First version
This commit is contained in:
parent
61ec7bb47b
commit
97cd6cdd98
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@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
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[unstable]
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bindeps = true
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6
.gitignore
vendored
6
.gitignore
vendored
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/target
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/kernel/target
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/build
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/binutils
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/gcc
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/opt
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23
Makefile
Normal file
23
Makefile
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.PHONY: all build test clean
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all: build
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build:
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rm -rf build
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rm -rf kernel/target
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mkdir build
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i686-elf-as -o build/boot.o boot.s
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cd kernel; cargo build
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cp kernel/target/i686-unknown-bare/debug/kernel.elf build/geos.bin
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mkdir -p build/isodir/boot/grub
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cp build/geos.bin build/isodir/boot/geos.bin
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cp grub.cfg build/isodir/boot/grub/grub.cfg
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grub-mkrescue -o build/geos.iso build/isodir
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test: build
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qemu-system-i386 -cdrom build/geos.iso
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clean:
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rm -rf kernel/target
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rm -rf build
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109
boot.s
Normal file
109
boot.s
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/* Declare constants for the multiboot header. */
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.set ALIGN, 1<<0 /* align loaded modules on page boundaries */
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.set MEMINFO, 1<<1 /* provide memory map */
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.set FLAGS, ALIGN | MEMINFO /* this is the Multiboot 'flag' field */
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.set MAGIC, 0x1BADB002 /* 'magic number' lets bootloader find the header */
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.set CHECKSUM, -(MAGIC + FLAGS) /* checksum of above, to prove we are multiboot */
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/*
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Declare a multiboot header that marks the program as a kernel. These are magic
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values that are documented in the multiboot standard. The bootloader will
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search for this signature in the first 8 KiB of the kernel file, aligned at a
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32-bit boundary. The signature is in its own section so the header can be
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forced to be within the first 8 KiB of the kernel file.
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*/
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.section .multiboot
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.align 4
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.long MAGIC
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.long FLAGS
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.long CHECKSUM
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/*
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The multiboot standard does not define the value of the stack pointer register
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(esp) and it is up to the kernel to provide a stack. This allocates room for a
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small stack by creating a symbol at the bottom of it, then allocating 16384
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bytes for it, and finally creating a symbol at the top. The stack grows
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downwards on x86. The stack is in its own section so it can be marked nobits,
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which means the kernel file is smaller because it does not contain an
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uninitialized stack. The stack on x86 must be 16-byte aligned according to the
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System V ABI standard and de-facto extensions. The compiler will assume the
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stack is properly aligned and failure to align the stack will result in
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undefined behavior.
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*/
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.section .bss
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.align 16
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stack_bottom:
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.skip 16384 # 16 KiB
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stack_top:
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/*
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The linker script specifies _start as the entry point to the kernel and the
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bootloader will jump to this position once the kernel has been loaded. It
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doesn't make sense to return from this function as the bootloader is gone.
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*/
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.section .text
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.global _start
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.type _start, @function
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_start:
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/*
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The bootloader has loaded us into 32-bit protected mode on a x86
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machine. Interrupts are disabled. Paging is disabled. The processor
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state is as defined in the multiboot standard. The kernel has full
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control of the CPU. The kernel can only make use of hardware features
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and any code it provides as part of itself. There's no printf
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function, unless the kernel provides its own <stdio.h> header and a
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printf implementation. There are no security restrictions, no
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safeguards, no debugging mechanisms, only what the kernel provides
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itself. It has absolute and complete power over the
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machine.
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*/
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/*
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To set up a stack, we set the esp register to point to the top of the
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stack (as it grows downwards on x86 systems). This is necessarily done
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in assembly as languages such as C cannot function without a stack.
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*/
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mov $stack_top, %esp
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/*
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This is a good place to initialize crucial processor state before the
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high-level kernel is entered. It's best to minimize the early
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environment where crucial features are offline. Note that the
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processor is not fully initialized yet: Features such as floating
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point instructions and instruction set extensions are not initialized
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yet. The GDT should be loaded here. Paging should be enabled here.
