| 1 | -------------------------------------------------
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| 2 | Building EFI Applications Using the GNU Toolchain
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| 3 | -------------------------------------------------
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| 4 |
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| 5 | David Mosberger <davidm@hpl.hp.com>
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| 6 |
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| 7 | 23 September 1999
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| 8 |
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| 9 |
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| 10 | Copyright (c) 1999-2003 Hewlett-Packard Co.
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| 11 |
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| 12 | Last update: 08/20/2003
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| 13 |
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| 14 | * Introduction
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| 15 |
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| 16 | This document has two parts: the first part describes how to develop
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| 17 | EFI applications for IA-64 and x86 using the GNU toolchain and the EFI
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| 18 | development environment contained in this directory. The second part
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| 19 | describes some of the more subtle aspects of how this development
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| 20 | environment works.
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| 21 |
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| 22 |
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| 23 |
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| 24 | * Part 1: Developing EFI Applications
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| 25 |
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| 26 |
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| 27 | ** Prerequisites:
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| 28 |
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| 29 | To develop x86 EFI applications, the following tools are needed:
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| 30 |
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| 31 | - gcc-3.0 or newer (gcc 2.7.2 is NOT sufficient!)
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| 32 | As of gnu-efi-3.0b, the Redhat 8.0 toolchain is known to work,
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| 33 | but the Redhat 9.0 toolchain is not currently supported.
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| 34 |
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| 35 | - A version of "objcopy" that supports EFI applications. To
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| 36 | check if your version includes EFI support, issue the
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| 37 | command:
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| 38 |
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| 39 | objcopy --help
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| 40 |
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| 41 | and verify that the line "supported targets" contains the
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| 42 | string "efi-app-ia32".
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| 43 |
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| 44 | - For debugging purposes, it's useful to have a version of
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| 45 | "objdump" that supports EFI applications as well. This
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| 46 | allows inspect and disassemble EFI binaries.
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| 47 |
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| 48 | To develop IA-64 EFI applications, the following tools are needed:
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| 49 |
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| 50 | - A version of gcc newer than July 30th 1999 (older versions
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| 51 | had problems with generating position independent code).
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| 52 | As of gnu-efi-3.0b, gcc-3.1 is known to work well.
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| 53 |
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| 54 | - A version of "objcopy" that supports EFI applications. To
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| 55 | check if your version includes EFI support, issue the
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| 56 | command:
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| 57 |
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| 58 | objcopy --help
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| 59 |
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| 60 | and verify that the line "supported targets" contains the
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| 61 | string "efi-app-ia64".
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| 62 |
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| 63 | - For debugging purposes, it's useful to have a version of
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| 64 | "objdump" that supports EFI applications as well. This
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| 65 | allows inspect and disassemble EFI binaries.
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| 66 |
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| 67 |
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| 68 | ** Directory Structure
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| 69 |
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| 70 | This EFI development environment contains the following
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| 71 | subdirectories:
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| 72 |
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| 73 | inc: This directory contains the EFI-related include files. The
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| 74 | files are taken from Intel's EFI source distribution, except
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| 75 | that various fixes were applied to make it compile with the
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| 76 | GNU toolchain.
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| 77 |
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| 78 | lib: This directory contains the source code for Intel's EFI library.
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| 79 | Again, the files are taken from Intel's EFI source
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| 80 | distribution, with changes to make them compile with the GNU
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| 81 | toolchain.
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| 82 |
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| 83 | gnuefi: This directory contains the glue necessary to convert ELF64
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| 84 | binaries to EFI binaries. Various runtime code bits, such as
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| 85 | a self-relocator are included as well. This code has been
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| 86 | contributed by the Hewlett-Packard Company and is distributed
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| 87 | under the GNU GPL.
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| 88 |
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| 89 | apps: This directory contains a few simple EFI test apps.
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| 90 |
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| 91 | ** Setup
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| 92 |
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| 93 | It is necessary to edit the Makefile in the directory containing this
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| 94 | README file before EFI applications can be built. Specifically, you
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| 95 | should verify that macros CC, AS, LD, AR, RANLIB, and OBJCOPY point to
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| 96 | the appropriate compiler, assembler, linker, ar, and ranlib binaries,
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| 97 | respectively.
