dom0) is called where "dom0" is the name then
used for the memory domain.
- To initialize the partition (effectively adding the partition
to a linked list), init_part_part0() is called. This is followed
by init_app_memory(), which walks all partitions in the linked
list and calculates the sizes for each partition.
- Once the partition is initialized, the domain can be
initialized with init_domain_dom0(part0) which initializes the
domain with partition part0.
- After the domain has been initialized, the current thread
can be added using add_thread_dom0(k_current_get()).
- The code used in ztests ans kernel/init has been added under
a conditional #ifdef to isolate the code from other tests.
The userspace test CMakeLists.txt file has commands to insert
the CONFIG_APP_SHARED_MEM definition into the required build
targets.
Example:
/* create partition at top of file outside functions */
app_mem_partition(part0);
/* create domain */
app_mem_domain(dom0);
_app_dmem(dom0) int var1;
_app_bmem(dom0) static volatile int var2;
int main()
{
init_part_part0();
init_app_memory();
init_domain_dom0(part0);
add_thread_dom0(k_current_get());
...
}
- If multiple partitions are being created, a variadic
preprocessor macro can be used as provided in
app_macro_support.h:
FOR_EACH(app_mem_partition, part0, part1, part2);
or, for multiple domains, similarly:
FOR_EACH(app_mem_domain, dom0, dom1);
Similarly, the init_part_* can also be used in the macro:
FOR_EACH(init_part, part0, part1, part2);
Testing:
- This has been successfully tested on qemu_x86 and the
ARM frdm_k64f board. It compiles and builds power of 2
aligned subsections for the linker script on the 96b_carbon
boards. These power of 2 alignments have been checked by
hand and are viewable in the zephyr.map file that is
produced during build. However, due to a shortage of
available MPU regions on the 96b_carbon board, we are unable
to test this.
- When run on the 96b_carbon board, the test suite will
enter execution, but each individaul test will fail due to
an MPU FAULT. This is expected as the required number of
MPU regions exceeds the number allowed due to the static
allocation. As the MPU driver does not detect this issue,
the fault occurs because the data being accessed has been
placed outside the active MPU region.
- This now compiles successfully for the ARC boards
em_starterkit_em7d and em_starterkit_em7d_v22. However,
as we lack ARC hardware to run this build on, we are unable
to test this build.
Current known issues:
1) While the script and edited CMakeLists.txt creates the
ability to align to the next power of 2, this does not
address the shortage of available MPU regions on certain
devices (e.g. 96b_carbon). In testing the APB and PPB
regions were commented out.
2) checkpatch.pl lists several issues regarding the
following:
a) Complex macros. The FOR_EACH macros as defined in
app_macro_support.h are listed as complex macros needing
parentheses. Adding parentheses breaks their
functionality, and we have otherwise been unable to
resolve the reported error.
b) __aligned() preferred. The _app_dmem_pad() and
_app_bmem_pad() macros give warnings that __aligned()
is preferred. Prior iterations had this implementation,
which resulted in errors due to "complex macros".
c) Trailing semicolon. The macro init_part(name) has
a trailing semicolon as the semicolon is needed for the
inlined macro call that is generated when this macro
expands.
Update: updated to alternative CONFIG_APPLCATION_MEMORY.
Added config option CONFIG_APP_SHARED_MEM to enable a new section
app_smem to contain the shared memory component. This commit
seperates the Kconfig definition from the definition used for the
conditional code. The change is in response to changes in the
way the build system treats definitions. The python script used
to generate a linker script for app_smem was also midified to
simplify the alignment directives. A default linker script
app_smem.ld was added to remove the conditional includes dependency
on CONFIG_APP_SHARED_MEM. By addining the default linker script
the prebuild stages link properly prior to the python script running
Signed-off-by: Joshua Domagalski <jedomag@tycho.nsa.gov>
Signed-off-by: Shawn Mosley <smmosle@tycho.nsa.gov>
Log API can be used before user can explicitly initialize the logger.
