1.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Daniel C. Sobral 2.\" All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 6.\" are met: 7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 8.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 10.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 11.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 12.\" 13.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 14.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 15.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 16.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 17.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 18.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 19.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 20.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 21.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 22.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 23.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 24.\" 25.\" $FreeBSD$ 26.\" 27.Dd November 18, 2015 28.Dt LOADER 8 29.Os 30.Sh NAME 31.Nm loader 32.Nd kernel bootstrapping final stage 33.Sh DESCRIPTION 34The program called 35.Nm 36is the final stage of 37.Fx Ns 's 38kernel bootstrapping process. 39On IA32 (i386) architectures, it is a 40.Pa BTX 41client. 42It is linked statically to 43.Xr libstand 3 44and usually located in the directory 45.Pa /boot . 46.Pp 47It provides a scripting language that can be used to 48automate tasks, do pre-configuration or assist in recovery 49procedures. 50This scripting language is roughly divided in 51two main components. 52The smaller one is a set of commands 53designed for direct use by the casual user, called "builtin 54commands" for historical reasons. 55The main drive behind these commands is user-friendliness. 56The bigger component is an 57.Tn ANS 58Forth compatible Forth interpreter based on FICL, by 59.An John Sadler . 60.Pp 61During initialization, 62.Nm 63will probe for a console and set the 64.Va console 65variable, or set it to serial console 66.Pq Dq Li comconsole 67if the previous boot stage used that. 68If multiple consoles are selected, they will be listed separated by spaces. 69Then, devices are probed, 70.Va currdev 71and 72.Va loaddev 73are set, and 74.Va LINES 75is set to 24. 76Next, 77.Tn FICL 78is initialized, the builtin words are added to its vocabulary, and 79.Pa /boot/boot.4th 80is processed if it exists. 81No disk switching is possible while that file is being read. 82The inner interpreter 83.Nm 84will use with 85.Tn FICL 86is then set to 87.Ic interpret , 88which is 89.Tn FICL Ns 's 90default. 91After that, 92.Pa /boot/loader.rc 93is processed if available. 94These files are processed through the 95.Ic include 96command, which reads all of them into memory before processing them, 97making disk changes possible. 98.Pp 99At this point, if an 100.Ic autoboot 101has not been tried, and if 102.Va autoboot_delay 103is not set to 104.Dq Li NO 105(not case sensitive), then an 106.Ic autoboot 107will be tried. 108If the system gets past this point, 109.Va prompt 110will be set and 111.Nm 112will engage interactive mode. 113Please note that historically even when 114.Va autoboot_delay 115is set to 116.Dq Li 0 117user will be able to interrupt autoboot process by pressing some key 118on the console while kernel and modules are being loaded. 119In some 120cases such behaviour may be undesirable, to prevent it set 121.Va autoboot_delay 122to 123.Dq Li -1 , 124in this case 125.Nm 126will engage interactive mode only if 127.Ic autoboot 128has failed. 129.Sh BUILTIN COMMANDS 130In 131.Nm , 132builtin commands take parameters from the command line. 133Presently, 134the only way to call them from a script is by using 135.Pa evaluate 136on a string. 137If an error condition occurs, an exception will be generated, 138which can be intercepted using 139.Tn ANS 140Forth exception handling 141words. 