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| 98 |
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| 99 | If you're working in a cross-development environment, be sure to set
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| 100 | macro ARCH to the desired target architecture ("ia32" for x86, "ia64"
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| 101 | for IA-64). For convenience, this can also be done from the make
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| 102 | command line (e.g., "make ARCH=ia64").
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| 103 |
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| 104 |
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| 105 | ** Building
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| 106 |
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| 107 | To build the sample EFI applications provided in subdirectory "apps",
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| 108 | simply invoke "make" in the toplevel directory (the directory
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| 109 | containing this README file). This should build lib/libefi.a and
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| 110 | gnuefi/libgnuefi.a first and then all the EFI applications such as a
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| 111 | apps/t6.efi.
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| 112 |
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| 113 |
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| 114 | ** Running
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| 115 |
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| 116 | Just copy the EFI application (e.g., apps/t6.efi) to the EFI
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| 117 | filesystem, boot EFI, and then select "Invoke EFI application" to run
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| 118 | the application you want to test. Alternatively, you can invoke the
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| 119 | Intel-provided "nshell" application and then invoke your test binary
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| 120 | via the command line interface that "nshell" provides.
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| 121 |
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| 122 |
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| 123 | ** Writing Your Own EFI Application
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| 124 |
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| 125 | Suppose you have your own EFI application in a file called
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| 126 | "apps/myefiapp.c". To get this application built by the GNU EFI build
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| 127 | environment, simply add "myefiapp.efi" to macro TARGETS in
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| 128 | apps/Makefile. Once this is done, invoke "make" in the top level
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| 129 | directory. This should result in EFI application apps/myefiapp.efi,
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| 130 | ready for execution.
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| 131 |
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| 132 | The GNU EFI build environment allows to write EFI applications as
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| 133 | described in Intel's EFI documentation, except for two differences:
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| 134 |
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| 135 | - The EFI application's entry point is always called "efi_main". The
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| 136 | declaration of this routine is:
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| 137 |
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| 138 | EFI_STATUS efi_main (EFI_HANDLE image, EFI_SYSTEM_TABLE *systab);
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| 139 |
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| 140 | - UNICODE string literals must be written as W2U(L"Sample String")
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| 141 | instead of just L"Sample String". The W2U() macro is defined in
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| 142 | <efilib.h>. This header file also declares the function W2UCpy()
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| 143 | which allows to convert a wide string into a UNICODE string and
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| 144 | store the result in a programmer-supplied buffer.
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| 145 |
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| 146 |
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| 147 | * Part 2: Inner Workings
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| 148 |
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| 149 | WARNING: This part contains all the gory detail of how the GNU EFI
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| 150 | toolchain works. Normal users do not have to worry about such
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| 151 | details. Reading this part incurs a definite risk of inducing severe
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| 152 | headaches or other maladies.
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| 153 |
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| 154 | The basic idea behind the GNU EFI build environment is to use the GNU
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| 155 | toolchain to build a normal ELF binary that, at the end, is converted
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| 156 | to an EFI binary. EFI binaries are really just PE32+ binaries. PE
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| 157 | stands for "Portable Executable" and is the object file format
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| 158 | Microsoft is using on its Windows platforms. PE is basically the COFF
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| 159 | object file format with an MS-DOS2.0 compatible header slapped on in
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| 160 | front of it. The "32" in PE32+ stands for 32 bits, meaning that PE32
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| 161 | is a 32-bit object file format. The plus in "PE32+" indicates that
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| 162 | this format has been hacked to allow loading a 4GB binary anywhere in
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| 163 | a 64-bit address space (unlike ELF64, however, this is not a full
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| 164 | 64-bit object file format because the entire binary cannot span more
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| 165 | than 4GB of address space). EFI binaries are plain PE32+ binaries
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| 166 | except that the "subsystem id" differs from normal Windows binaries.