In order to ensure that logger core is ready to buffer log messages
it must be initialize as early as possible. Initialization does not
include initialization of default backend since driver may not be
ready and backend is needed only when log messages are processed.
Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Chruscinski <krzysztof.chruscinski@nordicsemi.no>
The prepare_multithreading()/switch_to_main_thread() steps were being
done unconditionally, when with multhreading disabled we want to jump
straight into the main thread on the existing stack.
Needless to say, that doesn't work well. Fixes#8361.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
During the early boot process, in prepare_multithreading(), the kernel
structures and scheduler are not ready yet. In order to obtain entropy
for early works such as stack randomization, optionally use when present
the ISR-specific function that some drivers will provide.
Signed-off-by: Carles Cufi <carles.cufi@nordicsemi.no>
We generalize querying the entropy driver directly with
a new internal API, which is now used by CONFIG_STACK_RANDOM
and stack canary initialization.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Some sys_rand32_get() implementation will use shared state and protect
that using some synchronization primitive such as a mutex or a
semaphore. It's too early in the boot process to use any of them,
which causes some issues.
Use the entropy API directly to set up the stack canaries.
This doesn't completely solve the problem, as some drivers will use the
same synchronization primitives anyway. Some drivers (e.g. the NRF5
entropy driver) provide an API to be used by ISRs that might be
suitable here, but not all drivers do that.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
This was in prepare_multithreading(), which was moved
to after driver initialization and not before it.
The function now really just prepares system threads.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
STACK_ALIGN has somewhat different semantics across our arches,
particularly ARC.
These checks are unnecessary, _new_thread() is required
to properly align stack sizes anyway.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
prepare_multithreading() was done very early as it had a call
to initialize the interrupt subsystem. This was causing problems
with stack pointer randomization as any HW-based entropy drivers
had not been initialized.
Move the call to initialize the interrupt system out of
prepare_multithreading(), which now really does just prepare
the system to start threads. This is now done after the PRE_KERNEL
phases.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This replaces the existing scheduler (but not priority handling)
implementation with a somewhat simpler one. Behavior as to thread
selection does not change. New features:
+ Unifies SMP and uniprocessing selection code (with the sole
exception of the "cache" trick not being possible in SMP).
+ The old static multi-queue implementation is gone and has been
replaced with a build-time choice of either a "dumb" list
implementation (faster and significantly smaller for apps with only
a few threads) or a balanced tree queue which scales well to
arbitrary numbers of threads and priority levels. This is
controlled via the CONFIG_SCHED_DUMB kconfig variable.
+ The balanced tree implementation is usable symmetrically for the
wait_q abstraction, fixing a scalability glitch Zephyr had when many
threads were waiting on a single object. This can be selected via
CONFIG_WAITQ_FAST.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
This was wrong in two ways, one subtle and one awful.
The subtle problem was that the IRQ lock isn't actually globally
recursive, it gets reset when you context switch (i.e. a _Swap()
implicitly releases and reacquires it). So the recursive count I was
keeping needs to be per-thread or else we risk deadlock any time we
swap away from a thread holding the lock.
And because part of my brain apparently knew this, there was an
"optimization" in the code that tested the current count vs. zero
outside the lock, on the argument that if it was non-zero we must
already hold the lock. Which would be true of a per-thread counter,
but NOT a global one: the other CPU may be holding that lock, and this
test will tell you *you* do. The upshot is that a recursive
irq_lock() would almost always SUCCEED INCORRECTLY when there was lock
contention. That this didn't break more things is amazing to me.
The rework is actually simpler than the original, thankfully. Though
there are some further subtleties:
* The lock state implied by irq_lock() allows the lock to be
implicitly released on context switch (i.e. you can _Swap() with the
lock held at a recursion level higher than 1, which needs to allow
other processes to run). So return paths into threads from _Swap()
and interrupt/exception exit need to check and restore the global
lock state, spinning as needed.
