2016-12-18 06:48:47 +08:00
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ccflags-y += -I$(srctree)/kernel/include
|
unified: initial unified kernel implementation
Summary of what this includes:
initialization:
Copy from nano_init.c, with the following changes:
- the main thread is the continuation of the init thread, but an idle
thread is created as well
- _main() initializes threads in groups and starts the EXE group
- the ready queues are initialized
- the main thread is marked as non-essential once the system init is
done
- a weak main() symbol is provided if the application does not provide a
main() function
scheduler:
Not an exhaustive list, but basically provide primitives for:
- adding/removing a thread to/from a wait queue
- adding/removing a thread to/from the ready queue
- marking thread as ready
- locking/unlocking the scheduler
- instead of locking interrupts
- getting/setting thread priority
- checking what state (coop/preempt) a thread is currenlty running in
- rescheduling threads
- finding what thread is the next to run
- yielding/sleeping/aborting sleep
- finding the current thread
threads:
- Add operationns on threads, such as creating and starting them.
standardized handling of kernel object return codes:
- Kernel objects now cause _Swap() to return the following values:
0 => operation successful
-EAGAIN => operation timed out
-Exxxxx => operation failed for another reason
- The thread's swap_data field can be used to return any additional
information required to complete the operation, such as the actual
result of a successful operation.
timeouts:
- same as nano timeouts, renamed to simply 'timeouts'
- the kernel is still tick-based, but objects take timeout values in
ms for forward compatibility with a tickless kernel.
semaphores:
- Port of the nanokernel semaphores, which have the same basic behaviour
as the microkernel ones. Semaphore groups are not yet implemented.
- These semaphores are enhanced in that they accept an initial count and a
count limit. This allows configuring them as binary semaphores, and also
provisioning them without having to "give" the semaphore multiple times
before using them.
mutexes:
- Straight port of the microkernel mutexes. An init function is added to
allow defining them at runtime.
pipes:
- straight port
timers:
- amalgamation of nano and micro timers, with all functionalities
intact.
events:
- re-implementation, using semaphores and workqueues.
mailboxes:
- straight port
message queues:
- straight port of microkernel FIFOs
memory maps:
- straight port
workqueues:
- Basically, have all APIs follow the k_ naming rule, and use the _timeout
subsystem from the unified kernel directory, and not the _nano_timeout
one.
stacks:
- Port of the nanokernel stacks. They can now have multiple threads
pending on them and threads can wait with a timeout.
LIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel LIFOs.
FIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel FIFOs.
Work by: Dmitriy Korovkin <dmitriy.korovkin@windriver.com>
Peter Mitsis <peter.mitsis@windriver.com>
Allan Stephens <allan.stephens@windriver.com>
Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
Change-Id: Id3cadb3694484ab2ca467889cfb029be3cd3a7d6
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
2016-09-03 06:55:39 +08:00
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asflags-y := ${ccflags-y}
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obj-y =
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obj-y += $(strip \
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2016-09-10 01:59:17 +08:00
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version.o \
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)
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lib-y =
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lib-y += $(strip \
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unified: initial unified kernel implementation
Summary of what this includes:
initialization:
Copy from nano_init.c, with the following changes:
- the main thread is the continuation of the init thread, but an idle
thread is created as well
- _main() initializes threads in groups and starts the EXE group
- the ready queues are initialized
- the main thread is marked as non-essential once the system init is
done
- a weak main() symbol is provided if the application does not provide a
main() function
scheduler:
Not an exhaustive list, but basically provide primitives for:
- adding/removing a thread to/from a wait queue
- adding/removing a thread to/from the ready queue
- marking thread as ready
- locking/unlocking the scheduler
- instead of locking interrupts
- getting/setting thread priority
- checking what state (coop/preempt) a thread is currenlty running in
- rescheduling threads
- finding what thread is the next to run
- yielding/sleeping/aborting sleep
- finding the current thread
threads:
- Add operationns on threads, such as creating and starting them.
standardized handling of kernel object return codes:
- Kernel objects now cause _Swap() to return the following values:
0 => operation successful
-EAGAIN => operation timed out
-Exxxxx => operation failed for another reason
- The thread's swap_data field can be used to return any additional
information required to complete the operation, such as the actual
result of a successful operation.
timeouts:
- same as nano timeouts, renamed to simply 'timeouts'
- the kernel is still tick-based, but objects take timeout values in
ms for forward compatibility with a tickless kernel.
semaphores:
- Port of the nanokernel semaphores, which have the same basic behaviour
as the microkernel ones. Semaphore groups are not yet implemented.
