Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
e5cf32c7b3 Kernel: Introduce page ownership
Some pages, such as framebuffer pages, are not physical memory frames reserved for the current process.
Some, such as the framebuffer, may be shared between all processes.
Yet, on exit() or on exec(), a process frees all frames mapped into its address spaces.
And on fork(), it copies all data between frames. So how could we map framebuffers.

Simple: we use one of the bits in page table entries which are available to the OS, and mark whether that page is owned by the current process.

If it is owned, it will be:
- Freed on address space destruction
- Its data will be copied to a new page owned by the child process on fork()

If it is not owned, it will be:
- Left alone on address space destruction
- On fork(), the child's virtual page will be mapped to the same physical frame as the parent

This still needs a bit more work, such as keeping a reference of how many processes use a page to free it when all processes using it exit/exec.
This should be done for MAP_SHARED mappings, for example, since they are not permanent forever,
unlike the framebuffer for example.
2022-11-02 19:32:28 +01:00
22740e69bf Kernel: Add support for the NX bit
Not support, actually. We now REQUIRE it.
2022-11-02 18:34:57 +01:00
83e6b8cd21 VMM: Fix naming convention 2022-10-13 18:42:53 +02:00
69a9f7f06a Kernel: Move VMM from a class to a namespace
Also, rename the ugly Paging::VirtualMemoryManager name to just 'VMM'. Which is now used instead of kernelVMM.
2022-10-12 20:02:25 +02:00
97eacc027e Kernel: Use PAGE_SIZE in more places 2022-10-12 13:05:57 +02:00
abcf1b6118 Define PAGE_SIZE as 4096 and use it everywhere instead of using 4096 as a magic number 2022-10-08 14:52:28 +02:00
594d79143e Kernel: enable -Wconversion 2022-10-06 17:13:34 +02:00
1b727a66ea Ready. Set. Go! 2022-09-05 16:13:51 +02:00