Commit graph

374 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eric Kohl d8ba5920a2 [NTOS:PNP][UMPNPMGR] GUID_DEVICE_ENUMERATED should be a DeviceInstallEvent
- Move the GUID_DEVICE_ENUMERATED event from the TargetDeviceChangeEvent category to the DeviceInstallEvent category
- Create a new function that handles DeviceInstallEvent category events
2023-12-03 14:00:34 +01:00
Timo Kreuzer f92c44b217 [NTOS:KE] Remove KiMask32Array
It's useless and also broken in the way it is used. Replace it with a simple shift and make it correct for 64 bit.
2023-11-30 13:03:52 +02:00
Eric Kohl 12a5971b7a [NTOS:PNP] Queue a device change event on interface enable or disable 2023-11-27 22:36:52 +01:00
Serge Gautherie b386ea728f [NTOSKRNL] Remove unused internal/amd64/asmmacro.S
Added, but never(?) used.

Addendum to 99e6ad7 (r46620).
2023-11-27 22:51:51 +02:00
Justin Miller 516ccad340
[NTOS:KE][HALX86] Implement AP startup code (#5879)
Co-authored-by: Victor Perevertkin <victor.perevertkin@reactos.org>

Introduce the initial changes needed to get other processors up and into kernel mode. 
This only supports x86 as of now but is the first real step towards using other system processors.
2023-11-19 15:51:33 -08:00
George Bișoc f3141fb29e
[NTOS:CM] Implement support for alternate registry hives
Sometimes repairing a broken hive with a hive log does not always guarantee the hive
in question has fully recovered. In worst cases it could happen the LOG itself is even
corrupt too and that would certainly lead to a total unbootable system. This is most likely
if the victim hive is the SYSTEM hive.

This can be anyhow solved by the help of a mirror hive, or also called an "alternate hive".
Alternate hives serve the purpose as backup hives for primary hives of which there is still
a risk that is not worth taking. For now only the SYSTEM hive is granted the right to have
a backup alternate hive.

=== NOTE ===

Currently the SYSTEM hive can only base upon the alternate SYSTEM.ALT hive, which means the
corresponding LOG file never gets updated. When time comes the existing code must be adapted
to allow the possibility to use .ALT and .LOG hives simultaneously.
2023-11-19 20:44:29 +01:00
George Bișoc f33da480af
[SDK][CMLIB] Implement CmCheckRegistry and validation private helpers
CmCheckRegistry is a function that provides the necessary validation checks for a registry hive. This function usually comes into action when logs have been replayed for example, or when a registry hive internals have changed such as when saving a key, loading a key, etc.

This commit implements the whole Check Registry infrastructure (cmcheck.c) in CMLIB library for ease of usage and wide accessibility across parts of the OS. In addition, two more functions for registry checks are also implemented -- HvValidateHive and HvValidateBin.

Instead of having the CmCheckRegistry implementation in the kernel, it's better to have it in the Configuration Manager library instead (aka CMLIB). The benefits of having it in the library are the following:

- CmCheckRegistry can be used in FreeLdr to fix the SYSTEM hive
- It can be used on-demand in the kernel
- It can be used for offline registry repair tools
- It makes the underlying CmCheckRegistry implementation code debug-able in user mode

CORE-9195
CORE-6762
2023-11-19 20:44:27 +01:00
George Bișoc bfcb28787d
[NTOS:CM] Disable hard errors when setting up a new size for a hive file / annotate CmpFileSetSize parameters with SAL
During a I/O failure of whatever kind the upper-level driver, namely a FSD, can raise a hard error and a deadlock can occur. We wouldn't want that to happen for particular files like hives or logs so in such cases we must disable hard errors before toying with hives until we're done.

In addition to that, annotate the CmpFileSetSize function's parameters with SAL.
2023-11-19 20:44:26 +01:00
George Bișoc 0d776beac9
[NTOS:CM] Ignore syncing/flushing requests after registry shutdown
When shutting down the registry of the system we don't want that the registry in question gets poked again, such as flushing the hives or syncing the hives and respective logs for example. The reasoning behind this is very simple, during a complete shutdown the system does final check-ups and stuff until the computer
shuts down.