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C++ features such as global constructors and exceptions will require
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runtime support to work as well.
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*/
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/*
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Enter the high-level kernel. The ABI requires the stack is 16-byte
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aligned at the time of the call instruction (which afterwards pushes
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the return pointer of size 4 bytes). The stack was originally 16-byte
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aligned above and we've pushed a multiple of 16 bytes to the
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stack since (pushed 0 bytes so far), so the alignment has thus been
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preserved and the call is well defined.
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*/
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call kernel_main
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/*
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If the system has nothing more to do, put the computer into an
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infinite loop. To do that:
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1) Disable interrupts with cli (clear interrupt enable in eflags).
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They are already disabled by the bootloader, so this is not needed.
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Mind that you might later enable interrupts and return from
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kernel_main (which is sort of nonsensical to do).
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2) Wait for the next interrupt to arrive with hlt (halt instruction).
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Since they are disabled, this will lock up the computer.
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3) Jump to the hlt instruction if it ever wakes up due to a
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non-maskable interrupt occurring or due to system management mode.
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*/
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cli
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1: hlt
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jmp 1b
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/*
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Set the size of the _start symbol to the current location '.' minus its start.
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This is useful when debugging or when you implement call tracing.
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*/
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.size _start, . - _start
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9
kernel/.cargo/config.toml
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9
kernel/.cargo/config.toml
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[build]
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target = "i686-unknown-bare.json"
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[unstable]
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build-std-features = ["compiler-builtins-mem"]
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build-std = ["core", "compiler_builtins"]
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[target."i686-unknown-bare"]
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linker = "i686-elf-gcc"
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7
kernel/Cargo.lock
generated
Normal file
7
kernel/Cargo.lock
generated
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# This file is automatically @generated by Cargo.
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# It is not intended for manual editing.
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version = 3
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[[package]]
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name = "kernel"
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version = "0.1.0"
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6
kernel/Cargo.toml
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6
kernel/Cargo.toml
Normal file
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[package]
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name = "kernel"
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version = "0.1.0"
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edition = "2021"
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[dependencies]
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25
kernel/i686-unknown-bare.json
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25
kernel/i686-unknown-bare.json
Normal file
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{
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"llvm-target": "i686-unknown-none",
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"data-layout": "e-m:e-p:32:32-p270:32:32-p271:32:32-p272:64:64-i128:128-f64:32:64-f80:32-n8:16:32-S128",
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"arch": "x86",
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"target-endian": "little",
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"target-pointer-width": "32",
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"target-c-int-width": "32",
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"os": "none",
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"executables": true,
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"linker-flavor": "gcc",
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"linker": "i686-elf-gcc",
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"panic-strategy": "abort",
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"disable-redzone": true,
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"features": "-sse,+soft-float",
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"dynamic-linking": false,
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"relocation-model": "pic",
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"code-model": "kernel",
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"exe-suffix": ".elf",
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"has-rpath": false,
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"no-default-libraries": true,
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"position-independent-executables": false,
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"pre-link-args": {
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"gcc": ["-T", "../linker.ld", "-ffreestanding", "-nostdlib", "-lgcc", "../build/boot.o"]
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}
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}
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23
kernel/src/main.rs
Normal file
23
kernel/src/main.rs
Normal file
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#![no_std]
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#![no_main]
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#[no_mangle]
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pub extern "C" fn kernel_main() -> ! {
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let vga_buffer = 0xb8000 as *mut u8;
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let string: &[u8] = b":3";
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for (i, &byte) in string.iter().enumerate() {
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unsafe {
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*vga_buffer.offset(i as isize * 2) = byte;
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*vga_buffer.offset(i as isize * 2 + 1) = 0xf;
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}
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}
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loop {}
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}
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#[panic_handler]
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fn panic(_info: &core::panic::PanicInfo) -> ! {
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loop {}
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}
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52
linker.ld
Normal file
52
linker.ld
Normal file
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/* The bootloader will look at this image and start execution at the symbol
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designated as the entry point. */
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ENTRY(_start)
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/* Tell where the various sections of the object files will be put in the final
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kernel image. */
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SECTIONS
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{
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/* It used to be universally recommended to use 1M as a start offset,
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as it was effectively guaranteed to be available under BIOS systems.