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| 167 | There are two flavors of EFI binaries: "applications" and "drivers"
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| 168 | and each has there own subsystem id and are identical otherwise. At
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| 169 | present, the GNU EFI build environment supports the building of EFI
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| 170 | applications only, though it would be trivial to generate drivers, as
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| 171 | the only difference is the subsystem id. For more details on PE32+,
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| 172 | see the spec at
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| 173 |
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| 174 | http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/specs/msdn_pecoff.htm.
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| 175 |
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| 176 | In theory, converting a suitable ELF64 binary to PE32+ is easy and
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| 177 | could be accomplished with the "objcopy" utility by specifying option
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| 178 | --target=efi-app-ia32 (x86) or --target=efi-app-ia64 (IA-64). But
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| 179 | life never is that easy, so here some complicating factors:
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| 180 |
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| 181 | (1) COFF sections are very different from ELF sections.
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| 182 |
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| 183 | ELF binaries distinguish between program headers and sections.
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| 184 | The program headers describe the memory segments that need to
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| 185 | be loaded/initialized, whereas the sections describe what
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| 186 | constitutes those segments. In COFF (and therefore PE32+) no
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| 187 | such distinction is made. Thus, COFF sections need to be page
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| 188 | aligned and have a size that is a multiple of the page size
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| 189 | (4KB for EFI), whereas ELF allows sections at arbitrary
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| 190 | addresses and with arbitrary sizes.
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| 191 |
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| 192 | (2) EFI binaries should be relocatable.
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| 193 |
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| 194 | Since EFI binaries are executed in physical mode, EFI cannot
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| 195 | guarantee that a given binary can be loaded at its preferred
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| 196 | address. EFI does _try_ to load a binary at it's preferred
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| 197 | address, but if it can't do so, it will load it at another
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| 198 | address and then relocate the binary using the contents of the
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| 199 | .reloc section.
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| 200 |
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| 201 | (3) On IA-64, the EFI entry point needs to point to a function
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| 202 | descriptor, not to the code address of the entry point.
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| 203 |
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| 204 | (4) The EFI specification assumes that wide characters use UNICODE
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| 205 | encoding.
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| 206 |
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| 207 | ANSI C does not specify the size or encoding that a wide
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| 208 | character uses. These choices are "implementation defined".
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| 209 | On most UNIX systems, the GNU toolchain uses a wchar_t that is
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| 210 | 4 bytes in size. The encoding used for such characters is
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| 211 | (mostly) UCS4.
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| 212 |
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| 213 | In the following sections, we address how the GNU EFI build
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| 214 | environment addresses each of these issues.
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| 215 |
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| 216 |
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| 217 | ** (1) Accommodating COFF Sections
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| 218 |
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| 219 | In order to satisfy the COFF constraint of page-sized and page-aligned
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| 220 | sections, the GNU EFI build environment uses the special linker script
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| 221 | in gnuefi/elf_$(ARCH)_efi.lds where $(ARCH) is the target architecture
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| 222 | ("ia32" for x86, and "ia64" for IA-64). This script is set up to
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| 223 | create only eight COFF section, each page aligned and page sized.
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| 224 | These eight sections are used to group together the much greater
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| 225 | number of sections that are typically present in ELF object files.
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| 226 | Specifically:
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| 227 |
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| 228 | .hash
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| 229 | Collects the ELF .hash info (this section _must_ be the first
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| 230 | section in order to build a shared object file; the section is
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| 231 | not actually loaded or used at runtime).
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| 232 |
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| 233 | .text
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| 234 | Collects all sections containing executable code.
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| 235 |
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| 236 | .data
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| 237 | Collects read-only and read-write data, literal string data,
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| 238 | global offset tables, the uninitialized data segment (bss) and
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| 239 | various other sections containing data.
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| 240 |
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| 241 | The reason read-only data is placed here instead of the in
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| 242 | .text is to make it possible to disassemble the .text section
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| 243 | without getting garbage due to read-only data. Besides, since
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| 244 | EFI binaries execute in physical mode, differences in page
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| 245 | protection do not matter.
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| 246 |
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| 247 | The reason the uninitialized data is placed in this section is
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| 248 | that the EFI loader appears to be unable to handle sections
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| 249 | that are allocated but not loaded from the binary.
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| 250 |
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| 251 | .dynamic, .dynsym, .rela, .rel, .reloc
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| 252 | These sections contains the dynamic information necessary to
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| 253 | self-relocate the binary (see below).
