Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame^] | 1 | THE LINUX/I386 BOOT PROTOCOL |
| 2 | ---------------------------- |
| 3 | |
| 4 | H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com> |
| 5 | Last update 2002-01-01 |
| 6 | |
| 7 | On the i386 platform, the Linux kernel uses a rather complicated boot |
| 8 | convention. This has evolved partially due to historical aspects, as |
| 9 | well as the desire in the early days to have the kernel itself be a |
| 10 | bootable image, the complicated PC memory model and due to changed |
| 11 | expectations in the PC industry caused by the effective demise of |
| 12 | real-mode DOS as a mainstream operating system. |
| 13 | |
| 14 | Currently, four versions of the Linux/i386 boot protocol exist. |
| 15 | |
| 16 | Old kernels: zImage/Image support only. Some very early kernels |
| 17 | may not even support a command line. |
| 18 | |
| 19 | Protocol 2.00: (Kernel 1.3.73) Added bzImage and initrd support, as |
| 20 | well as a formalized way to communicate between the |
| 21 | boot loader and the kernel. setup.S made relocatable, |
| 22 | although the traditional setup area still assumed |
| 23 | writable. |
| 24 | |
| 25 | Protocol 2.01: (Kernel 1.3.76) Added a heap overrun warning. |
| 26 | |
| 27 | Protocol 2.02: (Kernel 2.4.0-test3-pre3) New command line protocol. |
| 28 | Lower the conventional memory ceiling. No overwrite |
| 29 | of the traditional setup area, thus making booting |
| 30 | safe for systems which use the EBDA from SMM or 32-bit |
| 31 | BIOS entry points. zImage deprecated but still |
| 32 | supported. |
| 33 | |
| 34 | Protocol 2.03: (Kernel 2.4.18-pre1) Explicitly makes the highest possible |
| 35 | initrd address available to the bootloader. |
| 36 | |
| 37 | |
| 38 | **** MEMORY LAYOUT |
| 39 | |
| 40 | The traditional memory map for the kernel loader, used for Image or |
| 41 | zImage kernels, typically looks like: |
| 42 | |
| 43 | | | |
| 44 | 0A0000 +------------------------+ |
| 45 | | Reserved for BIOS | Do not use. Reserved for BIOS EBDA. |
| 46 | 09A000 +------------------------+ |
| 47 | | Stack/heap/cmdline | For use by the kernel real-mode code. |
| 48 | 098000 +------------------------+ |
| 49 | | Kernel setup | The kernel real-mode code. |
| 50 | 090200 +------------------------+ |
| 51 | | Kernel boot sector | The kernel legacy boot sector. |
| 52 | 090000 +------------------------+ |
| 53 | | Protected-mode kernel | The bulk of the kernel image. |
| 54 | 010000 +------------------------+ |
| 55 | | Boot loader | <- Boot sector entry point 0000:7C00 |
| 56 | 001000 +------------------------+ |
| 57 | | Reserved for MBR/BIOS | |
| 58 | 000800 +------------------------+ |
| 59 | | Typically used by MBR | |
| 60 | 000600 +------------------------+ |
| 61 | | BIOS use only | |
| 62 | 000000 +------------------------+ |
| 63 | |
| 64 | |
| 65 | When using bzImage, the protected-mode kernel was relocated to |
| 66 | 0x100000 ("high memory"), and the kernel real-mode block (boot sector, |
| 67 | setup, and stack/heap) was made relocatable to any address between |
| 68 | 0x10000 and end of low memory. Unfortunately, in protocols 2.00 and |
| 69 | 2.01 the command line is still required to live in the 0x9XXXX memory |
| 70 | range, and that memory range is still overwritten by the early kernel. |
| 71 | The 2.02 protocol resolves that problem. |
| 72 | |
| 73 | It is desirable to keep the "memory ceiling" -- the highest point in |
| 74 | low memory touched by the boot loader -- as low as possible, since |
| 75 | some newer BIOSes have begun to allocate some rather large amounts of |
| 76 | memory, called the Extended BIOS Data Area, near the top of low |
| 77 | memory. The boot loader should use the "INT 12h" BIOS call to verify |
| 78 | how much low memory is available. |
| 79 | |
| 80 | Unfortunately, if INT 12h reports that the amount of memory is too |
| 81 | low, there is usually nothing the boot loader can do but to report an |
| 82 | error to the user. The boot loader should therefore be designed to |
| 83 | take up as little space in low memory as it reasonably can. For |
