27 KiB
The Limine Boot Protocol
The Limine boot protocol is a modern, minimal, fast, and extensible boot protocol, with a focus on backwards and forwards compatibility, created from the experience gained by working on the stivale boot protocols.
This file serves as the official centralised collection of features that the Limine boot protocol is composed of. Other bootloaders may support extra unofficial features, but it is strongly recommended to avoid fragmentation and submit new features by opening a pull request to this repository.
The limine.h file provides an implementation of all the structures and constants described in this document, for the C and C++ languages.
General Notes
All pointers are 64-bit wide. All pointers point to the object with the higher half direct map offset already added to them, unless otherwise noted.
The calling convention matches the SysV C ABI for the specific architecture.
Features
The protocol is centered around the concept of request/response - collectively named "features" - where the kernel requests some action or information from the bootloader, and the bootloader responds accordingly, if it is capable of doing so.
In C terms, a feature is composed of 2 structure: the request, and the response.
A request has 3 mandatory members at the beginning of the structure:
struct limine_example_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_example_response *response;
... optional members follow ...
};
id
- The ID of the request. This is an 8-byte aligned magic number that the bootloader will scan for inside the executable file to find requests. Requests may be located anywhere inside the executable as long as they are 8-byte aligned. There may only be 1 of the same request. The bootloader will refuse to boot an executable with multiple of the same request IDs. Alternatively, it is possible to provide a list of requests explicitly via an executable file section. See "Limine Requests Section".revision
- The revision of the request that the kernel provides. This is bumped whenever new members or functionality are added to the request structure. Bootloaders process requests in a backwards compatible manner, always. This means that if the bootloader does not support the revision of the request, it will process the request as if were the highest revision that the bootloader supports.response
- This field is filled in by the bootloader at load time, with a pointer to the response structure, if the request was successfully processed. If the request is unsupported or was not successfully processed, this field is left untouched, meaning that if it was set toNULL
, it will stay that way.
A response has only 1 mandatory member at the beginning of the structure:
struct limine_example_response {
uint64_t revision;
... optional members follow ...
};
revision
- Like for requests, bootloaders will instead mark responses with a revision number. This revision is not coupled between requests and responses, as they are bumped individually when new members are added or functionality is changed. Bootloaders will set the revision to the one they provide, and this is always backwards compatible, meaning higher revisions support all that lower revisions do.
This is all there is to features. For a list of official Limine features, read the "Feature List" section below.
Limine Requests Section
If the executable kernel file contains a .limine_reqs
section, the bootloader
will, instead of scanning the executable for requests, fetch the requests
from a NULL-terminated array of pointers to the provided requests, contained
inside said section.
Entry memory layout
The protocol mandates kernels to load themselves at or above
0xffffffff80000000
. Lower half kernels are not supported.
At handoff, the kernel will be properly loaded and mapped with appropriate
MMU permissions at the requested virtual memory address (provided it is at
or above 0xffffffff80000000
).
No specific physical memory placement is guaranteed. In order to determine where the kernel is loaded in physical memory, see the Kernel Address feature below.
Alongside the loaded kernel, the bootloader will set up memory mappings as such:
Base Physical Address - Size -> Virtual address
0x0000000000001000 - 4 GiB plus any additional memory map entry -> 0x0000000000001000
0x0000000000000000 - 4 GiB plus any additional memory map entry -> HHDM start
Where HHDM start is returned by the Higher Half Direct Map feature (see below). These mappings are supervisor, read, write, execute (-rwx).
The bootloader page tables are in bootloader-reclaimable memory (see Memory Map feature below), and their specific layout is undefined as long as they provide the above memory mappings.
If the kernel is a position independent executable, the bootloader is free to relocate it as it sees fit, potentially performing KASLR (as specified by the config).
Entry machine state
x86_64
rip
will be the entry point as defined as part of the executable file format,
unless the an Entry Point feature is requested (see below), in which case,
the value of rip
is going to be taken from there.
