1*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- 2*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@c -*-texinfo-*- 3*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@c %**start of header 4*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@setfilename multiboot.info 5*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@settitle Multiboot Specification 6*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@c %**end of header 7*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 8*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@c Unify all our little indices for now. 9*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@syncodeindex fn cp 10*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@syncodeindex vr cp 11*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@syncodeindex ky cp 12*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@syncodeindex pg cp 13*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@syncodeindex tp cp 14*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 15*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@footnotestyle separate 16*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@paragraphindent 3 17*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@finalout 18*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 19*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 20*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@dircategory Kernel 21*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@direntry 22*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Multiboot Specification: (multiboot). Multiboot Specification. 23*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end direntry 24*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 25*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@ifinfo 26*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiCopyright @copyright{} 1995, 96 Bryan Ford <baford@@cs.utah.edu> 27*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiCopyright @copyright{} 1995, 96 Erich Stefan Boleyn <erich@@uruk.org> 28*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiCopyright @copyright{} 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 29*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 30*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiPermission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of 31*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithis manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice 32*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiare preserved on all copies. 33*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 34*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@ignore 35*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiPermission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the 36*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiresults, provided the printed document carries a copying permission 37*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinotice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph 38*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual). 39*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 40*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end ignore 41*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 42*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiPermission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this 43*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimanual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that 44*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a 45*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipermission notice identical to this one. 46*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 47*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiPermission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual 48*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinto another language, under the above conditions for modified versions. 49*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end ifinfo 50*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 51*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@titlepage 52*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sp 10 53*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@title The Multiboot Specification 54*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@author Yoshinori K. Okuji, Bryan Ford, Erich Stefan Boleyn, Kunihiro Ishiguro 55*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@page 56*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 57*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@vskip 0pt plus 1filll 58*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiCopyright @copyright{} 1995, 96 Bryan Ford <baford@@cs.utah.edu> 59*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiCopyright @copyright{} 1995, 96 Erich Stefan Boleyn <erich@@uruk.org> 60*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiCopyright @copyright{} 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 61*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 62*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiPermission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of 63*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithis manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice 64*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiare preserved on all copies. 65*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 66*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiPermission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this 67*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimanual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that 68*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a 69*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipermission notice identical to this one. 70*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 71*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiPermission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual 72*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinto another language, under the above conditions for modified versions. 73*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end titlepage 74*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 75*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@finalout 76*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@headings double 77*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 78*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@ifnottex 79*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Top 80*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@top Multiboot Specification 81*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 82*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis file documents Multiboot Specification, the proposal for the boot 83*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisequence standard. This edition documents version 0.6.93. 84*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end ifnottex 85*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 86*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@menu 87*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Overview:: 88*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Terminology:: 89*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Specification:: 90*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Examples:: 91*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* History:: 92*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Index:: 93*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end menu 94*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 95*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 96*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Overview 97*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@chapter Introduction to Multiboot Specification 98*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 99*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis chapter describes some rough information on the Multiboot 100*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiSpecification. Note that this is not a part of the specification itself. 101*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 102*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@menu 103*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Motivation:: 104*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Architecture:: 105*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Operating systems:: 106*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Boot sources:: 107*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Boot-time configuration:: 108*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Convenience to operating systems:: 109*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Boot modules:: 110*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end menu 111*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 112*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 113*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Motivation 114*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section The background of Multiboot Specification 115*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 116*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiEvery operating system ever created tends to have its own boot loader. 117*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiInstalling a new operating system on a machine generally involves 118*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinstalling a whole new set of boot mechanisms, each with completely 119*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidifferent install-time and boot-time user interfaces. Getting multiple 120*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating systems to coexist reliably on one machine through typical 121*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@dfn{chaining} mechanisms can be a nightmare. There is little or no 122*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskichoice of boot loaders for a particular operating system --- if the one 123*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithat comes with the operating system doesn't do exactly what you want, 124*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskior doesn't work on your machine, you're screwed. 125*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 126*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiWhile we may not be able to fix this problem in existing commercial 127*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating systems, it shouldn't be too difficult for a few people in the 128*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifree operating system communities to put their heads together and solve 129*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithis problem for the popular free operating systems. That's what this 130*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskispecification aims for. Basically, it specifies an interface between a 131*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiboot loader and a operating system, such that any complying boot loader 132*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskishould be able to load any complying operating system. This 133*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskispecification does @emph{not} specify how boot loaders should work --- 134*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskionly how they must interface with the operating system being loaded. 135*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 136*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 137*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Architecture 138*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section The target architecture 139*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 140*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis specification is primarily targeted at @sc{pc}, since they are the 141*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimost common and have the largest variety of operating systems and boot 142*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloaders. However, to the extent that certain other architectures may 143*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskineed a boot specification and do not have one already, a variation of 144*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithis specification, stripped of the x86-specific details, could be 145*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiadopted for them as well. 146*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 147*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 148*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Operating systems 149*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section The target operating systems 150*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 151*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis specification is targeted toward free 32-bit operating systems 152*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithat can be fairly easily modified to support the specification without 153*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskigoing through lots of bureaucratic rigmarole. The particular free 154*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating systems that this specification is being primarily designed 155*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifor are Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, Mach, and VSTa. It is hoped that other 156*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiemerging free operating systems will adopt it from the start, and thus 157*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiimmediately be able to take advantage of existing boot loaders. It would 158*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibe nice if commercial operating system vendors eventually adopted this 159*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskispecification as well, but that's probably a pipe dream. 