- These semaphores are enhanced in that they accept an initial count and a
count limit. This allows configuring them as binary semaphores, and also
provisioning them without having to "give" the semaphore multiple times
before using them.
mutexes:
- Straight port of the microkernel mutexes. An init function is added to
allow defining them at runtime.
pipes:
- straight port
timers:
- amalgamation of nano and micro timers, with all functionalities
intact.
events:
- re-implementation, using semaphores and workqueues.
mailboxes:
- straight port
message queues:
- straight port of microkernel FIFOs
memory maps:
- straight port
workqueues:
- Basically, have all APIs follow the k_ naming rule, and use the _timeout
subsystem from the unified kernel directory, and not the _nano_timeout
one.
stacks:
- Port of the nanokernel stacks. They can now have multiple threads
pending on them and threads can wait with a timeout.
LIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel LIFOs.
FIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel FIFOs.
Work by: Dmitriy Korovkin <dmitriy.korovkin@windriver.com>
Peter Mitsis <peter.mitsis@windriver.com>
Allan Stephens <allan.stephens@windriver.com>
Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
Change-Id: Id3cadb3694484ab2ca467889cfb029be3cd3a7d6
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
2016-09-03 06:55:39 +08:00
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sys_clock.o \
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thread.o \
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init.o \
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sem.o \
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device.o \
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thread_abort.o \
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2016-09-16 00:37:58 +08:00
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idle.o \
|
unified: initial unified kernel implementation
Summary of what this includes:
initialization:
Copy from nano_init.c, with the following changes:
- the main thread is the continuation of the init thread, but an idle
thread is created as well
- _main() initializes threads in groups and starts the EXE group
- the ready queues are initialized
- the main thread is marked as non-essential once the system init is
done
- a weak main() symbol is provided if the application does not provide a
main() function
scheduler:
Not an exhaustive list, but basically provide primitives for:
- adding/removing a thread to/from a wait queue
- adding/removing a thread to/from the ready queue
- marking thread as ready
- locking/unlocking the scheduler
- instead of locking interrupts
- getting/setting thread priority
- checking what state (coop/preempt) a thread is currenlty running in
- rescheduling threads
- finding what thread is the next to run
- yielding/sleeping/aborting sleep
- finding the current thread
threads:
- Add operationns on threads, such as creating and starting them.
standardized handling of kernel object return codes:
- Kernel objects now cause _Swap() to return the following values:
0 => operation successful
-EAGAIN => operation timed out
-Exxxxx => operation failed for another reason
- The thread's swap_data field can be used to return any additional
information required to complete the operation, such as the actual
result of a successful operation.
timeouts:
- same as nano timeouts, renamed to simply 'timeouts'
- the kernel is still tick-based, but objects take timeout values in
ms for forward compatibility with a tickless kernel.
semaphores:
- Port of the nanokernel semaphores, which have the same basic behaviour
as the microkernel ones. Semaphore groups are not yet implemented.
- These semaphores are enhanced in that they accept an initial count and a
count limit. This allows configuring them as binary semaphores, and also
provisioning them without having to "give" the semaphore multiple times
before using them.
mutexes:
- Straight port of the microkernel mutexes. An init function is added to
allow defining them at runtime.
pipes:
- straight port
timers:
- amalgamation of nano and micro timers, with all functionalities
intact.
events:
- re-implementation, using semaphores and workqueues.
mailboxes:
- straight port
message queues:
- straight port of microkernel FIFOs
memory maps:
- straight port
workqueues:
- Basically, have all APIs follow the k_ naming rule, and use the _timeout
subsystem from the unified kernel directory, and not the _nano_timeout
one.
stacks:
- Port of the nanokernel stacks. They can now have multiple threads
pending on them and threads can wait with a timeout.
LIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel LIFOs.
FIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel FIFOs.
Work by: Dmitriy Korovkin <dmitriy.korovkin@windriver.com>
Peter Mitsis <peter.mitsis@windriver.com>
Allan Stephens <allan.stephens@windriver.com>
Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
Change-Id: Id3cadb3694484ab2ca467889cfb029be3cd3a7d6
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
2016-09-03 06:55:39 +08:00
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sched.o \
|
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mutex.o \
|
2017-02-21 20:50:42 +08:00
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queue.o \
|
unified: initial unified kernel implementation
Summary of what this includes:
initialization:
Copy from nano_init.c, with the following changes:
- the main thread is the continuation of the init thread, but an idle
thread is created as well
- _main() initializes threads in groups and starts the EXE group
- the ready queues are initialized
- the main thread is marked as non-essential once the system init is
done
- a weak main() symbol is provided if the application does not provide a
main() function
scheduler:
Not an exhaustive list, but basically provide primitives for:
- adding/removing a thread to/from a wait queue
- adding/removing a thread to/from the ready queue
- marking thread as ready
- locking/unlocking the scheduler
- instead of locking interrupts
- getting/setting thread priority
- checking what state (coop/preempt) a thread is currenlty running in
- rescheduling threads
- finding what thread is the next to run
- yielding/sleeping/aborting sleep
- finding the current thread
threads:
- Add operationns on threads, such as creating and starting them.
standardized handling of kernel object return codes:
- Kernel objects now cause _Swap() to return the following values:
0 => operation successful
-EAGAIN => operation timed out
-Exxxxx => operation failed for another reason
- The thread's swap_data field can be used to return any additional
information required to complete the operation, such as the actual
result of a successful operation.
timeouts:
- same as nano timeouts, renamed to simply 'timeouts'
- the kernel is still tick-based, but objects take timeout values in
ms for forward compatibility with a tickless kernel.
semaphores:
- Port of the nanokernel semaphores, which have the same basic behaviour
as the microkernel ones. Semaphore groups are not yet implemented.
- These semaphores are enhanced in that they accept an initial count and a
count limit. This allows configuring them as binary semaphores, and also
provisioning them without having to "give" the semaphore multiple times
before using them.
mutexes:
- Straight port of the microkernel mutexes. An init function is added to
allow defining them at runtime.
pipes:
- straight port
timers:
- amalgamation of nano and micro timers, with all functionalities
intact.
events:
- re-implementation, using semaphores and workqueues.
mailboxes:
- straight port
message queues:
- straight port of microkernel FIFOs
memory maps:
- straight port
workqueues:
- Basically, have all APIs follow the k_ naming rule, and use the _timeout
subsystem from the unified kernel directory, and not the _nano_timeout
one.
stacks:
- Port of the nanokernel stacks. They can now have multiple threads
pending on them and threads can wait with a timeout.
LIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel LIFOs.
FIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel FIFOs.
Work by: Dmitriy Korovkin <dmitriy.korovkin@windriver.com>
Peter Mitsis <peter.mitsis@windriver.com>
Allan Stephens <allan.stephens@windriver.com>
Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
Change-Id: Id3cadb3694484ab2ca467889cfb029be3cd3a7d6
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
2016-09-03 06:55:39 +08:00
|
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stack.o \
|
2016-10-25 05:04:43 +08:00
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mem_slab.o \
|
k_mem_pool: Complete rework
This patch amounts to a mostly complete rewrite of the k_mem_pool
allocator, which had been the source of historical complaints vs. the
one easily available in newlib. The basic design of the allocator is
unchanged (it's still a 4-way buddy allocator), but the implementation
has made different choices throughout. Major changes:
Space efficiency: The old implementation required ~2.66 bytes per
"smallest block" in overhead, plus 16 bytes per log4 "level" of the
allocation tree, plus a global tracking struct of 32 bytes and a very
surprising 12 byte overhead (in struct k_mem_block) per active
allocation on top of the returned data pointer. This new allocator
uses a simple bit array as the only per-block storage and places the
free list into the freed blocks themselves, requiring only ~1.33 bits
per smallest block, 12 bytes per level, 32 byte globally and only 4
bytes of per-allocation bookeeping. And it puts more of the generated
tree into BSS, slightly reducing binary sizes for non-trivial pool
sizes (even as the code size itself has increased a tiny bit).