At entry all segment registers are loaded as 64 bit code/data segments, limits and bases are ignored since this is 64-bit mode.
The GDT register is loaded to point to a GDT, in bootloader-reserved memory, with at least the following entries, starting at offset 0:
- Null descriptor
- 16-bit code descriptor. Base =
0
, limit =0xffff
. Readable. - 16-bit data descriptor. Base =
0
, limit =0xffff
. Writable. - 32-bit code descriptor. Base =
0
, limit =0xffffffff
. Readable. - 32-bit data descriptor. Base =
0
, limit =0xffffffff
. Writable. - 64-bit code descriptor. Base and limit irrelevant. Readable.
- 64-bit data descriptor. Base and limit irrelevant. Writable.
The IDT is in an undefined state. Kernel must load its own.
IF flag, VM flag, and direction flag are cleared on entry. Other flags undefined.
PG is enabled (cr0
), PE is enabled (cr0
), PAE is enabled (cr4
),
WP is enabled (cr0
), LME is enabled (EFER
), NX is enabled (EFER
).
If 5-level paging is requested and available, then 5-level paging is enabled
(LA57 bit in cr4
).
The A20 gate is opened.
Legacy PIC and IO APIC IRQs are all masked.
If booted by EFI/UEFI, boot services are exited.
rsp
is set to point to a stack, in bootloader-reserved memory, which is
at least 64KiB (65536 bytes) in size, or the size specified in the Stack
Size Request (see below). An invalid return address of 0 is pushed
to the stack before jumping to the kernel.
All other general purpose registers are set to 0.
Feature List
Request IDs are composed of 4 64-bit unsigned integers, but the first 2 are common to every request:
#define LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC 0xc7b1dd30df4c8b88, 0x0a82e883a194f07b
Bootloader Info Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_BOOTLOADER_INFO_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0xf55038d8e2a1202f, 0x279426fcf5f59740 }
Request:
struct limine_bootloader_info_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_bootloader_info_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_bootloader_info_response {
uint64_t revision;
char *name;
char *version;
};
name
and version
are 0-terminated ASCII strings containing the name and
version of the loading bootloader.
Stack Size Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_STACK_SIZE_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x224ef0460a8e8926, 0xe1cb0fc25f46ea3d }
Request:
struct limine_stack_size_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_stack_size_response *response;
uint64_t stack_size;
};
stack_size
- The requested stack size (also used for SMP processors).
Response:
struct limine_stack_size_response {
uint64_t revision;
};
HHDM (Higher Half Direct Map) Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_HHDM_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x48dcf1cb8ad2b852, 0x63984e959a98244b }
Request:
struct limine_hhdm_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_hhdm_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_hhdm_response {
uint64_t revision;
uint64_t offset;
};
offset
- the virtual address offset of the beginning of the higher half direct map.
Terminal Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_TERMINAL_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x0785a0aea5d0750f, 0x1c1936fee0d6cf6e }
Request:
typedef void (*limine_terminal_callback)(struct limine_terminal *, uint64_t, uint64_t, uint64_t, uint64_t);
struct limine_terminal_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_terminal_response *response;
limine_terminal_callback callback;
};
callback
- Pointer to the callback function.
Response:
typedef void (*limine_terminal_write)(struct limine_terminal *terminal, const char *string, uint64_t length);
struct limine_terminal_response {
uint64_t revision;
uint64_t terminal_count;
struct limine_terminal **terminals;
limine_terminal_write write;
};
terminal_count
- How many terminals are present.terminals
- Pointer to an array ofterminal_count
pointers tostruct limine_terminal
structures.write
- Physical pointer to the terminal write() function. The function is not thread-safe, nor reentrant, per-terminal. This means multiple terminals may be called simultaneously, and multiple callbacks may be handled simultaneously. Theterminal
parameter points to thestruct limine_terminal
structure to use to output the string; thestring
parameter points to a string to print; thelength
paremeter contains the length, in bytes, of the string to print.
struct limine_terminal {
uint32_t columns;
uint32_t rows;
struct limine_framebuffer *framebuffer;
};
columns
androws
- Columns and rows provided by the terminal.framebuffer
- The framebuffer associated with this terminal.
