| [This documentation is rather crufty at the moment.] |
| |
| MEMDISK is meant to allow booting legacy operating systems via PXE, |
| and as a workaround for BIOSes where ISOLINUX image support doesn't |
| work. |
| |
| MEMDISK simulates a disk by claiming a chunk of high memory for the |
| disk and a (very small - 2K typical) chunk of low (DOS) memory for the |
| driver itself, then hooking the INT 13h (disk driver) and INT 15h |
| (memory query) BIOS interrupts. |
| |
| MEMDISK allows for an OS to detect the MEMDISK instance. (See the |
| "Additional technical information" section below.) |
| |
| To use it, type on the Syslinux command line: |
| |
| memdisk initrd=diskimg.img |
| |
| ... where diskimg.img is the disk image you want to boot from. |
| |
| [Obviously, the memdisk binary as well as your disk image file need to |
| be present in the boot image directory.] |
| |
| ... or add to your syslinux.cfg/pxelinux.cfg/isolinux.cfg something like: |
| |
| label dos |
| kernel memdisk |
| append initrd=dosboot.img |
| |
| Note the following: |
| |
| a) The disk image can be uncompressed or compressed with gzip or zip. |
| |
| b) If the disk image is less than 4,194,304 bytes (4096K, 4 MB) it is |
| assumed to be a floppy image and MEMDISK will try to guess its |
| geometry based on the size of the file. MEMDISK recognizes all the |
| standard floppy sizes as well as common extended formats: |
| |
| 163,840 bytes (160K) c=40 h=1 s=8 5.25" SSSD |
| 184,320 bytes (180K) c=40 h=1 s=9 5.25" SSSD |
| 327,680 bytes (320K) c=40 h=2 s=8 5.25" DSDD |
| 368,640 bytes (360K) c=40 h=2 s=9 5.25" DSDD |
| 655,360 bytes (640K) c=80 h=2 s=8 3.5" DSDD |
| 737,280 bytes (720K) c=80 h=2 s=9 3.5" DSDD |
| 1,222,800 bytes (1200K) c=80 h=2 s=15 5.25" DSHD |
| 1,474,560 bytes (1440K) c=80 h=2 s=18 3.5" DSHD |
| 1,638,400 bytes (1600K) c=80 h=2 s=20 3.5" DSHD (extended) |
| 1,720,320 bytes (1680K) c=80 h=2 s=21 3.5" DSHD (extended) |
| 1,763,328 bytes (1722K) c=82 h=2 s=21 3.5" DSHD (extended) |
| 1,784,832 bytes (1743K) c=83 h=2 s=21 3.5" DSHD (extended) |
| 1,802,240 bytes (1760K) c=80 h=2 s=22 3.5" DSHD (extended) |
| 1,884,160 bytes (1840K) c=80 h=2 s=23 3.5" DSHD (extended) |
| 1,966,080 bytes (1920K) c=80 h=2 s=24 3.5" DSHD (extended) |
| 2,949,120 bytes (2880K) c=80 h=2 s=36 3.5" DSED |
| 3,194,880 bytes (3120K) c=80 h=2 s=39 3.5" DSED (extended) |
| 3,276,800 bytes (3200K) c=80 h=2 s=40 3.5" DSED (extended) |
| 3,604,480 bytes (3520K) c=80 h=2 s=44 3.5" DSED (extended) |
| 3,932,160 bytes (3840K) c=80 h=2 s=48 3.5" DSED (extended) |
| |
| A small perl script is included in the MEMDISK directory which can |
| determine the geometry that MEMDISK would select for other sizes; |
| in general MEMDISK will correctly detect most physical extended |
| formats used, with 80 cylinders or slightly more. |
| |
| If the image is 4 MB or larger, it is assumed to be a hard disk |
| image, and should typically have an MBR and a partition table. It |
| may optionally have a DOSEMU geometry header; in which case the |
| header is used to determine the C/H/S geometry of the disk. |
| Otherwise, the geometry is determined by examining the partition |
| table, so the entire image should be partitioned for proper |
| operation (it may be divided between multiple partitions, however.) |
| |
| You can also specify the geometry manually with the following command |
| line options: |
| |
| c=# Specify number of cylinders (max 1024[*]) |
| h=# Specify number of heads (max 256[*]) |
| s=# Specify number of sectors (max 63) |
| floppy[=#] The image is a floppy image[**] |
| harddisk[=#] The image is a hard disk image[**] |
| iso The image is an El Torito ISO9660 image (drive 0xE0) |
| |
| # represents a decimal number. |
| |
| [*] MS-DOS only allows max 255 heads, and only allows 255 cylinders |
| on floppy disks. |
| |
| [**] Normally MEMDISK emulates the first floppy or hard disk. This |
| can be overridden by specifying an index, e.g. floppy=1 will |
| simulate fd1 (B:). This may not work on all operating systems |
| or BIOSes. |
| |
