The code was passing 0 instead of SECTION_INHERIT::ViewUnmap (2). 0 isn't even a proper constant to be used here. It worked, because MmMapViewOfSection only compares against ViewShare (1) and treats everything else as ViewUnmap.
Since we were charging the pool quota after the VAD insertion,
if the quota charge failed, the VAD would still have been inserted.
This commit attempts to resolve this issue by charging quota
before inserting the VAD thus allowing the quota charge to fail early.
Addendum to 884356a0. CORE-18028
Fix MiInsertSharedUserPageVad to not charge the system process pool quota.
Even though PsChargeProcessNonPagedPoolQuota itself checks if the process specified is the system process, this doesn't work here as we're too early into boot for the kernel to know what the system process is.
- Change INIT_FUNCTION and INIT_SECTION to CODE_SEG("INIT") and DATA_SEG("INIT") respectively
- Remove INIT_FUNCTION from function prototypes
- Remove alloc_text pragma calls as they are not needed anymore
* Add an NDK header to define INIT_FUNCTION/INIT_SECTION globally
* Use _declspec(allocate(x)) and _declspec(code_seg(x)) on MSVC versions that support it
* Use INIT_FUNCTION on functions only and INIT_SECTION on data only (required by MSVC)
* Place INIT_FUNCTION before the return type (required by MSVC)
* Make sure declarations and implementations share the same modifiers (required by MSVC)
* Add a global linker option to suppress warnings about defined but unused INIT section
* Merge INIT section into .text in freeldr
Kernel stacks that re freed, can be placed on an SLIST for quick reuse. The old code was using a member of the PFN of the last stack page as the SLIST_ENTRY. This relies on the following (non-portable) assumptions:
- A stack always has a PTE associated with it.
- This PTE has a PFN associated with it.
- The PFN has an empty field that can be re-used as an SLIST_ENTRY.
- The PFN has another field that points back to the PTE, which then can be used to get the stack base.
Specifically: On x64 the PFN field is not 16 bytes aligned, so it cannot be used as an SLIST_ENTRY. (In a "usermode kernel" the other assumptions are also invalid).
The new code does what Windows does (and which seems absolutely obvious to do): Place the SLIST_ENTRY directly on the stack.
The size is in bytes, not in pages! On x86 we got away with it, since PEB and TEB require only a single page and the 1 passed to MiInsertVadEx() was aligned up to PAGE_SIZE. On x64 this doesn't work, since the size is 2 pages.