If you have read my previous [blog posts](http://0xax.blogspot.com/search/label/asm), you can see that sometime ago I started to get involved with low-level programming. I wrote some posts about x86_64 assembly programming for Linux. At the same time, I started to dive into the Linux source code. I have a great interest in understanding how low-level things work, how programs run on my computer, how they are located in memory, how the kernel manages processes and memory, how the network stack works on low-level and many many other things. So, I decided to write yet another series of posts about the Linux kernel for **x86_64**.
Note that I'm not a professional kernel hacker and I don't write code for the kernel at work. It's just a hobby. I just like low-level stuff, and it is interesting for me to see how these things work. So if you notice anything confusing, or if you have any questions/remarks, ping me on twitter [0xAX](https://twitter.com/0xAX), drop me an [email](anotherworldofworld@gmail.com) or just create an [issue](https://github.com/0xAX/linux-insides/issues/new). I appreciate it. All posts will also be accessible at [linux-insides](https://github.com/0xAX/linux-insides) and if you find something wrong with my English or the post content, feel free to send a pull request.
Anyway, if you just start to learn some tools, I will try to explain some parts during this and the following posts. Ok, simple introduction finishes and now we can start to dive into the kernel and low-level stuff.
Despite that this is a series of posts about the Linux kernel, we will not start from the kernel code (at least not in this paragraph). Ok, you press the magic power button on your laptop or desktop computer and it startes to work. After the motherboard sends a signal to the [power supply](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_supply), the power supply provides the computer with the proper amount of electricity. Once the motherboard receives the [power good signal](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_good_signal), it tries to start the CPU. The CPU resets all leftover data in its registers and sets up predefined values for each of them.
The processor starts working in [real mode](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_mode). Let's back up a little to try and understand memory segmentation in this mode. Real mode is supported on all x86-compatible processors, from the [8086](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_8086) all the way to the modern Intel 64-bit CPUs. The 8086 processor has a 20-bit address bus, which means that it could work with 0-2^20 bytes address space (1 megabyte). But it only has 16-bit registers, and with 16-bit registers the maximum address is 2^16 or 0xffff (64 kilobytes). [Memory segmentation](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_segmentation) is used to make use of all the address space available. All memory is divided into small, fixed-size segments of 65535 bytes, or 64 KB. Since we cannot address memory above 64 KB with 16 bit registers, an alternate method is devised. An address consists of two parts: the beginning address of the segment and an offset from this address. To get a physical address in memory, we need to multiply the segment part by 16 and add the offset part:
which is 65519 bytes over first megabyte. Since only one megabyte is accessible in real mode, `0x10ffef` becomes `0x00ffef` with disabled [A20](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A20_line).
`CS` register consists of two parts: the visible segment selector and hidden base address. We know predefined `CS` base and `IP` value, so the logical address will be:
We get `0xfffffff0` which is 4GB - 16 bytes. This point is called the [Reset vector](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reset_vector). This is the memory location at which the CPU expects to find the first instruction to execute after reset. It contains a [jump](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JMP_%28x86_instruction%29) instruction which usually points to the BIOS entry point. For example, if we look in the [coreboot](http://www.coreboot.org/) source code, we see:
Here we can see the jump instruction [opcode](http://ref.x86asm.net/coder32.html#xE9) - 0xe9 to the address `_start - ( . + 2)`, and we can see that the `reset` section is 16 bytes and starts at `0xfffffff0`:
Now the BIOS starts: after initializing and checking the hardware, it needs to find a bootable device. A boot order is stored in the BIOS configuration, controlling which devices the kernel attempts to boot from. When attempting to boot from a hard drive, the BIOS tries to find a boot sector. On hard drives partitioned with an MBR partition layout, the boot sector is stored in the first 446 bytes of the first sector (which is 512 bytes). The final two bytes of the first sector are `0x55` and `0xaa`, which signals the BIOS that this device is bootable. For example:
This will instruct [QEMU](http://qemu.org) to use the `boot` binary we just built as a disk image. Since the binary generated by the assembly code above fulfills the requirements of the boot sector (the origin is set to `0x7c00`, and we end with the magic sequence), QEMU will treat the binary as the master boot record(MBR) of a disk image.
