setup.S 21.9 KB
Newer Older
L
Linus Torvalds 已提交
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35
/*
 *	setup.S		Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Linus Torvalds
 *
 * setup.s is responsible for getting the system data from the BIOS,
 * and putting them into the appropriate places in system memory.
 * both setup.s and system has been loaded by the bootblock.
 *
 * This code asks the bios for memory/disk/other parameters, and
 * puts them in a "safe" place: 0x90000-0x901FF, ie where the
 * boot-block used to be. It is then up to the protected mode
 * system to read them from there before the area is overwritten
 * for buffer-blocks.
 *
 * Move PS/2 aux init code to psaux.c
 * (troyer@saifr00.cfsat.Honeywell.COM) 03Oct92
 *
 * some changes and additional features by Christoph Niemann,
 * March 1993/June 1994 (Christoph.Niemann@linux.org)
 *
 * add APM BIOS checking by Stephen Rothwell, May 1994
 * (sfr@canb.auug.org.au)
 *
 * High load stuff, initrd support and position independency
 * by Hans Lermen & Werner Almesberger, February 1996
 * <lermen@elserv.ffm.fgan.de>, <almesber@lrc.epfl.ch>
 *
 * Video handling moved to video.S by Martin Mares, March 1996
 * <mj@k332.feld.cvut.cz>
 *
 * Extended memory detection scheme retwiddled by orc@pell.chi.il.us (david
 * parsons) to avoid loadlin confusion, July 1997
 *
 * Transcribed from Intel (as86) -> AT&T (gas) by Chris Noe, May 1999.
 * <stiker@northlink.com>
 *
36
 * Fix to work around buggy BIOSes which don't use carry bit correctly
L
Linus Torvalds 已提交
37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162
 * and/or report extended memory in CX/DX for e801h memory size detection 
 * call.  As a result the kernel got wrong figures.  The int15/e801h docs
 * from Ralf Brown interrupt list seem to indicate AX/BX should be used
 * anyway.  So to avoid breaking many machines (presumably there was a reason
 * to orginally use CX/DX instead of AX/BX), we do a kludge to see
 * if CX/DX have been changed in the e801 call and if so use AX/BX .
 * Michael Miller, April 2001 <michaelm@mjmm.org>
 *
 * Added long mode checking and SSE force. March 2003, Andi Kleen.		
 */

#include <linux/config.h>
#include <asm/segment.h>
#include <linux/version.h>
#include <linux/compile.h>
#include <asm/boot.h>
#include <asm/e820.h>
#include <asm/page.h>

/* Signature words to ensure LILO loaded us right */
#define SIG1	0xAA55
#define SIG2	0x5A5A

INITSEG  = DEF_INITSEG		# 0x9000, we move boot here, out of the way
SYSSEG   = DEF_SYSSEG		# 0x1000, system loaded at 0x10000 (65536).
SETUPSEG = DEF_SETUPSEG		# 0x9020, this is the current segment
				# ... and the former contents of CS

DELTA_INITSEG = SETUPSEG - INITSEG	# 0x0020

.code16
.globl begtext, begdata, begbss, endtext, enddata, endbss

.text
begtext:
.data
begdata:
.bss
begbss:
.text

start:
	jmp	trampoline

# This is the setup header, and it must start at %cs:2 (old 0x9020:2)

		.ascii	"HdrS"		# header signature
		.word	0x0203		# header version number (>= 0x0105)
					# or else old loadlin-1.5 will fail)
realmode_swtch:	.word	0, 0		# default_switch, SETUPSEG
start_sys_seg:	.word	SYSSEG
		.word	kernel_version	# pointing to kernel version string
					# above section of header is compatible
					# with loadlin-1.5 (header v1.5). Don't
					# change it.

type_of_loader:	.byte	0		# = 0, old one (LILO, Loadlin,
					#      Bootlin, SYSLX, bootsect...)
					# See Documentation/i386/boot.txt for
					# assigned ids
	
# flags, unused bits must be zero (RFU) bit within loadflags
loadflags:
LOADED_HIGH	= 1			# If set, the kernel is loaded high
CAN_USE_HEAP	= 0x80			# If set, the loader also has set
					# heap_end_ptr to tell how much
					# space behind setup.S can be used for
					# heap purposes.
					# Only the loader knows what is free
#ifndef __BIG_KERNEL__
		.byte	0
#else
		.byte	LOADED_HIGH
#endif

setup_move_size: .word  0x8000		# size to move, when setup is not
					# loaded at 0x90000. We will move setup 
					# to 0x90000 then just before jumping
					# into the kernel. However, only the
					# loader knows how much data behind
					# us also needs to be loaded.

code32_start:				# here loaders can put a different
					# start address for 32-bit code.
#ifndef __BIG_KERNEL__
		.long	0x1000		#   0x1000 = default for zImage
#else
		.long	0x100000	# 0x100000 = default for big kernel
#endif

ramdisk_image:	.long	0		# address of loaded ramdisk image
					# Here the loader puts the 32-bit
					# address where it loaded the image.
					# This only will be read by the kernel.

ramdisk_size:	.long	0		# its size in bytes

bootsect_kludge:
		.long	0		# obsolete

heap_end_ptr:	.word	modelist+1024	# (Header version 0x0201 or later)
					# space from here (exclusive) down to
					# end of setup code can be used by setup
					# for local heap purposes.

pad1:		.word	0
cmd_line_ptr:	.long 0			# (Header version 0x0202 or later)
					# If nonzero, a 32-bit pointer
					# to the kernel command line.
					# The command line should be
					# located between the start of
					# setup and the end of low
					# memory (0xa0000), or it may
					# get overwritten before it
					# gets read.  If this field is
					# used, there is no longer
					# anything magical about the
					# 0x90000 segment; the setup
					# can be located anywhere in
					# low memory 0x10000 or higher.

ramdisk_max:	.long 0xffffffff
	
trampoline:	call	start_of_setup
		.align 16
					# The offset at this point is 0x240
163
		.space  (0xeff-0x240+1)	# E820 & EDD space (ending at 0xeff)
L
Linus Torvalds 已提交
164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385
# End of setup header #####################################################

start_of_setup:
# Bootlin depends on this being done early
	movw	$0x01500, %ax
	movb	$0x81, %dl
	int	$0x13

#ifdef SAFE_RESET_DISK_CONTROLLER
# Reset the disk controller.
	movw	$0x0000, %ax
	movb	$0x80, %dl
	int	$0x13
#endif

# Set %ds = %cs, we know that SETUPSEG = %cs at this point
	movw	%cs, %ax		# aka SETUPSEG
	movw	%ax, %ds
# Check signature at end of setup
	cmpw	$SIG1, setup_sig1
	jne	bad_sig

	cmpw	$SIG2, setup_sig2
	jne	bad_sig

	jmp	good_sig1

# Routine to print asciiz string at ds:si
prtstr:
	lodsb
	andb	%al, %al
	jz	fin

	call	prtchr
	jmp	prtstr

fin:	ret

# Space printing
prtsp2:	call	prtspc		# Print double space
prtspc:	movb	$0x20, %al	# Print single space (note: fall-thru)

prtchr:	
	pushw	%ax
	pushw	%cx
	movw	$0007,%bx
	movw	$0x01, %cx
	movb	$0x0e, %ah
	int	$0x10
	popw	%cx
	popw	%ax
	ret

beep:	movb	$0x07, %al
	jmp	prtchr
	
no_sig_mess: .string	"No setup signature found ..."

good_sig1:
	jmp	good_sig

# We now have to find the rest of the setup code/data
bad_sig:
	movw	%cs, %ax			# SETUPSEG
	subw	$DELTA_INITSEG, %ax		# INITSEG
	movw	%ax, %ds
	xorb	%bh, %bh
	movb	(497), %bl			# get setup sect from bootsect
	subw	$4, %bx				# LILO loads 4 sectors of setup
	shlw	$8, %bx				# convert to words (1sect=2^8 words)
	movw	%bx, %cx
	shrw	$3, %bx				# convert to segment
	addw	$SYSSEG, %bx
	movw	%bx, %cs:start_sys_seg
# Move rest of setup code/data to here
	movw	$2048, %di			# four sectors loaded by LILO
	subw	%si, %si
	movw	%cs, %ax			# aka SETUPSEG
	movw	%ax, %es
	movw	$SYSSEG, %ax
	movw	%ax, %ds
	rep
	movsw
	movw	%cs, %ax			# aka SETUPSEG
	movw	%ax, %ds
	cmpw	$SIG1, setup_sig1
	jne	no_sig

