When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

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darklink
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by darklink »

"Maybe I should use linked lists for the PMM stack"

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        if(!isUsed(i))
            continue;
        push(i); //Mark as free
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"Well…"
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by Kazinsal »

I left a scheduler test on to make sure it wouldn't leak any memory over a long period of time by setting up two threads (one to spin idly, the other to instantly invoke KeSyscallYield and give up its time share whenever it received one) and letting it sit. Didn't lose any memory, but I lost a chunk of hard drive space, having accidentally left the scheduler debug statements turned on...

I came back to find a very large serial dump file with this over and over and over and over...

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KeTimePITInterrupt: Invoking KeTaskingSwitch (reason: timer tick).
KeTaskingSwitch: About to switch tasks to thread 2 (process 1).
KeSyscallHandler: System call invoked by thread 2!
KeSyscallHandler: EAX = 0x00000000, EBX = 0x00000000, ECX = 0x00000000
KeSyscallHandler: EDX = 0x00000000, ESI = 0x00000000, EDI = 0x00000000
KeSyscallYield: Yielding thread 2.
KeTaskingSwitch: About to switch tasks to thread 3 (process 1).
KeTimePITInterrupt: Invoking KeTaskingSwitch (reason: timer tick).
KeTaskingSwitch: About to switch tasks to thread 2 (process 1).
KeSyscallHandler: System call invoked by thread 2!

[ ... over a gigabyte of repetitive logs snipped ... ]
Oops. At least my debugging statements don't leak any memory!
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by Octacone »

Something went wrong... Aka half-broken state machine. :D
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by CorruptedByCPU »

Without new_line char translated :D

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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by Sik »

Is it me or the blue channel is shifted by 1 pixel? o_o
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by CorruptedByCPU »

Sik wrote:Is it me or the blue channel is shifted by 1 pixel? o_o
You're almost right :)
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by osdever »

Tried to implement double-buffering :D
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by osdever »

UPD: recorded a video.

Developing U365.
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only testing: http://gitlab.com/bps-projs/U365/tree/testing

OSDev newbies can copy any code from my repositories, just leave a notice that this code was written by U365 development team, not by you.
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by Octacone »

osdeverr wrote:Tried to implement double-buffering :D
That is what happens to me every single time I try to implement it. I couldn't fix it for months so I gave up. SSE memory copy is just too tough.

Old picture of mine:
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by MajickTek »

octacone wrote:
osdeverr wrote:Tried to implement double-buffering :D
That is what happens to me every single time I try to implement it. I couldn't fix it for months so I gave up. SSE memory copy is just too tough.

Old picture of mine:
Image
It looks quite cool though. Double mouse support anyone?
Everyone should know how to program a computer, because it teaches you how to think! -Steve Jobs

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while ( ! ( succeed = try() ) ); 
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by SpyderTL »

osdeverr wrote:UPD: recorded a video.
What is ironic is that you would probably have a pretty hard time writing code to do that, if you were doing it on purpose.

You guys should start with simple REPD copying until everything is stable, and then swap it out with a faster method after it has been tested.

Step 1: make it work.
Step 2: make it fast.
Step 3: make it bulletproof.
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by Octacone »

MajickTek wrote:
octacone wrote:
osdeverr wrote:Tried to implement double-buffering :D
That is what happens to me every single time I try to implement it. I couldn't fix it for months so I gave up. SSE memory copy is just too tough.

Old picture of mine:
[imgsnip]http://forum.osdev.org/download/file.php?id=3349&mode=view[/img]
It looks quite cool though. Double mouse support anyone?
Yeah it does look cool but not functional. It looks like that I am better at creating mosaics than coding. :P
Dual mouse support would be epic, just image that! Endless possibilities.
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by Korona »

Image

I'm currently writing a native graphics mode setting driver (for the Intel G45 chipset) for my OS. This is what happens when you set a bad pixel clock :D. This imgur album (click me) has another funny fail and a picture of the working driver.
managarm: Microkernel-based OS capable of running a Wayland desktop (Discord: https://discord.gg/7WB6Ur3). My OS-dev projects: [mlibc: Portable C library for managarm, qword, Linux, Sigma, ...] [LAI: AML interpreter] [xbstrap: Build system for OS distributions].
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by Octacone »

Korona wrote:Image

I'm currently writing a native graphics mode setting driver (for the Intel G45 chipset) for my OS. This is what happens when you set a bad pixel clock :D. This imgur album (click me) has another funny fail and a picture of the working driver.
That is actually impressive! Btw what do you mean by native graphics driver? Setting a bad pixel clock? What is your method, VESA or VGA?
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Re: When your OS goes crazy - Screenshots

Post by Korona »

octacone wrote:That is actually impressive! Btw what do you mean by native graphics driver? Setting a bad pixel clock? What is your method, VESA or VGA?
I'm using neither VESA nor VGA. I manipulate the native registers of the graphics card (i.e. I set a pixel clock, display timings, program the framebuffer address and enable graphics output). The driver can set any mode (e.g. 1920x1080@32bpp) that is supported by the card and the monitor. I do not have to use the BIOS or any third party functionality. However keep in mind that the driver is tied to Intel G45 and similar chipsets.

It is easy to extend this to hardware double/triple/whatever buffering on VSYNC, hardware mouse cursors, hardware overlays (i.e. displaying a second framebuffer inside a window) and multiple monitors. My code does not support acceleration (BLTing or shaders) yet though.
managarm: Microkernel-based OS capable of running a Wayland desktop (Discord: https://discord.gg/7WB6Ur3). My OS-dev projects: [mlibc: Portable C library for managarm, qword, Linux, Sigma, ...] [LAI: AML interpreter] [xbstrap: Build system for OS distributions].
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