Any writing operations done to the registry can lead to erratic behaviors. CmShutdownSystem call already invokes a final flushing of all the hives on the backing storage which is more than enough to ensure consistency of the last session configuration. So after that final flushing, mark HvShutdownComplete as TRUE indicating
that any eventual flushing or syncying (in the case where HvSyncHive gets called) request is outright ignored.
2023-11-19 20:44:26 +01:00
Serge Gautherie 3fb5957de1
[NTOS:EX][CSRSRV][WIN32K] Make a few #define more explicit/strict (#5907)
- Add parentheses around macro parameters.
- Add casts on return value for the Interlocked*UL ("Unsigned Long") macros.
2023-11-13 20:55:48 +01:00
Timo Kreuzer 6d701b4b05 [NTOS:MM] Add ASSERTS to MmLockAddressSpace to guarantee lock ordering 2023-10-24 21:45:27 +03:00
Timo Kreuzer 70f6ed8ee3 [NTOS:KE/x64] Improve CPU feature detection
- Use 64 bit feature flags (with a hack in the PRCB)
- Improve setting up SharedUserData->ProcessorFeatures
2023-10-03 19:45:44 +03:00
George Bișoc f4de5ceb9e
[NTOS:CM] Implement cache lookup and cleanup subkey information for cache consistency
During an open or create procedure of a registry key, the registry parser grabs
a key control block (KCB) from the parser object and uses its information to do the
necessary work in order to obtain a pointer to the newly created or opened registry key.

However, the registry parsers faces several issues. First, we don't do subkey cache cleaning
information against gathered KCBs so whenever we do a registry parse we end up with KCBs
that have cache inconsistencies. Moreover we don't do any locking of whatever KCB we
are grabing during a parse procedure.

=== PROPOSED CHANGES ===

* Implement CmpComputeHashValue and CmpLookInCache functions. With CmpComputeHashValue we can
compute the convkey hashes of each subkey in the path name of a key so we can lock them
with CmpBuildAndLockKcbArray. CmpLookInCache is a function that searches for the suitable
KCB in the cache. The factors that determine if a KCB is "suitable" are:

-- the currently found KCB in the hash list has the same levels as that of the
given KCB from the parse object;

-- The key names from the computed hash values match with the block name of
the KCB;

-- The currently found KCB is not deleted.

The KCB will be changed if the key path name points to a partial match name in
the cache. The KCB from the parse object will be used if we have a full match
of remaining levels.

* Add missing CMP_LOCK_HASHES_FOR_KCB flags on CmpCreateKeyControlBlock calls
that create KCBs during a parse procedure. Such lock has to be preserved until
we're done with the registry parsing.

* On CmpDoCreateChild, preserve the exclusive lock of the KCB when we are
enlisting the key body.

* On CmpDoCreate, make sure that the passed parent KCB is locked exclusively and
lock the hiver flusher as we don't want the flusher to kick in during a key
creation on the given hive. Cleanup the subkey info when we're creating a key
object. Also implement missing cleanup path codes. Furthermore, avoid key
object creation if the parent KCB is protected with a read-only switch.

* Soft rewrite the CmpDoOpen function, namely how we manage a direct open vs
create KCB on open scenario. When a KCB is found in cache avoid touching
the key node. If the symbolic link has been resolved (aka found) then lock
exclusively the symbolic KCB. Otherwise just give the cached KCB to the caller.

If it were for the caller to request a KCB creation, we must check the passed
KCB from the parser object is locked exclusively, unlike on the case above
the caller doesn't want to create a KCB because there's already one in the cache.
We don't want anybody to touch our KCB while we are still toying with it during
its birth. Furthermore, enlist the key body but mind the kind of lock it's been
used.

* On CmpCreateLinkNode, avoid creating a key object if the parent KCB is protected
with a read-only switch. In addition, add missing hive flusher locks for both
the target hive and its child. Cleanup the subkey information of the KCB when
creating a link node, this ensures our cached KCB data remains consistent.

* Do a direct open on CmpParseKey if no remaining subkey levels have been found
during hash computation and cache lookup, in this case the given KCB is the
block that points to the exact key. This happens when for example someone tried
to call RegOpenKeyExW but submitting NULL to the lpSubKey argument parameter.