IRQ safe: atomic operations on the store have been cut down to be at
most "4 bit sets and dlist operations" (i.e. a few dozen
instructions), reducing latency significantly and allowing us to lock
against interrupts cleanly from all APIs. Allocations and frees can
be done from ISRs now without limitation (well, obviously you can't
sleep, so "timeout" must be K_NO_WAIT).
Deterministic performance: there is no more "defragmentation" step
that must be manually managed. Block coalescing is done synchronously
at free time and takes constant time (strictly log4(num_levels)), as
the detection of four free "partner bits" is just a simple shift and
mask operation.
Cleaner behavior with odd sizes. The old code assumed that the
specified maximum size would be a power of four multiple of the
minimum size, making use of non-standard buffer sizes problematic.
This implementation re-aligns the sub-blocks at each level and can
handle situations wehre alignment restrictions mean fewer than 4x will
be available. If you want precise layout control, you can still
specify the sizes rigorously. It just doesn't break if you don't.
More portable: the original implementation made use of GNU assembler
macros embedded inline within C __asm__ statements. Not all
toolchains are actually backed by a GNU assembler even when the
support the GNU assembly syntax. This is pure C, albeit with some
hairy macros to expand the compile-time-computed values.
Related changes that had to be rolled into this patch for bisectability:
* The new allocator has a firm minimum block size of 8 bytes (to store
the dlist_node_t). It will "work" with smaller requested min_size
values, but obviously makes no firm promises about layout or how
many will be available. Unfortunately many of the tests were
written with very small 4-byte minimum sizes and to assume exactly
how many they could allocate. Bump the sizes to match the allocator
minimum.
* The mbox and pipes API made use of the internals of k_mem_block and
had to be ported to the new scheme. Blocks no longer store a
backpointer to the pool that allocated them (it's an integer ID in a
bitfield) , so if you want to "nullify" them you have to use the
data pointer.
* test_mbox_api had a bug were it was prematurely freeing k_mem_blocks
that it sent through the mailbox. This worked in the old allocator
because the memory wouldn't be touched when freed, but now we stuff
list pointers in there and the bug was exposed.
* Remove test_mpool_options: the options (related to defragmentation
behavior) tested no longer exist.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
2017-05-10 01:42:39 +08:00
|
|
|
mempool.o \
|
unified: initial unified kernel implementation
Summary of what this includes:
initialization:
Copy from nano_init.c, with the following changes:
- the main thread is the continuation of the init thread, but an idle
thread is created as well
- _main() initializes threads in groups and starts the EXE group
- the ready queues are initialized
- the main thread is marked as non-essential once the system init is
done
- a weak main() symbol is provided if the application does not provide a
main() function
scheduler:
Not an exhaustive list, but basically provide primitives for:
- adding/removing a thread to/from a wait queue
- adding/removing a thread to/from the ready queue
- marking thread as ready
- locking/unlocking the scheduler
- instead of locking interrupts
- getting/setting thread priority
- checking what state (coop/preempt) a thread is currenlty running in
- rescheduling threads
- finding what thread is the next to run
- yielding/sleeping/aborting sleep
- finding the current thread
threads:
- Add operationns on threads, such as creating and starting them.
standardized handling of kernel object return codes:
- Kernel objects now cause _Swap() to return the following values:
0 => operation successful
-EAGAIN => operation timed out
-Exxxxx => operation failed for another reason
- The thread's swap_data field can be used to return any additional
information required to complete the operation, such as the actual
result of a successful operation.
timeouts:
- same as nano timeouts, renamed to simply 'timeouts'
- the kernel is still tick-based, but objects take timeout values in
ms for forward compatibility with a tickless kernel.
semaphores:
- Port of the nanokernel semaphores, which have the same basic behaviour
as the microkernel ones. Semaphore groups are not yet implemented.