Note: Omitting this request will cause the bootloader to not initialise the terminal service.
Terminal callback
The callback is a function that is part of the kernel, which is called by the
terminal during a write()
call whenever an event or escape sequence cannot
be handled by the bootloader's terminal alone, and the kernel may want to be
notified in order to handle it itself.
Returning from the callback will resume the write()
call which will return
to its caller normally.
Not returning from a callback may leave the terminal in an undefined state and cause issues.
The callback function has the following prototype:
void callback(struct limine_terminal *terminal, uint64_t type, uint64_t, uint64_t, uint64_t);
The terminal
argument is a pointer to the Limine terminal structure which
represents the terminal that caused the callback.
The purpose of the last 3 arguments changes depending on the type
argument.
The callback types are as follows:
LIMINE_TERMINAL_CB_DEC
- (type value:10
)
This callback is triggered whenever a DEC Private Mode (DECSET/DECRST)
sequence is encountered that the terminal cannot handle alone. The arguments
to this callback are: terminal
, type
, values_count
, values
, final
.
values_count
is a count of how many values are in the array pointed to by
values
. values
is a pointer to an array of uint32_t
values, which are
the values passed to the DEC private escape.
final
is the final character in the DEC private escape sequence (typically
l
or h
).
LIMINE_TERMINAL_CB_BELL
- (type value:20
)
This callback is triggered whenever a bell event is determined to be
necessary (such as when a bell character \a
is encountered). The arguments
to this callback are: terminal
, type
, unused1
, unused2
, unused3
.
LIMINE_TERMINAL_CB_PRIVATE_ID
- (type value:30
)
This callback is triggered whenever the kernel has to respond to a DEC
private identification request. The arguments to this callback are:
terminal
, type
, unused1
, unused2
, unused3
.
LIMINE_TERMINAL_CB_STATUS_REPORT
- (type value40
)
This callback is triggered whenever the kernel has to respond to a ECMA-48
status report request. The arguments to this callback are: terminal
,
type
, unused1
, unused2
, unused3
.
LIMINE_TERMINAL_CB_POS_REPORT
- (type value50
)
This callback is triggered whenever the kernel has to respond to a ECMA-48
cursor position report request. The arguments to this callback are:
terminal
, type
, x
, y
, unused3
. Where x
and y
represent the
cursor position at the time the callback is triggered.
LIMINE_TERMINAL_CB_KBD_LEDS
- (type value60
)
This callback is triggered whenever the kernel has to respond to a keyboard
LED state change request. The arguments to this callback are: terminal
,
type
, led_state
, unused2
, unused3
. led_state
can have one of the
following values: 0, 1, 2, or 3
. These values mean: clear all LEDs, set
scroll lock, set num lock, and set caps lock LED, respectively.
LIMINE_TERMINAL_CB_MODE
- (type value:70
)
This callback is triggered whenever an ECMA-48 Mode Switch sequence
is encountered that the terminal cannot handle alone. The arguments to this
callback are: terminal
, type
, values_count
, values
, final
.
values_count
is a count of how many values are in the array pointed to by
values
. values
is a pointer to an array of uint32_t
values, which are
the values passed to the mode switch escape.
final
is the final character in the mode switch escape sequence (typically
l
or h
).
LIMINE_TERMINAL_CB_LINUX
- (type value80
)
This callback is triggered whenever a private Linux escape sequence
is encountered that the terminal cannot handle alone. The arguments to this
callback are: terminal
, type
, values_count
, values
, unused3
.
values_count
is a count of how many values are in the array pointed to by
values
. values
is a pointer to an array of uint32_t
values, which are
the values passed to the Linux private escape.
Terminal context control
The write()
function can additionally be used to set and restore terminal
context, and refresh the terminal fully.