	cmpw	$SIG2, setup_sig2
	jne	no_sig

	jmp	good_sig

no_sig:
	lea	no_sig_mess, %si
	call	prtstr

no_sig_loop:
	jmp	no_sig_loop

good_sig:
	movw	%cs, %ax			# aka SETUPSEG
	subw	$DELTA_INITSEG, %ax 		# aka INITSEG
	movw	%ax, %ds
# Check if an old loader tries to load a big-kernel
	testb	$LOADED_HIGH, %cs:loadflags	# Do we have a big kernel?
	jz	loader_ok			# No, no danger for old loaders.

	cmpb	$0, %cs:type_of_loader 		# Do we have a loader that
						# can deal with us?
	jnz	loader_ok			# Yes, continue.

	pushw	%cs				# No, we have an old loader,
	popw	%ds				# die. 
	lea	loader_panic_mess, %si
	call	prtstr

	jmp	no_sig_loop

loader_panic_mess: .string "Wrong loader, giving up..."

loader_ok:
	/* check for long mode. */
	/* we have to do this before the VESA setup, otherwise the user
	   can't see the error message. */
	
	pushw	%ds
	movw	%cs,%ax
	movw	%ax,%ds
	
	/* minimum CPUID flags for x86-64 */
	/* see http://www.x86-64.org/lists/discuss/msg02971.html */		
#define SSE_MASK ((1<<25)|(1<<26))
#define REQUIRED_MASK1 ((1<<0)|(1<<3)|(1<<4)|(1<<5)|(1<<6)|(1<<8)|\
					   (1<<13)|(1<<15)|(1<<24))
#define REQUIRED_MASK2 (1<<29)

	pushfl				/* standard way to check for cpuid */
	popl	%eax
	movl	%eax,%ebx
	xorl	$0x200000,%eax
	pushl	%eax
	popfl
	pushfl
	popl	%eax
	cmpl	%eax,%ebx
	jz	no_longmode		/* cpu has no cpuid */
	movl	$0x0,%eax
	cpuid
	cmpl	$0x1,%eax
	jb	no_longmode		/* no cpuid 1 */
	xor	%di,%di
	cmpl	$0x68747541,%ebx	/* AuthenticAMD */
	jnz	noamd
	cmpl	$0x69746e65,%edx
	jnz	noamd
	cmpl	$0x444d4163,%ecx
	jnz	noamd
	mov	$1,%di			/* cpu is from AMD */
noamd:		
	movl    $0x1,%eax
	cpuid
	andl	$REQUIRED_MASK1,%edx
	xorl	$REQUIRED_MASK1,%edx
	jnz	no_longmode
	movl    $0x80000000,%eax
	cpuid
	cmpl    $0x80000001,%eax
	jb      no_longmode             /* no extended cpuid */
	movl    $0x80000001,%eax
	cpuid
	andl    $REQUIRED_MASK2,%edx
	xorl    $REQUIRED_MASK2,%edx
	jnz     no_longmode
sse_test:		
	movl	$1,%eax
	cpuid
	andl	$SSE_MASK,%edx
	cmpl	$SSE_MASK,%edx
	je	sse_ok
	test	%di,%di
	jz	no_longmode	/* only try to force SSE on AMD */ 
	movl	$0xc0010015,%ecx	/* HWCR */
	rdmsr
	btr	$15,%eax	/* enable SSE */
	wrmsr
	xor	%di,%di		/* don't loop */
	jmp	sse_test	/* try again */	
no_longmode:
	call	beep
	lea	long_mode_panic,%si
	call	prtstr
no_longmode_loop:		
	jmp	no_longmode_loop
long_mode_panic:
	.string "Your CPU does not support long mode. Use a 32bit distribution."
	.byte 0
	
sse_ok:
	popw	%ds
	
# tell BIOS we want to go to long mode
	movl  $0xec00,%eax	# declare target operating mode
	movl  $2,%ebx		# long mode
	int $0x15			
	
