The UEFI spec specifically calls out memory types with the high bit set
as being available for OS loaders' custom use. However, it seems many
UEFI firmware implementations don't handle this well. (Virtualbox, and
the firmware on my Intel NUC and Dell XPS laptop to name a few.)
So sadly since we can't rely on this feature of UEFI in all cases, we
can't use it at all. Instead, treat _all_ memory tagged as EfiLoaderData
as possibly containing data that's been passed to the OS by the
bootloader and don't free it yet.
This will need to be followed up with a change that copies anything we
need to save and frees this memory.
See: https://github.com/kiznit/rainbow-os/blob/master/boot/machine/efi/README.md
After exiting UEFI, the bootloader had no way of displaying status to
the user. Now it will display a series of small boxes as a progress bar
along the bottom of the screen if a framebuffer exists. Errors or
warnings during a step will cause that step's box to turn red or orange,
and display bars above it to signal the error code.
This caused the simplification of the error handling system (which was
mostly just calling status_line::fail) and added different types of
status objects.
Remove ELF and initrd loading from the kernel. The bootloader now loads
the initial programs, as it does with the kernel. Other files that were
in the initrd are now on the ESP, and non-program files are just passed
as modules.
The bootloader was previously just passing the memory map as a module,
but the memory map is important enough to want a direct pointer, instead
of having to search the modules.
* When using the non-allocating version of `get_uefi_mappings` the
length was not getting set. Reworked this function.
* Having `build_kernel_mem_map` from `bootloader_main_uefi` caused it to
get an out of date map key. Moved this function into `efi_main` right
before exiting boot services.
Set up initial page tables for both the offset-mapped area and the
loaded kernel code and data.
* Got rid of the `loaded_elf` struct - the loader now runs after the
initial PML4 is created and maps the ELF sections itself.
* Copied in the `page_table` and `page_table_indices` from the kernel,
still need to clean this up and extract it into shared code.
* Added `page_table_cache` to the kernel args to pass along free pages
that can be used for initial page tables.
Tags: paging
The `build_kernel_mem_map` function now calls `get_uefi_mappings`
itself, instead of having the efi map passed in. `get_uefi_mappings`
also now takes a `bool allocate` to direct it to actually allocate
the map or not. If it doesn't, it instead just returns the size of
the map and the metadata - which `build_kernel_mem_map` uses to decide
how much space to first allocate for the kernel's map.
Exiting boot services can't actually be done from inside
`bootloader_uefi_main`, because there are objects in that scope that run
code requiring boot services in their destructors.
Also added `support.cpp` with `memcpy` because clang will emit
references to `memcpy` even in freestanding mode.
Added a `debug_break` function to allow for faking breakpoints when
connecting to the bootloader with GDB.
Tags: debug
The `get_mappings()` function was getting too large, and some of its
output is needed by more than just the building of the kernel map. Split
it out into two.
Tags: boot memory
Removed the frame allocation logic from page_manager and replaced it
with using an instance of frame_allocator instead. This had several
major ripple effects:
- memory_initalize() had to change to support this new world
- Where to map used blocks is now passed as a flag, since blocks don't
track their virtual address anymore
- Instead of the complicated "find N contiguous pages that can be
mapped in with one page table", we now just have the bootloader give
us some (currently 64) pages to use both for tables and scratch
space.
- frame_allocator initialization was split into two steps to allow
mapping used blocks before std::move()ing them over