Introduces a kernel option that, when enabled, reduces the kernel window in a user address
space to just be Static Kernel Image and Microstate (SKIM), instead of the full kernel
address space. This isolates the important kernel data from the user preventing a
Meltdown style attack being able to violate secrecy. The kernel text and read only data,
i.e. anything that is static from boot, is not secret and can be allowed in the SKIM window
and potentially read by the user. Additionally to switch to and from the actual kernel
address space a small amount of state needs to also be in the SKIM window.
This is only an implementation for x86-64, although the same design is applicable to ia32
TOPLEVELTYPES is not intended to be configurable by the user, rather is a reflection
on the types defined by the source. This changes the TOPLEVELTYPES argument to be
a property, allowing it to be constructed as a generator expression when generating
BF files. By being a property, and not something like a global property, it removes
the need to ensure that additions to TOPLEVELTYPES are done prior to any bitfield
target definitions.
Defines an empty custom target whose purpose is to hold properties and configuration
data that can be retrieved using generator expressions in the build phase.
Using the `INTERNAL` attribute implied `FORCE` overriding any value the user may have set
for these. This was not the intention, and they should merely set a `CACHE` value if one
does not already exist.