CORE-10581
ROSTESTS-198
2023-10-01 20:06:02 +02:00
George Bișoc 8cb56e77a6
[NTOS:CM] Do not call CmpSecurityMethod when assigning a security descriptor
CmpSecurityMethod is a method used by the Object Manager and called by this
subsystem whenever a security operation has to be done against a key object.

As CmpSecurityMethod is a specific OB construct we should not make any direct
call attempts to CmpSecurityMethod, only OB is responsible for that. This fixes
a deadlock where CmpSecurityMethod acquires a push lock for exclusive access
even though such lock is already acquired by the same calling thread in
CmpDoCreateChild.
2023-10-01 20:06:02 +02:00
George Bișoc 697a52aa33
[NTOS:CM] Do not acquire the lock twice when the Object Manager calls CmpSecurityMethod
Whenever a security request is invoked into a key object, such as when requesting
information from its security descriptor, the Object Manager will execute
the CmpSecurityMethod method to do the job.

The problem is that CmpSecurityMethod is not aware if the key control block
of the key body already has a lock acquired which means the function will attempt
to acquire a lock again, leading to a deadlock. This happens if the same
calling thread locks the KCB but it also wants to acquire security information
with ObCheckObjectAccess in CmpDoOpen.

Windows has a hack in CmpSecurityMethod where the passed KCB pointer is ORed
with a bitfield mask to avoid locking in all cases. This is ugly because it negates
every thread to acquire a lock if at least one has it.
2023-10-01 20:06:02 +02:00
George Bișoc 08fcf0c58b
[NTOS:CM] Implement locking/unlocking of KCBs in an array
The CmpUnLockKcbArray, CmpLockKcbArray and CmpBuildAndLockKcbArray routines
help us to lock KCBs within array so that information remains consistent when
we are doing a cache lookup during a parse procedure of the registry database.
2023-10-01 20:06:01 +02:00
George Bișoc c6230ba255
[NTOS:CM] Add KCB array lock function prototypes & Other Stuff
Implement CmpBuildAndLockKcbArray and CmpUnLockKcbArray prototypes, we'll gonna need these
to do the locking/unlocking of KCBs stacked up in an array. In addition implement some CM
constructs specifically for cache lookup implementation (more at documentation remarks).

=== DOCUMENTATION REMARKS ===

CMP_SUBKEY_LEVELS_DEPTH_LIMIT -- This is the limit of up to 32 subkey levels
that the registry can permit. This is used in CmpComputeHashValue to ensure
that we don't compute more than the limit of subkeys we're allowed to.

CMP_KCBS_IN_ARRAY_LIMIT -- This is equal to CMP_SUBKEY_LEVELS_DEPTH_LIMIT
plus the addition by 2. This construct is used as a limit of KCB elements
the array can hold. 2 serves as an additional space for the array (one for
the root object and another one as extra space so we don't blow up the stack
array).

CMP_LOCK_KCB_ARRAY_EXCLUSIVE & CMP_LOCK_KCB_ARRAY_SHARED -- These flags are used exclusively
for CmpBuildAndLockKcbArray and CmpLockKcbArray. Their meaning are obvious.

CM_HASH_CACHE_STACK -- A structure used to store the hashes of KCBs for locking. It is named
"stack" because the way we store the hashes of KCBs is within an auxilliary "outer stack array".
2023-10-01 20:06:01 +02:00
George Bișoc 8a335a3141
[NTOS:CM] Implement the shared lock macro for use
CmpAcquireKcbLockSharedByKey can come in handy for use to lock KCBs by their convkey with a shared lock, specifically we would need this for cache lookup stuff.
2023-10-01 20:06:00 +02:00
George Bișoc 26fe3616fe
[NTOS:CM] Implement COMPUTE_HASH_CHAR macro definition
Wrap the hash computation formula in a macro so that we don't have to copy
the logic over the places again and again.
2023-10-01 20:06:00 +02:00
George Bișoc a4213d491d
[NTOS:CM] Add surrounding parentheses to GET_HASH_INDEX definition 2023-10-01 20:05:57 +02:00
Timo Kreuzer df053d4e43 [RTL] Improve usage of absolte vs self-relative security descriptors
- RtlpQuerySecurityDescriptor: Change argument type of first parameter from PISECURITY_DESCRIPTOR to PSECURITY_DESCRIPTOR, since it handles both absolute and self-relative SDs.
- RtlMakeSelfRelativeSD: rename first parameter from AbsoluteSD to SecurityDescriptor, since it handles both absolute and self-relative SDs.
- SepGetGroupFromDescriptor/SepGetOwnerFromDescriptor/SepGetDaclFromDescriptor/SepGetSaclFromDescriptor: Change parameter type from PVOID to PSECURITY_DESCRIPTOR for clarity.
2023-09-26 18:01:45 +03:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto 4bdfee8e8b
[NTOS:EX] Initialize ExpResourceTimeoutCount also via the "Session Manager/ResourceTimeoutCount" registry value (#4089)
For more details, see
http://systemmanager.ru/win2k_regestry.en/29859.htm
https://www.betaarchive.com/wiki/index.php/Microsoft_KB_Archive/102985#ResourceTimeoutCount_REG_DWORD
2023-09-21 13:33:28 +02:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto b5c75ce506
[NTOS:EX] Minor header formatting. 2023-09-21 13:33:25 +02:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto 0d0ffb7d7d
[NTOS:KD:KDBG] Integration into KD framework (Part 2/3)
Add redirections for KdSave/KdRestore and KdD0Transition/KdD3Transition.

