From 16252da654800461e0e1c32697cb59f4cda15aa9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jens Rottmann Date: Tue, 27 Nov 2007 12:35:13 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] x86 setup: don't recalculate ss:esp unless really necessary In order to work around old LILO versions providing an invalid ss register, the current setup code always sets up a new stack, immediately following .bss and the heap. But this breaks LOADLIN. This rewrite of the workaround checks for an invalid stack (ss!=ds) first, and leaves ss:sp alone otherwise (apart from aligning esp). [hpa note: LOADLIN has a number of arbitrary hard-coded limits that are being pushed up against. Without some major revision of LOADLIN itself it will not be sustainable keeping it alive. This gives it another brief lease on life, however. This patch also helps the cmdline truncation problem with old versions of SYSLINUX.] Signed-off-by: Jens Rottmann Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin --- arch/x86/boot/header.S | 41 ++++++++++++++++------------------------- 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 25 deletions(-) diff --git a/arch/x86/boot/header.S b/arch/x86/boot/header.S index 6ef5a06..4cc5b04 100644 --- a/arch/x86/boot/header.S +++ b/arch/x86/boot/header.S @@ -236,39 +236,30 @@ start_of_setup: movw %ax, %es cld -# Apparently some ancient versions of LILO invoked the kernel -# with %ss != %ds, which happened to work by accident for the -# old code. If the CAN_USE_HEAP flag is set in loadflags, or -# %ss != %ds, then adjust the stack pointer. +# Apparently some ancient versions of LILO invoked the kernel with %ss != %ds, +# which happened to work by accident for the old code. Recalculate the stack +# pointer if %ss is invalid. Otherwise leave it alone, LOADLIN sets up the +# stack behind its own code, so we can't blindly put it directly past the heap. - # Smallest possible stack we can tolerate - movw $(_end+STACK_SIZE), %cx - - movw heap_end_ptr, %dx - addw $512, %dx - jnc 1f - xorw %dx, %dx # Wraparound - whole segment available -1: testb $CAN_USE_HEAP, loadflags - jnz 2f - - # No CAN_USE_HEAP movw %ss, %dx cmpw %ax, %dx # %ds == %ss? movw %sp, %dx - # If so, assume %sp is reasonably set, otherwise use - # the smallest possible stack. - jne 4f # -> Smallest possible stack... + je 2f # -> assume %sp is reasonably set + + # Invalid %ss, make up a new stack + movw $_end, %dx + testb $CAN_USE_HEAP, loadflags + jz 1f + movw heap_end_ptr, %dx +1: addw $STACK_SIZE, %dx + jnc 2f + xorw %dx, %dx # Prevent wraparound - # Make sure the stack is at least minimum size. Take a value - # of zero to mean "full segment." -2: +2: # Now %dx should point to the end of our stack space andw $~3, %dx # dword align (might as well...) jnz 3f movw $0xfffc, %dx # Make sure we're not zero -3: cmpw %cx, %dx - jnb 5f -4: movw %cx, %dx # Minimum value we can possibly use -5: movw %ax, %ss +3: movw %ax, %ss movzwl %dx, %esp # Clear upper half of %esp sti # Now we should have a working stack -- 1.8.2.3