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hOp -- Sébastien Carlier and Jérémy Bobbio

What is hOp ?
=============

hOp is a micro-kernel based on the RTS of GHC, the Glasgow Haskell
Compiler.  It is meant to enable people to experiment with writing
device drivers in Haskell.  Currently, hOp is still very hackish, and
IA32-specific.  Contributions are welcome!

The RTS of GHC is truly an amazing piece of software.  By removing the
system-specific bits, and just adding a few lines of C and assembly
code, it turns into a standalone micro-kernel that can be extended in
our favorite language, Haskell.

All functions from the base hierarchical library outside of the System
module is available.  This includes threads, communication primitives
and the foreign interface, which means that experimenting with writing
drivers in Haskell should be reasonably easy.

Building
========

In order to build hOp, you need every software package required to
build GHC, autoconf, and also "genext2fs", which is available as a
package in Debian GNU/Linux, but can also be compiled from source:
http://uclibc.org/downloads/buildroot-sources/genext2fs_1.3.orig.tar.gz

Build steps are as follows:

1. Enter "make boot" to download and extract the source code of GHC.

2. Either enter "make floppy" to build a 2.88 MB floppy image named
   hOp.flp, or enter "make iso" to build a bootable CDROM image.

Starting hOp
============

hOp runs on real hardware, but 2.88MB floppy drives are rare, and
burning the CDROM image wastes a blank CD.

It is usually more convenient to use an IA32 emulator such as Bochs
(http://bochs.sourceforge.net/), which can read 2.88MB floppy disks
and CDROM images.

Here is a minimal configuration file (.bochsrc) for Bochs:

--- 8< --- cut here --- 8< ---------------------------------------------
config_interface: x
display_library: term
romimage: file=/usr/share/bochs/BIOS-bochs-latest, address=0xf0000
megs: 32
vgaromimage: /usr/share/vgabios/vgabios.bin
floppya: 2_88=hOp.flp, status=inserted
ata0: enabled=0, ioaddr1=0x1f0, ioaddr2=0x3f0, irq=14
ata1: enabled=0, ioaddr1=0x170, ioaddr2=0x370, irq=15
ata2: enabled=0, ioaddr1=0x1e8, ioaddr2=0x3e0, irq=11
ata3: enabled=0, ioaddr1=0x168, ioaddr2=0x360, irq=9
boot: floppy
ips: 1000000
floppy_bootsig_check: disabled=0
log: /tmp/bochsout.txt
panic: action=ask
error: action=report
info: action=report
debug: action=ignore
debugger_log: -
vga_update_interval: 300000
keyboard_serial_delay: 250
keyboard_paste_delay: 100000
floppy_command_delay: 500
mouse: enabled=0
private_colormap: enabled=0
--- 8< --- cut here --- 8< ---------------------------------------------


Enabling Debugging
------------------

Debugging can be enabled by doing the following changes:

* build.mk
  
  To compile the RTS with debugging enabled, you need to change the
  compilation options in build.mk:
  
      GhcRtsHcOpts = -optc-DSTANDALONE -optc-DDEBUG -optc-UPROFILING
      GhcRtsCcOpts = -O -DSTANDALONE -DDEBUG -UPROFILING

* kernel/Makefile

  RTS debug messages are printed using a simple compatibility layer to
  functions like fprintf.  These messages can currently be either
  displayed directly on screen (which trash what was displayed by
  Haskell code) or using the "console output" feature of Bochs.

  To enable video printing, add in kernel/Makefile:

     OBJS += cbits/video.o 

  To enable Bochs output, add in kernel/Makefile:

     CFLAGS += -DBOCHS_VIDEO

* kernel/cbits/c_start.c

  When booting, hOp launches the usual main() function of the RTS.
  The same debug flags as on the command line are thus available;
  they can be set by modifying argc and argv at the start of c_start()
  in kernel/cbits/c_start.c.

Implentation details
====================

Making a standalone RTS
-----------------------

The Run-Time System (RTS) of GHC handles memory management, thread
scheduling and inter-thread communication, so it can be thought of as
a micro-kernel.  Making a standalone RTS - removing all dependencies
on an operating system - is in fact fairly straightforward.

The RTS is written in portable C code, and therefore requires a C
execution environment to run.  Our goal to remove dependencies on an
operating system precludes the use of a full featured C library, so
only a handful of functions are included to provide a very minimal
C environment.  It is composed of the following components:

* a tiny libc with these functions:
  - abs, isdigit, memcpy, memmove, memset, strcmp, strnlen
  - iswalnum, iswalpha, iswcntrl, iswdigit, iswlower, iswpunct, iswupper,
    iswblank
    These functions are generacted from the character database named
    UnicodeData.txt available at www.unicode.org
  - malloc/free/realloc from Doug Lea's implementation

* a minimal libgcc with
  __divdi3, __moddi3, __udivdi3, __umoddi3
  extracted from libgcc on the build system

* several functions from libgmp, extracted from libgmp.a of the build
  system; ad-hoc replacements are provided for assert.o and memory.o
  to remove some dependencies.