# Get memory size (extended mem, kB)

	xorl	%eax, %eax
	movl	%eax, (0x1e0)
#ifndef STANDARD_MEMORY_BIOS_CALL
	movb	%al, (E820NR)
# Try three different memory detection schemes.  First, try
# e820h, which lets us assemble a memory map, then try e801h,
# which returns a 32-bit memory size, and finally 88h, which
# returns 0-64m

# method E820H:
# the memory map from hell.  e820h returns memory classified into
# a whole bunch of different types, and allows memory holes and
# everything.  We scan through this memory map and build a list
# of the first 32 memory areas, which we return at [E820MAP].
386
# This is documented at http://www.acpi.info/, in the ACPI 2.0 specification.
L
Linus Torvalds 已提交
387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414

#define SMAP  0x534d4150

meme820:
	xorl	%ebx, %ebx			# continuation counter
	movw	$E820MAP, %di			# point into the whitelist
						# so we can have the bios
						# directly write into it.

jmpe820:
	movl	$0x0000e820, %eax		# e820, upper word zeroed
	movl	$SMAP, %edx			# ascii 'SMAP'
	movl	$20, %ecx			# size of the e820rec
	pushw	%ds				# data record.
	popw	%es
	int	$0x15				# make the call
	jc	bail820				# fall to e801 if it fails

	cmpl	$SMAP, %eax			# check the return is `SMAP'
	jne	bail820				# fall to e801 if it fails

#	cmpl	$1, 16(%di)			# is this usable memory?
#	jne	again820

	# If this is usable memory, we save it by simply advancing %di by
	# sizeof(e820rec).
	#
good820:
415
	movb	(E820NR), %al			# up to 128 entries
L
Linus Torvalds 已提交
416
	cmpb	$E820MAX, %al
417
	jae	bail820
L
Linus Torvalds 已提交
418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438

	incb	(E820NR)
	movw	%di, %ax
	addw	$20, %ax
	movw	%ax, %di
again820:
	cmpl	$0, %ebx			# check to see if
	jne	jmpe820				# %ebx is set to EOF
bail820:


# method E801H:
# memory size is in 1k chunksizes, to avoid confusing loadlin.
# we store the 0xe801 memory size in a completely different place,
# because it will most likely be longer than 16 bits.
# (use 1e0 because that's what Larry Augustine uses in his
# alternative new memory detection scheme, and it's sensible
# to write everything into the same place.)

meme801:
	stc					# fix to work around buggy
439
	xorw	%cx,%cx				# BIOSes which don't clear/set
L
Linus Torvalds 已提交
440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735
	xorw	%dx,%dx				# carry on pass/error of
						# e801h memory size call
						# or merely pass cx,dx though
						# without changing them.
	movw	$0xe801, %ax
	int	$0x15
	jc	mem88

	cmpw	$0x0, %cx			# Kludge to handle BIOSes
	jne	e801usecxdx			# which report their extended
	cmpw	$0x0, %dx			# memory in AX/BX rather than
	jne	e801usecxdx			# CX/DX.  The spec I have read
	movw	%ax, %cx			# seems to indicate AX/BX 
	movw	%bx, %dx			# are more reasonable anyway...

e801usecxdx:
	andl	$0xffff, %edx			# clear sign extend
	shll	$6, %edx			# and go from 64k to 1k chunks
	movl	%edx, (0x1e0)			# store extended memory size
	andl	$0xffff, %ecx			# clear sign extend
 	addl	%ecx, (0x1e0)			# and add lower memory into
						# total size.