| c) The disk is normally writable (although, of course, there is |
| nothing backing it up, so it only lasts until reset.) If you want, |
| you can mimic a write-protected disk by specifying the command line |
| option: |
| |
| ro Disk is readonly |
| |
| d) MEMDISK normally uses the BIOS "INT 15h mover" API to access high |
| memory. This is well-behaved with extended memory managers which load |
| later. Unfortunately it appears that the "DOS boot disk" from |
| WinME/XP *deliberately* crash the system when this API is invoked. |
| The following command-line options tells MEMDISK to enter protected |
| mode directly, whenever possible: |
| |
| raw Use raw access to protected mode memory. |
| |
| bigraw Use raw access to protected mode memory, and leave the |
| CPU in "big real" mode afterwards. |
| |
| int Use plain INT 15h access to protected memory. This assumes |
| that anything which hooks INT 15h knows what it is doing. |
| |
| safeint Use INT 15h access to protected memory, but invoke |
| INT 15h the way it was *before* MEMDISK was loaded. |
| This is the default since version 3.73. |
| |
| e) MEMDISK by default supports EDD/EBIOS on hard disks, but not on |
| floppy disks. This can be controlled with the options: |
| |
| edd Enable EDD/EBIOS |
| noedd Disable EDD/EBIOS |
| |
| f) The following option can be used to pause to view the messages: |
| |
| pause Wait for a keypress right before booting |
| |
| g) The following option can be used to set the real-mode stack size. |
| The default is 512 bytes, but if there is a failure it might be |
| interesting to set it to something larger: |
| |
| stack=size Set the stack to "size" bytes |
| |
| h) Some systems without a floppy drive have been known to have |
| problems with floppy images. To avoid that those problems, first |
| of all make sure you don't have a floppy drive configured on the |
| BIOS screen. If there is no option to configure that, or that |
| doesn't work, you can use the option: |
| |
| nopass Hide all real drives of the same type (floppy or hard disk) |
| nopassany Hide all real drives (floppy and hard disk) |
| |
| i) The following standard Linux option will mark memory as reserved. |
| Please note that the Syslinux core already loads MEMDISK and its |
| initrd below this point: |
| |
| mem=size Mark available memory above this point as Reserved. |
| |
| |
| Some interesting things to note: |
| |
| If you're using MEMDISK to boot DOS from a CD-ROM (using ISOLINUX), |
| you might find the generic El Torito CD-ROM driver by Gary Tong and |
| Bart Lagerweij useful. It is now included with the Syslinux |
| distribution, in the dosutil directory. See the file |
| dosutil/eltorito.txt for more information. |
| |
| Similarly, if you're booting DOS over the network using PXELINUX, you |
| can use the "keeppxe" option and use the generic PXE (UNDI) NDIS |
| network driver, which is part of the PROBOOT.EXE distribution from |
| Intel: |
| |
| http://www.intel.com/support/network/adapter/1000/software.htm |
| |
| |
| Additional technical information: |
| |
| Starting with version 2.08, MEMDISK now supports an installation check |
| API. This works as follows: |
| |
| EAX = 454D08xxh ("ME") (08h = parameter query) |
| ECX = 444Dxxxxh ("MD") |
| EDX = 5349xxnnh ("IS") (nn = drive #) |
| EBX = 3F4Bxxxxh ("K?") |
| INT 13h |
| |
| If drive nn is a MEMDISK, the registers will contain: |
| |
| EAX = 4D21xxxxh ("!M") |
| ECX = 4D45xxxxh ("EM") |
| EDX = 4944xxxxh ("DI") |
| EBX = 4B53xxxxh ("SK") |
| |
| ES:DI -> MEMDISK info structures |
| |
| The low parts of EAX/ECX/EDX/EBX have the normal return values for INT |
| 13h, AH=08h, i.e. information of the disk geometry etc. |
| |
| See Ralf Brown's interrupt list, |
| http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/ralf/pub/WWW/files.html or |
| http://www.ctyme.com/rbrown.htm, for a detailed description. |
| |
| The MEMDISK info structure currently contains: |
| |
| [ES:DI] word Total size of structure (currently 30 bytes) |
| [ES:DI+2] byte MEMDISK minor version |