In order to achieve this, special values for the length
argument are
passed. These values are:
#define LIMINE_TERMINAL_CTX_SIZE ((uint64_t)(-1))
#define LIMINE_TERMINAL_CTX_SAVE ((uint64_t)(-2))
#define LIMINE_TERMINAL_CTX_RESTORE ((uint64_t)(-3))
#define LIMINE_TERMINAL_FULL_REFRESH ((uint64_t)(-4))
For CTX_SIZE
, the ptr
variable has to point to a location to which the
terminal will write a single uint64_t
which contains the size of the
terminal context.
For CTX_SAVE
and CTX_RESTORE
, the ptr
variable has to point to a
location to which the terminal will save or restore its context from,
respectively.
This location must have a size congruent to the value received from
CTX_SIZE
.
For FULL_REFRESH
, the ptr
variable is unused. This routine is to be used
after control of the framebuffer is taken over and the bootloader's terminal
has to fully repaint the framebuffer to avoid inconsistencies.
x86_64
Additionally, the kernel must ensure, when calling write()
, that:
-
Either the GDT provided by the bootloader is still properly loaded, or a custom GDT is loaded with at least the following descriptors in this specific order:
- Null descriptor
- 16-bit code descriptor. Base =
0
, limit =0xffff
. Readable. - 16-bit data descriptor. Base =
0
, limit =0xffff
. Writable. - 32-bit code descriptor. Base =
0
, limit =0xffffffff
. Readable. - 32-bit data descriptor. Base =
0
, limit =0xffffffff
. Writable. - 64-bit code descriptor. Base and limit irrelevant. Readable.
- 64-bit data descriptor. Base and limit irrelevant. Writable.
-
The currently loaded virtual address space is still the one provided at entry by the bootloader, or a custom virtual address space is loaded which identity maps the framebuffer memory region associated with the terminal, and all the bootloader reclaimable memory regions, with read, write, and execute permissions.
-
The routine is called by its physical address (the value of the function pointer is already physical), which should be identity mapped.
-
Bootloader-reclaimable memory entries are left untouched until after the kernel is done utilising bootloader-provided facilities (this terminal being one of them).
Notes regarding segment registers and FPU:
The values of the FS and GS segments are guaranteed preserved across the call. All other segment registers may have their "hidden" portion overwritten, but Limine guarantees that the "visible" portion is going to be restored to the one used at the time of call before returning.
No registers other than the segment registers and general purpose registers are going to be used. Especially, this means that there is no need to save and restore FPU, SSE, or AVX state when calling the terminal write function.
Terminal characteristics
The terminal should strive for Linux console compatibility.
Framebuffer Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_FRAMEBUFFER_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0xcbfe81d7dd2d1977, 0x063150319ebc9b71 }
Request:
struct limine_framebuffer_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_framebuffer_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_framebuffer_response {
uint64_t revision;
uint64_t framebuffer_count;
struct limine_framebuffer **framebuffers;
};
framebuffer_count
- How many framebuffers are present.framebuffers
- Pointer to an array offramebuffer_count
pointers tostruct limine_framebuffer
structures.
// Constants for `memory_model`
#define LIMINE_FRAMEBUFFER_RGB 1
struct limine_framebuffer {
void *address;
uint16_t width;
uint16_t height;
uint16_t pitch;
uint16_t bpp;
uint8_t memory_model;
uint8_t red_mask_size;
uint8_t red_mask_shift;
uint8_t green_mask_size;
uint8_t green_mask_shift;
uint8_t blue_mask_size;
uint8_t blue_mask_shift;
uint8_t unused;
uint64_t edid_size;
void *edid;
};
5-Level Paging Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_5_LEVEL_PAGING_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x94469551da9b3192, 0xebe5e86db7382888 }
Request:
struct limine_5_level_paging_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_5_level_paging_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_5_level_paging_response {
uint64_t revision;
};
Notes: The presence of this request will prompt the bootloader to turn on x86_64 5-level paging. It will not be turned on if this request is not present. If the response pointer is unchanged, 5-level paging is engaged.