# Ye Olde Traditional Methode.  Returns the memory size (up to 16mb or
# 64mb, depending on the bios) in ax.
mem88:

#endif
	movb	$0x88, %ah
	int	$0x15
	movw	%ax, (2)

# Set the keyboard repeat rate to the max
	movw	$0x0305, %ax
	xorw	%bx, %bx
	int	$0x16

# Check for video adapter and its parameters and allow the
# user to browse video modes.
	call	video				# NOTE: we need %ds pointing
						# to bootsector

# Get hd0 data...
	xorw	%ax, %ax
	movw	%ax, %ds
	ldsw	(4 * 0x41), %si
	movw	%cs, %ax			# aka SETUPSEG
	subw	$DELTA_INITSEG, %ax		# aka INITSEG
	pushw	%ax
	movw	%ax, %es
	movw	$0x0080, %di
	movw	$0x10, %cx
	pushw	%cx
	cld
	rep
 	movsb
# Get hd1 data...
	xorw	%ax, %ax
	movw	%ax, %ds
	ldsw	(4 * 0x46), %si
	popw	%cx
	popw	%es
	movw	$0x0090, %di
	rep
	movsb
# Check that there IS a hd1 :-)
	movw	$0x01500, %ax
	movb	$0x81, %dl
	int	$0x13
	jc	no_disk1
	
	cmpb	$3, %ah
	je	is_disk1

no_disk1:
	movw	%cs, %ax			# aka SETUPSEG
	subw	$DELTA_INITSEG, %ax 		# aka INITSEG
	movw	%ax, %es
	movw	$0x0090, %di
	movw	$0x10, %cx
	xorw	%ax, %ax
	cld
	rep
	stosb
is_disk1:

# Check for PS/2 pointing device
	movw	%cs, %ax			# aka SETUPSEG
	subw	$DELTA_INITSEG, %ax		# aka INITSEG
	movw	%ax, %ds
	movw	$0, (0x1ff)			# default is no pointing device
	int	$0x11				# int 0x11: equipment list
	testb	$0x04, %al			# check if mouse installed
	jz	no_psmouse

	movw	$0xAA, (0x1ff)			# device present
no_psmouse:

#include "../../i386/boot/edd.S"

# Now we want to move to protected mode ...
	cmpw	$0, %cs:realmode_swtch
	jz	rmodeswtch_normal

	lcall	*%cs:realmode_swtch

	jmp	rmodeswtch_end

rmodeswtch_normal:
        pushw	%cs
	call	default_switch

rmodeswtch_end:
# we get the code32 start address and modify the below 'jmpi'
# (loader may have changed it)
	movl	%cs:code32_start, %eax
	movl	%eax, %cs:code32

# Now we move the system to its rightful place ... but we check if we have a
# big-kernel. In that case we *must* not move it ...
	testb	$LOADED_HIGH, %cs:loadflags
	jz	do_move0			# .. then we have a normal low
						# loaded zImage
						# .. or else we have a high
						# loaded bzImage
	jmp	end_move			# ... and we skip moving

do_move0:
	movw	$0x100, %ax			# start of destination segment
	movw	%cs, %bp			# aka SETUPSEG
	subw	$DELTA_INITSEG, %bp		# aka INITSEG
	movw	%cs:start_sys_seg, %bx		# start of source segment
	cld
do_move:
	movw	%ax, %es			# destination segment
	incb	%ah				# instead of add ax,#0x100
	movw	%bx, %ds			# source segment
	addw	$0x100, %bx
	subw	%di, %di
	subw	%si, %si
	movw 	$0x800, %cx
	rep
	movsw
	cmpw	%bp, %bx			# assume start_sys_seg > 0x200,
						# so we will perhaps read one
						# page more than needed, but
						# never overwrite INITSEG
						# because destination is a
						# minimum one page below source
	jb	do_move

end_move:
# then we load the segment descriptors
	movw	%cs, %ax			# aka SETUPSEG
	movw	%ax, %ds
		
# Check whether we need to be downward compatible with version <=201
	cmpl	$0, cmd_line_ptr
	jne	end_move_self		# loader uses version >=202 features
	cmpb	$0x20, type_of_loader
	je	end_move_self		# bootsect loader, we know of it

