TODO revision 1.19
1o Call module as module. 2 3 Until now, everything is called as attribute. Separate module from it: 4 5 - Module is a collection of code (*.[cSo]), and provides a function. 6 Module can depend on other modules. 7 8 - Attribute provides metadata for modules. One module can have 9 multiple attributes. Attribute doesn't generate a module (*.o, 10 *.ko). 11 12o Emit everything (ioconf.*, Makefile, ...) per-attribute. 13 14 config(9) related metadata (cfdriver, cfattach, cfdata, ...) should be 15 collected using linker. Create ELF sections like 16 .{rodata,data}.config.{cfdriver,cfattach,cfdata}. Provide reference 17 symbols (e.g. cfdriverinit[]) using linker script. Sort entries by name 18 to lookup entries by binary search in kernel. 19 20o Generate modular(9) related information. Especially module dependency. 21 22 At this moment modular(9) modules hardcode dependency in *.c using the 23 MODULE() macro: 24 25 MODULE(MODULE_CLASS_DRIVER, hdaudio, "pci"); 26 27 This information already exists in config(5) definitions (files.*). 28 Extend config(5) to be able to specify module's class. 29 30 Ideally these module metadata are kept somewhere in ELF headers, so that 31 loaders (e.g. boot(8)) can easily read. One idea is to abuse DYNAMIC 32 sections to record dependency, as shared library does. (Feasibility 33 unknown.) 34 35o Rename "interface attribute" to "bus". 36 37 Instead of 38 39 define audiobus {} 40 attach audio at audiobus 41 42 Do like this 43 44 defbus audiobus {} 45 attach audio at audiobus 46 47 Always provide xxxbusprint() (and xxxbussubmatch if multiple children). 48 Extend struct cfiattrdata like: 49 50 struct cfiattrdata { 51 const char *ci_name; 52 cfprint_t ci_print; 53 cfsubmatch_t ci_submatch; 54 int ci_loclen; 55 const struct cflocdesc ci_locdesc[]; 56 }; 57 58o Simplify child configuration API 59 60 With said struct cfiattrdata extension, config_found*() can omit 61 print/submatch args. If the found child is known (e.g., "pcibus" creating 62 "pci"): 63 64 config_found(self, "pcibus"); 65 66 If finding unknown children (e.g. "pci" finding pci devices): 67 68 config_find(self, "pci", locs, aux); 69 70o Retire "attach foo at bar with foo_bar.c" 71 72 Most of these should be rewritten by defining a common interface attribute 73 "foobus", instead of writing multiple attachments. com(4), ld(4), ehci(4) 74 are typical examples. For ehci(4), EHCI-capable controller drivers implement 75 "ehcibus" interface, like: 76 77 defne ehcibus {} 78 device imxehci: ehcibus 79 80 These drivers' attach functions call config_found() to attach ehci(4) via 81 the "ehcibus" interface attribute, instead of calling ehci_init() directly. 82 Same for com(4) (com_attach_subr()) and ld(4) (ldattach()). 83 84o Sort objects in more reasonable order. 85 86 Put machdep.ko in the lowest address. uvm.ko and kern.ko follow. 87 88 Kill alphabetical sort (${OBJS:O} in sys/conf/Makefile.inc.kern. 89 90 Use ldscript. Do like this 91 92 .text : 93 AT (ADDR(.text) & 0x0fffffff) 94 { 95 *(.text.machdep.locore.entry) 96 *(.text.machdep.locore) 97 *(.text.machdep) 98 *(.text) 99 *(.text.*) 100 : 101 102 Kill linker definitions in sys/conf/Makefile.inc.kern. 103 104o Differentiate "options" and "flags"/"params". 105 106 "options" enables features by adding *.c files (via attributes). 107 108 "flags" and "params" are to change contents of *.c files. These don't add 109 *.c files to the result kernel, or don't build attributes (modules). 110 111o Make flags/params per attributes (modules). 112 113 Basically flags and params are cpp(1) #define's generated in opt_*.h. Make 114 them local to one attributes (modules). Flags/params which affects files 115 across attributes (modules) are possible, but should be discouraged. 116 117o Generate things only by definitions. 118 119 In the ideal dynamically modular world, "selection" will be done not at 120 compile time but at runtime. Users select their wanted modules, by 121 dynamically loading them. 122 123 This means that the system provides all choices; that is, build all modules 124 in the source tree. Necessary information is defined in the "definition" 125 part. 126 127o Split cfdata. 128 129 cfdata is a set of pattern matching rules to enable devices at runtime device 130 auto-configuration. It is pure data and can (should) be generated separately 131 from the code. 132 133o Allow easier adding and removing of options. 134 135 It should be possible to add or remove options, flags, etc., 136 without regard to whether or not they are already defined. 