| 84 | zImage or old bzImage kernels, which need data written into the |
| 85 | 0x90000 segment, the boot loader should make sure not to use memory |
| 86 | above the 0x9A000 point; too many BIOSes will break above that point. |
| 87 | |
| 88 | |
| 89 | **** THE REAL-MODE KERNEL HEADER |
| 90 | |
| 91 | In the following text, and anywhere in the kernel boot sequence, "a |
| 92 | sector" refers to 512 bytes. It is independent of the actual sector |
| 93 | size of the underlying medium. |
| 94 | |
| 95 | The first step in loading a Linux kernel should be to load the |
| 96 | real-mode code (boot sector and setup code) and then examine the |
| 97 | following header at offset 0x01f1. The real-mode code can total up to |
| 98 | 32K, although the boot loader may choose to load only the first two |
| 99 | sectors (1K) and then examine the bootup sector size. |
| 100 | |
| 101 | The header looks like: |
| 102 | |
| 103 | Offset Proto Name Meaning |
| 104 | /Size |
| 105 | |
| 106 | 01F1/1 ALL setup_sects The size of the setup in sectors |
| 107 | 01F2/2 ALL root_flags If set, the root is mounted readonly |
| 108 | 01F4/2 ALL syssize DO NOT USE - for bootsect.S use only |
| 109 | 01F6/2 ALL swap_dev DO NOT USE - obsolete |
| 110 | 01F8/2 ALL ram_size DO NOT USE - for bootsect.S use only |
| 111 | 01FA/2 ALL vid_mode Video mode control |
| 112 | 01FC/2 ALL root_dev Default root device number |
| 113 | 01FE/2 ALL boot_flag 0xAA55 magic number |
| 114 | 0200/2 2.00+ jump Jump instruction |
| 115 | 0202/4 2.00+ header Magic signature "HdrS" |
| 116 | 0206/2 2.00+ version Boot protocol version supported |
| 117 | 0208/4 2.00+ realmode_swtch Boot loader hook (see below) |
| 118 | 020C/2 2.00+ start_sys The load-low segment (0x1000) (obsolete) |
| 119 | 020E/2 2.00+ kernel_version Pointer to kernel version string |
| 120 | 0210/1 2.00+ type_of_loader Boot loader identifier |
| 121 | 0211/1 2.00+ loadflags Boot protocol option flags |
| 122 | 0212/2 2.00+ setup_move_size Move to high memory size (used with hooks) |
| 123 | 0214/4 2.00+ code32_start Boot loader hook (see below) |
| 124 | 0218/4 2.00+ ramdisk_image initrd load address (set by boot loader) |
| 125 | 021C/4 2.00+ ramdisk_size initrd size (set by boot loader) |
| 126 | 0220/4 2.00+ bootsect_kludge DO NOT USE - for bootsect.S use only |
| 127 | 0224/2 2.01+ heap_end_ptr Free memory after setup end |
| 128 | 0226/2 N/A pad1 Unused |
| 129 | 0228/4 2.02+ cmd_line_ptr 32-bit pointer to the kernel command line |
| 130 | 022C/4 2.03+ initrd_addr_max Highest legal initrd address |
| 131 | |
| 132 | For backwards compatibility, if the setup_sects field contains 0, the |
| 133 | real value is 4. |
| 134 | |
| 135 | If the "HdrS" (0x53726448) magic number is not found at offset 0x202, |
| 136 | the boot protocol version is "old". Loading an old kernel, the |
| 137 | following parameters should be assumed: |
| 138 | |
| 139 | Image type = zImage |
| 140 | initrd not supported |
| 141 | Real-mode kernel must be located at 0x90000. |
| 142 | |
| 143 | Otherwise, the "version" field contains the protocol version, |
| 144 | e.g. protocol version 2.01 will contain 0x0201 in this field. When |
| 145 | setting fields in the header, you must make sure only to set fields |
| 146 | supported by the protocol version in use. |
| 147 | |
| 148 | The "kernel_version" field, if set to a nonzero value, contains a |
| 149 | pointer to a null-terminated human-readable kernel version number |
| 150 | string, less 0x200. This can be used to display the kernel version to |
| 151 | the user. This value should be less than (0x200*setup_sects). For |
| 152 | example, if this value is set to 0x1c00, the kernel version number |
| 153 | string can be found at offset 0x1e00 in the kernel file. This is a |
| 154 | valid value if and only if the "setup_sects" field contains the value |
| 155 | 14 or higher. |
| 156 | |
| 157 | Most boot loaders will simply load the kernel at its target address |
| 158 | directly. Such boot loaders do not need to worry about filling in |
| 159 | most of the fields in the header. The following fields should be |
