We used size_t, which is a type that is guarenteed to be large
enough to hold an array index, but uintptr_t is designed to be used
to hold pointer values, which is the case of stack guards.
Now that we reclaim the memory range that is created by KASLR before
the start of the kernel image, there's no need to be conservative with
the KASLR offset.
This ensures we don't just waste the memory range between the default
base load address and the actual load address that was shifted by the
KASLR offset.
This requirement comes from the fact the Prekernel mapping logic only
uses 2 MiB pages.
This unfortunately reduces the bits of entropy in kernel addresses from
16 bits to 7, but it could be further improved in the future by making
the Prekernel mapping logic a bit more dynamic.
We should only look at the framebuffer structure members if the
MULTIBOOT_INFO_FRAMEBUFFER_INFO bit is set in the flags field.
Also add some logging if we ignored the fbdev command line argument
due to either not having a framebuffer provided by the bootloader, or
because we don't support the framebuffer format.
This enables further work on implementing KASLR by adding relocation
support to the pre-kernel and updating the kernel to be less dependent
on specific virtual memory layouts.
This allows us to specify virtual addresses for things the kernel should
access via virtual addresses later on. By doing this we can make the
kernel independent from specific physical addresses.
Previously the kernel relied on a fixed offset between virtual and
physical addresses based on the kernel's load address. This allows us
to specify an independent offset.
Depending on the exact layout of the .ksyms section the kernel would
fail to boot because the kernel_load_end variable didn't account for the
section's size.
This implements a simple bootloader that is capable of loading ELF64
kernel images. It does this by using QEMU/GRUB to load the kernel image
from disk and pass it to our bootloader as a Multiboot module.
The bootloader then parses the ELF image and sets it up appropriately.
The kernel's entry point is a C++ function with architecture-native
code.
Co-authored-by: Liav A <liavalb@gmail.com>