Skip to content

mcb30/legacybios

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

99 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

This code implements an X86 legacy bios.  It is intended to be
compiled using standard gnu tools (eg, gas and gcc).

To build, one should be able to run "make" in the main directory.  The
resulting file "out/rom.bin" contains the processed bios image.

The code has been successfully compiled with gcc 4.1.2 and gas
2.17.50.0.18.


Overview of files:

The src/ directory contains the bios source code.  The post.c code is
compiled in 32bit mode.  The output.c code is compiled twice - once in
16bit mode and once in 32bit mode.  The remaining c files are compiled
in 16bit mode.

The tools/ directory contains helper utilities for manipulating and
building the final rom.

The out/ directory is created by the build process - it contains all
temporary and final files.


Build overview:

The 16bit code is compiled via gcc to assembler (file out/blob.16.s).
The gcc "-fwhole-program" option is used to optimize the process so
that gcc can efficiently compile and discard unneeded code.

This resulting assembler code is pulled into romlayout.S.  The gas
option ".code16gcc" is used prior to including the gcc generated
assembler - this option enables gcc to be used to generate valid 16
bit code.  The romlayout.S also defines all the mandatory bios visible
memory locations.

The post code (post.c) is written in 32bits.  The 16bit post vector
(in romlayout.S) transitions the cpu into 32 bit mode before calling
the initialization code in post.c.

In the last step, the compiled 32 bit code is merged into the 16 bit
code so that one binary file contains both.  Currently, both 16bit and
32bit code will be located in the 64K block at segment 0xf000.


GCC 16 bit limitations:

Although the 16bit code is compiled with gcc, developers need to be
aware of the environment.  In particular, global variables _must_ be
treated specially.

The code has full access to stack variables and general purpose
registers.  The entry code in romlayout.S will push the original
registers on the stack before calling the C code and then pop them off
(including any required changes) before returning from the interrupt.
Changes to CS, DS, and ES segment registers in C code is also safe.
Changes to other segment registers (SS, FS, GS) need to be restored
manually.

Stack variables (and pointers to stack variables) work as they
normally do in standard C code.

However, variables stored outside the stack need to be accessed via
the GET_VAR and SET_VAR macros.  This is due to the 16bit segment
nature of the X86 cpu when it is in "real mode".  The C entry code
will set DS and SS to point to the stack segment.  Variables not on
the stack need to be accessed via an explicit segment register.
Global constant definitions (those in 0xf000) can be accessed via the
CS segment register.  Any other access requires altering one of the
other segment registers (usually ES) and then accessing the variable
via that segment register.

About

Mirror of git://git.linuxtogo.org/home/kevin/legacybios.git

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published