142If not intercepted, an error message will be displayed and 143the interpreter's state will be reset, emptying the stack and restoring 144interpreting mode. 145.Pp 146The builtin commands available are: 147.Pp 148.Bl -tag -width Ds -compact 149.It Ic autoboot Op Ar seconds Op Ar prompt 150Proceeds to bootstrap the system after a number of seconds, if not 151interrupted by the user. 152Displays a countdown prompt 153warning the user the system is about to be booted, 154unless interrupted by a key press. 155The kernel will be loaded first if necessary. 156Defaults to 10 seconds. 157.Pp 158.It Ic bcachestat 159Displays statistics about disk cache usage. 160For debugging only. 161.Pp 162.It Ic boot 163.It Ic boot Ar kernelname Op Cm ... 164.It Ic boot Fl flag Cm ... 165Immediately proceeds to bootstrap the system, loading the kernel 166if necessary. 167Any flags or arguments are passed to the kernel, but they 168must precede the kernel name, if a kernel name is provided. 169.Pp 170.Em WARNING : 171The behavior of this builtin is changed if 172.Xr loader.4th 8 173is loaded. 174.Pp 175.It Ic echo Xo 176.Op Fl n 177.Op Aq message 178.Xc 179Displays text on the screen. 180A new line will be printed unless 181.Fl n 182is specified. 183.Pp 184.It Ic heap 185Displays memory usage statistics. 186For debugging purposes only. 187.Pp 188.It Ic help Op topic Op subtopic 189Shows help messages read from 190.Pa /boot/loader.help . 191The special topic 192.Em index 193will list the topics available. 194.Pp 195.It Ic include Ar file Op Ar 196Process script files. 197Each file, in turn, is completely read into memory, 198and then each of its lines is passed to the command line interpreter. 199If any error is returned by the interpreter, the include 200command aborts immediately, without reading any other files, and 201returns an error itself (see 202.Sx ERRORS ) . 203.Pp 204.It Ic load Xo 205.Op Fl t Ar type 206.Ar file Cm ... 207.Xc 208Loads a kernel, kernel loadable module (kld), disk image, 209or file of opaque contents tagged as being of the type 210.Ar type . 211Kernel and modules can be either in a.out or ELF format. 212Any arguments passed after the name of the file to be loaded 213will be passed as arguments to that file. 214Use the 215.Li md_image 216type to make the kernel create a file-backed 217.Xr md 4 218disk. 219This is useful for booting from a temporary rootfs. 220Currently, argument passing does not work for the kernel. 221.Pp 222.It Ic load_geli Xo 223.Op Fl n Ar keyno 224.Ar prov Ar file 225.Xc 226Loads a 227.Xr geli 8 228encryption keyfile for the given provider name. 229The key index can be specified via 230.Ar keyno 231or will default to zero. 232.Pp 233.It Ic ls Xo 234.Op Fl l 235.Op Ar path 236.Xc 237Displays a listing of files in the directory 238.Ar path , 239or the root directory if 240.Ar path 241is not specified. 242If 243.Fl l 244is specified, file sizes will be shown too. 245.Pp 246.It Ic lsdev Op Fl v 247Lists all of the devices from which it may be possible to load modules. 248If 249.Fl v 250is specified, more details are printed. 251.Pp 252.It Ic lsmod Op Fl v 253Displays loaded modules. 254If 255.Fl v 256is specified, more details are shown. 257.Pp 258.It Ic more Ar file Op Ar 259Display the files specified, with a pause at each 260.Va LINES 261displayed. 262.Pp 263.It Ic pnpscan Op Fl v 264Scans for Plug-and-Play devices. 265This is not functional at present. 266.Pp 267.It Ic read Xo 268.Op Fl t Ar seconds 269.Op Fl p Ar prompt 270.Op Va variable 271.Xc 272Reads a line of input from the terminal, storing it in 273.Va variable 274if specified. 275A timeout can be specified with 276.Fl t , 277though it will be canceled at the first key pressed. 278A prompt may also be displayed through the 279.Fl p 280flag. 281.Pp 282.It Ic reboot 283Immediately reboots the system. 284.Pp 285.It Ic set Ar variable 286.It Ic set Ar variable Ns = Ns Ar value 287Set loader's environment variables. 288.Pp 289.It Ic show Op Va variable 290Displays the specified variable's value, or all variables and their 291values if 292.Va variable 293is not specified. 