| 160 | filled out, however: |
| 161 | |
| 162 | vid_mode: |
| 163 | Please see the section on SPECIAL COMMAND LINE OPTIONS. |
| 164 | |
| 165 | type_of_loader: |
| 166 | If your boot loader has an assigned id (see table below), enter |
| 167 | 0xTV here, where T is an identifier for the boot loader and V is |
| 168 | a version number. Otherwise, enter 0xFF here. |
| 169 | |
| 170 | Assigned boot loader ids: |
| 171 | 0 LILO |
| 172 | 1 Loadlin |
| 173 | 2 bootsect-loader |
| 174 | 3 SYSLINUX |
| 175 | 4 EtherBoot |
| 176 | 5 ELILO |
| 177 | 7 GRuB |
| 178 | 8 U-BOOT |
| 179 | |
| 180 | Please contact <hpa@zytor.com> if you need a bootloader ID |
| 181 | value assigned. |
| 182 | |
| 183 | loadflags, heap_end_ptr: |
| 184 | If the protocol version is 2.01 or higher, enter the |
| 185 | offset limit of the setup heap into heap_end_ptr and set the |
| 186 | 0x80 bit (CAN_USE_HEAP) of loadflags. heap_end_ptr appears to |
| 187 | be relative to the start of setup (offset 0x0200). |
| 188 | |
| 189 | setup_move_size: |
| 190 | When using protocol 2.00 or 2.01, if the real mode |
| 191 | kernel is not loaded at 0x90000, it gets moved there later in |
| 192 | the loading sequence. Fill in this field if you want |
| 193 | additional data (such as the kernel command line) moved in |
| 194 | addition to the real-mode kernel itself. |
| 195 | |
| 196 | ramdisk_image, ramdisk_size: |
| 197 | If your boot loader has loaded an initial ramdisk (initrd), |
| 198 | set ramdisk_image to the 32-bit pointer to the ramdisk data |
| 199 | and the ramdisk_size to the size of the ramdisk data. |
| 200 | |
| 201 | The initrd should typically be located as high in memory as |
| 202 | possible, as it may otherwise get overwritten by the early |
| 203 | kernel initialization sequence. However, it must never be |
| 204 | located above the address specified in the initrd_addr_max |
| 205 | field. The initrd should be at least 4K page aligned. |
| 206 | |
| 207 | cmd_line_ptr: |
| 208 | If the protocol version is 2.02 or higher, this is a 32-bit |
| 209 | pointer to the kernel command line. The kernel command line |
| 210 | can be located anywhere between the end of setup and 0xA0000. |
| 211 | Fill in this field even if your boot loader does not support a |
| 212 | command line, in which case you can point this to an empty |
| 213 | string (or better yet, to the string "auto".) If this field |
| 214 | is left at zero, the kernel will assume that your boot loader |
| 215 | does not support the 2.02+ protocol. |
| 216 | |
| 217 | ramdisk_max: |
| 218 | The maximum address that may be occupied by the initrd |
| 219 | contents. For boot protocols 2.02 or earlier, this field is |
| 220 | not present, and the maximum address is 0x37FFFFFF. (This |
| 221 | address is defined as the address of the highest safe byte, so |
| 222 | if your ramdisk is exactly 131072 bytes long and this field is |
| 223 | 0x37FFFFFF, you can start your ramdisk at 0x37FE0000.) |
| 224 | |
| 225 | |
| 226 | **** THE KERNEL COMMAND LINE |
| 227 | |
| 228 | The kernel command line has become an important way for the boot |
| 229 | loader to communicate with the kernel. Some of its options are also |
| 230 | relevant to the boot loader itself, see "special command line options" |
| 231 | below. |
| 232 | |
| 233 | The kernel command line is a null-terminated string up to 255 |
| 234 | characters long, plus the final null. |
| 235 | |
| 236 | If the boot protocol version is 2.02 or later, the address of the |
| 237 | kernel command line is given by the header field cmd_line_ptr (see |
| 238 | above.) |
| 239 | |
| 240 | If the protocol version is *not* 2.02 or higher, the kernel |
| 241 | command line is entered using the following protocol: |
| 242 | |
| 243 | At offset 0x0020 (word), "cmd_line_magic", enter the magic |
| 244 | number 0xA33F. |
| 245 | |
| 246 | At offset 0x0022 (word), "cmd_line_offset", enter the offset |
| 247 | of the kernel command line (relative to the start of the |
| 248 | real-mode kernel). |
| 249 | |
| 250 | The kernel command line *must* be within the memory region |