Both KDBG and KD(TERM) need those since they will become external
transport DLLs later.
2023-08-31 16:09:49 +02:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto 2046a17ef4
[NTOS:KD:KDBG] Integration into KD framework (Part 1/3)
Split KdSendPacket and KdReceivePacket into those that manipulate the
KDBG state proper (reside in kdbg/kdbg.c), and those that deal only with
debug input/output that will reside in a KDTERM "KD Terminal Driver" DLL.

Based on some previous preparatory work by Hervé Poussineau in PR #4600.
(Equivalents of commits 5162bf106 and partly e9bcf7275.)
2023-08-31 16:07:51 +02:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto 86e0d5e9b8
[NTOS:MM/PS] Remove code duplication between LookupEntryPoint/MiLocateExportName/MiFindExportedRoutineByName. (#4918)
As it turns out, those three functions were duplicating the same code
between each other. Reimplement these in terms of a common helper,
RtlFindExportedRoutineByName().
Indeed: MiFindExportedRoutineByName() was just MiLocateExportName()
but taking a PANSI_STRING instead of a NULL-terminated string.

A similar state of affairs also existed in Windows <= 2003, and the
MS guys also noticed it. Both routines have been then merged and renamed
to MiFindExportedRoutineByName() on Windows 8 (taking a PCSTR instead),
and finally renamed and exported as RtlFindExportedRoutineByName()
on Windows 10.
2023-08-29 17:26:57 +02:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto e8b048a282
[NTOS:MM] Reformat MmCallDllInitialize and MiCallDllUnloadAndUnloadDll. 2023-08-29 17:26:55 +02:00
unknown 310563aece
[NTOS:SE] Let SepGetSidFromAce figure out the ACE type
As the commit title says. Instead of having the caller figuring out what
the ACE type should be of the ACE.
2023-08-23 17:54:47 +02:00
George Bișoc 5654ce7b9a
[NTOS:SE] Declare function prototypes & add OBJECT_TYPE_LIST_INTERNAL
OBJECT_TYPE_LIST_INTERNAL will serve as an internal kernel data structure
to hold validated object type contents that are copied from UM.