In this example we can see that the code will be executed in 16 bit real mode and will start at 0x7c00 in memory. After starting it calls the [0x10](http://www.ctyme.com/intr/rb-0106.htm) interrupt which just prints the `!` symbol. It fills the rest of the 510 bytes with zeros and finishes with the two magic bytes `0xaa` and `0x55`.
A real-world boot sector has code to continue the boot process and the partition table instead of a bunch of 0's and an exclamation mark :) From this point onwards, BIOS hands over control to the bootloader.
The same as mentioned before. We have only 16 bit general purpose registers, the maximum value of a 16 bit register is `0xffff`, so if we take the largest values, the result will be:
Where `0x10ffef` is equal to `1MB + 64KB - 16b`. But a [8086](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_8086) processor, which is the first processor with real mode, has a 20 bit address line and `2^20 = 1048576` is 1MB. This means the actual memory available is 1MB.
In the beginning of this post I wrote that the first instruction executed by the CPU is located at address `0xFFFFFFF0`, which is much larger than `0xFFFFF` (1MB). How can the CPU access this in real mode? This is in the [coreboot](http://www.coreboot.org/Developer_Manual/Memory_map) documentation:
There are a number of bootloaders that can boot Linux, such as [GRUB 2](https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/) and [syslinux](http://www.syslinux.org/wiki/index.php/The_Syslinux_Project). The Linux kernel has a [Boot protocol](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/Documentation/x86/boot.txt) which specifies the requirements for bootloaders to implement Linux support. This example will describe GRUB 2.
Now that the BIOS has chosen a boot device and transferred control to the boot sector code, execution starts from [boot.img](http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=grub.git;a=blob;f=grub-core/boot/i386/pc/boot.S;hb=HEAD). This code is very simple due to the limited amount of space available, and contains a pointer which is used to jump to the location of GRUB 2's core image. The core image begins with [diskboot.img](http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=grub.git;a=blob;f=grub-core/boot/i386/pc/diskboot.S;hb=HEAD), which is usually stored immediately after the first sector in the unused space before the first partition. The above code loads the rest of the core image into memory, which contains GRUB 2's kernel and drivers for handling filesystems. After loading the rest of the core image, it executes [grub_main](http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=grub.git;a=blob;f=grub-core/kern/main.c).
`grub_main` initializes the console, gets the base address for modules, sets the root device, loads/parses the grub configuration file, loads modules etc. At the end of execution, `grub_main` moves grub to normal mode. `grub_normal_execute` (from `grub-core/normal/main.c`) completes the last preparation and shows a menu to select an operating system. When we select one of the grub menu entries, `grub_menu_execute_entry` runs, which executes the grub `boot` command, booting the selected operating system.
As we can read in the kernel boot protocol, the bootloader must read and fill some fields of the kernel setup header, which starts at `0x01f1` offset from the kernel setup code. The kernel header [arch/x86/boot/header.S](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/header.S) starts from:
The bootloader must fill this and the rest of the headers (only marked as `write` in the Linux boot protocol, for example [this](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/Documentation/x86/boot.txt#L354)) with values which it either got from command line or calculated. We will not see a description and explanation of all fields of the kernel setup header, we will get back to that when the kernel uses them. You can find a description of all fields in the [boot protocol](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/Documentation/x86/boot.txt#L156).
The bootloader has now loaded the Linux kernel into memory, filled the header fields and jumped to it. Now we can move directly to the kernel setup code.
Finally we are in the kernel. Technically the kernel hasn't run yet, we need to set up the kernel, memory manager, process manager etc first. Kernel setup execution starts from [arch/x86/boot/header.S](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/header.S) at [_start](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/header.S#L293). It is a little strange at first sight, as there are several instructions before it.
Actually `header.S` starts from [MZ](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOS_MZ_executable) (see image above), error message printing and following [PE](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portable_Executable) header:
It needs this to load an operating system with [UEFI](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_Extensible_Firmware_Interface). We won't see how this works right now, we'll see this in one of the next chapters.
The bootloader (grub2 and others) knows about this point (`0x200` offset from `MZ`) and makes a jump directly to this point, despite the fact that `header.S` starts from `.bstext` section which prints an error message:
Here we can see a `jmp` instruction opcode - `0xeb` to the `start_of_setup-1f` point. `Nf` notation means `2f` refers to the next local `2:` label. In our case it is label `1` which goes right after jump. It contains the rest of the setup [header](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/Documentation/x86/boot.txt#L156). Right after the setup header we see the `.entrytext` section which starts at the `start_of_setup` label.
