- Remove KdbInit() macro and directly use KdbpCliInit() (since the place
where it was used was already within an #ifdef KDBG block).
- Declare KdpKdbgInit() only when KDBG is defined, move its definition
into kdio.c and remove the legacy wrappers/kdbg.c file.
And in KdbInitialize(), set KdpInitRoutine directly to the former,
instead of using the KdpKdbgInit indirection.
- Don't reset KdComPortInUse in KdpDebugLogInit().
- Minor refactorings: KdpSerialDebugPrint -> KdpSerialPrint and make it
static; argument name "Message" -> "String", "StringLength" -> "Length".
NtQueryInformationToken is by far the only system call in NT where ReturnLength simply cannot be optional. On Windows this parameter is always probed and an argument to NULL directly leads to an access violation exception.
This is due to the fact of how tokens work, as its information contents (token user, owner, primary group, et al) are dynamic and can vary throughout over time in memory.
What happens on current ReactOS master however is that ReturnLength is only probed if the parameter is not NULL. On a NULL case scenario the probing checks succeed and NtQueryInformationToken fails later. For this, just get rid of CompleteProbing
parameter and opt in for a bit mask flag based approach, with ICIF_FORCE_RETURN_LENGTH_PROBE being set on DefaultQueryInfoBufferCheck which NtQueryInformationToken calls it to do sanity checks.
In addition to that...
- Document the ICIF probe helpers
- Annotate the ICIF prope helpers with SAL
- With the riddance of CompleteProbing and adoption of flags based approach, add ICIF_PROBE_READ_WRITE and ICIF_PROBE_READ flags alongside with ICIF_FORCE_RETURN_LENGTH_PROBE
- Add a check for correct PDO before doing anything
- Process the request only for started devices
- Send the request synchronously during the start sequence
This makes Windows' i8042prt.sys work on ReactOS.
Addendum to cf0bc1c132
Implement the correct start-stop sequence for resource rebalancing
without the actual rebalancing. Also move IoInvalidateDeviceState
processing into the enumeration thread as it should be.
CORE-17519
Always create only non-volatile (sub)keys when registering a new device interface, so then they are saved after reboot.
On Windows, nearly all device interface keys are non-volatile, except the "Control" subkey, which is managed by IoSetDeviceInterfaceState instead.
In particular, it fixes MS sysaudio loading failure with MS audio drivers replacement (ks, portcls, swenum, sysaudio, wdmaud). My IoGetDeviceInterfaceAlias implementation is also required to be applied. MS sysaudio implementation(s) except that those keys are non-volatile (but we're creating them volatile instead), and trying to create a subkey(s) there (via other IoDeviceInterface* routines), to read/write some needed data. But then they fail to do that with STATUS_CHILD_MUST_BE_VOLATILE (0xc0000181), obviously because our keys are volatile.
The volatile keys can never have non-volatile subkeys.
CORE-17361
We have a special file, tag.h, which serves as a place to store whatever kernel pool allocation tag yet we still have some tags sparse over the kernel code... So just re-group them in one unique place.
NormalContext and NormalRoutine are just for good measure, but
SystemArgument2 is actually used by the function.
And yes, this appears to be a bug in Win 2003.
Only resources of HAL were checked against conflicts, not those of PnP Manager
Let IoReportResourceForDetection() make a silent conflict check.
Otherwise IopCheckResourceDescriptor() will always return 'no conflict'.
CORE-17789
Previous code did not detect equal resource ranges as conflicting.
Thanks Hervé Poussineau for pointing this out!
Meanwhile, simplify the code to make it more readable.
Certainly due to copy-pasta error from the original code.
A consequence of this oversight, was that the IoGetDeviceObjectPointer()
calls on these device names, in fltmgr!DriverEntry() couldn't work.
(See drivers/filters/fltmgr/Interface.c, line 1880 and below.)
Use REG_OPTION_NON_VOLATILE instead of REG_OPTION_VOLATILE in all ZwCreateKey calls of OpenRegistryHandlesFromSymbolicLink, since the keys created/opened by this function, should be non-volatile (in other words, be saved after reboot).
Also Device Parameters subkey that is created in IoOpenDeviceInterfaceRegistryKey (which uses that routine as well), is non-volatile too, so the parent keys whose contain it, cannot be volatile.
It will fix an error with status 0xc0000181 (STATUS_CHILD_MUST_BE_VOLATILE) occuring during loading kernel mode audio drivers from Windows XP/2003, especially checked (debug) versions, with my IoGetDeviceInterfaceAlias implementation. Also it may fix other error cases.
CORE-17361
driverName.Buffer leaked when the "(!NT_SUCCESS(status) || ServiceName != NULL)"
case is taken because ServiceName != NULL, and some of the functions fail.