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| 254 |
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| 255 | A couple of more points worth noting about the linker script:
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| 256 |
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| 257 | o On IA-64, the global pointer symbol (__gp) needs to be placed such
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| 258 | that the _entire_ EFI binary can be addressed using the signed
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| 259 | 22-bit offset that the "addl" instruction affords. Specifically,
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| 260 | this means that __gp should be placed at ImageBase + 0x200000.
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| 261 | Strictly speaking, only a couple of symbols need to be addressable
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| 262 | in this fashion, so with some care it should be possible to build
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| 263 | binaries much larger than 4MB. To get a list of symbols that need
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| 264 | to be addressable in this fashion, grep the assembly files in
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| 265 | directory gnuefi for the string "@gprel".
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| 266 |
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| 267 | o The link address (ImageBase) of the binary is (arbitrarily) set to
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| 268 | zero. This could be set to something larger to increase the chance
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| 269 | of EFI being able to load the binary without requiring relocation.
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| 270 | However, a start address of 0 makes debugging a wee bit easier
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| 271 | (great for those of us who can add, but not subtract... ;-).
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| 272 |
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| 273 | o The relocation related sections (.dynamic, .rel, .rela, .reloc)
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| 274 | cannot be placed inside .data because some tools in the GNU
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| 275 | toolchain rely on the existence of these sections.
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| 276 |
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| 277 | o Some sections in the ELF binary intentionally get dropped when
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| 278 | building the EFI binary. Particularly noteworthy are the dynamic
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| 279 | relocation sections for the .plabel and .reloc sections. It would
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| 280 | be _wrong_ to include these sections in the EFI binary because it
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| 281 | would result in .reloc and .plabel being relocated twice (once by
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| 282 | the EFI loader and once by the self-relocator; see below for a
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| 283 | description of the latter). Specifically, only the sections
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| 284 | mentioned with the -j option in the final "objcopy" command are
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| 285 | retained in the EFI binary (see apps/Makefile).
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| 286 |
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| 287 |
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| 288 | ** (2) Building Relocatable Binaries
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| 289 |
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| 290 | ELF binaries are normally linked for a fixed load address and are thus
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| 291 | not relocatable. The only kind of ELF object that is relocatable are
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| 292 | shared objects ("shared libraries"). However, even those objects are
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| 293 | usually not completely position independent and therefore require
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| 294 | runtime relocation by the dynamic loader. For example, IA-64 binaries
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| 295 | normally require relocation of the global offset table.
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| 296 |
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| 297 | The approach to building relocatable binaries in the GNU EFI build
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| 298 | environment is to:
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| 299 |
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| 300 | (a) build an ELF shared object
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| 301 |
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| 302 | (b) link it together with a self-relocator that takes care of
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| 303 | applying the dynamic relocations that may be present in the
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| 304 | ELF shared object
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| 305 |
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| 306 | (c) convert the resulting image to an EFI binary
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| 307 |
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| 308 | The self-relocator is of course architecture dependent. The x86
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| 309 | version can be found in gnuefi/reloc_ia32.c, the IA-64 version can be
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| 310 | found in gnuefi/reloc_ia64.S.
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| 311 |
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| 312 | The self-relocator operates as follows: the startup code invokes it
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| 313 | right after EFI has handed off control to the EFI binary at symbol
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| 314 | "_start". Upon activation, the self-relocator searches the .dynamic
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| 315 | section (whose starting address is given by symbol _DYNAMIC) for the
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| 316 | dynamic relocation information, which can be found in the DT_REL,
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| 317 | DT_RELSZ, and DT_RELENT entries of the dynamic table (DT_RELA,
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| 318 | DT_RELASZ, and DT_RELAENT in the case of rela relocations, as is the
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| 319 | case for IA-64). The dynamic relocation information points to the ELF
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| 320 | relocation table. Once this table is found, the self-relocator walks
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| 321 | through it, applying each relocation one by one. Since the EFI
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| 322 | binaries are fully resolved shared objects, only a subset of all
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| 323 | possible relocations need to be supported. Specifically, on x86 only
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| 324 | the R_386_RELATIVE relocation is needed. On IA-64, the relocations
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| 325 | R_IA64_DIR64LSB, R_IA64_REL64LSB, and R_IA64_FPTR64LSB are needed.
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| 326 | Note that the R_IA64_FPTR64LSB relocation requires access to the
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| 327 | dynamic symbol table. This is why the .dynsym section is included in
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| 328 | the EFI binary. Another complication is that this relocation requires
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| 329 | memory to hold the function descriptors (aka "procedure labels" or
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| 330 | "plabels"). Each function descriptor uses 16 bytes of memory. The
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| 331 | IA-64 self-relocator currently reserves a static memory area that can
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| 332 | hold 100 of these descriptors. If the self-relocator runs out of
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| 333 | space, it causes the EFI binary to fail with error code 5
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| 334 | (EFI_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL). When this happens, the manifest constant
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| 335 | MAX_FUNCTION_DESCRIPTORS in gnuefi/reloc_ia64.S should be increased
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| 336 | and the application recompiled. An easy way to count the number of
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| 337 | function descriptors required by an EFI application is to run the
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| 338 | command:
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| 339 |
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| 340 | objdump --dynamic-reloc example.so | fgrep FPTR64 | wc -l
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| 341 |
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| 342 | assuming "example" is the name of the desired EFI application.
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| 343 |
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| 344 |
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| 345 | ** (3) Creating the Function Descriptor for the IA-64 EFI Binaries
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| 346 |
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| 347 | As mentioned above, the IA-64 PE32+ format assumes that the entry
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| 348 | point of the binary is a function descriptor. A function descriptors
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| 349 | consists of two double words: the first one is the code entry point
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| 350 | and the second is the global pointer that should be loaded before
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| 351 | calling the entry point. Since the ELF toolchain doesn't know how to
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| 352 | generate a function descriptor for the entry point, the startup code
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| 353 | in gnuefi/crt0-efi-ia64.S crafts one manually by with the code:
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| 354 |
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| 355 | .section .plabel, "a"
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| 356 | _start_plabel:
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| 357 | data8 _start
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| 358 | data8 __gp
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| 359 |
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| 360 | this places the procedure label for entry point _start in a section
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| 361 | called ".plabel". Now, the only problem is that _start and __gp need
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| 362 | to be relocated _before_ EFI hands control over to the EFI binary.
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| 363 | Fortunately, PE32+ defines a section called ".reloc" that can achieve
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| 364 | this. Thus, in addition to manually crafting the function descriptor,
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| 365 | the startup code also crafts a ".reloc" section that has will cause
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| 366 | the EFI loader to relocate the function descriptor before handing over
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| 367 | control to the EFI binary (again, see the PECOFF spec mentioned above
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| 368 | for details).
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| 369 |
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| 370 | A final question may be why .plabel and .reloc need to go in their own
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| 371 | COFF sections. The answer is simply: we need to be able to discard
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| 372 | the relocation entries that are generated for these sections. By
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| 373 | placing them in these sections, the relocations end up in sections
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| 374 | ".rela.plabel" and ".rela.reloc" which makes it easy to filter them
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| 375 | out in the filter script. Also, the ".reloc" section needs to be in
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| 376 | its own section so that the objcopy program can recognize it and can
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| 377 | create the correct directory entries in the PE32+ binary.
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| 378 |
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| 379 |
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| 380 | ** (4) Convenient and Portable Generation of UNICODE String Literals
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| 381 |
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| 382 | As of gnu-efi-3.0, we make use (and somewhat abuse) the gcc option
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| 383 | that forces wide characters (WCHAR_T) to use short integers (2 bytes)
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| 384 | instead of integers (4 bytes). This way we match the Unicode character
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| 385 | size. By abuse, we mean that we rely on the fact that the regular ASCII
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| 386 | characters are encoded the same way between (short) wide characters
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| 387 | and Unicode and basically only use the first byte. This allows us
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| 388 | to just use them interchangeably.
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| 389 |
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| 390 | The gcc option to force short wide characters is : -fshort-wchar
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| 391 |
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| 392 | * * * The End * * *
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