294.Pp 295.It Ic unload 296Remove all modules from memory. 297.Pp 298.It Ic unset Va variable 299Removes 300.Va variable 301from the environment. 302.Pp 303.It Ic \&? 304Lists available commands. 305.El 306.Ss BUILTIN ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES 307The 308.Nm 309has actually two different kinds of 310.Sq environment 311variables. 312There are ANS Forth's 313.Em environmental queries , 314and a separate space of environment variables used by builtins, which 315are not directly available to Forth words. 316It is the latter type that this section covers. 317.Pp 318Environment variables can be set and unset through the 319.Ic set 320and 321.Ic unset 322builtins, and can have their values interactively examined through the 323use of the 324.Ic show 325builtin. 326Their values can also be accessed as described in 327.Sx BUILTIN PARSER . 328.Pp 329Notice that these environment variables are not inherited by any shell 330after the system has been booted. 331.Pp 332A few variables are set automatically by 333.Nm . 334Others can affect the behavior of either 335.Nm 336or the kernel at boot. 337Some options may require a value, 338while others define behavior just by being set. 339Both types of builtin variables are described below. 340.Bl -tag -width bootfile 341.It Va autoboot_delay 342Number of seconds 343.Ic autoboot 344will wait before booting. 345If this variable is not defined, 346.Ic autoboot 347will default to 10 seconds. 348.Pp 349If set to 350.Dq Li NO , 351no 352.Ic autoboot 353will be automatically attempted after processing 354.Pa /boot/loader.rc , 355though explicit 356.Ic autoboot Ns 's 357will be processed normally, defaulting to 10 seconds delay. 358.Pp 359If set to 360.Dq Li 0 , 361no delay will be inserted, but user still will be able to interrupt 362.Ic autoboot 363process and escape into the interactive mode by pressing some key 364on the console while kernel and 365modules are being loaded. 366.Pp 367If set to 368.Dq Li -1 , 369no delay will be inserted and 370.Nm 371will engage interactive mode only if 372.Ic autoboot 373has failed for some reason. 374.It Va boot_askname 375Instructs the kernel to prompt the user for the name of the root device 376when the kernel is booted. 377.It Va boot_cdrom 378Instructs the kernel to try to mount the root file system from CD-ROM. 379.It Va boot_ddb 380Instructs the kernel to start in the DDB debugger, rather than 381proceeding to initialize when booted. 382.It Va boot_dfltroot 383Instructs the kernel to mount the statically compiled-in root file system. 384.It Va boot_gdb 385Selects gdb-remote mode for the kernel debugger by default. 386.It Va boot_multicons 387Enables multiple console support in the kernel early on boot. 388In a running system, console configuration can be manipulated 389by the 390.Xr conscontrol 8 391utility. 392.It Va boot_mute 393All console output is suppressed when console is muted. 394In a running system, the state of console muting can be manipulated by the 395.Xr conscontrol 8 396utility. 397.It Va boot_pause 398During the device probe, pause after each line is printed. 399.It Va boot_serial 400Force the use of a serial console even when an internal console 401is present. 402.It Va boot_single 403Prevents the kernel from initiating a multi-user startup; instead, 404a single-user mode will be entered when the kernel has finished 405device probing. 406.It Va boot_verbose 407Setting this variable causes extra debugging information to be printed 408by the kernel during the boot phase. 409.It Va bootfile 410List of semicolon-separated search path for bootable kernels. 411The default is 412.Dq Li kernel . 413.It Va comconsole_speed 414Defines the speed of the serial console (i386 and amd64 only). 415If the previous boot stage indicated that a serial console is in use 416then this variable is initialized to the current speed of the console 417serial port. 418Otherwise it is set to 9600 unless this was overridden using the 419.Va BOOT_COMCONSOLE_SPEED 420variable when 421.Nm 422was compiled. 