haiku/headers/private/kernel/arch/x86/arch_kernel.h

87 lines
2.8 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright 2004-2008, Haiku Inc. All rights reserved.
* Distributed under the terms of the MIT license.
*
* Copyright 2001-2002, Travis Geiselbrecht. All rights reserved.
* Distributed under the terms of the NewOS License.
*/
#ifndef _KERNEL_ARCH_x86_KERNEL_H
#define _KERNEL_ARCH_x86_KERNEL_H
#ifndef _ASSEMBLER
# include <arch/cpu.h>
#endif
#ifdef _BOOT_MODE
// 32-bit and 64-bit kernel load addresses.
#define KERNEL_LOAD_BASE 0x80000000
#define KERNEL_LOAD_BASE_64_BIT 0xffffffff80000000ll
#elif defined(__x86_64__)
// Base of the kernel address space.
// KERNEL_BASE is the base of the kernel address space. This differs from the
// address where the kernel is loaded to: the kernel is loaded in the top 2GB
// of the virtual address space as required by GCC's kernel code model. The
// whole kernel address space is the top 512GB of the address space.
#define KERNEL_BASE 0xffffff8000000000
#define KERNEL_SIZE 0x8000000000
#define KERNEL_TOP (KERNEL_BASE + (KERNEL_SIZE - 1))
#define KERNEL_LOAD_BASE 0xffffffff80000000
// Kernel physical memory map area.
#define KERNEL_PMAP_BASE 0xffffff0000000000
#define KERNEL_PMAP_SIZE 0x8000000000
// Userspace address space layout.
// There is a 2MB hole just before the end of the bottom half of the address
// space. This means that if userland passes in a buffer that crosses into the
// uncanonical address region, it will be caught through a page fault.
#define USER_BASE 0x0
#define USER_BASE_ANY 0x100000
#define USER_SIZE (0x800000000000 - 0x200000)
#define USER_TOP (USER_BASE + (USER_SIZE - 1))
#define KERNEL_USER_DATA_BASE 0x7fffefff0000
#define USER_STACK_REGION 0x7ffff0000000
#define USER_STACK_REGION_SIZE ((USER_TOP - USER_STACK_REGION) + 1)
#else // __x86_64__
// memory layout
#define KERNEL_BASE 0x80000000
#define KERNEL_SIZE 0x80000000
#define KERNEL_TOP (KERNEL_BASE + (KERNEL_SIZE - 1))
/* User space layout is a little special:
* The user space does not completely cover the space not covered by the
* kernel. There is a gap of 64kb between the user and kernel space. The 64kb
* region assures a user space thread cannot pass a buffer into the kernel as
* part of a syscall that would cross into kernel space.
* Furthermore no areas are placed in the lower 1Mb unless the application
* explicitly requests it to find null pointer references.
* TODO: introduce the 1Mb lower barrier again - it's only used for vm86 mode,
* and this should be moved into the kernel (and address space) completely.
*/
#define USER_BASE 0x0
#define USER_BASE_ANY 0x100000
#define USER_SIZE (KERNEL_BASE - 0x10000)
#define USER_TOP (USER_BASE + (USER_SIZE - 1))
#define KERNEL_USER_DATA_BASE 0x6fff0000
#define USER_STACK_REGION 0x70000000
#define USER_STACK_REGION_SIZE ((USER_TOP - USER_STACK_REGION) + 1)
#endif // __x86_64__
#endif // _KERNEL_ARCH_x86_KERNEL_H