Actually this is the first code that runs (aside from the previous jump instruction of course). After the kernel setup got the control from the bootloader, the first `jmp` instruction is located at `0x200` (first 512 bytes) offset from the start of the kernel real mode. This we can read in the Linux kernel boot protocol and also see in the grub2 source code:
As I wrote earlier, grub2 loads kernel setup code at address `0x10000` and `cs` at `0x1020` because execution doesn't start from the start of file, but from:
`jump`, which is at 512 bytes offset from the [4d 5a](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/header.S#L47). It also needs to align `cs` from `0x10200` to `0x10000` as all other segment registers. After that we set up the stack:
push `ds` value to stack, and address of [6](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/header.S#L494) label and execute `lretw` instruction. When we call `lretw`, it loads address of label `6` into the [instruction pointer](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Program_counter) register and `cs` with value of `ds`. After this we will have `ds` and `cs` with the same values.
Actually, almost all of the setup code is preparation for the C language environment in real mode. The next [step](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/header.S#L467) is checking of `ss` register value and make a correct stack if `ss` is wrong:
Here we can see aligning of `dx` (contains `sp` given by bootloader) to 4 bytes and checking whether it is zero. If it is zero, we put `0xfffc` (4 byte aligned address before maximum segment size - 64 KB) in `dx`. If it is not zero we continue to use `sp` given by the bootloader (0xf7f4 in my case). After this we put the `ax` value to `ss` which stores the correct segment address of `0x10000` and sets up a correct `sp`. We now have a correct stack:
2. In the second scenario, (`ss` != `ds`). First of all put the [_end](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/setup.ld#L52) (address of end of setup code) value in `dx` and check the `loadflags` header field with the `testb` instruction too see whether we can use heap or not. [loadflags](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/header.S#L321) is a bitmask header which is defined as:
If the `CAN_USE_HEAP` bit is set, put `heap_end_ptr` in `dx` which points to `_end` and add `STACK_SIZE` (minimal stack size - 512 bytes) to it. After this if `dx` is not carry (it will not be carry, dx = _end + 512), jump to label `2` as in the previous case and make a correct stack.
The last two steps that need to happen before we can jump to the main C code, are setting up the [BSS](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.bss) area and checking the "magic" signature. First, signature checking:
This simply compares the [setup_sig](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/setup.ld#L39) with the magic number `0x5a5aaa55`. If they are not equal, a fatal error is reported.
If the magic number matches, knowing we have a set of correct segment registers and a stack, we only need to set up the BSS section before jumping into the C code.
The BSS section is used to store statically allocated, uninitialized data. Linux carefully ensures this area of memory is first blanked, using the following code:
First of all the [__bss_start](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/setup.ld#L47) address is moved into `di` and the `_end + 3` address (+3 - aligns to 4 bytes) is moved into `cx`. The `eax` register is cleared (using an `xor` instruction), and the bss section size (`cx`-`di`) is calculated and put into `cx`. Then, `cx` is divided by four (the size of a 'word'), and the `stosl` instruction is repeatedly used, storing the value of `eax` (zero) into the address pointed to by `di`, automatically increasing `di` by four (this occurs until `cx` reaches zero). The net effect of this code is that zeros are written through all words in memory from `__bss_start` to `_end`:
The `main()` function is located in [arch/x86/boot/main.c](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/arch/x86/boot/main.c). What this does, you can read in the next part.
This is the end of the first part about Linux kernel internals. If you have questions or suggestions, ping me in twitter [0xAX](https://twitter.com/0xAX), drop me [email](anotherworldofworld@gmail.com) or just create [issue](https://github.com/0xAX/linux-internals/issues/new). In the next part we will see first C code which executes in Linux kernel setup, implementation of memory routines as `memset`, `memcpy`, `earlyprintk` implementation and early console initialization and many more.
**Please note that English is not my first language and I am really sorry for any inconvenience. If you found any mistakes please send me PR to [linux-internals](https://github.com/0xAX/linux-internals).**