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linux-next/arch/x86/boot/compressed/efi_stub_32.S
Matt Fleming 291f36325f x86, efi: EFI boot stub support
There is currently a large divide between kernel development and the
development of EFI boot loaders. The idea behind this patch is to give
the kernel developers full control over the EFI boot process. As
H. Peter Anvin put it,

"The 'kernel carries its own stub' approach been very successful in
dealing with BIOS, and would make a lot of sense to me for EFI as
well."

This patch introduces an EFI boot stub that allows an x86 bzImage to
be loaded and executed by EFI firmware. The bzImage appears to the
firmware as an EFI application. Luckily there are enough free bits
within the bzImage header so that it can masquerade as an EFI
application, thereby coercing the EFI firmware into loading it and
jumping to its entry point. The beauty of this masquerading approach
is that both BIOS and EFI boot loaders can still load and run the same
bzImage, thereby allowing a single kernel image to work in any boot
environment.

The EFI boot stub supports multiple initrds, but they must exist on
the same partition as the bzImage. Command-line arguments for the
kernel can be appended after the bzImage name when run from the EFI
shell, e.g.

Shell> bzImage console=ttyS0 root=/dev/sdb initrd=initrd.img

v7:
 - Fix checkpatch warnings.

v6:

 - Try to allocate initrd memory just below hdr->inird_addr_max.

v5:

 - load_options_size is UTF-16, which needs dividing by 2 to convert
   to the corresponding ASCII size.

v4:

 - Don't read more than image->load_options_size

v3:

 - Fix following warnings when compiling CONFIG_EFI_STUB=n

   arch/x86/boot/tools/build.c: In function ‘main’:
   arch/x86/boot/tools/build.c:138:24: warning: unused variable ‘pe_header’
   arch/x86/boot/tools/build.c:138:15: warning: unused variable ‘file_sz’

 - As reported by Matthew Garrett, some Apple machines have GOPs that
   don't have hardware attached. We need to weed these out by
   searching for ones that handle the PCIIO protocol.

 - Don't allocate memory if no initrds are on cmdline
 - Don't trust image->load_options_size

Maarten Lankhorst noted:
 - Don't strip first argument when booted from efibootmgr
 - Don't allocate too much memory for cmdline
 - Don't update cmdline_size, the kernel considers it read-only
 - Don't accept '\n' for initrd names

v2:

 - File alignment was too large, was 8192 should be 512. Reported by
   Maarten Lankhorst on LKML.
 - Added UGA support for graphics
 - Use VIDEO_TYPE_EFI instead of hard-coded number.
 - Move linelength assignment until after we've assigned depth
 - Dynamically fill out AddressOfEntryPoint in tools/build.c
 - Don't use magic number for GDT/TSS stuff. Requested by Andi Kleen
 - The bzImage may need to be relocated as it may have been loaded at
   a high address address by the firmware. This was required to get my
   macbook booting because the firmware loaded it at 0x7cxxxxxx, which
   triggers this error in decompress_kernel(),

	if (heap > ((-__PAGE_OFFSET-(128<<20)-1) & 0x7fffffff))
		error("Destination address too large");

Cc: Mike Waychison <mikew@google.com>
Cc: Matthew Garrett <mjg@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Henrik Rydberg <rydberg@euromail.se>
Signed-off-by: Matt Fleming <matt.fleming@intel.com>
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/1321383097.2657.9.camel@mfleming-mobl1.ger.corp.intel.com
Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@linux.intel.com>
2011-12-12 14:26:10 -08:00

87 lines
2.3 KiB
ArmAsm

/*
* EFI call stub for IA32.
*
* This stub allows us to make EFI calls in physical mode with interrupts
* turned off. Note that this implementation is different from the one in
* arch/x86/platform/efi/efi_stub_32.S because we're _already_ in physical
* mode at this point.
*/
#include <linux/linkage.h>
#include <asm/page_types.h>
/*
* efi_call_phys(void *, ...) is a function with variable parameters.
* All the callers of this function assure that all the parameters are 4-bytes.
*/
/*
* In gcc calling convention, EBX, ESP, EBP, ESI and EDI are all callee save.
* So we'd better save all of them at the beginning of this function and restore
* at the end no matter how many we use, because we can not assure EFI runtime
* service functions will comply with gcc calling convention, too.
*/
.text
ENTRY(efi_call_phys)
/*
* 0. The function can only be called in Linux kernel. So CS has been
* set to 0x0010, DS and SS have been set to 0x0018. In EFI, I found
* the values of these registers are the same. And, the corresponding
* GDT entries are identical. So I will do nothing about segment reg
* and GDT, but change GDT base register in prelog and epilog.
*/
/*
* 1. Because we haven't been relocated by this point we need to
* use relative addressing.
*/
call 1f
1: popl %edx
subl $1b, %edx
/*
* 2. Now on the top of stack is the return
* address in the caller of efi_call_phys(), then parameter 1,
* parameter 2, ..., param n. To make things easy, we save the return
* address of efi_call_phys in a global variable.
*/
popl %ecx
movl %ecx, saved_return_addr(%edx)
/* get the function pointer into ECX*/
popl %ecx
movl %ecx, efi_rt_function_ptr(%edx)
/*
* 3. Call the physical function.
*/
call *%ecx
/*
* 4. Balance the stack. And because EAX contain the return value,
* we'd better not clobber it. We need to calculate our address
* again because %ecx and %edx are not preserved across EFI function
* calls.
*/
call 1f
1: popl %edx
subl $1b, %edx
movl efi_rt_function_ptr(%edx), %ecx
pushl %ecx
/*
* 10. Push the saved return address onto the stack and return.
*/
movl saved_return_addr(%edx), %ecx
pushl %ecx
ret
ENDPROC(efi_call_phys)
.previous
.data
saved_return_addr:
.long 0
efi_rt_function_ptr:
.long 0