The difference between the public and the internal one is that the internal structure has
an additional member for access check rights that have been granted on each
object element in the list.
2023-08-22 17:54:17 +02:00
Jérôme Gardou 69daff72d2 NTOS:CC Free some VACBs when we're under memory pressure 2023-07-29 14:00:44 +03:00
Timo Kreuzer 73de609917 [NTOS:Mm] Implement MmCreatePhysicalMapping and MmDeletePhysicalMapping to handle pyhsical memory sections 2023-07-29 14:00:44 +03:00
Jérôme Gardou 57e018acf6 [NTOS:MM] Use FORCEINLINE instead of simple inline
inline implies an implementation must exist in another compilation unit
2023-07-23 23:58:42 +02:00
Stanislav Motylkov 5ae65ab7a7 [NTOS:KE] Add x86 CPU features reporting to AMD64
CORE-18023 CORE-14922
2023-07-02 21:00:32 +03:00
Stanislav Motylkov 6a6b383abd [NTOS:KE] Report x86 CPU features in a separate function
KiGetFeatureBits() is now being called in the early boot phase 0
when the Kernel Debugger is not yet initialized, so debug prints
are not available here. Move the debug prints into a new function
and call it at the right time. CORE-18023
2023-07-02 21:00:31 +03:00
Stanislav Motylkov 00715ccf8b [NTOS:KE] Fix magic constants for x86 CPU features
Do it the same way as in amd64 ke.h/cpu.c. CORE-18023
2023-07-02 21:00:31 +03:00
Victor Perevertkin 6cac5b8c9e
[NTOS:PNP] Refactor PnpRootCreateDevice
- Remove unused "DriverObject" argument
- Make "FullInstancePath" mandatory
- Extract the PDO creation into separate function, it will be used later
2023-06-29 19:25:28 +03:00
Victor Perevertkin bbf64c0cc4
[NTOS:PNP] Do not create an extra "PDO" device inside PnP root driver
The root device object is in fact a PDO and a FDO at the same time. Thus
there is no need in creating two device objects here, one is enough.
This commit also removes the explicit device extension for the root DO,
because the only reason it existed is to distinguish the root driver's
FDO from its PDOs. This can easily be done by comparing with
IopRootDeviceNode.

Also collect some unused garbage while we are here.
2023-06-29 19:25:25 +03:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto 2674e26cbb
[NTOS:IO] Reformat iorsrce.c, no functional code changes.
- Fix whitespace; add SAL annotations, doxygen documentation...

- Deduplicate the array of description strings corresponding to
  IO_QUERY_DEVICE_DATA_FORMAT.

- Unhardcode the "[3]" into 'IoQueryDeviceMaxData': the maximum number
  of device data queried.
2023-06-04 21:40:07 +02:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto 579eab8a31
[NTOS] Include kdbg/kdb.h only in the files that really need it. 2023-04-11 00:44:10 +02:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto eb02a85214
[NTOS:KD] Split internal/kd.h into a part shared in the whole kernel and a private part only used within ntoskrnl/kd. 2023-03-27 23:31:34 +02:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto 6fafe54f89
[NTOS:KD:KDBG] Move some files to a better place. 2023-03-27 23:31:28 +02:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto 9d9536d431
[NTOS:KD64] Format string of KdpDprintf can be const. 2023-03-22 19:57:59 +01:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto 4ce819ca5a
[NTOS:KD][KDBG] Rework the BootPhase >= 2 initialization of the KD/KDBG kernel debugger. (#4892)
CORE-17470

+ KdpDebugLogInit: Add resources cleanup in failure code paths.

Fix, in an NT-compatible manner, how (and when) the KD/KDBG BootPhase >=2
initialization steps are performed.
These are necessary for any functionality KDBG needs, that would depend
on the NT I/O Manager and the storage and filesystem stacks to be running.
This includes, creating the debug log file, and for KDBG, loading its
KDBinit initialization file.

As a result, file debug logging is fixed.

The old ReactOS-specific (NT-incompatible) callback we did in the middle
of IoInitSystem() is removed, in favor of a runtime mechanism that should
work on Windows as well.

The idea for this new mechanism is loosely inspired by the TDL4 rootkit,
see http://blog.w4kfu.com/public/tdl4_article/draft_tdl4article.html
but contrary to it, a specific hook is used instead, as well as the
technique of driver reinitialization:
https://web.archive.org/web/20211021050515/https://driverentry.com.br/en/blog/?p=261

Its rationale is as follows:

We want to be able to perform I/O-related initialization (starting a
logger thread for file log debugging, loading KDBinit file for KDBG,
etc.). A good place for this would be as early as possible, once the
I/O Manager has started the storage and the boot filesystem drivers.