* math functions from Sun Microsystems' public domain math library

We also provide simple wrappers for
fprintf, stderr, stdout, fflush, fprintf, fwrite, fputc, fputs, fopen
in order to build RTS with debugging option enabled.

We say that C code (including the RTS, boot code, and parts of the
interrupt handling code) is executed in the "C land", which has its
own explicitly managed heap (malloc/free), and uses conventions
defined by the C compiler for function calls, etc.

We say that Haskell code is executed in the "Haskell land", with its
heap being managed by the RTS, and using the execution model of the
RTS (STG).

Although our goal is to minimize the amount of code running in C land,
favoring Haskell code, data can be exchanged between this two worlds
using primitive operations of the Haskell compiler or the Foreign
Function Interface (FFI).

Memory model
------------

hOp only supports IA32 (i.e., Intel's x86 family of processors), but
is meant to eventually run of multiple architectures.  The remaining
subsections of this section give IA32 specific details.

hOp currently operates in protected mode with a flat address space
(paging is disabled), and is limited to use only 32MB of memory (it
will crash miserably if you have less memory; adding code to detect
the amount of available memory is future work).

------------ 0x00000000 0
 Interrupt
  vectors
------------ 0x00000400 1kB
  C stack
------------ 0x000A0000 640kB
 Video RAM
 and BIOS
------------ 0x00100000 1MB
 hOp kernel
------------ 0x00400000 4MB
  C heap
------------ 0x00800000 8MB
Haskell heap
------------ 0x02000000 32MB

The low level interface to the C heap is a trivial implementation of
the standard Unix system call sbrk(2).  The high level interface uses
Doug Lea's malloc.

The Haskell heap is divided in 1MB blocks, which are handed out as
needed to the RTS to be managed by the garbage collector.  The C
land functions MBlock_init() and getMBlocks() manage a static
variable pointing to the next 1MB block start address.

Interrupt handling
------------------

* Each interrupt handler runs in its own Haskell thread.
* These threads, wrapped in StablePtrs, are registered in a global
  array "irqHandlerThreads" which resides in C land.
* A new blocked state "BlockedWaitingInterrupts" was added.
* In order to register a thread as an handler for a given IRQ,
  a new PrimOp, registerForIRQ#, was added.  It creates a new StablePtr
  for the current thread, update the global array, enable the IRQ and
  put the thread in blocked state, waiting for interrupts.
* Another new PrimOp, waitNextInterrupt#, is used after handling an
  interrupt to sends a specific End Of Interrupt to the controller and
  block the thread again until the next IRQ. 
* When an interrupt occurs, the C handler examines the irqHandlerThreads
  array; if a thread was registered, it is unblocked and a context switch
  is requested (and will occur when control is next passed to the Haskell
  scheduler).

This interrupt handling model was the easiest to implement but it has
some major drawbacks:

* The current garbage collector is neither concurrent nor incremental,
  which could lead to severe loss of interrupt during a long garbage
  collection.
* It relies on the ability of the i8259A programmable interrupt
  controller (PIC) to accept Specific End Of Interrupt signals.
  This feature may not be available on other PICs.
* The current Haskell scheduler does not support multiple priority
  levels; many threads running concurrently could delay handling an
  interrupt for a long time.

We plan to improve this aspect in future versions.

Boot process
------------

GRUB already takes care of setting up x86 protected mode, which makes
the boot process easier.

------- C land
start.S   | Load static, flat-memory GDT (segment descriptors)
          | Initialize the memory to 0xCC (IA32 breakpoint instruction)
          | Initialize the C stack
          | Jump to c_start
c_start.c | Initialize PIC (IRQs 0-15 mapped to interrupts 0x20-0x2F)
          | Initialize IDT (interrupt vectors)
          | Initialize Haskell block allocator (MBlock_init)
          | Pass control to the RTS
------- Haskell land
Main.hs   | Start a console driver which handles a basic x86 text console
          | Start a keyboard controller
          | Start an idle thread
          | Bind the keyboard and console driver to a simple Readline clone
          |     which allows shell-like interaction with the system

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Haskell User's Operating System and Environment -- with Lightweight Concurrency. (I, Ericson2314 did not write this at all)

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