2 startup.asm listing, Ven in example 9-1 – Intel IA-32 User Manual

Page 397

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Vol. 3A 9-23

PROCESSOR MANAGEMENT AND INITIALIZATION

9.10.2

STARTUP.ASM Listing

Example 9-1 provides high-level sample code designed to move the processor into protected
mode. This listing does not include any opcode and offset information.

Example 9-1. STARTUP.ASM

MS-DOS* 5.0(045-N) 386(TM) MACRO ASSEMBLER STARTUP 09:44:51 08/19/92
PAGE 1

MS-DOS 5.0(045-N) 386(TM) MACRO ASSEMBLER V4.0, ASSEMBLY OF MODULE
STARTUP

OBJECT MODULE PLACED IN startup.obj

ASSEMBLER INVOKED BY: f:\386tools\ASM386.EXE startup.a58 pw (132 )

LINE SOURCE

1 NAME STARTUP

2

3

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

4 ;

5 ; ASSUMPTIONS:

6 ;

7 ; 1. The bottom 64K of memory is ram, and can be used for

8 ; scratch space by this module.

9 ;

10 ; 2. The system has sufficient free usable ram to copy the

11 ; initial GDT, IDT, and TSS

12 ;

13 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

14

15 ; configuration data - must match with build definition

16

17 CS_BASE EQU 0FFFF0000H

18

19 ; CS_BASE is the linear address of the segment STARTUP_CODE

20 ; - this is specified in the build language file

21

22 RAM_START EQU 400H

23

24 ; RAM_START is the start of free, usable ram in the linear

25 ; memory space. The GDT, IDT, and initial TSS will be

26 ; copied above this space, and a small data segment will be

27 ; discarded at this linear address. The 32-bit word at

28 ; RAM_START will contain the linear address of the first

29 ; free byte above the copied tables - this may be useful if

30 ; a memory manager is used.

31

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