| [ES:DI+3] byte MEMDISK major version |
| [ES:DI+4] dword Pointer to MEMDISK data in high memory |
| [ES:DI+8] dword Size of MEMDISK data in sectors |
| [ES:DI+12] 16:16 Far pointer to command line |
| [ES:DI+16] 16:16 Old INT 13h pointer |
| [ES:DI+20] 16:16 Old INT 15h pointer |
| [ES:DI+24] word Amount of DOS memory before MEMDISK loaded |
| [ES:DI+26] byte Boot loader ID |
| [ES:DI+27] byte Sector size as a power of 2 |
| (If zero, assume 512-byte sectors) |
| [ES:DI+28] word If nonzero, offset (vs ES) to installed DPT |
| This pointer+16 contains the original INT 1Eh |
| |
| Sizes of this structure: |
| |
| 3.71+ 30 bytes Added DPT pointer |
| 3.00-3.70 27 bytes Added boot loader ID |
| pre-3.00 26 bytes |
| |
| In addition, the following fields are available at [ES:0]: |
| |
| [ES:0] word Offset of INT 13h routine (segment == ES) |
| [ES:2] word Offset of INT 15h routine (segment == ES) |
| |
| The program mdiskchk.c in the sample directory is an example on how |
| this API can be used. |
| |
| The following code can be used to "disable" MEMDISK. Note that it |
| does not free the handler in DOS memory, and that running this from |
| DOS will probably crash your machine (DOS doesn't like drives suddenly |
| disappearing from underneath.) This is also not necessarily the best |
| method for this. |
| |
| mov eax, 454D0800h |
| mov ecx, 444D0000h |
| mov edx, 53490000h |
| mov dl,drive_number |
| mov ebx, 3F4B0000h |
| int 13h |
| |
| shr eax, 16 |
| cmp ax, 4D21h |
| jne not_memdisk |
| shr ecx, 16 |
| cmp cx, 4D45h |
| jne not_memdisk |
| shr edx, 16 |
| cmp dx, 4944h |
| jne not_memdisk |
| shr ebx, 16 |
| cmp bx, 4B53h |
| jne not_memdisk |
| |
| cli |
| mov bx,[es:0] ; INT 13h handler offset |
| mov eax,[es:di+16] ; Old INT 13h handler |
| mov byte [es:bx], 0EAh ; FAR JMP |
| mov [es:bx+1], eax |
| |
| mov bx,[es:2] ; INT 15h handler offset |
| mov eax,[es:di+20] ; Old INT 15h handler |
| mov byte [es:bx], 0EAh ; FAR JMP |
| mov [es:bx+1], eax |
| sti |
| |
| MEMDISK supports the Win9x "safe hook" structure for OS detection. |
| (See "Safe Master Boot Record INT 13h Hook Routines," available at |
| http://www.osronline.com/ddkx/w98ddk/storage_5l6g.htm as of |
| December 7th, 2009.) An OS driver can take a look at the INTerrupt table |
| and try to walk along the chain of those hooks that implement the "safe hook" |
| structure. For each hook discovered, a vendor can be identified and the OS |
| driver can take appropriate action. The OS driver can mark the "flags" field |
| of the "safe hook" to indicate that the driver has reviewed it already. This |
| prevents accidental re-detection, for example. |
| |
| MEMDISK adds one additional extension field to the "safe hook" structure, a |
| pointer to a special MEMDISK structure called the "mBFT." The mBFT is the |
| "MEMDISK Boot Firmware Table" (akin to the iSCSI iBFT and the AoE aBFT). An |
| OS driver looking at MEMDISK's "safe hook" should know that this field will |
| be present based on the fact that MEMDISK is the vendor identifier. |
| |
| The mBFT is little more than an ACPI table to prefix MEMDISK's traditional |
| MEMDISK info structure (the "MDI"). The ACPI table's details are: |
| |
| OEM ID. . . .: MEMDSK |
| OEM Table ID : Syslinux |
| |
| There is a 1-byte checksum field which covers the length of the mBFT all |
| the way through to the end of the MEMDISK info structure. |
| |
| There is also a physical pointer to the "safe hook" structure associated |
| with the MEMDISK instance. An OS driver might use the following logic: |
| |
| 1. Walk INT 13h "safe hook" chain as far as possible, marking hooks as |
| having been reviewed. For MEMDISK hooks, the driver then follows the |
| pointer to the mBFT and gathers the RAM disk details from the included |
| MDI. |
| 2. The OS driver scans low memory for valid mBFTs. MEMDISK instances that |
| have been "disconnected" from the INT 13h "safe hook" chain can be thus |
| discovered. Looking at their associated "safe hook" structure will |
| reveal if they were indeed reviewed by the previous stage. |