21a88fd487
and plan 9 code, at least boots and gets into C code.
96 lines
3.8 KiB
ArmAsm
96 lines
3.8 KiB
ArmAsm
#include "asm.h"
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.set PROT_MODE_CSEG,0x8 # code segment selector
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.set PROT_MODE_DSEG,0x10 # data segment selector
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.set CR0_PE_ON,0x1 # protected mode enable flag
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###################################################################################
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# ENTRY POINT
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# This code should be stored in the first sector of the hard disk.
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# After the BIOS initializes the hardware on startup or system reset,
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# it loads this code at physical address 0x7c00 - 0x7d00 (512 bytes).
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# Then the BIOS jumps to the beginning of it, address 0x7c00,
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# while running in 16-bit real-mode (8086 compatibility mode).
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# The Code Segment register (CS) is initially zero on entry.
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#
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# This code switches into 32-bit protected mode so that all of
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# memory can accessed, then calls into C.
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###################################################################################
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.globl start # Entry point
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start: .code16 # This runs in real mode
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cli # Disable interrupts
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cld # String operations increment
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# Set up the important data segment registers (DS, ES, SS).
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xorw %ax,%ax # Segment number zero
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movw %ax,%ds # -> Data Segment
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movw %ax,%es # -> Extra Segment
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movw %ax,%ss # -> Stack Segment
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# Set up the stack pointer, growing downward from 0x7c00.
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movw $start,%sp # Stack Pointer
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#### Enable A20:
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#### For fascinating historical reasons (related to the fact that
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#### the earliest 8086-based PCs could only address 1MB of physical memory
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#### and subsequent 80286-based PCs wanted to retain maximum compatibility),
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#### physical address line 20 is tied to low when the machine boots.
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#### Obviously this a bit of a drag for us, especially when trying to
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#### address memory above 1MB. This code undoes this.
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seta20.1: inb $0x64,%al # Get status
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testb $0x2,%al # Busy?
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jnz seta20.1 # Yes
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movb $0xd1,%al # Command: Write
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outb %al,$0x64 # output port
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seta20.2: inb $0x64,%al # Get status
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testb $0x2,%al # Busy?
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jnz seta20.2 # Yes
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movb $0xdf,%al # Enable
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outb %al,$0x60 # A20
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#### Switch from real to protected mode
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#### The descriptors in our GDT allow all physical memory to be accessed.
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#### Furthermore, the descriptors have base addresses of 0, so that the
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#### segment translation is a NOP, ie. virtual addresses are identical to
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#### their physical addresses. With this setup, immediately after
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#### enabling protected mode it will still appear to this code
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#### that it is running directly on physical memory with no translation.
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#### This initial NOP-translation setup is required by the processor
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#### to ensure that the transition to protected mode occurs smoothly.
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real_to_prot: cli # Mandatory since we dont set up an IDT
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lgdt gdtdesc # load GDT -- mandatory in protected mode
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movl %cr0, %eax # turn on protected mode
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orl $CR0_PE_ON, %eax #
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movl %eax, %cr0 #
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### CPU magic: jump to relocation, flush prefetch queue, and reload %cs
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### Has the effect of just jmp to the next instruction, but simultaneous
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### loads CS with $PROT_MODE_CSEG.
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ljmp $PROT_MODE_CSEG, $protcseg
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#### we are in 32-bit protected mode (hence the .code32)
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.code32
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protcseg:
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# Set up the protected-mode data segment registers
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movw $PROT_MODE_DSEG, %ax # Our data segment selector
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movw %ax, %ds # -> DS: Data Segment
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movw %ax, %es # -> ES: Extra Segment
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movw %ax, %fs # -> FS
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movw %ax, %gs # -> GS
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movw %ax, %ss # -> SS: Stack Segment
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call cmain # finish the boot load from C.
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# cmain() should not return
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spin: jmp spin # ..but in case it does, spin
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.p2align 2 # force 4 byte alignment
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gdt:
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SEG_NULL # null seg
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SEG(STA_X|STA_R, 0x0, 0xffffffff) # code seg
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SEG(STA_W, 0x0, 0xffffffff) # data seg
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gdtdesc:
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.word 0x17 # sizeof(gdt) - 1
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.long gdt # address gdt
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