ref: d62bb413980727400377b5dfe166d61ad0ecc86f
dir: /pc/boot.s/
/* Declare constants for the multiboot header. */ .set ALIGN, 1<<0 /* align loaded modules on page boundaries */ .set MEMINFO, 1<<1 /* provide memory map */ .set FLAGS, ALIGN | MEMINFO /* this is the Multiboot 'flag' field */ .set MAGIC, 0x1BADB002 /* 'magic number' lets bootloader find the header */ .set CHECKSUM, -(MAGIC + FLAGS) /* checksum of above, to prove we are multiboot */ /* Declare a multiboot header that marks the program as a kernel. These are magic values that are documented in the multiboot standard. The bootloader will search for this signature in the first 8 KiB of the kernel file, aligned at a 32-bit boundary. The signature is in its own section so the header can be forced to be within the first 8 KiB of the kernel file. */ .section .multiboot .align 4 .long MAGIC .long FLAGS .long CHECKSUM /* The multiboot standard does not define the value of the stack pointer register (esp) and it is up to the kernel to provide a stack. This allocates room for a small stack by creating a symbol at the bottom of it, then allocating 16384 bytes for it, and finally creating a symbol at the top. The stack grows downwards on x86. The stack is in its own section so it can be marked nobits, which means the kernel file is smaller because it does not contain an uninitialized stack. The stack on x86 must be 16-byte aligned according to the System V ABI standard and de-facto extensions. The compiler will assume the stack is properly aligned and failure to align the stack will result in undefined behavior. */ .section .bss .align 16 stack_bottom: .skip 2<<16 # 64 KiB stack_top: .section .text .global _start _start: /* c needs a stack */ mov $stack_top, %esp /* This is a good place to initialize crucial processor state before the high-level kernel is entered. It's best to minimize the early environment where crucial features are offline. Note that the processor is not fully initialized yet: Features such as floating point instructions and instruction set extensions are not initialized yet. The GDT should be loaded here. Paging should be enabled here. C++ features such as global constructors and exceptions will require runtime support to work as well. */ /* Enter the high-level kernel. The ABI requires the stack is 16-byte aligned at the time of the call instruction (which afterwards pushes the return pointer of size 4 bytes). The stack was originally 16-byte aligned above and we've pushed a multiple of 16 bytes to the stack since (pushed 0 bytes so far), so the alignment has thus been preserved and the call is well defined. */ call kernel_main