| 251 | covered by setup_move_size, so you may need to adjust this |
| 252 | field. |
| 253 | |
| 254 | |
| 255 | **** SAMPLE BOOT CONFIGURATION |
| 256 | |
| 257 | As a sample configuration, assume the following layout of the real |
| 258 | mode segment: |
| 259 | |
| 260 | 0x0000-0x7FFF Real mode kernel |
| 261 | 0x8000-0x8FFF Stack and heap |
| 262 | 0x9000-0x90FF Kernel command line |
| 263 | |
| 264 | Such a boot loader should enter the following fields in the header: |
| 265 | |
| 266 | unsigned long base_ptr; /* base address for real-mode segment */ |
| 267 | |
| 268 | if ( setup_sects == 0 ) { |
| 269 | setup_sects = 4; |
| 270 | } |
| 271 | |
| 272 | if ( protocol >= 0x0200 ) { |
| 273 | type_of_loader = <type code>; |
| 274 | if ( loading_initrd ) { |
| 275 | ramdisk_image = <initrd_address>; |
| 276 | ramdisk_size = <initrd_size>; |
| 277 | } |
| 278 | if ( protocol >= 0x0201 ) { |
| 279 | heap_end_ptr = 0x9000 - 0x200; |
| 280 | loadflags |= 0x80; /* CAN_USE_HEAP */ |
| 281 | } |
| 282 | if ( protocol >= 0x0202 ) { |
| 283 | cmd_line_ptr = base_ptr + 0x9000; |
| 284 | } else { |
| 285 | cmd_line_magic = 0xA33F; |
| 286 | cmd_line_offset = 0x9000; |
| 287 | setup_move_size = 0x9100; |
| 288 | } |
| 289 | } else { |
| 290 | /* Very old kernel */ |
| 291 | |
| 292 | cmd_line_magic = 0xA33F; |
| 293 | cmd_line_offset = 0x9000; |
| 294 | |
| 295 | /* A very old kernel MUST have its real-mode code |
| 296 | loaded at 0x90000 */ |
| 297 | |
| 298 | if ( base_ptr != 0x90000 ) { |
| 299 | /* Copy the real-mode kernel */ |
| 300 | memcpy(0x90000, base_ptr, (setup_sects+1)*512); |
| 301 | /* Copy the command line */ |
| 302 | memcpy(0x99000, base_ptr+0x9000, 256); |
| 303 | |
| 304 | base_ptr = 0x90000; /* Relocated */ |
| 305 | } |
| 306 | |
| 307 | /* It is recommended to clear memory up to the 32K mark */ |
| 308 | memset(0x90000 + (setup_sects+1)*512, 0, |
| 309 | (64-(setup_sects+1))*512); |
| 310 | } |
| 311 | |
| 312 | |
| 313 | **** LOADING THE REST OF THE KERNEL |
| 314 | |
| 315 | The non-real-mode kernel starts at offset (setup_sects+1)*512 in the |
| 316 | kernel file (again, if setup_sects == 0 the real value is 4.) It |
| 317 | should be loaded at address 0x10000 for Image/zImage kernels and |
| 318 | 0x100000 for bzImage kernels. |
| 319 | |
| 320 | The kernel is a bzImage kernel if the protocol >= 2.00 and the 0x01 |
| 321 | bit (LOAD_HIGH) in the loadflags field is set: |
| 322 | |
| 323 | is_bzImage = (protocol >= 0x0200) && (loadflags & 0x01); |
| 324 | load_address = is_bzImage ? 0x100000 : 0x10000; |
| 325 | |
| 326 | Note that Image/zImage kernels can be up to 512K in size, and thus use |
| 327 | the entire 0x10000-0x90000 range of memory. This means it is pretty |
| 328 | much a requirement for these kernels to load the real-mode part at |
| 329 | 0x90000. bzImage kernels allow much more flexibility. |
| 330 | |
| 331 | |
| 332 | **** SPECIAL COMMAND LINE OPTIONS |
| 333 | |
| 334 | If the command line provided by the boot loader is entered by the |
| 335 | user, the user may expect the following command line options to work. |
| 336 | They should normally not be deleted from the kernel command line even |
| 337 | though not all of them are actually meaningful to the kernel. Boot |
| 338 | loader authors who need additional command line options for the boot |
| 339 | loader itself should get them registered in |
| 340 | Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt to make sure they will not |
| 341 | conflict with actual kernel options now or in the future. |
| 342 | |
| 343 | vga=<mode> |
| 344 | <mode> here is either an integer (in C notation, either |
| 345 | decimal, octal, or hexadecimal) or one of the strings |
| 346 | "normal" (meaning 0xFFFF), "ext" (meaning 0xFFFE) or "ask" |
| 347 | (meaning 0xFFFD). This value should be entered into the |
| 348 | vid_mode field, as it is used by the kernel before the command |
| 349 | line is parsed. |
| 350 | |
| 351 | mem=<size> |
| 352 | <size> is an integer in C notation optionally followed by K, M |
| 353 | or G (meaning << 10, << 20 or << 30). This specifies the end |