* The idle loop design specifies a k_cpu_idle() function that is on
common architectures expected to enable interrupts (for obvious
reasons), but there is no place to put non-arch code to wire it into
the global lock accounting. So on SMP, even CPU0 needs to use the
"dumb" spinning idle loop.
Finally this patch contains a simple bugfix too, found by inspection:
the interrupt return code used when CONFIG_SWITCH is enabled wasn't
correctly setting the active flag on the threads, opening up the
potential for a race that might result in a thread being scheduled on
two CPUs simultaneously.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
The smp_init() call was too early. Device and subsystem
initialization doesn't happen until after the main thread starts
running. Starting extra CPUs and allowing them to schedule threads
before their drivers are alive is a bad idea, even if it works in a
unit test.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
This uses the version and hash (git describe) and replaces the timestamp
currently used in the boot banner. This works much better than using
timestamps. It lets us point to the exact commit being used to run a
certain application or test.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
The scheduler exposed two APIs to do the same thing:
_add_thread_to_ready_q() was a low level primitive that in most cases
was wrapped by _ready_thread(), which also (1) checks that the thread
_is_ready() or exits, (2) flags the thread as "started" to handle the
case of a thread running for the first time out of a waitq timeout,
and (3) signals a logger event.
As it turns out, all existing usage was already checking case #1.
Case #2 can be better handled in the timeout resume path instead of on
every call. And case #3 was probably wrong to have been skipping
anyway (there were paths that could make a thread runnable without
logging).
Now _add_thread_to_ready_q() is an internal scheduler API, as it
probably always should have been.
This also moves some asserts from the inline _ready_thread() wrapper
to the underlying true function for code size reasons, otherwise the
extra use of the inline added by this patch blows past code size
limits on Quark D2000.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
Names that begin with an underscore are reserved by the C standard.
This patch does not change names of functions defined and implemented
in header files.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
Now that all the pieces are in place, enable SMP for real:
Initialize the CPU records, launch the CPUs at the end of kernel
initialization, have them wait for a flag to release them into the
scheduler, then enter into the runnable threads via _Swap().
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
The scheduler needs a few tweaks to work in SMP mode:
1. The "cache" field just doesn't work. With more than one CPU,
caching the highest priority thread isn't useful as you may need N
of them at any given time before another thread is returned to the
scheduler. You could recalculate it at every change, but that
provides no performance benefit. Remove.
2. The "bitmask" designed to prevent the need to individually check
priorities is likewise dropped. This could work, but in fact on
our only current SMP system and with current K_NUM_PRIOPRITIES
values it provides no real benefit.
3. The individual threads now have a "current cpu" and "active" flag
so that the choice of the next thread to run can correctly skip
threads that are active on other CPUs.
The upshot is that a decent amount of code gets #if'd out, and the new
SMP implementations for _get_highest_ready_prio() and
_get_next_ready_thread() are simpler and smaller, at the expense of
having to drop older optimizations.
Note that scheduler synchronization is unchanged: all scheduler APIs
used to require that an irq_lock() be held, which means that they now
require the global spinlock via the same API. This should be a very
early candidate for lock granularity attention!
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
Simple implementation that caps at 4 CPUs. Long term we should use
some linker magic to define as many as needed and loop over them
without needlessly increasing data or code size for the tracking.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
The xtensa-asm2 work included a patch that added nano_internal.h
includes in lots of places that needed to have _Swap defined, because
it had to break a cycle and this no longer got pulled in from the arch
headers.
Unfortunately those new includes created new and more amusing cycles
elsewhere which led to breakage on other platforms.
Break out the _Swap definition (only) into a separate header and use
that instead. Cleaner. Seems not to have any more hidden gotchas.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
_Swap() is defined in nano_internal.h. Everything calls _Swap().
Pretty much nothing that called _Swap() included nano_internal.h,
expecting it to be picked up automatically through other headers (as
it happened, from the kernel arch-specific include file). A new
_Swap() is going to need some other symbols in the inline definition,
so I needed to break that cycle. Now nothing sees _Swap() defined
anymore. Put nano_internal.h everywhere it's needed.
Our kernel includes remain a big awful yucky mess. This makes things
more correct but no less ugly. Needs cleanup.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
For the dummy thread, contents in the mem_domain structure
is insignificant hence setting it to NULL.
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
Kernel object metadata had an extra data field added recently to
store bounds for stack objects. Use this data field to assign
IDs to thread objects at build time. This has numerous advantages:
* Threads can be granted permissions on kernel objects before the
thread is initialized. Previously, it was necessary to call
k_thread_create() with a K_FOREVER delay, assign permissions, then
start the thread. Permissions are still completely cleared when
a thread exits.
* No need for runtime logic to manage thread IDs
* Build error if CONFIG_MAX_THREAD_BYTES is set too low
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Some "random" drivers are not drivers at all: they just implement the
function `sys_rand32_get()`. Move those to a random subsystem in
preparation for a reorganization.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
Intention of CONFIG_BOOT_DELAY is to delay booting of system for certain
time. Currently it is only delaying start of _main thread as delay is
created using k_sleep. This leads to putting _main thread into timeout
queue and continue kernel boot. This is causing some of undesirable
effects in some of test Automation usecase.
This patch changes k_sleep to k_busy_wait which result in delay in OS
boot instead of delaying start of _main.
Signed-off-by: Youvedeep Singh <youvedeep.singh@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
It's currently too easy to run out of thread IDs as they
are never re-used on thread exit.
Now the kernel maintains a bitfield of in-use thread IDs,
updated on thread creation and termination. When a thread
exits, the permission bitfield for all kernel objects is
updated to revoke access for that retired thread ID, so that
a new thread re-using that ID will not gain access to objects
that it should not have.
Because of these runtime updates, setting the permission
bitmap for an object to all ones for a "public" object doesn't
work properly any more; a flag is now set for this instead.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Now creating a thread will assign it a unique, monotonically increasing
id which is used to reference the permission bitfield in the kernel
object metadata.
Stub functions in userspace.c now implemented.
_new_thread is now wrapped in a common function with pre- and post-
architecture thread initialization tasks.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Garbage values here could wreak havoc on the initial switch to main
depending on how arch-specific _Swap() manages memory permissions when
switching threads.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
All system calls made from userspace which involve pointers to kernel
objects (including device drivers) will need to have those pointers
validated; userspace should never be able to crash the kernel by passing
it garbage.
The actual validation with _k_object_validate() will be in the system
call receiver code, which doesn't exist yet.
- CONFIG_USERSPACE introduced. We are somewhat far away from having an
end-to-end implementation, but at least need a Kconfig symbol to
guard the incoming code with. Formal documentation doesn't exist yet
either, but will appear later down the road once the implementation is
mostly finalized.
- In the memory region for RAM, the data section has been moved last,
past bss and noinit. This ensures that inserting generated tables
with addresses of kernel objects does not change the addresses of
those objects (which would make the table invalid)
- The DWARF debug information in the generated ELF binary is parsed to
fetch the locations of all kernel objects and pass this to gperf to
create a perfect hash table of their memory addresses.
- The generated gperf code doesn't know that we are exclusively working
with memory addresses and uses memory inefficently. A post-processing
script process_gperf.py adjusts the generated code before it is
compiled to work with pointer values directly and not strings
containing them.
- _k_object_init() calls inserted into the init functions for the set of
kernel object types we are going to support so far
Issue: ZEP-2187
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Fixes https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr/issues/1280, but
also many other failures, where output was garbled due to this. Other
similarly affected issues are missing first benchmark (context) in
latency benchmark and some net tests.
Signed-off-by: Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky.perez-gonzalez@intel.com>
The API/Variable names in timing_info looks very speicific to
platform (like systick etc), whereas these variabled are used
across platforms (nrf/arm/quark).