Here is an overview of the initialization steps of the NT Kernel and
Executive:
----
KiSystemStartup(KeLoaderBlock)
    if (Cpu == 0) KdInitSystem(0, KeLoaderBlock);
    KiSwitchToBootStack() -> KiSystemStartupBootStack()
    -> KiInitializeKernel() -> ExpInitializeExecutive(Cpu, KeLoaderBlock)

(NOTE: Any unexpected debugger break will call KdInitSystem(0, NULL); )
KdInitSystem(0, LoaderBlock) -> KdDebuggerInitialize0(LoaderBlock);

ExpInitializeExecutive(Cpu == 0):    ExpInitializationPhase = 0;
    HalInitSystem(0, KeLoaderBlock); <-- Sets HalInitPnpDriver callback.
    ...
    PsInitSystem(LoaderBlock)
        PsCreateSystemThread(Phase1Initialization)

Phase1Initialization(Discard):       ExpInitializationPhase = 1;
    HalInitSystem(1, KeLoaderBlock);
    ...
    Early initialization of Ob, Ex, Ke.
    KdInitSystem(1, KeLoaderBlock);
    ...
    KdDebuggerInitialize1(LoaderBlock);
    ...
    IoInitSystem(LoaderBlock);
    ...
----
As we can see, KdDebuggerInitialize1() is the last KD initialization
routine the kernel calls, and is called *before* the I/O Manager starts.
Thus, direct Nt/ZwCreateFile ... calls done there would fail. Also,
we want to do the I/O initialization as soon as possible. There does
not seem to be any exported way to be notified about the I/O manager
initialization steps... that is, unless we somehow become a driver and
insert ourselves in the flow!

Since we are not a regular driver, we need to invoke IoCreateDriver()
to create one. However, remember that we are currently running *before*
IoInitSystem(), the I/O subsystem is not initialized yet. Due to this,
calling IoCreateDriver(), much like any other IO functions, would lead
to a crash, because it calls
ObCreateObject(..., IoDriverObjectType, ...), and IoDriverObjectType
is non-initialized yet (it's NULL).

The chosen solution is to hook a "known" exported callback: namely, the
HalInitPnpDriver() callback (it initializes the "HAL Root Bus Driver").
It is set very early on by the HAL via the HalInitSystem(0, ...) call,
and is called early on by IoInitSystem() before any driver is loaded,
but after the I/O Manager has been minimally set up so that new drivers
can be created.
When the hook: KdpInitDriver() is called, we create our driver with
IoCreateDriver(), specifying its entrypoint KdpDriverEntry(), then
restore and call the original HalInitPnpDriver() callback.

Another possible unexplored alternative, could be to insert ourselves
in the KeLoaderBlock->LoadOrderListHead boot modules list, or in the
KeLoaderBlock->BootDriverListHead boot-driver list. (Note that while
we may be able to do this, because boot-drivers are resident in memory,
much like we are, we cannot insert ourselves in the system-driver list
however, since those drivers are expected to come from PE image files.)

Once the KdpDriverEntry() driver entrypoint is called, we register
KdpDriverReinit() for re-initialization with the I/O Manager, in order
to provide more initialization points. KdpDriverReinit() calls the KD
providers at BootPhase >= 2, and schedules further reinitializations
(at most 3 more) if any of the providers request so.
2023-03-11 01:22:19 +01:00
Hervé Poussineau bf734e5373
[NTOS:KD] Move handling of Dmesg buffer from screen provider to KDBG provider. (#5143)
CORE-10749

The dmesg command is now available even if screen output is disabled.

Co-authored-by: Hermès Bélusca-Maïto <hermes.belusca-maito@reactos.org>
2023-03-10 23:59:08 +01:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto dfb6996b45
[NTOS:KDBG] Split KdbInitialize into KdbSymInit and KDBG initialization proper.
- KdbSymInit() in kdb_symbols.c only initializes symbols implementation
  support.
- The rest of KdbInitialize gets moved into kdb_cli.c and initializes
  the KDBG debugger itself.
- Move KdbDebugPrint to kdb_cli.c as well.
2023-03-10 20:56:21 +01:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto a8b09eddc4
[NTOS:KD] Add some annotations. 2023-03-09 18:32:36 +01:00
George Bișoc b284e82f47
[NTOS:SE] Do not allocate memory pool just for the access rights
Access check is an expensive operation, that is, whenever an access to an
object is performed an access check has to be done to ensure the access
can be allowed to the calling thread who attempts to access such object.

Currently SepAnalyzeAcesFromDacl allocates a block of pool memory for
access check rights, nagging the Memory Manager like a desperate naughty
creep. So instead initialize the access rights as a simple variable in
SepAccessCheck and pass it out as an address to SepAnalyzeAcesFromDacl so
that the function will fill it up with access rights. This helps with
performance, avoiding wasting a few bits of memory just to hold these
access rights.

