doubts regarding System Initialization working (SYSINIT)
John Baldwin
jhb at freebsd.org
Fri Jan 23 14:57:57 PST 2009
On Friday 23 January 2009 10:55:32 am Mehul Chadha wrote:
> Hello all,
> I have been browsing through the FreeBSD kernel's
> source code trying to understand its working .
>
> In the mi_startup() in /sys/kern/init_main.c all the SYSINIT objects
> are sorted using bubble sort and then they are executed in order.
>
> My doubt is that we have declared the pointer to the struct sysinit as
> const pointer to a const in the macro definition of SYSINIT ie when
> the macro
>
> SYSINIT(kmem, SI_SUB_KMEM, SI_ORDER_FIRST, kmeminit, NULL) is
> expanded completely we get the following
>
> static struct sysinit kmem_sys_init = { SI_SUB_KMEM, SI_ORDER_FIRST,
> (sysinit_cfunc_t)(sysinit_
> nfunc_t)kmeminit, ((void *)(((void *)0))) }; static void const * const
> __set_sysinit_set_sym_kmem_sys_init __attribute__((__section__("set_"
> "sysinit_set"))) __attribute__((__used__)) = &kmem_sys_init;
>
> Here we see that the pointer is of type const and to a const but when we
sort
> and swap using
> *sipp=*xipp;
>
> We are trying to change the address of const pointer to a new address
> in which case it should segfault but it works fine.
>
> Why does it not segfault it seems I have not understood the concept
> behind using const *const... I will be very thankful if you can help
> me with it.
I'm guessing the startup code doesn't map the SYSINIT pages read only because
it is not smart enough to honor that request perhaps. That is, I wouldn't be
surprised if all of .rodata in the kernel was mapped as R/W instead of R/O.
--
John Baldwin
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