So this patch :-
1. changing API/Variable names to generic one.
2. Creating some of Macros whose implimentation is platform
depenent.
Jira: ZEP-2314
Signed-off-by: Youvedeep Singh <youvedeep.singh@intel.com>
The boot banner is being printed after static threads have started, for
example this is visible with tests using ztest.
This puts the banner message before starting any threads.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
* add nested interrupt support for interrupts
+ use a varibale exc_nest_count to trace nest interrupt and exception
+ regular interrupts can be nested by regular interrupts and fast
interrupts
+ fast interrupt's priority is the highest, cannot be nested
* remove the firq stack and exception stack
+ remove the coressponding kconfig option
+ all interrupts (normal and fast) and exceptions will be handled
in the same stack (_interrupt stack)
+ the pros are, smaller memory footprint (no firq stack), simpler
stack management, simpler codes, etc.. The cons are, possible
10-15 instructions overhead for the case where fast irq nests
regular irq
* add the case of ARC in test/kernel/gen_isr_table
Signed-off-by: Wayne Ren <wei.ren@synopsys.com>
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Subsequent patches will set this guard page as unmapped,
triggering a page fault on access. If this is due to
stack overflow, a double fault will be triggered,
which we are now capable of handling with a switch to
a know good stack.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Introduce a configurable boot delay option (defaulting to none) that
happens right after printing a boot delay banner, #before calling
main() in kernel/init.c:_main(), before taking timestamps for _main()
and once all the infrastructure is in place. Move also the boot banner
to happen after this delay.
The rationale for this is some boards will boot really fast and print
out some test case output in the serial port before the system that is
monitoring the serial port is able to read from the serial port.
This happens in MCUs whose serial port is embedded in a USB connection
which also is used to power the MCU board. When powering it on by
powering the USB port, there is a time it takes the host system to
detect the USB connection, enumerate the serial port, configure it and
load, start and read from the serial port. At this time, it might have
printed the output of the serial port.
While manually it is possible to press a reset button, on automation
setups this adds a lot of overhead and cabling or modifications to the
MCU that are easier (and cheaper) to overcome with this delay. Other
options (like using a separate serial line) might not be possible or
add a lot of cabling and cost, plus it'd also add extra build
configuration.
Change-Id: I2f4d1ba356de6cefa19b4ef5c9f19f87885d4dfd
Signed-off-by: Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky.perez-gonzalez@intel.com>
Applications will have their own BSS and data sections which
will need to be additionally copied.
This covers the common C implementation of these functions.
Arches which implement their own optimized versions will need
to be updated.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
1. Changed _tsc_read() to k_cycles_get_32(). Thus reading the
time stamp will be agnostic of the architecutre used.
2. Changed the variable names from *_tsc to *_time_stamp.
JIRA: ZEP-1426
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
The existing __stack decorator is not flexible enough for upcoming
thread stack memory protection scenarios. Wrap the entire thing in
a declaration macro abstraction instead, which can be implemented
on a per-arch or per-SOC basis.
Issue: ZEP-2185
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
The initial dummy thread context used for the initial __swap to
the main thread at early kernel initialization was not marked as a dummy
thread as it ought to be.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Unline k_thread_spawn(), the struct k_thread can live anywhere and not
in the thread's stack region. This will be useful for memory protection
scenarios where private kernel structures for a thread are not
accessible by that thread, or we want to allow the thread to use all the
stack space we gave it.
This requires a change to the internal _new_thread() API as we need to
provide a separate pointer for the k_thread.
By default, we still create internal threads with the k_thread in stack
memory. Forthcoming patches will change this, but we first need to make
it easier to define k_thread memory of variable size depending on
whether we need to store coprocessor state or not.