| 354 | of memory to the kernel. This affects the possible placement |
| 355 | of an initrd, since an initrd should be placed near end of |
| 356 | memory. Note that this is an option to *both* the kernel and |
| 357 | the bootloader! |
| 358 | |
| 359 | initrd=<file> |
| 360 | An initrd should be loaded. The meaning of <file> is |
| 361 | obviously bootloader-dependent, and some boot loaders |
| 362 | (e.g. LILO) do not have such a command. |
| 363 | |
| 364 | In addition, some boot loaders add the following options to the |
| 365 | user-specified command line: |
| 366 | |
| 367 | BOOT_IMAGE=<file> |
| 368 | The boot image which was loaded. Again, the meaning of <file> |
| 369 | is obviously bootloader-dependent. |
| 370 | |
| 371 | auto |
| 372 | The kernel was booted without explicit user intervention. |
| 373 | |
| 374 | If these options are added by the boot loader, it is highly |
| 375 | recommended that they are located *first*, before the user-specified |
| 376 | or configuration-specified command line. Otherwise, "init=/bin/sh" |
| 377 | gets confused by the "auto" option. |
| 378 | |
| 379 | |
| 380 | **** RUNNING THE KERNEL |
| 381 | |
| 382 | The kernel is started by jumping to the kernel entry point, which is |
| 383 | located at *segment* offset 0x20 from the start of the real mode |
| 384 | kernel. This means that if you loaded your real-mode kernel code at |
| 385 | 0x90000, the kernel entry point is 9020:0000. |
| 386 | |
| 387 | At entry, ds = es = ss should point to the start of the real-mode |
| 388 | kernel code (0x9000 if the code is loaded at 0x90000), sp should be |
| 389 | set up properly, normally pointing to the top of the heap, and |
| 390 | interrupts should be disabled. Furthermore, to guard against bugs in |
| 391 | the kernel, it is recommended that the boot loader sets fs = gs = ds = |
| 392 | es = ss. |
| 393 | |
| 394 | In our example from above, we would do: |
| 395 | |
| 396 | /* Note: in the case of the "old" kernel protocol, base_ptr must |
| 397 | be == 0x90000 at this point; see the previous sample code */ |
| 398 | |
| 399 | seg = base_ptr >> 4; |
| 400 | |
| 401 | cli(); /* Enter with interrupts disabled! */ |
| 402 | |
| 403 | /* Set up the real-mode kernel stack */ |
| 404 | _SS = seg; |
| 405 | _SP = 0x9000; /* Load SP immediately after loading SS! */ |
| 406 | |
| 407 | _DS = _ES = _FS = _GS = seg; |
| 408 | jmp_far(seg+0x20, 0); /* Run the kernel */ |
| 409 | |
| 410 | If your boot sector accesses a floppy drive, it is recommended to |
| 411 | switch off the floppy motor before running the kernel, since the |
| 412 | kernel boot leaves interrupts off and thus the motor will not be |
| 413 | switched off, especially if the loaded kernel has the floppy driver as |
| 414 | a demand-loaded module! |
| 415 | |
| 416 | |
| 417 | **** ADVANCED BOOT TIME HOOKS |
| 418 | |
| 419 | If the boot loader runs in a particularly hostile environment (such as |
| 420 | LOADLIN, which runs under DOS) it may be impossible to follow the |
| 421 | standard memory location requirements. Such a boot loader may use the |
| 422 | following hooks that, if set, are invoked by the kernel at the |
| 423 | appropriate time. The use of these hooks should probably be |
| 424 | considered an absolutely last resort! |
| 425 | |
| 426 | IMPORTANT: All the hooks are required to preserve %esp, %ebp, %esi and |
| 427 | %edi across invocation. |
| 428 | |
| 429 | realmode_swtch: |
| 430 | A 16-bit real mode far subroutine invoked immediately before |
| 431 | entering protected mode. The default routine disables NMI, so |
| 432 | your routine should probably do so, too. |
| 433 | |
| 434 | code32_start: |
| 435 | A 32-bit flat-mode routine *jumped* to immediately after the |
| 436 | transition to protected mode, but before the kernel is |
| 437 | uncompressed. No segments, except CS, are set up; you should |
| 438 | set them up to KERNEL_DS (0x18) yourself. |
| 439 | |
| 440 | After completing your hook, you should jump to the address |
| 441 | that was in this field before your boot loader overwrote it. |