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However, UEFI has made things more complicated, and experimental data
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strongly suggests that 2M is a safer place to load. In 2016, a new
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feature was introduced to the multiboot2 spec to inform bootloaders
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that a kernel can be loaded anywhere within a range of addresses and
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will be able to relocate itself to run from such a loader-selected
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address, in order to give the loader freedom in selecting a span of
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memory which is verified to be available by the firmware, in order to
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work around this issue. This does not use that feature, so 2M was
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chosen as a safer option than the traditional 1M. */
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. = 2M;
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/* First put the multiboot header, as it is required to be put very early
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in the image or the bootloader won't recognize the file format.
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Next we'll put the .text section. */
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.text BLOCK(4K) : ALIGN(4K)
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{
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*(.multiboot)
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*(.text)
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}
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/* Read-only data. */
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.rodata BLOCK(4K) : ALIGN(4K)
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{
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*(.rodata)
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}
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/* Read-write data (initialized) */
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.data BLOCK(4K) : ALIGN(4K)
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{
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*(.data)
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}
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/* Read-write data (uninitialized) and stack */
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.bss BLOCK(4K) : ALIGN(4K)
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{
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*(COMMON)
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*(.bss)
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}
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/* The compiler may produce other sections, by default it will put them in
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a segment with the same name. Simply add stuff here as needed. */
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}
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@ -1 +0,0 @@
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nightly
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21
shell.nix
21
shell.nix
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@ -1,20 +1,35 @@
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{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
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{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
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pkgs.mkShell rec {
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let
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crossPkgs = pkgs.pkgsCross.aarch64-multiplatform;
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in pkgs.mkShell rec {
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buildInputs = with pkgs; [
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buildInputs = with pkgs; [
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clang
|
clang
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llvmPackages_17.bintools
|
llvmPackages_17.bintools
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rustup
|
rustup
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qemu
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qemu
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grub2
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libisoburn
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|
bison
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flex
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gmp
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libmpc
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mpfr
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texinfo
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isl
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];
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];
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RUSTC_VERSION = pkgs.lib.readFile ./rust-toolchain;
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RUSTC_VERSION = "nightly";
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hardeningDisable = [ "all" ];
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# https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-bindgen#environment-variables
|
# https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-bindgen#environment-variables
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LIBCLANG_PATH = pkgs.lib.makeLibraryPath [ pkgs.llvmPackages_latest.libclang.lib ];
|
LIBCLANG_PATH = pkgs.lib.makeLibraryPath [ pkgs.llvmPackages_latest.libclang.lib ];
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shellHook = ''
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shellHook = ''
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|
rustup default nightly
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rustup component add llvm-tools-preview
|
rustup component add llvm-tools-preview
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rustup component add rust-analyzer
|
rustup component add rust-analyzer
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rustup target add x86_64-unknown-none
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rustup target add x86_64-unknown-none
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export PATH=$PATH:''${CARGO_HOME:-~/.cargo}/bin
|
export PATH=$PATH:''${CARGO_HOME:-~/.cargo}/bin
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export PATH=$PATH:''${RUSTUP_HOME:-~/.rustup}/toolchains/$RUSTC_VERSION-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/bin/
|
export PATH=$PATH:''${RUSTUP_HOME:-~/.rustup}/toolchains/nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/bin/
|
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|
export PATH=$PATH:$PWD/opt/bin
|
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'';
|
'';
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# Add precompiled library to rustc search path
|
# Add precompiled library to rustc search path
|
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RUSTFLAGS = (builtins.map (a: ''-L ${a}/lib'') [
|
RUSTFLAGS = (builtins.map (a: ''-L ${a}/lib'') [
|
||||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue