1
0
mirror of https://github.com/hsoft/collapseos.git synced 2024-11-17 10:08:05 +11:00
collapseos/kernel/README.md
Virgil Dupras 7fad3b0c90 Move /parts/z80 to /kernel
Let go of that "meta os" thing. it's not as meta as I made it sound
like. It's a kernel.
2019-05-19 11:19:41 -04:00

47 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown

# Kernel
Bits and pieces of code that you can assemble to build a kernel for your
machine.
These parts are made to be glued together in a single `glue.asm` file you write
yourself.
As of now, the z80 assembler code is written to be assembled with [scas][scas],
but this is going to change in the future as a new hosted assembler is written.
## Defines
Each part can have its own constants, but some constant are made to be defined
externally. We already have some of those external definitions in platform
includes, but we can have more defines than this.
Each part has a "DEFINES" section listing the constant it expects to be defined.
Make sure that you have these constants defined before you include the file.
## Variable management
Each part can define variables. These variables are defined as addresses in
RAM. We know where RAM start from the `RAMSTART` constant in platform includes,
but because those parts are made to be glued together in no pre-defined order,
we need a system to align variables from different modules in RAM.
This is why each part that has variable expect a `<PARTNAME>_RAMSTART`
constant to be defined and, in turn, defines a `<PARTNAME>_RAMEND` constant to
carry to the following part.
Thus, code that glue parts together coould look like:
MOD1_RAMSTART .equ RAMSTART
#include "mod1.asm"
MOD2_RAMSTART .equ MOD1_RAMEND
#include "mod2.asm"
## Code style
The asm code used in these parts is heavily dependent on what scas offers. I
try to be as "low-tech" as possible because the implementation of the assembler
to be implemented for the z80 will likely be more limited. For example, we don't
use macros.
[scas]: https://github.com/KnightOS/scas