137 For example, a configuration like this: 138 139 include GENERIC 140 options FOO 141 no options BAR 142 143 should work regardless of whether or not options FOO and/or 144 options BAR were defined in GENERIC. It should not give 145 errors like "options BAR was already defined" or "options FOO 146 was not defined". 147 148o Introduce "class". 149 150 Every module should be classified as at least one class, as modular(9) 151 modules already do. For example, file systems are marked as "vfs", network 152 protocols are "netproto". 153 154 Consider to merge "devclass" into "class". 155 156 For syntax clarity, class names could be used as a keyword to select the 157 class's instance module: 158 159 # Define net80211 module as netproto class 160 class netproto 161 define net80211: netproto 162 163 # Select net80211 to be builtin 164 netproto net80211 165 166 Accordingly device/attach selection syntax should be revisited. 167 168o Support kernel constructor/destructor (.kctors/.kdtors) 169 170 Initialization and finalization should be called via constructors and 171 destructors. Don't hardcode those sequences as sys/kern/init_main.c:main() 172 does. 173 174 The order of .kctors/.kdtors is resolved by dependency. The difference from 175 userland is that in kernel depended ones are located in lower addresses; 176 "machdep" module is the lowest. Thus the lowest entry in .ctors must be 177 executed the first. 178 179 The .kctors/.kdtors entries are executed by kernel's main() function, unlike 180 userland where start code executes .ctors/.dtors before main(). The hardcoded 181 sequence of various subsystem initializations in init_main.c:main() will be 182 replaced by an array of .kctors invocations, and #ifdef's there will be gone. 183 184o Hide link-set in the final kernel. 185 186 Link-set is used to collect references (pointers) at link time. It relys on 187 the ld(1) behavior that it automatically generates `__start_X' and `__stop_X' 188 symbols for the section `X' to reduce coding. 189 190 Don't allow kernel subsystems create random ELF sections. 191 192 Pre-define all the available link-set names and pre-generate a linker script 193 to merge them into .rodata. 194 195 (For modular(9) modules, `link_set_modules' is looked up by kernel loader. 196 Provide only it.) 197 198 Provide a way for 3rd party modules to declare extra link-set. 199 200o Shared kernel objects. 201 202 Since NetBSD has not established a clear kernel ABI, every single kernel 203 has to build all the objects by their own. As a result, similar kernels 204 (e.g. evbarm kernels) repeatedly compile similar objects, that is waste of 205 energy & space. 206 207 Share them if possible. For evb* ports, ideally everything except machdep.ko 208 should be shared. 209 210 While leaving optimizations as options (CPU specific optimizations, inlined 211 bus_space(9) operations, etc.) for users, the official binaries build 212 provided by TNF should be as portable as possible. 213 214o Control ELF sections using linker script. 215 216 Now kernel is linked and built directly from object files (*.o). Each port 217 has an MD linker script, which does everything needed to be done at link 218 time. As a result, they do from MI alignment restriction (read_mostly, 219 cacheline_aligned) to load address specification for external boot loaders. 220 221 Make this into multiple stages to make linkage more structural. Especially, 222 reserve the final link for purely MD purpose. Note that in modular build, 223 *.ko are shared between build of kernel and modular(9) modules (*.kmod). 224 225 Monolithic build: 226 *.o ---> netbsd.ko Generic MI linkage 227 netbsd.ko ---> netbsd.ro Kernel MI linkage 228 netbsd.ro ---> netbsd Kernel MD linkage 229 230 Modular build (kernel): 231 *.o ---> *.ko Generic + Per-module MI linkage 232 *.ko ---> netbsd.ro Kernel MI linkage 233 netbsd.ro ---> netbsd Kernel MD linkage 234 235 Modular build (module): 236 *.o ---> *.ko Generic + Per-module MI linkage 237 *.ko ---> *.ro Modular MI linkage 238 *.ro ---> *.kmod Modular MD linkage 239 240 Genric MI linkage is for processing MI linkage that can be applied generally. 241 Data section alignment (.data.read_mostly and .data.cacheline_aligned) is 242 processed here. 243 244 Per-module MI linkage is for modules that want some ordering. For example, 245 machdep.ko wants to put entry code at the top of .text and .data. 246 247 Kernel MI linkage is for collecting kernel global section data, that is what 248 link-set is used for now. Once they are collected and symbols to the ranges 249 are assigned, those sections are merged into the pre-existing sections 250 (.rodata) because link-set sections in "netbsd" will never be interpreted by 251 external loaders. 