Fixed in x86 and ARM (this was already done in x64).
This is needed because thread preparation routine KxQueueReadyThread()
releases PRCB lock, but does not acquire it, so that the locking must
always be done outside the function, same as in all its other usage cases.
This fixes an assert from release PRCB routine, when booting x86 ReactOS
in SMP mode, because it attempts to release the lock when it is not
actually acquired.
Addendum to commit a011d19ed.
+ Add an assert in KxQueueReadyThread() to ensure the PRCB lock is actually acquired.
CORE-1697
Raise IRQL to SYNCH_LEVEL when exiting from the idle thread in the
idle loop, in case it is scheduled for execution. Then restore it
back to DISPATCH_LEVEL, after this is done.
This behaviour is a bit similar to the way it's done on x64.
This IRQL raise is necessary only in SMP builds.
Calls are placed in CONFIG_SMP ifdef: this avoids unnecessary IRQL
changes on UP, since SYNCH_LEVEL and DISPATCH_LEVEL are identical
there, unlike in MP, where SYNCH_LEVEL is IPI_LEVEL - 2 actually.
This prevents bugcheck DRIVER_IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL when booting
SMP x86 ReactOS, in KiTimerExpiration when calling it 2nd time.
The BSOD happened due to IRQL levels mismatch.
- 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
Note: before we had a BOOLEAN parameter called StoreInstruction, but in reality it was not specifying whether the fault was from a store store instruction, but whether it was an access violation rather than a page-not-present fault. On x86 without PAE there are only 2 kinds of access violations: (1) Access of a kernel mode page from user mode, which is handled early and (2) access of a read-only (or COW) page with a writing instruction. Therefore we could get away with this, even though it relied on the wrong assumption that a fault, which was not a page-not-present-fault, was automatically a write access. This commit only changes one thing: we pass the full fault-code to MmAccessFault and handle the rest from there in exactly the same way as before. More changes are coming to make things clear.