- These semaphores are enhanced in that they accept an initial count and a
count limit. This allows configuring them as binary semaphores, and also
provisioning them without having to "give" the semaphore multiple times
before using them.
mutexes:
- Straight port of the microkernel mutexes. An init function is added to
allow defining them at runtime.
pipes:
- straight port
timers:
- amalgamation of nano and micro timers, with all functionalities
intact.
events:
- re-implementation, using semaphores and workqueues.
mailboxes:
- straight port
message queues:
- straight port of microkernel FIFOs
memory maps:
- straight port
workqueues:
- Basically, have all APIs follow the k_ naming rule, and use the _timeout
subsystem from the unified kernel directory, and not the _nano_timeout
one.
stacks:
- Port of the nanokernel stacks. They can now have multiple threads
pending on them and threads can wait with a timeout.
LIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel LIFOs.
FIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel FIFOs.
Work by: Dmitriy Korovkin <dmitriy.korovkin@windriver.com>
Peter Mitsis <peter.mitsis@windriver.com>
Allan Stephens <allan.stephens@windriver.com>
Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
Change-Id: Id3cadb3694484ab2ca467889cfb029be3cd3a7d6
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
2016-09-03 06:55:39 +08:00
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msg_q.o \
|
|
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mailbox.o \
|
2016-10-26 01:28:35 +08:00
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alert.o \
|
unified: initial unified kernel implementation
Summary of what this includes:
initialization:
Copy from nano_init.c, with the following changes:
- the main thread is the continuation of the init thread, but an idle
thread is created as well
- _main() initializes threads in groups and starts the EXE group
- the ready queues are initialized
- the main thread is marked as non-essential once the system init is
done
- a weak main() symbol is provided if the application does not provide a
main() function
scheduler:
Not an exhaustive list, but basically provide primitives for:
- adding/removing a thread to/from a wait queue
- adding/removing a thread to/from the ready queue
- marking thread as ready
- locking/unlocking the scheduler
- instead of locking interrupts
- getting/setting thread priority
- checking what state (coop/preempt) a thread is currenlty running in
- rescheduling threads
- finding what thread is the next to run
- yielding/sleeping/aborting sleep
- finding the current thread
threads:
- Add operationns on threads, such as creating and starting them.
standardized handling of kernel object return codes:
- Kernel objects now cause _Swap() to return the following values:
0 => operation successful
-EAGAIN => operation timed out
-Exxxxx => operation failed for another reason
- The thread's swap_data field can be used to return any additional
information required to complete the operation, such as the actual
result of a successful operation.
timeouts:
- same as nano timeouts, renamed to simply 'timeouts'
- the kernel is still tick-based, but objects take timeout values in
ms for forward compatibility with a tickless kernel.
semaphores:
- Port of the nanokernel semaphores, which have the same basic behaviour
as the microkernel ones. Semaphore groups are not yet implemented.
- These semaphores are enhanced in that they accept an initial count and a
count limit. This allows configuring them as binary semaphores, and also
provisioning them without having to "give" the semaphore multiple times
before using them.
mutexes:
- Straight port of the microkernel mutexes. An init function is added to
allow defining them at runtime.
pipes:
- straight port
timers:
- amalgamation of nano and micro timers, with all functionalities
intact.
events:
- re-implementation, using semaphores and workqueues.
mailboxes:
- straight port
message queues:
- straight port of microkernel FIFOs
memory maps:
- straight port
workqueues:
- Basically, have all APIs follow the k_ naming rule, and use the _timeout
subsystem from the unified kernel directory, and not the _nano_timeout
one.
stacks:
- Port of the nanokernel stacks. They can now have multiple threads
pending on them and threads can wait with a timeout.
LIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel LIFOs.
FIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel FIFOs.
Work by: Dmitriy Korovkin <dmitriy.korovkin@windriver.com>
Peter Mitsis <peter.mitsis@windriver.com>
Allan Stephens <allan.stephens@windriver.com>
Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
Change-Id: Id3cadb3694484ab2ca467889cfb029be3cd3a7d6
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
2016-09-03 06:55:39 +08:00
|
|
|
pipes.o \
|
2016-10-07 04:24:09 +08:00
|
|
|
errno.o \
|
2016-11-05 03:47:32 +08:00
|
|
|
work_q.o \
|
|
|
|
system_work_q.o \
|
unified: initial unified kernel implementation
Summary of what this includes:
initialization:
Copy from nano_init.c, with the following changes:
- the main thread is the continuation of the init thread, but an idle
thread is created as well
- _main() initializes threads in groups and starts the EXE group
- the ready queues are initialized
- the main thread is marked as non-essential once the system init is
done
- a weak main() symbol is provided if the application does not provide a
main() function
scheduler:
Not an exhaustive list, but basically provide primitives for:
- adding/removing a thread to/from a wait queue
- adding/removing a thread to/from the ready queue
- marking thread as ready
- locking/unlocking the scheduler
- instead of locking interrupts
- getting/setting thread priority
- checking what state (coop/preempt) a thread is currenlty running in
- rescheduling threads
- finding what thread is the next to run
- yielding/sleeping/aborting sleep
- finding the current thread
threads:
- Add operationns on threads, such as creating and starting them.
standardized handling of kernel object return codes:
- Kernel objects now cause _Swap() to return the following values:
0 => operation successful
-EAGAIN => operation timed out
-Exxxxx => operation failed for another reason
- The thread's swap_data field can be used to return any additional
information required to complete the operation, such as the actual
result of a successful operation.
timeouts:
- same as nano timeouts, renamed to simply 'timeouts'
- the kernel is still tick-based, but objects take timeout values in
ms for forward compatibility with a tickless kernel.
semaphores:
- Port of the nanokernel semaphores, which have the same basic behaviour
as the microkernel ones. Semaphore groups are not yet implemented.
- These semaphores are enhanced in that they accept an initial count and a
count limit. This allows configuring them as binary semaphores, and also
provisioning them without having to "give" the semaphore multiple times
before using them.
mutexes:
- Straight port of the microkernel mutexes. An init function is added to
allow defining them at runtime.
pipes:
- straight port
timers:
- amalgamation of nano and micro timers, with all functionalities
intact.
events:
- re-implementation, using semaphores and workqueues.
mailboxes:
- straight port
message queues:
- straight port of microkernel FIFOs
memory maps:
- straight port
workqueues:
- Basically, have all APIs follow the k_ naming rule, and use the _timeout
subsystem from the unified kernel directory, and not the _nano_timeout
one.
stacks:
- Port of the nanokernel stacks. They can now have multiple threads
pending on them and threads can wait with a timeout.
LIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel LIFOs.
FIFOs:
- Straight port of the nanokernel FIFOs.
Work by: Dmitriy Korovkin <dmitriy.korovkin@windriver.com>
Peter Mitsis <peter.mitsis@windriver.com>
Allan Stephens <allan.stephens@windriver.com>
Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
Change-Id: Id3cadb3694484ab2ca467889cfb029be3cd3a7d6
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
2016-09-03 06:55:39 +08:00
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2016-09-10 01:59:17 +08:00
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lib-$(CONFIG_INT_LATENCY_BENCHMARK) += int_latency_bench.o
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lib-$(CONFIG_STACK_CANARIES) += compiler_stack_protect.o
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2017-01-17 20:00:55 +08:00
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lib-$(CONFIG_SYS_CLOCK_EXISTS) += timer.o
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2016-09-10 01:59:17 +08:00
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lib-$(CONFIG_ATOMIC_OPERATIONS_C) += atomic_c.o
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2017-01-30 07:57:45 +08:00
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lib-$(CONFIG_POLL) += poll.o
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