252 253 Kernel MD linkage is used purely for MD purposes, that is, how kernels are 254 loaded by external loaders. It might be possible that one kernel relocatable 255 (netbsd.ro) is linked into multiple final kernel image (netbsd) for diferent 256 load addresses. 257 258 Modular MI linkage is to prepare a module to be loadable as modular(9). This 259 may add some extra sections and/or symbols. 260 261 Modular MD linkage is again for pure MD purposes like kernel MD linkage. 262 Adjustment and/or optimization may be done. 263 264 Kernel and modular MI linkages may change behavior depending on existence 265 of debug information. In the future .symtab will be copied using linker 266 during this stage. 267 268o Preprocess and generate linker scripts dynamically. 269 270 Include opt_xxx.h and replace some constant values (e.g. COHERENCY_UNIT, 271 PAGE_SIZE, KERNEL_BASE_PHYS, KERNEL_BASE_VIRT, ...) with cpp(1). 272 273 Don't unnecessarily define symbols. Don't use sed(1). 274 275o Clean up linker scripts. 276 277 o Don't specify OUTPUT_FORMAT()/OUTPUT_ARCH() 278 279 These are basically set in compilers/linkers. If non-default ABI is used, 280 command-line arguments should be specified. 281 282 o Remove .rel/.rela handlings. 283 284 These are set in relocatable objects, and handled by dynamic linkers. 285 Totally irrelefant for kernels. 286 287 o Clean up debug section handlings. 288 289 o Document (section boundary) symbols set in linker scripts. 290 291 There must be a reason why symbols are defined and exported. 292 293 PROVIDE() is to define internal symbols. 294 295 o Clean up load addresses. 296 297 o Program headers. 298 299 o According to matt@, .ARM.extab/.ARM.exidx sections are no longer needed. 300 301o Redesign swapnetbsd.c (root/swap device specification) 302 303 Don't build a whole kernel only to specify root/swap devices. 304 305 Make these parameter re-configurable afterwards. 306 307o Namespace. 308 309 Investigate namespace of attributes/modules/options. Figure out the hidden 310 design about these, document it, then re-design it. 311 312 At this moment, all of them share the single "selecttab", which means their 313 namespaces are common, but they also have respective tables (attrtab, 314 opttab, etc.). 315 316 Selecting an option (addoption()), that is also a module name, works only if 317 the module doesn't depend on anything, because addoption() doesn't select 318 module and its dependencies (selectattr()). In other words, an option is 319 only safely converted to a module (define), only if it doesn't depend on 320 anything. (One example is DDB.) 321 322o Convert pseudo(dev) attach functions to take (void) (== kernel ctors). 323 324 The pseudo attach function was originally designed to take `int n' as 325 the number of instances of the pseudo device. Now most of pseudo 326 devices have been converted to be `cloneable', meaning that their 327 instances are dynamically allocated at run-time, because guessing how 328 much instances are needed for users at compile time is almost impossible. 329 Restricting such a pure software resource at compile time is senseless, 330 considering that the rest of the world is dynamic. 331 332 If pseudo attach functions once become (void), config(1) no longer 333 has to generate iteration to call those functions, by making them part 334 of kernel constructors, that are a list of (void) functions. 335 336 Some pseudo devices may have dependency/ordering problems, because 337 pseudo attach functions have no choice when to be called. This could 338 be solved by converting to kctors, where functions are called in order 339 by dependency. 340 341o Enhance ioconf behavior for pseudo-devices 342 343 See "bin/48571: config(1) ioconf is insufficient for pseudo-devices" for 344 more details. In a nutshell, it would be "useful" for config to emit 345 the necessary stuff in the generated ioconf.[ch] to enable use of 346 config_{init,fini}_component() for attaching and detaching pseudodev's. 347 348 Currently, you need to manually construct your own data structures, and 349 manually "attach" them, one at a time. This leads to duplication of 350 code (where multiple drivers contain the same basic logic), and doesn't 351 necessarily handle all of the "frobbing" of the kernel lists. 352