423Changes to the 424.Va comconsole_speed 425variable take effect immediately. 426.It Va comconsole_port 427Defines the base i/o port used to access console UART 428(i386 and amd64 only). 429If the variable is not set, its assumed value is 0x3F8, which 430corresponds to PC port COM1, unless overridden by 431.Va BOOT_COMCONSOLE_PORT 432variable during the compilation of 433.Nm . 434Setting the 435.Va comconsole_port 436variable automatically set 437.Va hw.uart.console 438environment variable to provide a hint to kernel for location of the console. 439Loader console is changed immediately after variable 440.Va comconsole_port 441is set. 442.It Va comconsole_pcidev 443Defines the location of a PCI device of the 'simple communication' 444class to be used as the serial console UART (i386 and amd64 only). 445The syntax of the variable is 446.Li 'bus:device:function[:bar]' , 447where all members must be numeric, with possible 448.Li 0x 449prefix to indicate a hexadecimal value. 450The 451.Va bar 452member is optional and assumed to be 0x10 if omitted. 453The bar must decode i/o space. 454Setting the variable 455.Va comconsole_pcidev 456automatically sets the variable 457.Va comconsole_port 458to the base of the selected bar, and hint 459.Va hw.uart.console . 460Loader console is changed immediately after variable 461.Va comconsole_pcidev 462is set. 463.It Va console 464Defines the current console or consoles. 465Multiple consoles may be specified. 466In that case, the first listed console will become the default console for 467userland output (e.g.\& from 468.Xr init 8 ) . 469.It Va currdev 470Selects the default device. 471Syntax for devices is odd. 472.It Va dumpdev 473Sets the device for kernel dumps. 474This can be used to ensure that a device is configured before the corresponding 475.Va dumpdev 476directive from 477.Xr rc.conf 5 478has been processed, allowing kernel panics that happen during the early stages 479of boot to be captured. 480.It Va init_chroot 481If set to a valid directory in the root file system, it causes 482.Xr init 8 483to perform a 484.Xr chroot 2 485operation on that directory, making it the new root directory. 486That happens before entering single-user mode or multi-user 487mode (but after executing the 488.Va init_script 489if enabled). 490This functionality has generally been eclipsed by rerooting. 491See 492.Xr reboot 8 493.Fl r 494for details. 495.It Va init_path 496Sets the list of binaries which the kernel will try to run as the initial 497process. 498The first matching binary is used. 499The default list is 500.Dq Li /sbin/init:/sbin/oinit:/sbin/init.bak:\:/rescue/init . 501.It Va init_script 502If set to a valid file name in the root file system, 503instructs 504.Xr init 8 505to run that script as the very first action, 506before doing anything else. 507Signal handling and exit code interpretation is similar to 508running the 509.Pa /etc/rc 510script. 511In particular, single-user operation is enforced 512if the script terminates with a non-zero exit code, 513or if a SIGTERM is delivered to the 514.Xr init 8 515process (PID 1). 516This functionality has generally been eclipsed by rerooting. 517See 518.Xr reboot 8 519.Fl r 520for details. 521.It Va init_shell 522Defines the shell binary to be used for executing the various shell scripts. 523The default is 524.Dq Li /bin/sh . 525It is used for running the 526.Va init_script 527if set, as well as for the 528.Pa /etc/rc 529and 530.Pa /etc/rc.shutdown 531scripts. 532The value of the corresponding 533.Xr kenv 2 534variable is evaluated every time 535.Xr init 8 536calls a shell script, so it can be changed later on using the 537.Xr kenv 1 538utility. 539In particular, if a non-default shell is used for running an 540.Va init_script , 541it might be desirable to have that script reset the value of 542.Va init_shell 543back to the default, so that the 544.Pa /etc/rc 545script is executed with the standard shell 546.Pa /bin/sh . 547.It Va interpret 548Has the value 549.Dq Li OK 550if the Forth's current state is interpreting. 551.It Va LINES 552Define the number of lines on the screen, to be used by the pager. 553.It Va module_path 554Sets the list of directories which will be searched for modules 555named in a load command or implicitly required by a dependency. 556The default value for this variable is 557.Dq Li /boot/kernel;/boot/modules . 558.It Va num_ide_disks 559Sets the number of IDE disks as a workaround for some problems in 560finding the root disk at boot. 561This has been deprecated in favor of 562.Va root_disk_unit . 563.It Va prompt 564Value of 565.Nm Ns 's 566prompt. 567Defaults to 568.Dq Li "${interpret}" . 569If variable 570.Va prompt 571is unset, the default prompt is 572.Ql > . 573.It Va root_disk_unit 574If the code which detects the disk unit number for the root disk is 575confused, e.g.\& by a mix of SCSI and IDE disks, or IDE disks with 576gaps in the sequence (e.g.\& no primary slave), the unit number can 577be forced by setting this variable. 578.It Va rootdev 579By default the value of 580.Va currdev 581is used to set the root file system 582when the kernel is booted. 583This can be overridden by setting 584.Va rootdev 585explicitly. 586.El 587.Pp 588Other variables are used to override kernel tunable parameters. 589The following tunables are available: 590.Bl -tag -width Va 591.It Va hw.physmem 592Limit the amount of physical memory the system will use. 593By default the size is in bytes, but the 594.Cm k , K , m , M , g 595and 596.Cm G 597suffixes 598are also accepted and indicate kilobytes, megabytes and gigabytes 599respectively. 600An invalid suffix will result in the variable being ignored by the 601kernel. 602.It Va hw.pci.host_start_mem , hw.acpi.host_start_mem 603When not otherwise constrained, this limits the memory start 604address. 605The default is 0x80000000 and should be set to at least size of the 606memory and not conflict with other resources. 607Typically, only systems without PCI bridges need to set this variable 608since PCI bridges typically constrain the memory starting address 609(and the variable is only used when bridges do not constrain this 610address). 611.It Va hw.pci.enable_io_modes 612Enable PCI resources which are left off by some BIOSes or are not 613enabled correctly by the device driver. 614Tunable value set to ON (1) by default, but this may cause problems 615with some peripherals. 616.It Va kern.maxusers 617Set the size of a number of statically allocated system tables; see 618.Xr tuning 7 619for a description of how to select an appropriate value for this 620tunable. 621When set, this tunable replaces the value declared in the kernel 622compile-time configuration file. 623.It Va kern.ipc.nmbclusters 624Set the number of mbuf clusters to be allocated. 625The value cannot be set below the default 626determined when the kernel was compiled. 627.It Va kern.ipc.nsfbufs 628Set the number of 629.Xr sendfile 2 630buffers to be allocated. 631Overrides 632.Dv NSFBUFS . 633Not all architectures use such buffers; see 634.Xr sendfile 2 635for details. 636.It Va kern.maxswzone 637Limits the amount of KVM to be used to hold swap 638metadata, which directly governs the 639maximum amount of swap the system can support, 640at the rate of approximately 200 MB of swap space 641per 1 MB of metadata. 642This value is specified in bytes of KVA space. 643If no value is provided, the system allocates 644enough memory to handle an amount of swap 645that corresponds to eight times the amount of 646physical memory present in the system. 647.Pp 648Note that swap metadata can be fragmented, 649which means that the system can run out of 650space before it reaches the theoretical limit. 651Therefore, care should be taken to not configure 652more swap than approximately half of the 653theoretical maximum. 654.Pp 655Running out of space for swap metadata can leave 656the system in an unrecoverable state. 657Therefore, you should only change 658this parameter if you need to greatly extend the 659KVM reservation for other resources such as the 660buffer cache or 661.Va kern.ipc.nmbclusters . 662Modifies kernel option 663.Dv VM_SWZONE_SIZE_MAX . 664.It Va kern.maxbcache 665Limits the amount of KVM reserved for use by the 666buffer cache, specified in bytes. 667The default maximum is 200MB on i386, 668and 400MB on amd64 and sparc64. 669This parameter is used to 670prevent the buffer cache from eating too much 671KVM in large-memory machine configurations. 672Only mess around with this parameter if you need to 673greatly extend the KVM reservation for other resources 674such as the swap zone or 675.Va kern.ipc.nmbclusters . 676Note that 677the NBUF parameter will override this limit. 678Modifies 679.Dv VM_BCACHE_SIZE_MAX . 680.It Va kern.msgbufsize 681Sets the size of the kernel message buffer. 682The default limit of 64KB is usually sufficient unless 683large amounts of trace data need to be collected 684between opportunities to examine the buffer or 685dump it to a file. 686Overrides kernel option 687.Dv MSGBUF_SIZE . 688.It Va machdep.disable_mtrrs 689Disable the use of i686 MTRRs (x86 only). 690.It Va net.inet.tcp.tcbhashsize 691Overrides the compile-time set value of 692.Dv TCBHASHSIZE 693or the preset default of 512. 694Must be a power of 2. 695.It Va twiddle_divisor 696Throttles the output of the 697.Sq twiddle 698I/O progress indicator displayed while loading the kernel and modules. 699This is useful on slow serial consoles where the time spent waiting for 700these characters to be written can add up to many seconds. 701The default is 1 (full speed); a value of 2 spins half as fast, and so on. 702.It Va vm.kmem_size 703Sets the size of kernel memory (bytes). 704This overrides the value determined when the kernel was compiled. 705Modifies 706.Dv VM_KMEM_SIZE . 707.It Va vm.kmem_size_min 708.It Va vm.kmem_size_max 709Sets the minimum and maximum (respectively) amount of kernel memory 710that will be automatically allocated by the kernel. 711These override the values determined when the kernel was compiled. 712Modifies 713.Dv VM_KMEM_SIZE_MIN 714and 715.Dv VM_KMEM_SIZE_MAX . 716.El 717.Ss BUILTIN PARSER 718When a builtin command is executed, the rest of the line is taken 719by it as arguments, and it is processed by a special parser which 720is not used for regular Forth commands. 721.Pp 722This special parser applies the following rules to the parsed text: 723.Bl -enum 724.It 725All backslash characters are preprocessed. 726.Bl -bullet 727.It 728\eb , \ef , \er , \en and \et are processed as in C. 729.It 730\es is converted to a space. 731.It 732\ev is converted to 733.Tn ASCII 73411. 735.It 736\ez is just skipped. 737Useful for things like 738.Dq \e0xf\ez\e0xf . 739.It 740\e0xN and \e0xNN are replaced by the hex N or NN. 741.It 742\eNNN is replaced by the octal NNN 743.Tn ASCII 744character. 745.It 746\e" , \e' and \e$ will escape these characters, preventing them from 747receiving special treatment in Step 2, described below. 748.It 749\e\e will be replaced with a single \e . 750.It 751In any other occurrence, backslash will just be removed. 752.El 753.It 754Every string between non-escaped quotes or double-quotes will be treated 755as a single word for the purposes of the remaining steps. 756.It 757Replace any 758.Li $VARIABLE 759or 760.Li ${VARIABLE} 761with the value of the environment variable 762.Va VARIABLE . 763.It 764Space-delimited arguments are passed to the called builtin command. 765Spaces can also be escaped through the use of \e\e . 766.El 767.Pp 768An exception to this parsing rule exists, and is described in 769.Sx BUILTINS AND FORTH . 770.Ss BUILTINS AND FORTH 771All builtin words are state-smart, immediate words. 772If interpreted, they behave exactly as described previously. 773If they are compiled, though, 774they extract their arguments from the stack instead of the command line. 775.Pp 776If compiled, the builtin words expect to find, at execution time, the 777following parameters on the stack: 778.D1 Ar addrN lenN ... addr2 len2 addr1 len1 N 779where 780.Ar addrX lenX 781are strings which will compose the command line that will be parsed 782into the builtin's arguments. 783Internally, these strings are concatenated in from 1 to N, 784with a space put between each one. 785.Pp 786If no arguments are passed, a 0 787.Em must 788be passed, even if the builtin accepts no arguments. 789.Pp 790While this behavior has benefits, it has its trade-offs. 791If the execution token of a builtin is acquired (through 792.Ic ' 793or 794.Ic ['] ) , 795and then passed to 796.Ic catch 797or 798.Ic execute , 799the builtin behavior will depend on the system state 800.Bf Em 801at the time 802.Ic catch 803or 804.Ic execute 805is processed! 806.Ef 807This is particularly annoying for programs that want or need to 808handle exceptions. 809In this case, the use of a proxy is recommended. 810For example: 811.Dl : (boot) boot ; 812.Sh FICL 813.Tn FICL 814is a Forth interpreter written in C, in the form of a forth 815virtual machine library that can be called by C functions and vice 816versa. 817.Pp 818In 819.Nm , 820each line read interactively is then fed to 821.Tn FICL , 822which may call 823.Nm 824back to execute the builtin words. 825The builtin 826.Ic include 827will also feed 828.Tn FICL , 829one line at a time. 830.Pp 831The words available to 832.Tn FICL 833can be classified into four groups. 834The 835.Tn ANS 836Forth standard words, extra 837.Tn FICL 838words, extra 839.Fx 840words, and the builtin commands; 841the latter were already described. 842The 843.Tn ANS 844Forth standard words are listed in the 845.Sx STANDARDS 846section. 847The words falling in the two other groups are described in the 848following subsections. 849.Ss FICL EXTRA WORDS 850.Bl -tag -width wid-set-super 851.It Ic .env 852.It Ic .ver 853.It Ic -roll 854.It Ic 2constant 855.It Ic >name 856.It Ic body> 857.It Ic compare 858This is the STRING word set's 859.Ic compare . 860.It Ic compile-only 861.It Ic endif 862.It Ic forget-wid 863.It Ic parse-word 864.It Ic sliteral 865This is the STRING word set's 866.Ic sliteral . 867.It Ic wid-set-super 868.It Ic w@ 869.It Ic w! 870.It Ic x. 871.It Ic empty 872.It Ic cell- 873.It Ic -rot 874.El 875.Ss FREEBSD EXTRA WORDS 876.Bl -tag -width XXXXXXXX 877.It Ic \&$ Pq -- 878Evaluates the remainder of the input buffer, after having printed it first. 879.It Ic \&% Pq -- 880Evaluates the remainder of the input buffer under a 881.Ic catch 882exception guard. 883.It Ic .# 884Works like 885.Ic "." 886but without outputting a trailing space. 887.It Ic fclose Pq Ar fd -- 888Closes a file. 889.It Ic fkey Pq Ar fd -- char 890Reads a single character from a file. 891.It Ic fload Pq Ar fd -- 892Processes a file 893.Em fd . 894.It Ic fopen Pq Ar addr len mode Li -- Ar fd 895Opens a file. 896Returns a file descriptor, or \-1 in case of failure. 897The 898.Ar mode 899parameter selects whether the file is to be opened for read access, write 900access, or both. 901The constants 902.Dv O_RDONLY , O_WRONLY , 903and 904.Dv O_RDWR 905are defined in 906.Pa /boot/support.4th , 907indicating read only, write only, and read-write access, respectively. 908.It Xo 909.Ic fread 910.Pq Ar fd addr len -- len' 911.Xc 912Tries to read 913.Em len 914bytes from file 915.Em fd 916into buffer 917.Em addr . 918Returns the actual number of bytes read, or -1 in case of error or end of 919file. 920.It Ic heap? Pq -- Ar cells 921Return the space remaining in the dictionary heap, in cells. 922This is not related to the heap used by dynamic memory allocation words. 923.It Ic inb Pq Ar port -- char 924Reads a byte from a port. 925.It Ic key Pq -- Ar char 926Reads a single character from the console. 927.It Ic key? Pq -- Ar flag 928Returns 929.Ic true 930if there is a character available to be read from the console. 931.It Ic ms Pq Ar u -- 932Waits 933.Em u 934microseconds. 935.It Ic outb Pq Ar port char -- 936Writes a byte to a port. 937.It Ic seconds Pq -- Ar u 938Returns the number of seconds since midnight. 939.It Ic tib> Pq -- Ar addr len 940Returns the remainder of the input buffer as a string on the stack. 941.It Ic trace! Pq Ar flag -- 942Activates or deactivates tracing. 943Does not work with 944.Ic catch . 945.El 946.Ss FREEBSD DEFINED ENVIRONMENTAL QUERIES 947.Bl -tag -width Ds 948.It arch-i386 949.Ic TRUE 950if the architecture is IA32. 951.It FreeBSD_version 952.Fx 953version at compile time. 954.It loader_version 955.Nm 956version. 957.El 958.Ss SYSTEM DOCUMENTATION 959.Sh FILES 960.Bl -tag -width /boot/defaults/loader.conf -compact 961.It Pa /boot/loader 962.Nm 963itself. 964.It Pa /boot/boot.4th 965Additional 966.Tn FICL 967initialization. 968.It Pa /boot/defaults/loader.conf 969.It Pa /boot/loader.conf 970.It Pa /boot/loader.conf.local 971.Nm 972configuration files, as described in 973.Xr loader.conf 5 . 974.It Pa /boot/loader.rc 975.Nm 976bootstrapping script. 977.It Pa /boot/loader.help 978Loaded by 979.Ic help . 980Contains the help messages. 981.El 982.Sh EXAMPLES 983Boot in single user mode: 984.Pp 985.Dl boot -s 986.Pp 987Load the kernel, a splash screen, and then autoboot in five seconds. 988Notice that a kernel must be loaded before any other 989.Ic load 990command is attempted. 991.Bd -literal -offset indent 992load kernel 993load splash_bmp 994load -t splash_image_data /boot/chuckrulez.bmp 995autoboot 5 996.Ed 997.Pp 998Set the disk unit of the root device to 2, and then boot. 999This would be needed in a system with two IDE disks, 1000with the second IDE disk hardwired to ada2 instead of ada1. 1001.Bd -literal -offset indent 1002set root_disk_unit=2 1003boot /boot/kernel/kernel 1004.Ed 1005.Pp 1006See also: 1007.Bl -tag -width /usr/share/examples/bootforth/X 1008.It Pa /boot/loader.4th 1009Extra builtin-like words. 1010.It Pa /boot/support.4th 1011.Pa loader.conf 1012processing words. 1013.It Pa /usr/share/examples/bootforth/ 1014Assorted examples. 1015.El 1016.Sh ERRORS 1017The following values are thrown by 1018.Nm : 1019.Bl -tag -width XXXXX -offset indent 1020.It 100 1021Any type of error in the processing of a builtin. 1022.It -1 1023.Ic Abort 1024executed. 1025.It -2 1026.Ic Abort" 1027executed. 1028.It -56 1029.Ic Quit 1030executed. 1031.It -256 1032Out of interpreting text. 1033.It -257 1034Need more text to succeed -- will finish on next run. 1035.It -258 1036.Ic Bye 1037executed. 1038.It -259 1039Unspecified error. 1040.El 1041.Sh SEE ALSO 1042.Xr libstand 3 , 1043.Xr loader.conf 5 , 1044.Xr tuning 7 , 1045.Xr boot 8 , 1046.Xr btxld 8 1047.Sh STANDARDS 1048For the purposes of ANS Forth compliance, loader is an 1049.Bf Em 1050ANS Forth System with Environmental Restrictions, Providing 1051.Ef 1052.Bf Li 1053.No .( , 1054.No :noname , 1055.No ?do , 1056parse, pick, roll, refill, to, value, \e, false, true, 1057.No <> , 1058.No 0<> , 1059compile\&, , erase, nip, tuck 1060.Ef 1061.Em and 1062.Li marker 1063.Bf Em 1064from the Core Extensions word set, Providing the Exception Extensions 1065word set, Providing the Locals Extensions word set, Providing the 1066Memory-Allocation Extensions word set, Providing 1067.Ef 1068.Bf Li 1069\&.s, 1070bye, forget, see, words, 1071\&[if], 1072\&[else] 1073.Ef 1074.Em and 1075.Li [then] 1076.Bf Em 1077from the Programming-Tools extension word set, Providing the 1078Search-Order extensions word set. 1079.Ef 1080.Sh HISTORY 1081The 1082.Nm 1083first appeared in 1084.Fx 3.1 . 1085.Sh AUTHORS 1086.An -nosplit 1087The 1088.Nm 1089was written by 1090.An Michael Smith Aq msmith@FreeBSD.org . 1091.Pp 1092.Tn FICL 1093was written by 1094.An John Sadler Aq john_sadler@alum.mit.edu . 1095.Sh BUGS 1096The 1097.Ic expect 1098and 1099.Ic accept 1100words will read from the input buffer instead of the console. 1101The latter will be fixed, but the former will not. 1102