SMP (multiprocessor) Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_SMP_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x95a67b819a1b857e, 0xa0b61b723b6a73e0 }
Request:
struct limine_smp_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_smp_response *response;
uint64_t flags;
};
flags
- Bit 0: Enable X2APIC, if possible.
Response:
struct limine_smp_response {
uint64_t revision;
uint32_t flags;
uint32_t bsp_lapic_id;
uint64_t cpu_count;
struct limine_smp_info **cpus;
};
flags
- Bit 0: X2APIC has been enabled.bsp_lapic_id
- The Local APIC ID of the bootstrap processor.cpu_count
- How many CPUs are present. It includes the bootstrap processor.cpus
- Pointer to an array ofcpu_count
pointers tostruct limine_smp_info
structures.
Notes: The presence of this request will prompt the bootloader to bootstrap the secondary processors. This will not be done if this request is not present.
struct limine_smp_info;
typedef void (*limine_goto_address)(struct limine_smp_info *);
struct limine_smp_info {
uint32_t processor_id;
uint32_t lapic_id;
uint64_t reserved;
limine_goto_address goto_address;
uint64_t extra_argument;
};
processor_id
- ACPI Processor UID as specified by the MADTlapic_id
- Local APIC ID of the processor as specified by the MADTgoto_address
- An atomic write to this field causes the parked CPU to jump to the written address, on a 64KiB (or Stack Size Request size) stack. A pointer to thestruct limine_smp_info
structure of the CPU is passed inRDI
. Other than that, the CPU state will be the same as described for the bootstrap processor. This field is unused for the structure describing the bootstrap processor.extra_argument
- A free for use field.
Memory Map Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_MEMMAP_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x67cf3d9d378a806f, 0xe304acdfc50c3c62 }
Request:
struct limine_memmap_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_memmap_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_memmap_response {
uint64_t revision;
uint64_t entry_count;
struct limine_memmap_entry **entries;
};
entry_count
- How many memory map entries are present.entries
- Pointer to an array ofentry_count
pointers tostruct limine_memmap_entry
structures.
// Constants for `type`
#define LIMINE_MEMMAP_USABLE 0
#define LIMINE_MEMMAP_RESERVED 1
#define LIMINE_MEMMAP_ACPI_RECLAIMABLE 2
#define LIMINE_MEMMAP_ACPI_NVS 3
#define LIMINE_MEMMAP_BAD_MEMORY 4
#define LIMINE_MEMMAP_BOOTLOADER_RECLAIMABLE 5
#define LIMINE_MEMMAP_KERNEL_AND_MODULES 6
#define LIMINE_MEMMAP_FRAMEBUFFER 7
struct limine_memmap_entry {
uint64_t base;
uint64_t length;
uint64_t type;
};
Note: The kernel and modules loaded are not marked as usable memory. They are marked as Kernel/Modules. The entries are guaranteed to be sorted by base address, lowest to highest. Usable and bootloader reclaimable entries are guaranteed to be 4096 byte aligned for both base and length. Usable and bootloader reclaimable entries are guaranteed not to overlap with any other entry. To the contrary, all non-usable entries (including kernel/modules) are not guaranteed any alignment, nor is it guaranteed that they do not overlap other entries.
Entry Point Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_ENTRY_POINT_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x13d86c035a1cd3e1, 0x2b0caa89d8f3026a }
Request:
typedef void (*limine_entry_point)(void);
struct limine_entry_point_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_entry_point_response *response;
limine_entry_point entry;
};
entry
- The requested entry point.
Response:
struct limine_entry_point_response {
uint64_t revision;
};
Kernel File Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_KERNEL_FILE_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0xad97e90e83f1ed67, 0x31eb5d1c5ff23b69 }
Request:
struct limine_kernel_file_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_kernel_file_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_kernel_file_response {
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_file *kernel_file;
};
kernel_file
- Pointer to thestruct limine_file
structure (see below) for the kernel file.
