If the processor has invariant TSC it can be used to measure time. We
keep track of the last nanosecond and TSC values and offset them based
on the current TSC. This allows getting current time in userspace.
The implementation maps a single RO page to every processes' address
space. The page contains the TSC info which gets updated every 100 ms.
If the processor does not have invariant TSC, this page will not
indicate the capability for TSC based timing.
There was the problem about how does a processor know which cpu it is
running without doing syscall. TSC counters may or may not be
synchronized between cores, so we need a separate TSC info for each
processor. I ended up adding sequence of bytes 0..255 at the start of
the shared page. When a scheduler gets a new thread, it updates the
threads gs/fs segment to point to the byte corresponding to the current
cpu.
This TSC based timing is also used in kernel. With 64 bit HPET this
probably does not bring much of a benefit, but on PIT or 32 bit HPET
this removes the need to aquire a spinlock to get the current time.
This change does force the userspace to not use gs/fs themselves and
they are both now reserved. Other one is used for TLS (this can be
technically used if user does not call libc code) and the other for
the current processor index (cannot be used as kernel unconditionally
resets it after each load balance).
I was looking at how many times timer's current time was polled
(userspace and kernel combined). When idling in window manager, it was
around 8k times/s. When running doom it peaked at over 1 million times
per second when loading and settled at ~30k times/s.
Joystick axis and buttons are now named to standard values, this allows
interfacing multiple different controllers (only DS3 is supported)
Add ioctl calls for userspace to set joystick player leds and rumble
Only use DS3 code paths when we detect that the attached device is
actually an DS3 controller
update test-joystick program to the new interface and add support to
control rumble and player leds
I'm not sure if these are used by anything but I would assume so as I
have added them :D
functions added:
- getprotobyname
- open_memstream
- munlock
- lockf
- nice
- crypt
- getsid
- wcstoul
This also removes the now old recvfrom and sendto syscalls. These are
now implemented as wrappers around recvmsg and sendmsg.
Also replace unnecessary spinlocks from unix socket with mutexes