लिनक्स/linux-0.01.tar/init/main.c
< लिनक्स | linux-0.01.tar
#define __LIBRARY__ #include <unistd.h> #include <time.h> /* * we need this inline - forking from kernel space will result * in NO COPY ON WRITE (!!!), until an execve is executed. This * is no problem, but for the stack. This is handled by not letting * main() use the stack at all after fork(). Thus, no function * calls - which means inline code for fork too, as otherwise we * would use the stack upon exit from 'fork()'. * * Actually only pause and fork are needed inline, so that there * won't be any messing with the stack from main(), but we define * some others too. */ static inline _syscall0(int,fork) static inline _syscall0(int,pause) static inline _syscall0(int,setup) static inline _syscall0(int,sync) #include <linux/tty.h> #include <linux/sched.h> #include <linux/head.h> #include <asm/system.h> #include <asm/io.h> #include <stddef.h> #include <stdarg.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <fcntl.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <linux/fs.h> static char printbuf[1024]; extern int vsprintf(); extern void init(void); extern void hd_init(void); extern long kernel_mktime(struct tm * tm); extern long startup_time; /* * Yeah, yeah, it's ugly, but I cannot find how to do this correctly * and this seems to work. I anybody has more info on the real-time * clock I'd be interested. Most of this was trial and error, and some * bios-listing reading. Urghh. */ #define CMOS_READ(addr) ({ \ outb_p(0x80|addr,0x70); \ inb_p(0x71); \ }) #define BCD_TO_BIN(val) ((val)=((val)&15) + ((val)>>4)*10) static void time_init(void) { struct tm time; do { time.tm_sec = CMOS_READ(0); time.tm_min = CMOS_READ(2); time.tm_hour = CMOS_READ(4); time.tm_mday = CMOS_READ(7); time.tm_mon = CMOS_READ(8)-1; time.tm_year = CMOS_READ(9); } while (time.tm_sec != CMOS_READ(0)); BCD_TO_BIN(time.tm_sec); BCD_TO_BIN(time.tm_min); BCD_TO_BIN(time.tm_hour); BCD_TO_BIN(time.tm_mday); BCD_TO_BIN(time.tm_mon); BCD_TO_BIN(time.tm_year); startup_time = kernel_mktime(&time); } void main(void) /* This really IS void, no error here. */ { /* The startup routine assumes (well, ...) this */ /* * Interrupts are still disabled. Do necessary setups, then * enable them */ time_init(); tty_init(); trap_init(); sched_init(); buffer_init(); hd_init(); sti(); move_to_user_mode(); if (!fork()) { /* we count on this going ok */ init(); } /* * NOTE!! For any other task 'pause()' would mean we have to get a * signal to awaken, but task0 is the sole exception (see 'schedule()') * as task 0 gets activated at every idle moment (when no other tasks * can run). For task0 'pause()' just means we go check if some other * task can run, and if not we return here. */ for(;;) pause(); } static int printf(const char *fmt, ...) { va_list args; int i; va_start(args, fmt); write(1,printbuf,i=vsprintf(printbuf, fmt, args)); va_end(args); return i; } static char * argv[] = { "-",NULL }; static char * envp[] = { "HOME=/usr/root", NULL }; void init(void) { int i,j; setup(); if (!fork()) _exit(execve("/bin/update",NULL,NULL)); (void) open("/dev/tty0",O_RDWR,0); (void) dup(0); (void) dup(0); printf("%d buffers = %d bytes buffer space\n\r",NR_BUFFERS, NR_BUFFERS*BLOCK_SIZE); printf(" Ok.\n\r"); if ((i=fork())<0) printf("Fork failed in init\r\n"); else if (!i) { close(0);close(1);close(2); setsid(); (void) open("/dev/tty0",O_RDWR,0); (void) dup(0); (void) dup(0); _exit(execve("/bin/sh",argv,envp)); } j=wait(&i); printf("child %d died with code %04x\n",j,i); sync(); _exit(0); /* NOTE! _exit, not exit() */ }