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| 9 | bondari | 1 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> |
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| 11 | bondari | 3 | <chapter id="architecture"><?dbhtml filename="arch.html"?> |
| 4 | <title>Architecture overview</title> |
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| 16 | bondari | 5 | <section> |
| 27 | bondari | 6 | <title>Scheme</title> |
| 7 | <para> |
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| 8 | <mediaobject id="arch1"> |
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| 9 | <imageobject role="html"> |
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| 10 | <imagedata format="PNG" fileref="images/arch1.png"/> |
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| 11 | </imageobject> |
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| 12 | |||
| 13 | <imageobject role="fop"> |
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| 14 | <imagedata format="SVG" fileref="images.vector/arch1.svg" /> |
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| 15 | </imageobject> |
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| 16 | </mediaobject> |
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| 17 | </para> |
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| 18 | </section> |
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| 37 | bondari | 19 | |
| 27 | bondari | 20 | <section> |
| 38 | bondari | 21 | <title>Kernel primitives</title> |
| 22 | <para> |
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| 23 | <termdef><glossterm>Thread</glossterm> is the basic execution primitive.</termdef> |
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| 24 | </para> |
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| 25 | |||
| 26 | <para> |
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| 27 | <termdef><glossterm>Thread context</glossterm> represents state of the <emphasis>thread</emphasis>. |
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| 28 | Thread context is built of the context registers contents, FPU state and the stack.</termdef> |
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| 29 | </para> |
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| 30 | |||
| 31 | <para> |
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| 32 | <termdef> |
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| 33 | <glossterm>Task</glossterm> is a multi-purpose entity, serving to |
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| 34 | <itemizedlist> |
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| 35 | <listitem>incorporate set if its threads</listitem> |
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| 36 | <listitem>provide common address space to its threads</listitem> |
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| 37 | <listitem>be an end-point in IPC</listitem> |
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| 38 | </itemizedlist> |
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| 39 | |||
| 40 | </termdef> |
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| 41 | </para> |
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| 42 | |||
| 43 | <para> |
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| 44 | <termdef> |
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| 45 | <glossterm>Address space area</glossterm> is a mutually disjunctive range of memory with the code, stack and data. |
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| 46 | </termdef> |
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| 47 | </para> |
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| 48 | |||
| 49 | <para> |
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| 50 | <termdef> |
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| 51 | <glossterm>Address space</glossterm> is a aggregating entity for address space areas, connecting them to the task. |
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| 52 | </termdef> |
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| 53 | </para> |
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| 54 | </section> |
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| 55 | |||
| 56 | <section> |
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| 37 | bondari | 57 | <title>Monolithic microkernel</title> |
| 58 | <para> |
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| 38 | bondari | 59 | Though HelenOS was initially planned as a microkernel, we were trying to avoid several issues, connected |
| 37 | bondari | 60 | with microkernels, such as much higher overhead during memory management and hardware operations. For this reason |
| 38 | bondari | 61 | some of the subsystems, that are to be implemented as servers in classic microkernel design, were implemented |
| 37 | bondari | 62 | as a part of kernel, thus minimizing this overhead. |
| 63 | </para> |
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| 64 | |||
| 65 | <formalpara> |
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| 66 | <title>Memory management</title> |
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| 67 | <para> |
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| 68 | Unlike the classic microkernel, HelenOS has all its memory management functionality in the kernel, available to the memory |
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| 69 | management server via the set of syscalls. |
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| 70 | </para> |
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| 71 | </formalpara> |
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| 72 | |||
| 73 | <formalpara> |
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| 74 | <title>Kernel device drivers</title> |
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| 75 | <para> |
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| 76 | HelenOS kernel has some of the very basic device drivers |
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| 77 | <itemizedlist> |
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| 78 | <listitem>ACPI</listitem> |
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| 79 | <listitem>APIC</listitem> |
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| 80 | <listitem>SMP configuration</listitem> |
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| 81 | <listitem>System clock</listitem> |
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| 82 | <listitem>Interrupt controllers</listitem> |
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| 83 | <listitem>Console</listitem> |
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| 84 | <listitem>VESA & frame buffer</listitem> |
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| 85 | </itemizedlist> |
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| 86 | |||
| 87 | </para> |
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| 88 | </formalpara> |
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| 89 | |||
| 90 | </section> |
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| 91 | |||
| 92 | <section> |
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| 38 | bondari | 93 | <title>IPC</title> |
| 37 | bondari | 94 | |
| 38 | bondari | 95 | <para>HelenOS IPC is designed in analogy with telephone communication. |
| 96 | Each task has an <emphasis>answerbox</emphasis> and a set of <emphasis>phones</emphasis> to call another tasks' answerboxes. |
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| 37 | bondari | 97 | </para> |
| 38 | bondari | 98 | |
| 99 | <para>Communication |
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| 100 | is possible after the connection is established, and can be either <emphasis>asynchronious</emphasis> or <emphasis>synchronious</emphasis>. |
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| 37 | bondari | 101 | </para> |
| 38 | bondari | 102 | |
| 37 | bondari | 103 | </section> |
| 104 | |||
| 105 | <section> |
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| 38 | bondari | 106 | <title>Functionality model</title> |
| 37 | bondari | 107 | |
| 16 | bondari | 108 | <para> |
| 38 | bondari | 109 | As you know, microkernel design is very simple, just enough to provide communication facility for tasks. Most of the OS functionality |
| 110 | is performed by server tasks, that are running in userspace. |
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| 111 | Thus most of the system calls in monolithic kernels, are the IPC calls on server tasks in microkernels. |
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| 16 | bondari | 112 | </para> |
| 113 | |||
| 114 | <para> |
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| 38 | bondari | 115 | Moreover, problems experience the device drivers. Running in the user space, device driver still needs to recieve interrupts |
| 116 | and access hardware directly. |
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| 16 | bondari | 117 | </para> |
| 38 | bondari | 118 | |
| 119 | <para> |
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| 120 | This raises two major problems in microkernels: |
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| 121 | |||
| 122 | <orderedlist numeration="loweralpha"> |
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| 123 | <listitem>What is the recipient address of the server (e.g. "memory manager" or a specific device driver) ?</listitem> |
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| 124 | <listitem>How this server task is going to access hardware or kernel while running in the user mode?</listitem> |
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| 125 | </orderedlist> |
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| 126 | |||
| 127 | </para> |
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| 128 | |||
| 129 | |||
| 130 | <formalpara id="intro_ns"> |
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| 131 | <title>Name server</title> |
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| 132 | <para>As every microkernel, HelenOS has a "Name server" task with "well known" IPC address, that connects user task to any server |
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| 133 | just by the string service indentification.</para> |
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| 134 | </formalpara> |
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| 135 | |||
| 136 | |||
| 137 | <formalpara id="intro_ddi"> |
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| 138 | <title>Device driver interface</title> |
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| 139 | <para>Device drivers use special syscalls to map physical memory areas into their address space, to map port regions (mostly ia32). |
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| 140 | Interrupts are delivered to the device driver task by the standard IPC means. |
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| 141 | </para> |
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| 142 | </formalpara> |
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| 143 | |||
| 20 | jermar | 144 | </section> |
| 38 | bondari | 145 | |
| 146 | |||
| 147 | |||
| 148 | |||
| 11 | bondari | 149 | </chapter> |
| 9 | bondari | 150 |