In addition to that, add a few asserts and fix the copyright header on
both se.h and accesschk.c, to reflect the Coding Style rules.
2023-03-07 17:50:39 +01:00
Timo Kreuzer b89a4eed72 [NTOS:EX] Initialize ExpTimeRefreshLock 2022-12-01 20:17:40 +02:00
Timo Kreuzer 9658c6a220 [NTOSKRNL] Print boot cycles on x64 just like on x86 2022-11-24 21:17:58 +02:00
Hermès Bélusca-Maïto ffb05406e6
[NTOS:KD64] Implement KdLogDbgPrint() for the WinDbg !dbgprint command.
See this command's documentation:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/debugger/-dbgprint
and the section "DbgPrint buffer and the debugger"
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/debugger/reading-and-filtering-debugging-messages#dbgprint-buffer-and-the-debugger
for more details.

- Loosely implement the function, based on our existing circular printout
  buffers in kdio.c.
- Enable its usage in the KdpPrint() and KdpPrompt() functions.

Notice that this function will *only* capture the strings being sent **to**
the debugger, and not the strings the debugger itself produce. (This means
that we cannot use the KdPrintCircularBuffer as a replacement for our
KDBG dmesg one, for example...)

How to test:
Run ReactOS under WinDbg, and use the !dbgprint command to view the
buffer. You can also use the Memory Window, place yourself at the
address pointed by KdPrintCircularBuffer and KdPrintWritePointer, and
read its contents.

What you should observe:
Prior notice: The circular buffer in debug builds of ReactOS and Windows
is 0x8000 bytes large. In release builds, its size is down to 0x1000.
1- When you start e.g. the 2nd-stage GUI installation of ReactOS, going
   past the initial "devices installation" and letting it stabilize on
   the Welcome page, break into WinDbg and run the !dbgprint command. You
   should notice that the end of its output is weirdly truncated, compared
   to what has been actually emitted to the debug output. Comparing this
   with the actual contents of the circular buffer (via Memory Window),
   shows that the buffer contents is actually correct.
2- Copy all the text that has been output by the !dbgprint command and
   paste it in an editor; count the number of all characters appearing +
   newlines (only CR or LF), and observe that this number is "mysteriously"
   equal to 16384 == 0x4000.
3- Continue running ReactOS installation for a little while, breaking back
   back into WinDbg and looking at !dbgprint again. Its output seems to be
   still stopping at the same place as before (but the actual buffer memory
   contents shows otherwise). Continue running ROS installation, and break
   into the debugger when ROS is about to restart. You should now observe
   that the dbgprint buffer rolled over:
     dd nt!KdPrintRolloverCount shows 1.
   Carefully analysing the output of !dbgprint, however, you will notice
   that it looks a bit garbage-y: the first part of the output is actually
   truncated after 16384 characters, then you get a second part of the
   buffer showing what ReactOS was printing while shutting down. Then
   you get again what was shown at the top of the !dbgprint output.
   (Of course, comparing with the actual contents of the circular buffer
   in memory shows that its contents are fine...)

The reason of these strange observations, is because there is an intrinsic
bug in the !dbgprint command implementation (in kdexts.dll). Essentially,
it displays the contents of the circular buffer in two single dprintf()
calls: one for the "older" (bottom) part of the buffer:
  [WritePointer, EndOfBuffer]
and one for the "newer" (upper) part of the buffer:
  [CircularBuffer, WritePointer[ .
The first aspect of the bug (causing observation 3), is that those two
parts are not necessarily NULL-terminated strings (especially after
rollover), so for example, displaying the upper part of the buffer, will
potentially also display part of the buffer's bottom part.
The second aspect of the bug (explaining observations 1 and 2), is due
to the implementation of the dprintf() function (callback in dbgenv.dll).
There, it uses a fixed-sized buffer of size 0x4000 == 16384 characters.
Since the output of the circular buffer is not done by little chunks,
but by the two large parts, if any of those are larger than 0x4000 they
get truncated on display.
(This last observation is confirmed in a completely different context by
https://community.osr.com/discussion/112439/dprintf-s-max-string-length .)
2022-11-24 01:18:18 +01:00