#include #include #include #include /* * The following code and data reboots the machine by switching to real * mode and jumping to the BIOS reset entry point, as if the CPU has * really been reset. The previous version asked the keyboard * controller to pulse the CPU reset line, which is more thorough, but * doesn't work with at least one type of 486 motherboard. It is easy * to stop this code working; hence the copious comments. * * This code is called with the restart type (0 = BIOS, 1 = APM) in %eax. */ .section ".x86_trampoline","a" .balign 16 .code32 ENTRY(machine_real_restart_asm) r_base = . /* Get our own relocated address */ call 1f 1: popl %ebx subl $(1b - r_base), %ebx /* Compute the equivalent real-mode segment */ movl %ebx, %ecx shrl $4, %ecx /* Patch post-real-mode segment jump */ movw (dispatch_table - r_base)(%ebx,%eax,2),%ax movw %ax, (101f - r_base)(%ebx) movw %cx, (102f - r_base)(%ebx) /* Set up the IDT for real mode. */ lidtl (machine_real_restart_idt - r_base)(%ebx) /* * Set up a GDT from which we can load segment descriptors for real * mode. The GDT is not used in real mode; it is just needed here to * prepare the descriptors. */ lgdtl (machine_real_restart_gdt - r_base)(%ebx) /* * Load the data segment registers with 16-bit compatible values */ movl $16, %ecx movl %ecx, %ds movl %ecx, %es movl %ecx, %fs movl %ecx, %gs movl %ecx, %ss ljmpl $8, $1f - r_base /* * This is 16-bit protected mode code to disable paging and the cache, * switch to real mode and jump to the BIOS reset code. * * The instruction that switches to real mode by writing to CR0 must be * followed immediately by a far jump instruction, which set CS to a * valid value for real mode, and flushes the prefetch queue to avoid * running instructions that have already been decoded in protected * mode. * * Clears all the flags except ET, especially PG (paging), PE * (protected-mode enable) and TS (task switch for coprocessor state * save). Flushes the TLB after paging has been disabled. Sets CD and * NW, to disable the cache on a 486, and invalidates the cache. This * is more like the state of a 486 after reset. I don't know if * something else should be done for other chips. * * More could be done here to set up the registers as if a CPU reset had * occurred; hopefully real BIOSs don't assume much. This is not the * actual BIOS entry point, anyway (that is at 0xfffffff0). * * Most of this work is probably excessive, but it is what is tested. */ .code16 1: xorl %ecx, %ecx movl %cr0, %eax andl $0x00000011, %eax orl $0x60000000, %eax movl %eax, %cr0 movl %ecx, %cr3 movl %cr0, %edx andl $0x60000000, %edx /* If no cache bits -> no wbinvd */ jz 2f wbinvd 2: andb $0x10, %al movl %eax, %cr0 .byte 0xea /* ljmpw */ 101: .word 0 /* Offset */ 102: .word 0 /* Segment */ bios: ljmpw $0xf000, $0xfff0 apm: movw $0x1000, %ax movw %ax, %ss movw $0xf000, %sp movw $0x5307, %ax movw $0x0001, %bx movw $0x0003, %cx int $0x15 END(machine_real_restart_asm) .balign 16 /* These must match