160*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 161*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 162*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Boot sources 163*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section Boot sources 164*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 165*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIt should be possible to write compliant boot loaders that load the OS 166*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiimage from a variety of sources, including floppy disk, hard disk, and 167*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiacross a network. 168*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 169*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiDisk-based boot loaders may use a variety of techniques to find the 170*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskirelevant OS image and boot module data on disk, such as by 171*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinterpretation of specific file systems (e.g. the BSD/Mach boot loader), 172*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiusing precalculated @dfn{block lists} (e.g. LILO), loading from a 173*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskispecial @dfn{boot partition} (e.g. OS/2), or even loading from within 174*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskianother operating system (e.g. the VSTa boot code, which loads from 175*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiDOS). Similarly, network-based boot loaders could use a variety of 176*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinetwork hardware and protocols. 177*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 178*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIt is hoped that boot loaders will be created that support multiple 179*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloading mechanisms, increasing their portability, robustness, and 180*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiuser-friendliness. 181*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 182*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 183*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Boot-time configuration 184*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section Configure an operating system at boot-time 185*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 186*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIt is often necessary for one reason or another for the user to be able 187*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito provide some configuration information to an operating system 188*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidynamically at boot time. While this specification should not dictate 189*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskihow this configuration information is obtained by the boot loader, it 190*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskishould provide a standard means for the boot loader to pass such 191*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinformation to the operating system. 192*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 193*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 194*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Convenience to operating systems 195*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section How to make OS development easier 196*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 197*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiOS images should be easy to generate. Ideally, an OS image should simply 198*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibe an ordinary 32-bit executable file in whatever file format the 199*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating system normally uses. It should be possible to @code{nm} or 200*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidisassemble OS images just like normal executables. Specialized tools 201*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskishould not be required to create OS images in a @emph{special} file 202*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiformat. If this means shifting some work from the operating system to 203*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskia boot loader, that is probably appropriate, because all the memory 204*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiconsumed by the boot loader will typically be made available again after 205*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe boot process is created, whereas every bit of code in the OS image 206*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskitypically has to remain in memory forever. The operating system should 207*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinot have to worry about getting into 32-bit mode initially, because mode 208*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiswitching code generally needs to be in the boot loader anyway in order 209*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito load operating system data above the 1MB boundary, and forcing the 210*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating system to do this makes creation of OS images much more 211*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidifficult. 212*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 213*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiUnfortunately, there is a horrendous variety of executable file formats 214*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskieven among free Unix-like @sc{pc}-based operating systems --- generally 215*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskia different format for each operating system. Most of the relevant free 216*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating systems use some variant of a.out format, but some are moving 217*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito @sc{elf}. It is highly desirable for boot loaders not to have to be 218*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiable to interpret all the different types of executable file formats in 219*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiexistence in order to load the OS image --- otherwise the boot loader 220*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskieffectively becomes operating system specific again. 221*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 222*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis specification adopts a compromise solution to this 223*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiproblem. Multiboot-compliant OS images always contain a magic 224*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@dfn{Multiboot header} (@pxref{OS image format}), which allows the boot 225*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloader to load the image without having to understand numerous a.out 226*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskivariants or other executable formats. This magic header does not need to 227*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibe at the very beginning of the executable file, so kernel images can 228*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistill conform to the local a.out format variant in addition to being 229*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMultiboot-compliant. 230*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 231*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 232*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Boot modules 233*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section Boot modules 234*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 235*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMany modern operating system kernels, such as those of VSTa and Mach, do 236*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinot by themselves contain enough mechanism to get the system fully 237*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperational: they require the presence of additional software modules at 238*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiboot time in order to access devices, mount file systems, etc. While 239*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithese additional modules could be embedded in the main OS image along 240*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiwith the kernel itself, and the resulting image be split apart manually 241*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiby the operating system when it receives control, it is often more 242*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiflexible, more space-efficient, and more convenient to the operating 243*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisystem and user if the boot loader can load these additional modules 244*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiindependently in the first place. 245*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 246*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThus, this specification should provide a standard method for a boot 247*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloader to indicate to the operating system what auxiliary boot modules 248*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiwere loaded, and where they can be found. Boot loaders don't have to 249*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisupport multiple boot modules, but they are strongly encouraged to, 250*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibecause some operating systems will be unable to boot without them. 251*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 252*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 253*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Terminology 254*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@chapter The definitions of terms used through the specification 255*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 256*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@table @dfn 257*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item must 258*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiWe use the term @dfn{must}, when any boot loader or OS image needs to 259*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifollow a rule --- otherwise, the boot loader or OS image is @emph{not} 260*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMultiboot-compliant. 261*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 262*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item should 263*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiWe use the term @dfn{should}, when any boot loader or OS image is 264*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskirecommended to follow a rule, but it doesn't need to follow the rule. 265*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 266*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item may 267*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiWe use the term @dfn{may}, when any boot loader or OS image is allowed 268*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito follow a rule. 269*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 270*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item boot loader 271*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiWhatever program or set of programs loads the image of the final 272*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating system to be run on the machine. The boot loader may itself 273*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiconsist of several stages, but that is an implementation detail not 274*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskirelevant to this specification. Only the @emph{final} stage of the boot 275*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloader --- the stage that eventually transfers control to an operating 276*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisystem --- must follow the rules specified in this document in order 277*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito be @dfn{Multiboot-compliant}; earlier boot loader stages may be 278*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidesigned in whatever way is most convenient. 279*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 280*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item OS image 281*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe initial binary image that a boot loader loads into memory and 282*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskitransfers control to start an operating system. The OS image is 283*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskitypically an executable containing the operating system kernel. 284*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 285*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item boot module 286*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiOther auxiliary files that a boot loader loads into memory along with 287*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskian OS image, but does not interpret in any way other than passing their 288*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilocations to the operating system when it is invoked. 289*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 290*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item Multiboot-compliant 291*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiA boot loader or an OS image which follows the rules defined as 292*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@dfn{must} is Multiboot-compliant. When this specification specifies a 293*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskirule as @dfn{should} or @dfn{may}, a Multiboot-complaint boot loader/OS 294*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiimage doesn't need to follow the rule. 295*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 296*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item u8 297*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe type of unsigned 8-bit data. 298*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 299*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item u16 300*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe type of unsigned 16-bit data. Because the target architecture is 301*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilittle-endian, u16 is coded in little-endian. 302*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 303*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item u32 304*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe type of unsigned 32-bit data. Because the target architecture is 305*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilittle-endian, u32 is coded in little-endian. 306*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 307*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item u64 308*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe type of unsigned 64-bit data. Because the target architecture is 309*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilittle-endian, u64 is coded in little-endian. 310*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end table 311*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 312*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 313*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Specification 314*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@chapter The exact definitions of Multiboot Specification 315*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 316*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThere are three main aspects of a boot loader/OS image interface: 317*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 318*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@enumerate 319*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 320*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe format of an OS image as seen by a boot loader. 321*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 322*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 323*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe state of a machine when a boot loader starts an operating 324*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisystem. 325*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 326*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 327*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe format of information passed by a boot loader to an operating 328*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisystem. 329*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end enumerate 330*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 331*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@menu 332*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* OS image format:: 333*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Machine state:: 334*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Boot information format:: 335*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end menu 336*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 337*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 338*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node OS image format 339*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section OS image format 340*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 341*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiAn OS image may be an ordinary 32-bit executable file in the standard 342*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiformat for that particular operating system, except that it may be 343*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilinked at a non-default load address to avoid loading on top of the 344*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{pc}'s I/O region or other reserved areas, and of course it should 345*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinot use shared libraries or other fancy features. 346*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 347*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiAn OS image must contain an additional header called @dfn{Multiboot 348*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiheader}, besides the headers of the format used by the OS image. The 349*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMultiboot header must be contained completely within the first 8192 350*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibytes of the OS image, and must be longword (32-bit) aligned. In 351*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskigeneral, it should come @emph{as early as possible}, and may be 352*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiembedded in the beginning of the text segment after the @emph{real} 353*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiexecutable header. 354*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 355*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@menu 356*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Header layout:: The layout of Multiboot header 357*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Header magic fields:: The magic fields of Multiboot header 358*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Header address fields:: 359*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Header graphics fields:: 360*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end menu 361*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 362*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 363*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Header layout 364*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@subsection The layout of Multiboot header 365*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 366*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe layout of the Multiboot header must be as follows: 367*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 368*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@multitable @columnfractions .1 .1 .2 .5 369*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item Offset @tab Type @tab Field Name @tab Note 370*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 0 @tab u32 @tab magic @tab required 371*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 4 @tab u32 @tab flags @tab required 372*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 8 @tab u32 @tab checksum @tab required 373*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 12 @tab u32 @tab header_addr @tab if flags[16] is set 374*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 16 @tab u32 @tab load_addr @tab if flags[16] is set 375*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 20 @tab u32 @tab load_end_addr @tab if flags[16] is set 376*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 24 @tab u32 @tab bss_end_addr @tab if flags[16] is set 377*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 28 @tab u32 @tab entry_addr @tab if flags[16] is set 378*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 32 @tab u32 @tab mode_type @tab if flags[2] is set 379*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 36 @tab u32 @tab width @tab if flags[2] is set 380*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 40 @tab u32 @tab height @tab if flags[2] is set 381*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 44 @tab u32 @tab depth @tab if flags[2] is set 382*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end multitable 383*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 384*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe fields @samp{magic}, @samp{flags} and @samp{checksum} are defined in 385*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@ref{Header magic fields}, the fields @samp{header_addr}, 386*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{load_addr}, @samp{load_end_addr}, @samp{bss_end_addr} and 387*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{entry_addr} are defined in @ref{Header address fields}, and the 388*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifields @samp{mode_type}, @samp{width}, @samp{height} and @samp{depth} are 389*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidefind in @ref{Header graphics fields}. 390*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 391*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 392*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Header magic fields 393*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@subsection The magic fields of Multiboot header 394*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 395*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@table @samp 396*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item magic 397*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe field @samp{magic} is the magic number identifying the header, 398*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiwhich must be the hexadecimal value @code{0x1BADB002}. 399*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 400*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item flags 401*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe field @samp{flags} specifies features that the OS image requests or 402*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskirequires of an boot loader. Bits 0-15 indicate requirements; if the 403*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiboot loader sees any of these bits set but doesn't understand the flag 404*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskior can't fulfill the requirements it indicates for some reason, it must 405*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinotify the user and fail to load the OS image. Bits 16-31 indicate 406*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioptional features; if any bits in this range are set but the boot loader 407*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidoesn't understand them, it may simply ignore them and proceed as 408*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiusual. Naturally, all as-yet-undefined bits in the @samp{flags} word 409*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimust be set to zero in OS images. This way, the @samp{flags} fields 410*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiserves for version control as well as simple feature selection. 411*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 412*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 0 in the @samp{flags} word is set, then all boot modules loaded 413*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskialong with the operating system must be aligned on page (4KB) 414*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiboundaries. Some operating systems expect to be able to map the pages 415*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicontaining boot modules directly into a paged address space during 416*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistartup, and thus need the boot modules to be page-aligned. 417*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 418*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 1 in the @samp{flags} word is set, then information on available 419*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimemory via at least the @samp{mem_*} fields of the Multiboot information 420*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistructure (@pxref{Boot information format}) must be included. If the 421*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiboot loader is capable of passing a memory map (the @samp{mmap_*} fields) 422*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiand one exists, then it may be included as well. 423*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 424*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 2 in the @samp{flags} word is set, information about the video 425*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimode table (@pxref{Boot information format}) must be available to the 426*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskikernel. 427*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 428*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 16 in the @samp{flags} word is set, then the fields at offsets 429*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski8-24 in the Multiboot header are valid, and the boot loader should use 430*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithem instead of the fields in the actual executable header to calculate 431*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiwhere to load the OS image. This information does not need to be 432*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiprovided if the kernel image is in @sc{elf} format, but it @emph{must} 433*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibe provided if the images is in a.out format or in some other 434*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiformat. Compliant boot loaders must be able to load images that either 435*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiare in @sc{elf} format or contain the load address information embedded 436*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiin the Multiboot header; they may also directly support other executable 437*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiformats, such as particular a.out variants, but are not required to. 438*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 439*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item checksum 440*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe field @samp{checksum} is a 32-bit unsigned value which, when added 441*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito the other magic fields (i.e. @samp{magic} and @samp{flags}), must 442*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskihave a 32-bit unsigned sum of zero. 443*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end table 444*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 445*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 446*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Header address fields 447*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@subsection The address fields of Multiboot header 448*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 449*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiAll of the address fields enabled by flag bit 16 are physical addresses. 450*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe meaning of each is as follows: 451*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 452*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@table @code 453*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item header_addr 454*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiContains the address corresponding to the beginning of the Multiboot 455*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiheader --- the physical memory location at which the magic value is 456*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisupposed to be loaded. This field serves to @dfn{synchronize} the 457*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimapping between OS image offsets and physical memory addresses. 458*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 459*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item load_addr 460*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiContains the physical address of the beginning of the text segment. The 461*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioffset in the OS image file at which to start loading is defined by the 462*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioffset at which the header was found, minus (header_addr - 463*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiload_addr). load_addr must be less than or equal to header_addr. 464*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 465*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item load_end_addr 466*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiContains the physical address of the end of the data 467*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisegment. (load_end_addr - load_addr) specifies how much data to load. 468*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis implies that the text and data segments must be consecutive in the 469*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiOS image; this is true for existing a.out executable formats. 470*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf this field is zero, the boot loader assumes that the text and data 471*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisegments occupy the whole OS image file. 472*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 473*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item bss_end_addr 474*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiContains the physical address of the end of the bss segment. The boot 475*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloader initializes this area to zero, and reserves the memory it 476*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioccupies to avoid placing boot modules and other data relevant to the 477*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating system in that area. If this field is zero, the boot loader 478*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiassumes that no bss segment is present. 479*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 480*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item entry_addr 481*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe physical address to which the boot loader should jump in order to 482*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistart running the operating system. 483*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end table 484*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 485*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 486*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Header graphics fields 487*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@subsection The graphics fields of Multiboot header 488*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 489*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiAll of the graphics fields are enabled by flag bit 2. They specify the 490*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipreferred graphics mode. Note that that is only a @emph{recommended} 491*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimode by the OS image. If the mode exists, the boot loader should set 492*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiit, when the user doesn't specify a mode explicitly. Otherwise, the 493*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiboot loader should fall back to a similar mode, if available. 494*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 495*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe meaning of each is as follows: 496*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 497*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@table @code 498*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item mode_type 499*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiContains @samp{0} for linear graphics mode or @samp{1} for 500*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiEGA-standard text mode. Everything else is reserved for future 501*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiexpansion. Note that the boot loader may set a text mode, even if this 502*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifield contains @samp{0}. 503*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 504*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item width 505*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiContains the number of the columns. This is specified in pixels in a 506*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskigraphics mode, and in characters in a text mode. The value zero 507*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiindicates that the OS image has no preference. 508*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 509*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item height 510*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiContains the number of the lines. This is specified in pixels in a 511*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskigraphics mode, and in characters in a text mode. The value zero 512*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiindicates that the OS image has no preference. 513*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 514*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item depth 515*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiContains the number of bits per pixel in a graphics mode, and zero in 516*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskia text mode. The value zero indicates that the OS image has no 517*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipreference. 518*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end table 519*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 520*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 521*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Machine state 522*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section Machine state 523*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 524*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiWhen the boot loader invokes the 32-bit operating system, the machine 525*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimust have the following state: 526*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 527*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@table @samp 528*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item EAX 529*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMust contain the magic value @samp{0x2BADB002}; the presence of this 530*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskivalue indicates to the operating system that it was loaded by a 531*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMultiboot-compliant boot loader (e.g. as opposed to another type of 532*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiboot loader that the operating system can also be loaded from). 533*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 534*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item EBX 535*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMust contain the 32-bit physical address of the Multiboot 536*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinformation structure provided by the boot loader (@pxref{Boot 537*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinformation format}). 538*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 539*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item CS 540*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMust be a 32-bit read/execute code segment with an offset of @samp{0} 541*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiand a limit of @samp{0xFFFFFFFF}. The exact value is undefined. 542*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 543*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item DS 544*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@itemx ES 545*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@itemx FS 546*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@itemx GS 547*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@itemx SS 548*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMust be a 32-bit read/write data segment with an offset of @samp{0} 549*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiand a limit of @samp{0xFFFFFFFF}. The exact values are all undefined. 550*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 551*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item A20 gate 552*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMust be enabled. 553*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 554*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item CR0 555*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiBit 31 (PG) must be cleared. Bit 0 (PE) must be set. Other bits are 556*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiall undefined. 557*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 558*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item EFLAGS 559*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiBit 17 (VM) must be cleared. Bit 9 (IF) must be cleared. Other bits 560*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiare all undefined. 561*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end table 562*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 563*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiAll other processor registers and flag bits are undefined. This 564*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiincludes, in particular: 565*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 566*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@table @samp 567*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item ESP 568*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe OS image must create its own stack as soon as it needs one. 569*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 570*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item GDTR 571*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiEven though the segment registers are set up as described above, the 572*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{GDTR} may be invalid, so the OS image must not load any segment 573*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiregisters (even just reloading the same values!) until it sets up its 574*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiown @samp{GDT}. 575*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 576*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item IDTR 577*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe OS image must leave interrupts disabled until it sets up its own 578*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@code{IDT}. 579*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end table 580*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 581*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiHowever, other machine state should be left by the boot loader in 582*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@dfn{normal working order}, i.e. as initialized by the @sc{bios} (or 583*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiDOS, if that's what the boot loader runs from). In other words, the 584*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating system should be able to make @sc{bios} calls and such after 585*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibeing loaded, as long as it does not overwrite the @sc{bios} data 586*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistructures before doing so. Also, the boot loader must leave the 587*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{pic} programmed with the normal @sc{bios}/DOS values, even if it 588*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskichanged them during the switch to 32-bit mode. 589*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 590*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 591*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Boot information format 592*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section Boot information format 593*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 594*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFIXME: Split this chapter like the chapter ``OS image format''. 595*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 596*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiUpon entry to the operating system, the @code{EBX} register contains the 597*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiphysical address of a @dfn{Multiboot information} data structure, 598*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithrough which the boot loader communicates vital information to the 599*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating system. The operating system can use or ignore any parts of 600*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe structure as it chooses; all information passed by the boot loader 601*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis advisory only. 602*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 603*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe Multiboot information structure and its related substructures may be 604*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiplaced anywhere in memory by the boot loader (with the exception of the 605*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimemory reserved for the kernel and boot modules, of course). It is the 606*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioperating system's responsibility to avoid overwriting this memory until 607*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiit is done using it. 608*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 609*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe format of the Multiboot information structure (as defined so far) 610*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifollows: 611*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 612*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 613*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@group 614*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 615*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0 | flags | (required) 616*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 617*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski4 | mem_lower | (present if flags[0] is set) 618*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski8 | mem_upper | (present if flags[0] is set) 619*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 620*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski12 | boot_device | (present if flags[1] is set) 621*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 622*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski16 | cmdline | (present if flags[2] is set) 623*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 624*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski20 | mods_count | (present if flags[3] is set) 625*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski24 | mods_addr | (present if flags[3] is set) 626*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 627*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski28 - 40 | syms | (present if flags[4] or 628*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski | | flags[5] is set) 629*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 630*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski44 | mmap_length | (present if flags[6] is set) 631*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski48 | mmap_addr | (present if flags[6] is set) 632*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 633*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski52 | drives_length | (present if flags[7] is set) 634*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski56 | drives_addr | (present if flags[7] is set) 635*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 636*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski60 | config_table | (present if flags[8] is set) 637*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 638*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski64 | boot_loader_name | (present if flags[9] is set) 639*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 640*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski68 | apm_table | (present if flags[10] is set) 641*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 642*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski72 | vbe_control_info | (present if flags[11] is set) 643*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski76 | vbe_mode_info | 644*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski80 | vbe_mode | 645*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski82 | vbe_interface_seg | 646*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski84 | vbe_interface_off | 647*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski86 | vbe_interface_len | 648*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 649*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end group 650*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 651*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 652*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe first longword indicates the presence and validity of other fields 653*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiin the Multiboot information structure. All as-yet-undefined bits must 654*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibe set to zero by the boot loader. Any set bits that the operating 655*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisystem does not understand should be ignored. Thus, the @samp{flags} 656*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifield also functions as a version indicator, allowing the Multiboot 657*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinformation structure to be expanded in the future without breaking 658*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskianything. 659*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 660*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 0 in the @samp{flags} word is set, then the @samp{mem_*} fields 661*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiare valid. @samp{mem_lower} and @samp{mem_upper} indicate the amount of 662*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilower and upper memory, respectively, in kilobytes. Lower memory starts 663*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiat address 0, and upper memory starts at address 1 megabyte. The maximum 664*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipossible value for lower memory is 640 kilobytes. The value returned for 665*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiupper memory is maximally the address of the first upper memory hole 666*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiminus 1 megabyte. It is not guaranteed to be this value. 667*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 668*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 1 in the @samp{flags} word is set, then the @samp{boot_device} 669*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifield is valid, and indicates which @sc{bios} disk device the boot 670*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloader loaded the OS image from. If the OS image was not loaded from a 671*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{bios} disk, then this field must not be present (bit 3 must be 672*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiclear). The operating system may use this field as a hint for 673*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidetermining its own @dfn{root} device, but is not required to. The 674*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{boot_device} field is laid out in four one-byte subfields as 675*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifollows: 676*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 677*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 678*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@group 679*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski+-------+-------+-------+-------+ 680*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski| drive | part1 | part2 | part3 | 681*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski+-------+-------+-------+-------+ 682*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end group 683*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 684*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 685*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe first byte contains the @sc{bios} drive number as understood by the 686*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{bios} INT 0x13 low-level disk interface: e.g. 0x00 for the first 687*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifloppy disk or 0x80 for the first hard disk. 688*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 689*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe three remaining bytes specify the boot partition. @samp{part1} 690*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskispecifies the @dfn{top-level} partition number, @samp{part2} specifies a 691*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@dfn{sub-partition} in the top-level partition, etc. Partition numbers 692*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskialways start from zero. Unused partition bytes must be set to 0xFF. For 693*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiexample, if the disk is partitioned using a simple one-level DOS 694*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipartitioning scheme, then @samp{part1} contains the DOS partition 695*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinumber, and @samp{part2} and @samp{part3} are both 0xFF. As another 696*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiexample, if a disk is partitioned first into DOS partitions, and then 697*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskione of those DOS partitions is subdivided into several BSD partitions 698*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiusing BSD's @dfn{disklabel} strategy, then @samp{part1} contains the DOS 699*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipartition number, @samp{part2} contains the BSD sub-partition within 700*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithat DOS partition, and @samp{part3} is 0xFF. 701*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 702*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiDOS extended partitions are indicated as partition numbers starting from 703*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski4 and increasing, rather than as nested sub-partitions, even though the 704*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiunderlying disk layout of extended partitions is hierarchical in 705*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinature. For example, if the boot loader boots from the second extended 706*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskipartition on a disk partitioned in conventional DOS style, then 707*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{part1} will be 5, and @samp{part2} and @samp{part3} will both be 708*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0xFF. 709*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 710*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 2 of the @samp{flags} longword is set, the @samp{cmdline} field 711*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis valid, and contains the physical address of the command line to 712*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibe passed to the kernel. The command line is a normal C-style 713*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskizero-terminated string. 714*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 715*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 3 of the @samp{flags} is set, then the @samp{mods} fields 716*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiindicate to the kernel what boot modules were loaded along with the 717*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskikernel image, and where they can be found. @samp{mods_count} contains 718*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe number of modules loaded; @samp{mods_addr} contains the physical 719*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiaddress of the first module structure. @samp{mods_count} may be zero, 720*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiindicating no boot modules were loaded, even if bit 1 of @samp{flags} is 721*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiset. Each module structure is formatted as follows: 722*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 723*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 724*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@group 725*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 726*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0 | mod_start | 727*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski4 | mod_end | 728*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 729*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski8 | string | 730*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 731*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski12 | reserved (0) | 732*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 733*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end group 734*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 735*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 736*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe first two fields contain the start and end addresses of the boot 737*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimodule itself. The @samp{string} field provides an arbitrary string to 738*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibe associated with that particular boot module; it is a zero-terminated 739*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiASCII string, just like the kernel command line. The @samp{string} field 740*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimay be 0 if there is no string associated with the module. Typically the 741*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistring might be a command line (e.g. if the operating system treats boot 742*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimodules as executable programs), or a pathname (e.g. if the operating 743*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisystem treats boot modules as files in a file system), but its exact use 744*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis specific to the operating system. The @samp{reserved} field must be 745*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiset to 0 by the boot loader and ignored by the operating system. 746*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 747*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@strong{Caution:} Bits 4 & 5 are mutually exclusive. 748*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 749*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 4 in the @samp{flags} word is set, then the following fields in 750*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe Multiboot information structure starting at byte 28 are valid: 751*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 752*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 753*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@group 754*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 755*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski28 | tabsize | 756*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski32 | strsize | 757*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski36 | addr | 758*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski40 | reserved (0) | 759*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 760*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end group 761*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 762*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 763*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThese indicate where the symbol table from an a.out kernel image can be 764*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifound. @samp{addr} is the physical address of the size (4-byte unsigned 765*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilong) of an array of a.out format @dfn{nlist} structures, followed 766*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiimmediately by the array itself, then the size (4-byte unsigned long) of 767*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskia set of zero-terminated @sc{ascii} strings (plus sizeof(unsigned long) in 768*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithis case), and finally the set of strings itself. @samp{tabsize} is 769*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiequal to its size parameter (found at the beginning of the symbol 770*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisection), and @samp{strsize} is equal to its size parameter (found at 771*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe beginning of the string section) of the following string table to 772*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiwhich the symbol table refers. Note that @samp{tabsize} may be 0, 773*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiindicating no symbols, even if bit 4 in the @samp{flags} word is set. 774*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 775*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 5 in the @samp{flags} word is set, then the following fields in 776*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe Multiboot information structure starting at byte 28 are valid: 777*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 778*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 779*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@group 780*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 781*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski28 | num | 782*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski32 | size | 783*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski36 | addr | 784*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski40 | shndx | 785*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 786*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end group 787*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 788*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 789*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThese indicate where the section header table from an ELF kernel is, the 790*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisize of each entry, number of entries, and the string table used as the 791*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiindex of names. They correspond to the @samp{shdr_*} entries 792*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski(@samp{shdr_num}, etc.) in the Executable and Linkable Format (@sc{elf}) 793*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskispecification in the program header. All sections are loaded, and the 794*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiphysical address fields of the @sc{elf} section header then refer to where 795*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe sections are in memory (refer to the i386 @sc{elf} documentation for 796*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidetails as to how to read the section header(s)). Note that 797*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{shdr_num} may be 0, indicating no symbols, even if bit 5 in the 798*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{flags} word is set. 799*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 800*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 6 in the @samp{flags} word is set, then the @samp{mmap_*} fields 801*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiare valid, and indicate the address and length of a buffer containing a 802*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimemory map of the machine provided by the @sc{bios}. @samp{mmap_addr} is 803*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe address, and @samp{mmap_length} is the total size of the buffer. The 804*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibuffer consists of one or more of the following size/structure pairs 805*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski(@samp{size} is really used for skipping to the next pair): 806*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 807*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 808*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@group 809*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 810*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski-4 | size | 811*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 812*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0 | base_addr_low | 813*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski4 | base_addr_high | 814*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski8 | length_low | 815*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski12 | length_high | 816*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski16 | type | 817*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 818*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end group 819*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 820*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 821*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiwhere @samp{size} is the size of the associated structure in bytes, which 822*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskican be greater than the minimum of 20 bytes. @samp{base_addr_low} is the 823*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilower 32 bits of the starting address, and @samp{base_addr_high} is the 824*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiupper 32 bits, for a total of a 64-bit starting address. @samp{length_low} 825*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis the lower 32 bits of the size of the memory region in bytes, and 826*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{length_high} is the upper 32 bits, for a total of a 64-bit 827*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilength. @samp{type} is the variety of address range represented, where a 828*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskivalue of 1 indicates available @sc{ram}, and all other values currently 829*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiindicated a reserved area. 830*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 831*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe map provided is guaranteed to list all standard @sc{ram} that should 832*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibe available for normal use. 833*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 834*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 7 in the @samp{flags} is set, then the @samp{drives_*} fields 835*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiare valid, and indicate the address of the physical address of the first 836*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidrive structure and the size of drive structures. @samp{drives_addr} 837*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis the address, and @samp{drives_length} is the total size of drive 838*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistructures. Note that @samp{drives_length} may be zero. Each drive 839*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistructure is formatted as follows: 840*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 841*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 842*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@group 843*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 844*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0 | size | 845*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 846*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski4 | drive_number | 847*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 848*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski5 | drive_mode | 849*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 850*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski6 | drive_cylinders | 851*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski8 | drive_heads | 852*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski9 | drive_sectors | 853*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 854*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski10 - xx | drive_ports | 855*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +-------------------+ 856*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end group 857*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 858*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 859*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe @samp{size} field specifies the size of this structure. The size 860*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskivaries, depending on the number of ports. Note that the size may not be 861*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiequal to (10 + 2 * the number of ports), because of an alignment. 862*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 863*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe @samp{drive_number} field contains the BIOS drive number. The 864*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{drive_mode} field represents the access mode used by the boot 865*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloader. Currently, the following modes are defined: 866*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 867*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@table @samp 868*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 0 869*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiCHS mode (traditional cylinder/head/sector addressing mode). 870*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 871*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1 872*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiLBA mode (Logical Block Addressing mode). 873*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end table 874*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 875*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe three fields, @samp{drive_cylinders}, @samp{drive_heads} and 876*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{drive_sectors}, indicate the geometry of the drive detected by the 877*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{bios}. @samp{drive_cylinders} contains the number of the 878*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicylinders. @samp{drive_heads} contains the number of the 879*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiheads. @samp{drive_sectors} contains the number of the sectors per 880*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskitrack. 881*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 882*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe @samp{drive_ports} field contains the array of the I/O ports used 883*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifor the drive in the @sc{bios} code. The array consists of zero or more 884*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiunsigned two-bytes integers, and is terminated with zero. Note that the 885*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiarray may contain any number of I/O ports that are not related to the 886*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidrive actually (such as @sc{dma} controller's ports). 887*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 888*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 8 in the @samp{flags} is set, then the @samp{config_table} field 889*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis valid, and indicates the address of the @sc{rom} configuration table 890*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskireturned by the @dfn{GET CONFIGURATION} @sc{bios} call. If the @sc{bios} 891*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicall fails, then the size of the table must be @emph{zero}. 892*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 893*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 9 in the @samp{flags} is set, the @samp{boot_loader_name} field 894*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis valid, and contains the physical address of the name of a boot 895*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloader booting the kernel. The name is a normal C-style zero-terminated 896*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskistring. 897*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 898*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 10 in the @samp{flags} is set, the @samp{apm_table} field is 899*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskivalid, and contains the physical address of an @sc{apm} table defined as 900*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibelow: 901*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 902*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 903*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@group 904*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +----------------------+ 905*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski0 | version | 906*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski2 | cseg | 907*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski4 | offset | 908*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski8 | cseg_16 | 909*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski10 | dseg | 910*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski12 | flags | 911*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski14 | cseg_len | 912*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski16 | cseg_16_len | 913*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski18 | dseg_len | 914*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski +----------------------+ 915*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end group 916*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 917*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 918*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe fields @samp{version}, @samp{cseg}, @samp{offset}, @samp{cseg_16}, 919*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{dseg}, @samp{flags}, @samp{cseg_len}, @samp{cseg_16_len}, 920*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{dseg_len} indicate the version number, the protected mode 32-bit 921*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicode segment, the offset of the entry point, the protected mode 16-bit 922*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicode segment, the protected mode 16-bit data segment, the flags, the 923*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilength of the protected mode 32-bit code segment, the length of the 924*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiprotected mode 16-bit code segment, and the length of the protected mode 925*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski16-bit data segment, respectively. Only the field @samp{offset} is 4 926*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibytes, and the others are 2 bytes. See 927*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@uref{http://www.microsoft.com/hwdev/busbios/amp_12.htm, Advanced Power 928*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiManagement (APM) BIOS Interface Specification}, for more information. 929*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 930*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIf bit 11 in the @samp{flags} is set, the graphics table is available. 931*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis must only be done if the kernel has indicated in the 932*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{Multiboot Header} that it accepts a graphics mode. 933*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 934*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe fields @samp{vbe_control_info} and @samp{vbe_mode_info} contain 935*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe physical addresses of @sc{vbe} control information returned by the 936*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{vbe} Function 00h and @sc{vbe} mode information returned by the 937*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{vbe} Function 01h, respectively. 938*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 939*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe field @samp{vbe_mode} indicates current video mode in the format 940*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskispecified in @sc{vbe} 3.0. 941*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 942*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe rest fields @samp{vbe_interface_seg}, @samp{vbe_interface_off}, and 943*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@samp{vbe_interface_len} contain the table of a protected mode interface 944*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidefined in @sc{vbe} 2.0+. If this information is not available, those 945*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifields contain zero. Note that @sc{vbe} 3.0 defines another protected 946*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimode interface which is incompatible with the old one. If you want to 947*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiuse the new protected mode interface, you will have to find the table 948*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiyourself. 949*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 950*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe fields for the graphics table are designed for @sc{vbe}, but 951*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMultiboot boot loaders may simulate @sc{vbe} on non-@sc{vbe} modes, as 952*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiif they were @sc{vbe} modes. 953*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 954*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 955*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Examples 956*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@chapter Examples 957*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 958*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@strong{Caution:} The following items are not part of the specification 959*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidocument, but are included for prospective operating system and boot 960*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloader writers. 961*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 962*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@menu 963*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Notes on PC:: 964*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* BIOS device mapping techniques:: 965*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Example OS code:: 966*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Example boot loader code:: 967*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end menu 968*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 969*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 970*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Notes on PC 971*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section Notes on PC 972*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 973*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIn reference to bit 0 of the @samp{flags} parameter in the Multiboot 974*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinformation structure, if the bootloader in question uses older 975*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{bios} interfaces, or the newest ones are not available (see 976*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidescription about bit 6), then a maximum of either 15 or 63 megabytes of 977*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimemory may be reported. It is @emph{highly} recommended that boot 978*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloaders perform a thorough memory probe. 979*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 980*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIn reference to bit 1 of the @samp{flags} parameter in the Multiboot 981*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinformation structure, it is recognized that determination of which 982*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{bios} drive maps to which device driver in an operating system is 983*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinon-trivial, at best. Many kludges have been made to various operating 984*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisystems instead of solving this problem, most of them breaking under 985*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimany conditions. To encourage the use of general-purpose solutions to 986*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithis problem, there are 2 @sc{bios} device mapping techniques 987*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski(@pxref{BIOS device mapping techniques}). 988*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 989*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIn reference to bit 6 of the @samp{flags} parameter in the Multiboot 990*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinformation structure, it is important to note that the data structure 991*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiused there (starting with @samp{BaseAddrLow}) is the data returned by 992*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe INT 15h, AX=E820h --- Query System Address Map call. See @xref{Query 993*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiSystem Address Map, , Query System Address Map, grub.info, The GRUB 994*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiManual}, for more information. The interface here is meant to allow a 995*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiboot loader to work unmodified with any reasonable extensions of the 996*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{bios} interface, passing along any extra data to be interpreted by 997*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe operating system as desired. 998*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 999*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1000*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node BIOS device mapping techniques 1001*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section BIOS device mapping techniques 1002*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1003*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiBoth of these techniques should be usable from any PC operating system, 1004*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiand neither require any special support in the drivers themselves. This 1005*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisection will be flushed out into detailed explanations, particularly for 1006*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe I/O restriction technique. 1007*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1008*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe general rule is that the data comparison technique is the quick and 1009*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidirty solution. It works most of the time, but doesn't cover all the 1010*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibases, and is relatively simple. 1011*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1012*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe I/O restriction technique is much more complex, but it has potential 1013*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito solve the problem under all conditions, plus allow access of the 1014*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiremaining @sc{bios} devices when not all of them have operating system 1015*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskidrivers. 1016*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1017*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@menu 1018*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Data comparison technique:: 1019*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* I/O restriction technique:: 1020*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end menu 1021*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1022*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1023*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Data comparison technique 1024*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@subsection Data comparison technique 1025*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1026*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiBefore activating @emph{any} of the device drivers, gather enough data 1027*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskifrom similar sectors on each of the disks such that each one can be 1028*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiuniquely identified. 1029*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1030*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiAfter activating the device drivers, compare data from the drives using 1031*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe operating system drivers. This should hopefully be sufficient to 1032*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiprovide such a mapping. 1033*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1034*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiProblems: 1035*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1036*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@enumerate 1037*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1038*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe data on some @sc{bios} devices might be identical (so the part 1039*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskireading the drives from the @sc{bios} should have some mechanism to give 1040*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiup). 1041*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1042*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1043*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThere might be extra drives not accessible from the @sc{bios} which are 1044*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiidentical to some drive used by the @sc{bios} (so it should be capable 1045*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiof giving up there as well). 1046*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end enumerate 1047*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1048*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1049*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node I/O restriction technique 1050*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@subsection I/O restriction technique 1051*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1052*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis first step may be unnecessary, but first create copy-on-write 1053*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimappings for the device drivers writing into @sc{pc} @sc{ram}. Keep the 1054*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioriginal copies for the @dfn{clean @sc{bios} virtual machine} to be 1055*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicreated later. 1056*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1057*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFor each device driver brought online, determine which @sc{bios} devices 1058*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskibecome inaccessible by: 1059*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1060*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@enumerate 1061*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1062*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiCreate a @dfn{clean @sc{bios} virtual machine}. 1063*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1064*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1065*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiSet the I/O permission map for the I/O area claimed by the device driver 1066*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito no permissions (neither read nor write). 1067*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1068*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1069*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiAccess each device. 1070*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1071*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1072*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiRecord which devices succeed, and those which try to access the 1073*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@dfn{restricted} I/O areas (hopefully, this will be an @dfn{xor} 1074*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisituation). 1075*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end enumerate 1076*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1077*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiFor each device driver, given how many of the @sc{bios} devices were 1078*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskisubsumed by it (there should be no gaps in this list), it should be easy 1079*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskito determine which devices on the controller these are. 1080*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1081*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIn general, you have at most 2 disks from each controller given 1082*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@sc{bios} numbers, but they pretty much always count from the lowest 1083*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilogically numbered devices on the controller. 1084*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1085*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1086*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Example OS code 1087*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section Example OS code 1088*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1089*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIn this distribution, the example Multiboot kernel @file{kernel} is 1090*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiincluded. The kernel just prints out the Multiboot information structure 1091*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskion the screen, so you can make use of the kernel to test a 1092*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMultiboot-compliant boot loader and for reference to how to implement a 1093*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMultiboot kernel. The source files can be found under the directory 1094*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@file{docs} in the GRUB distribution. 1095*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1096*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe kernel @file{kernel} consists of only three files: @file{boot.S}, 1097*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@file{kernel.c} and @file{multiboot.h}. The assembly source 1098*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@file{boot.S} is written in GAS (@pxref{Top, , GNU assembler, as.info, 1099*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe GNU assembler}), and contains the Multiboot information structure to 1100*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskicomply with the specification. When a Multiboot-compliant boot loader 1101*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloads and execute it, it initialize the stack pointer and @code{EFLAGS}, 1102*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiand then call the function @code{cmain} defined in @file{kernel.c}. If 1103*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@code{cmain} returns to the callee, then it shows a message to inform 1104*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskithe user of the halt state and stops forever until you push the reset 1105*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskikey. The file @file{kernel.c} contains the function @code{cmain}, 1106*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiwhich checks if the magic number passed by the boot loader is valid and 1107*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiso on, and some functions to print messages on the screen. The file 1108*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@file{multiboot.h} defines some macros, such as the magic number for the 1109*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMultiboot header, the Multiboot header structure and the Multiboot 1110*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinformation structure. 1111*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1112*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@menu 1113*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* multiboot.h:: 1114*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* boot.S:: 1115*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* kernel.c:: 1116*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski* Other Multiboot kernels:: 1117*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end menu 1118*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1119*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1120*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node multiboot.h 1121*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@subsection multiboot.h 1122*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1123*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThis is the source code in the file @file{multiboot.h}: 1124*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1125*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 1126*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@include multiboot.h.texi 1127*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 1128*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1129*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1130*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node boot.S 1131*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@subsection boot.S 1132*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1133*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiIn the file @file{boot.S}: 1134*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1135*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 1136*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@include boot.S.texi 1137*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 1138*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1139*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1140*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node kernel.c 1141*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@subsection kernel.c 1142*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1143*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiAnd, in the file @file{kernel.c}: 1144*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1145*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@example 1146*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@include kernel.c.texi 1147*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end example 1148*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1149*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1150*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Other Multiboot kernels 1151*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@subsection Other Multiboot kernels 1152*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1153*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiOther useful information should be available in Multiboot kernels, such 1154*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskias GNU Mach and Fiasco @url{http://os.inf.tu-dresden.de/fiasco/}. And, 1155*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiit is worth mentioning the OSKit 1156*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@url{http://www.cs.utah.edu/projects/flux/oskit/}, which provides a 1157*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskilibrary supporting the specification. 1158*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1159*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1160*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Example boot loader code 1161*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@section Example boot loader code 1162*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1163*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe GNU GRUB (@pxref{Top, , GRUB, grub.info, The GRUB manual}) project 1164*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiis a full Multiboot-compliant boot loader, supporting all required and 1165*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskioptional features present in this specification. A public release has 1166*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskinot been made, but the test release is available from: 1167*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1168*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@url{ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/grub} 1169*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1170*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiSee the webpage @url{http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/grub.html}, for 1171*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskimore information. 1172*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1173*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1174*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node History 1175*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@chapter The change log of this specification 1176*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1177*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@table @asis 1178*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 0.7 1179*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@itemize @bullet 1180*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1181*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@dfn{Multiboot Standard} is renamed to @dfn{Multiboot Specification}. 1182*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1183*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1184*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiGraphics fields are added to Multiboot header. 1185*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1186*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1187*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiBIOS drive information, BIOS configuration table, the name of a boot 1188*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiloader, APM information, and graphics information are added to Multiboot 1189*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharskiinformation. 1190*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1191*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1192*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiRewritten in Texinfo format. 1193*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1194*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1195*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiRewritten, using more strict words. 1196*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1197*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1198*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiThe maintainer changes to the GNU GRUB maintainer team 1199*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@email{bug-grub@@gnu.org}, from Bryan Ford and Erich Stefan Boleyn. 1200*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end itemize 1201*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1202*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 0.6 1203*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@itemize @bullet 1204*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1205*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiA few wording changes. 1206*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1207*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1208*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiHeader checksum. 1209*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1210*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1211*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiClasification of machine state passed to an operating system. 1212*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end itemize 1213*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1214*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 0.5 1215*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@itemize @bullet 1216*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1217*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiName change. 1218*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end itemize 1219*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1220*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 0.4 1221*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@itemize @bullet 1222*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@item 1223*1b8adde7SWilliam KucharskiMajor changes plus HTMLification. 1224*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end itemize 1225*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@end table 1226*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1227*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1228*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@node Index 1229*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@unnumbered Index 1230*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1231*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@printindex cp 1232*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski 1233*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@contents 1234*1b8adde7SWilliam Kucharski@bye 1235