Module Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_MODULE_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x3e7e279702be32af, 0xca1c4f3bd1280cee }
Request:
struct limine_module_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_module_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_module_response {
uint64_t revision;
uint64_t module_count;
struct limine_file **modules;
};
module_count
- How many modules are present.modules
- Pointer to an array ofmodule_count
pointers tostruct limine_file
structures (see below).
File Structure
struct limine_uuid {
uint32_t a;
uint16_t b;
uint16_t c;
uint8_t d[8];
};
#define LIMINE_MEDIA_TYPE_GENERIC 0
#define LIMINE_MEDIA_TYPE_OPTICAL 1
#define LIMINE_MEDIA_TYPE_TFTP 2
struct limine_file {
uint64_t revision;
void *address;
uint64_t size;
char *path;
char *cmdline;
uint32_t media_type;
uint32_t unused;
uint32_t tftp_ip;
uint32_t tftp_port;
uint32_t partition_index;
uint32_t mbr_disk_id;
struct limine_uuid gpt_disk_uuid;
struct limine_uuid gpt_part_uuid;
struct limine_uuid part_uuid;
};
revision
- Revision of thestruct limine_file
structure.address
- The address of the file.size
- The size of the file.path
- The path of the file within the volume, with a leading slash.cmdline
- A command line associated with the file.media_type
- Type of media file resides on.tftp_ip
- If non-0, this is the IP of the TFTP server the file was loaded from.tftp_port
- Likewise, but port.partition_index
- 1-based partition index of the volume from which the file was loaded. If 0, it means invalid or unpartitioned.mbr_disk_id
- If non-0, this is the ID of the disk the file was loaded from as reported in its MBR.gpt_disk_uuid
- If non-0, this is the UUID of the disk the file was loaded from as reported in its GPT.gpt_part_uuid
- If non-0, this is the UUID of the partition the file was loaded from as reported in the GPT.part_uuid
- If non-0, this is the UUID of the filesystem of the partition the file was loaded from.
RSDP Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_RSDP_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0xc5e77b6b397e7b43, 0x27637845accdcf3c }
Request:
struct limine_rsdp_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_rsdp_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_rsdp_response {
uint64_t revision;
void *address;
};
address
- Address of the RSDP table.
SMBIOS Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_SMBIOS_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x9e9046f11e095391, 0xaa4a520fefbde5ee }
Request:
struct limine_smbios_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_smbios_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_smbios_response {
uint64_t revision;
void *entry_32;
void *entry_64;
};
entry_32
- Address of the 32-bit SMBIOS entry point. NULL if not present.entry_64
- Address of the 64-bit SMBIOS entry point. NULL if not present.
EFI System Table Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_EFI_SYSTEM_TABLE_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x5ceba5163eaaf6d6, 0x0a6981610cf65fcc }
Request:
struct limine_efi_system_table_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_efi_system_table_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_efi_system_table_response {
uint64_t revision;
void *address;
};
address
- Address of EFI system table.
Boot Time Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_BOOT_TIME_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x502746e184c088aa, 0xfbc5ec83e6327893 }
Request:
struct limine_boot_time_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_boot_time_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_boot_time_response {
uint64_t revision;
int64_t boot_time;
};
boot_time
- The UNIX time on boot, in seconds, taken from the system RTC.
Kernel Address Feature
ID:
#define LIMINE_KERNEL_ADDRESS_REQUEST { LIMINE_COMMON_MAGIC, 0x71ba76863cc55f63, 0xb2644a48c516a487 }
Request:
struct limine_kernel_address_request {
uint64_t id[4];
uint64_t revision;
struct limine_kernel_address_response *response;
};
Response:
struct limine_kernel_address_response {
uint64_t revision;
uint64_t physical_base;
uint64_t virtual_base;
};
physical_base
- The physical base address of the kernel.virtual_base
- The virtual base address of the kernel.