# Boot loader doesnt support boot protocol version 2.02.
# If we have our code not at 0x90000, we need to move it there now.
# We also then need to move the params behind it (commandline)
# Because we would overwrite the code on the current IP, we move
# it in two steps, jumping high after the first one.
	movw	%cs, %ax
	cmpw	$SETUPSEG, %ax
	je	end_move_self

	cli					# make sure we really have
						# interrupts disabled !
						# because after this the stack
						# should not be used
	subw	$DELTA_INITSEG, %ax		# aka INITSEG
	movw	%ss, %dx
	cmpw	%ax, %dx
	jb	move_self_1

	addw	$INITSEG, %dx
	subw	%ax, %dx			# this will go into %ss after
						# the move
move_self_1:
	movw	%ax, %ds
	movw	$INITSEG, %ax			# real INITSEG
	movw	%ax, %es
	movw	%cs:setup_move_size, %cx
	std					# we have to move up, so we use
						# direction down because the
						# areas may overlap
	movw	%cx, %di
	decw	%di
	movw	%di, %si
	subw	$move_self_here+0x200, %cx
	rep
	movsb
	ljmp	$SETUPSEG, $move_self_here

move_self_here:
	movw	$move_self_here+0x200, %cx
	rep
	movsb
	movw	$SETUPSEG, %ax
	movw	%ax, %ds
	movw	%dx, %ss
end_move_self:					# now we are at the right place
	lidt	idt_48				# load idt with 0,0
	xorl	%eax, %eax			# Compute gdt_base
	movw	%ds, %ax			# (Convert %ds:gdt to a linear ptr)
	shll	$4, %eax
	addl	$gdt, %eax
	movl	%eax, (gdt_48+2)
	lgdt	gdt_48				# load gdt with whatever is
						# appropriate

# that was painless, now we enable a20
	call	empty_8042

	movb	$0xD1, %al			# command write
	outb	%al, $0x64
	call	empty_8042

	movb	$0xDF, %al			# A20 on
	outb	%al, $0x60
	call	empty_8042

#
#	You must preserve the other bits here. Otherwise embarrasing things
#	like laptops powering off on boot happen. Corrected version by Kira
#	Brown from Linux 2.2
#
	inb	$0x92, %al			# 
	orb	$02, %al			# "fast A20" version
	outb	%al, $0x92			# some chips have only this

# wait until a20 really *is* enabled; it can take a fair amount of
# time on certain systems; Toshiba Tecras are known to have this
# problem.  The memory location used here (0x200) is the int 0x80
# vector, which should be safe to use.

	xorw	%ax, %ax			# segment 0x0000
	movw	%ax, %fs
	decw	%ax				# segment 0xffff (HMA)
	movw	%ax, %gs
a20_wait:
	incw	%ax				# unused memory location <0xfff0
	movw	%ax, %fs:(0x200)		# we use the "int 0x80" vector
	cmpw	%gs:(0x210), %ax		# and its corresponding HMA addr
	je	a20_wait			# loop until no longer aliased

# make sure any possible coprocessor is properly reset..
	xorw	%ax, %ax
	outb	%al, $0xf0
	call	delay

	outb	%al, $0xf1
	call	delay

# well, that went ok, I hope. Now we mask all interrupts - the rest
# is done in init_IRQ().
	movb	$0xFF, %al			# mask all interrupts for now
	outb	%al, $0xA1
	call	delay
	
	movb	$0xFB, %al			# mask all irq's but irq2 which
	outb	%al, $0x21			# is cascaded

# Well, that certainly wasn't fun :-(. Hopefully it works, and we don't
# need no steenking BIOS anyway (except for the initial loading :-).
# The BIOS-routine wants lots of unnecessary data, and it's less
# "interesting" anyway. This is how REAL programmers do it.
#
# Well, now's the time to actually move into protected mode. To make
# things as simple as possible, we do no register set-up or anything,
# we let the gnu-compiled 32-bit programs do that. We just jump to
# absolute address 0x1000 (or the loader supplied one),
# in 32-bit protected mode.
#
# Note that the short jump isn't strictly needed, although there are
# reasons why it might be a good idea. It won't hurt in any case.
	movw	$1, %ax				# protected mode (PE) bit
	lmsw	%ax				# This is it!
	jmp	flush_instr