Change-Id: I533bbcf317833ba67a771b356b6bbc6596bf60f5
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Convert code to use u{8,16,32,64}_t and s{8,16,32,64}_t instead of C99
integer types. This handles the remaining includes and kernel, plus
touching up various points that we skipped because of include
dependancies. We also convert the PRI printf formatters in the arch
code over to normal formatters.
Jira: ZEP-2051
Change-Id: Iecbb12601a3ee4ea936fd7ddea37788a645b08b0
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Filter was wrong and sample was not being built on any boards. Exclude
platforms that do not support interrupt based UART drivers.
Jira: ZEP-2014
Change-Id: I84a690e7c93fae52335434830b83086019cfd00d
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Due to a limitation on XCC, the inline assembly does not
produce the expected instructions. This results in a wrong
code sequence. On the other hand, plain C code works well.
The note about compilers seems to not be an issue on any of
our currently supported compilers.
Change-Id: I9d2ab0fbf8a48d9dad51da3fd54453f205516d74
Signed-off-by: Mazen NEIFER <mazen@nestwave.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
The K_<thread option> flags/options avaialble to users were hidden in
the kernel private header files: move them to include/kernel.h to
publicize them.
Also, to avoid any future confusion, rename the k_thread.execution_flags
field to user_options.
Change-Id: I65a6fd5e9e78d4ccf783f3304b607a1e6956aeac
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <walsh.benj@gmail.com>
The execution_flags will store the user-facing states of a thread.
This also fixes a bug where K_ESSENTIAL was already assigned to
execution_flags via the options field of
k_thread_spawn()/K_THREAD_DEFINE().
Change-Id: I91ad7a62b5d180e09eead8985ff519809959ecf2
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <walsh.benj@gmail.com>
Replace the existing Apache 2.0 boilerplate header with an SPDX tag
throughout the zephyr code tree. This patch was generated via a
script run over the master branch.
Also updated doc/porting/application.rst that had a dependency on
line numbers in a literal include.
Manually updated subsys/logging/sys_log.c that had a malformed
header in the original file. Also cleanup several cases that already
had a SPDX tag and we either got a duplicate or missed updating.
Jira: ZEP-1457
Change-Id: I6131a1d4ee0e58f5b938300c2d2fc77d2e69572c
Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder <david.b.kinder@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
added _MOVE_INSTR for RISCV32 architecture
The store instruction has a different syntax in RISC-V,
compared to the other architectures. Hence, for each
architecture, specify the entire load instruction within
the _MOVE_INSTR variable.
Change-Id: Iedc421e73411876abd8b698f7d4b46081b473d79
Signed-off-by: Jean-Paul Etienne <fractalclone@gmail.com>
The main, idle, interrupt and workqueue call stack definitions are not available
to applications to call stack_analyze() on, but they often require to be
measured empirically to tune their sizes in particular applications and
use cases.
This exposes a new k_call_stacks_analyze() API call that allows the
application to measure the used call stack space for the 4
kernel-defined call stacks.
Additionally for the ARC architecture the FIRQ stack is also profiled.
Change-id: I0cde149c7366cb6c4bbe8f9b0ab1cc5b56a36ed9
Signed-off-by: Carles Cufi <carles.cufi@nordicsemi.no>
Some thread fields were 32-bit wide, when they are not even close to
using that full range of values. They are instead changed to 8-bit fields.
- prio can fit in one byte, limiting the priorities range to -128 to 127
- recursive scheduler locking can be limited to 255; a rollover results
most probably from a logic error
- flags are split into execution flags and thread states; 8 bits is
enough for each of them currently, with at worst two states and four
flags to spare (on x86, on other archs, there are six flags to spare)
Doing this saves 8 bytes per stack. It also sets up an incoming
enhancement when checking if the current thread is preemptible on
interrupt exit.
Change-Id: Ieb5321a5b99f99173b0605dd4a193c3bc7ddabf4
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
Also remove mentions of unified kernel in various places in the kernel,
samples and documentation.
Change-Id: Ice43bc73badbe7e14bae40fd6f2a302f6528a77d
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>