paulbergmann_mpstubs/boot/longmode.asm

246 lines
7.1 KiB
NASM

; The stony path to Long Mode (64-bit)...
; ... begins in 32-bit Protected Mode
[BITS 32]
; Pointer to Long Mode Global Descriptor Table (GDT, machine/gdt.cc)
[EXTERN gdt_long_mode_pointer]
[GLOBAL long_mode]
long_mode:
; You can check if the CPU supports Long Mode by using the `cpuid` command.
; Problem: You first have to figure out if the `cpuid` command itself is
; supported. Therefore, you have to try to reverse the 21st bit in the EFLAGS
; register -- if it works, then there is the 'cpuid' instruction.
CPUID_BIT_MASK equ 1 << 21
check_cpuid:
; Save EFLAGS on stack
pushfd
; Copy stored EFLAGS from stack to EAX register
mov eax, [esp]
; Flip the 21st bit (ID) in EAX
xor eax, CPUID_BIT_MASK
; Copy EAX to EFLAGS (using the stack)
push eax
popfd
; And reverse: copy EFLAGS to EAX (using the stack)
; (but the 21st bit should now still be flipped, if `cpuid` is supported)
pushfd
pop eax
; Compare the new EFLAGS copy (residing in EAX) with the EFLAGS stored at
; the beginning of this function by using an exclusive OR -- all different
; (flipped) bits will be stored in EAX.
xor eax, [esp]
; Restore original EFLAGS
popfd
; If 21st Bit in EAX is set, `cpuid` is supported -- continue at check_long_mode
and eax, CPUID_BIT_MASK
jnz check_long_mode
; Show error message "No CPUID" and stop CPU
mov dword [0xb8000], 0xcf6fcf4e
mov dword [0xb8004], 0xcf43cf20
mov dword [0xb8008], 0xcf55cf50
mov dword [0xb800c], 0xcf44cf49
hlt
; Now you are able to use the `cpuid` instruction to check if Long Mode is
; available -- after you've checked if the `cpuid` is able to perform the
; check itself (since it is an extended `cpuid` function)...
CPUID_GET_LARGEST_EXTENDED_FUNCTION_NUMBER equ 0x80000000
CPUID_GET_EXTENDED_PROCESSOR_FEATURES equ 0x80000001
CPUID_HAS_LONGMODE equ 1 << 29
check_long_mode:
; Set argument for `cpuid` to check the availability of extended functions
; and call cpuid
mov eax, CPUID_GET_LARGEST_EXTENDED_FUNCTION_NUMBER
cpuid
; The return value contains the maximum function number supported by `cpuid`,
; You'll need the function number for extended processor features
cmp eax, CPUID_GET_EXTENDED_PROCESSOR_FEATURES
; If not present, the CPU is definitely too old to support long mode
jb no_long_mode
; Finally, you are able to check the Long Mode support itself
mov eax, CPUID_GET_EXTENDED_PROCESSOR_FEATURES
cpuid
; If the return value in the EDX register has set the 29th bit,
; then long mode is supported -- continue with setup_paging
test edx, CPUID_HAS_LONGMODE
jnz setup_paging
no_long_mode:
; Show error message "No 64bit" and stop CPU
mov dword [0xb8000], 0xcf6fcf4e
mov dword [0xb8004], 0xcf36cf20
mov dword [0xb8008], 0xcf62cf34
mov dword [0xb800c], 0xcf74cf69
hlt
; Paging is required for Long Mode.
; Since an extensive page manager might be a bit of an overkill to start with,
; the following code creates an identity mapping for the first four gigabytes
; (using huge pages): each virtual address will point to the same physical one.
; This area (up to 4 GiB) is important for some memory mapped devices (APIC)
; and you don't want to remap them yet for simplicity reasons.
; In the advanced operating systems lecture, this topic is covered in detail,
; however, if you want a quick overview, have a look at
; https://wiki.osdev.org/Page_Tables#2_MiB_pages_2
PAGE_SIZE equ 4096
PAGE_FLAGS_PRESENT equ 1 << 0
PAGE_FLAGS_WRITEABLE equ 1 << 1
PAGE_FLAGS_USER equ 1 << 2
PAGE_FLAGS_HUGE equ 1 << 7
setup_paging:
; Unlike in Protected Mode, an entry in the page table has a size of 8 bytes
; (vs 4 bytes), so there are only 512 (and not 1024) entries per table.
; Structure of the 3-level PAE paging: One entry in the
; - lv2: Page-Directory-Table (PDT) covers 2 MiB (1 Huge Page)
; - lv3: Page-Directory-Pointer-Table (PDPT) covers 1 GiB (512 * 2 MiB)
; - lv4: Page-Map-Level-4-Table (PML4) covers 512 GiB (512 * 1 GiB)
; To address 4 GiB only four level-2 tables are required.
; All entries of the level-2 tables should be marked as writeable (attributes)
; and map (point to) the corresponding physical memory.
; This is done in a loop using ECX as counter
mov ecx, 0
.identitymap_level2:
; Calculate physical address in EAX (2 MiB multiplied by the counter)
mov eax, 0x200000
mul ecx
; Configure page attributes
or eax, PAGE_FLAGS_PRESENT | PAGE_FLAGS_WRITEABLE | PAGE_FLAGS_HUGE | PAGE_FLAGS_USER
; Write (8 byte) entry in the level-2 table
mov [paging_level2_tables + ecx * 8], eax
; Increment counter...
inc ecx
; ... until all four level-2 tables are filled
cmp ecx, 512 * 4
jne .identitymap_level2
; The first four entries of the level-3 table should point to the
; four level-2 tables (and be writeable as well).
; Again, ECX acts as counter for the loop
mov ecx, 0
.identitymap_level3:
; Calculate the address: ECX * PAGE_SIZE + paging_level2_tables
mov eax, ecx
; The size of a page is stored in the EDX register
mov edx, PAGE_SIZE
mul edx
add eax, paging_level2_tables
; Configure attributes
or eax, PAGE_FLAGS_PRESENT | PAGE_FLAGS_WRITEABLE | PAGE_FLAGS_USER
; Write (8 byte) entry in the level-3 table
mov [paging_level3_table + ecx * 8], eax
; Increment counter...
inc ecx
; ... until all four entries of the table are written
cmp ecx, 4
jne .identitymap_level3
mov eax, paging_level2_tables
or eax, PAGE_FLAGS_PRESENT | PAGE_FLAGS_WRITEABLE | PAGE_FLAGS_USER
mov [paging_level3_table], eax
; The first entry of the level-4 table should point to to the level-3 table
mov eax, paging_level3_table
or eax, PAGE_FLAGS_PRESENT | PAGE_FLAGS_WRITEABLE | PAGE_FLAGS_USER
mov [paging_level4_table], eax
; Time to activate paging
paging_enable:
; First setup the control registers
; Write the address of the level-4 table into the CR3 register
mov eax, paging_level4_table
mov cr3, eax
; Activate Physical Address Extension (PAE)
; by setting the 5th bits in the CR4 register
mov eax, cr4
or eax, 1 << 5
mov cr4, eax
; Set the Long Mode Enable Bit in the EFER MSR
; (Extended Feature Enable Register Model Specific Register)
mov ecx, 0xC0000080
rdmsr
or eax, 1 << 8
wrmsr
; Finally, the 31st bit in CR0 is set to enable Paging
mov eax, cr0
or eax, 1 << 31
mov cr0, eax
; Load Long Mode Global Descriptor Table
lgdt [gdt_long_mode_pointer]
; Far jump to the 64-bit start code
jmp 0x8:long_mode_start
; print `KO` to screen
mov dword [0xb8000], 0x3f4f3f4b
hlt
; Memory reserved for page tables
[SECTION .bss]
ALIGN 4096
[GLOBAL paging_level4_table]
[GLOBAL paging_level3_table]
[GLOBAL paging_level2_tables]
; 1x Level-4 Table (Page Map Level 4)
paging_level4_table:
resb PAGE_SIZE
; 1x Level-3 Table (Page Directory Pointer Table)
paging_level3_table:
resb PAGE_SIZE
; 4x Level-2 Table (Page Directory)
paging_level2_tables:
resb PAGE_SIZE * 4
[SECTION .text]
[EXTERN kernel_init] ; C++ entry function
; Continue with 64 bit code
[BITS 64]
long_mode_start:
; Set data segment registers to SEGMENT_KERNEL_DATA (machine/gdt.h)
mov ax, 0x10
mov ss, ax
mov ds, ax
mov es, ax
mov fs, ax
mov gs, ax
; Call high-level (C++) kernel initialization function
call kernel_init
; Print `STOP` to screen and stop
mov rax, 0x2f502f4f2f544f53
mov qword [0xb8000], rax
hlt