flush_instr:
	xorw	%bx, %bx			# Flag to indicate a boot
	xorl	%esi, %esi			# Pointer to real-mode code
	movw	%cs, %si
	subw	$DELTA_INITSEG, %si
	shll	$4, %esi			# Convert to 32-bit pointer
# NOTE: For high loaded big kernels we need a
#	jmpi    0x100000,__KERNEL_CS
#
#	but we yet haven't reloaded the CS register, so the default size 
#	of the target offset still is 16 bit.
736
#	However, using an operand prefix (0x66), the CPU will properly
L
Linus Torvalds 已提交
737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767 768 769 770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782 783 784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846 847 848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 865 866 867
#	take our 48 bit far pointer. (INTeL 80386 Programmer's Reference
#	Manual, Mixing 16-bit and 32-bit code, page 16-6)

	.byte 0x66, 0xea			# prefix + jmpi-opcode
code32:	.long	0x1000				# will be set to 0x100000
						# for big kernels
	.word	__KERNEL_CS

# Here's a bunch of information about your current kernel..
kernel_version:	.ascii	UTS_RELEASE
		.ascii	" ("
		.ascii	LINUX_COMPILE_BY
		.ascii	"@"
		.ascii	LINUX_COMPILE_HOST
		.ascii	") "
		.ascii	UTS_VERSION
		.byte	0

# This is the default real mode switch routine.
# to be called just before protected mode transition
default_switch:
	cli					# no interrupts allowed !
	movb	$0x80, %al			# disable NMI for bootup
						# sequence
	outb	%al, $0x70
	lret


# This routine checks that the keyboard command queue is empty
# (after emptying the output buffers)
#
# Some machines have delusions that the keyboard buffer is always full
# with no keyboard attached...
#
# If there is no keyboard controller, we will usually get 0xff
# to all the reads.  With each IO taking a microsecond and
# a timeout of 100,000 iterations, this can take about half a
# second ("delay" == outb to port 0x80). That should be ok,
# and should also be plenty of time for a real keyboard controller
# to empty.
#

empty_8042:
	pushl	%ecx
	movl	$100000, %ecx

empty_8042_loop:
	decl	%ecx
	jz	empty_8042_end_loop

	call	delay

	inb	$0x64, %al			# 8042 status port
	testb	$1, %al				# output buffer?
	jz	no_output

	call	delay
	inb	$0x60, %al			# read it
	jmp	empty_8042_loop

no_output:
	testb	$2, %al				# is input buffer full?
	jnz	empty_8042_loop			# yes - loop
empty_8042_end_loop:
	popl	%ecx
	ret

# Read the cmos clock. Return the seconds in al
gettime:
	pushw	%cx
	movb	$0x02, %ah
	int	$0x1a
	movb	%dh, %al			# %dh contains the seconds
	andb	$0x0f, %al
	movb	%dh, %ah
	movb	$0x04, %cl
	shrb	%cl, %ah
	aad
	popw	%cx
	ret

# Delay is needed after doing I/O
delay:
	outb	%al,$0x80
	ret

# Descriptor tables
gdt:
	.word	0, 0, 0, 0			# dummy

	.word	0, 0, 0, 0			# unused

	.word	0xFFFF				# 4Gb - (0x100000*0x1000 = 4Gb)
	.word	0				# base address = 0
	.word	0x9A00				# code read/exec
	.word	0x00CF				# granularity = 4096, 386
						#  (+5th nibble of limit)

	.word	0xFFFF				# 4Gb - (0x100000*0x1000 = 4Gb)
	.word	0				# base address = 0
	.word	0x9200				# data read/write
	.word	0x00CF				# granularity = 4096, 386
						#  (+5th nibble of limit)
idt_48:
	.word	0				# idt limit = 0
	.word	0, 0				# idt base = 0L
gdt_48:
	.word	0x8000				# gdt limit=2048,
						#  256 GDT entries

	.word	0, 0				# gdt base (filled in later)

# Include video setup & detection code

#include "video.S"

# Setup signature -- must be last
setup_sig1:	.word	SIG1
setup_sig2:	.word	SIG2

# After this point, there is some free space which is used by the video mode
# handling code to store the temporary mode table (not used by the kernel).

modelist:

.text
endtext:
.data
enddata:
.bss
endbss: