Hello,
I'm new to assembly and trying to teach myself. I wrote a small Hello World bootloader from a tutorial I found on this site. My current toolchain is Win10, VS Code, and Nasm. DD to create the image and Rufus to burn it to a USB stick. That process works I've gotten text output. However I am trying to display a whole string and for some reason it only displays it partially. The string being Hello and all I get is Hel. Here's my code.
org 0x7C00
main:
mov ax, 0x0000
mov ds, ax
mov si, Message
call Print_String
jmp $
Print_String:
lodsb
or al, al
jz .return
mov ah, 0x0E
int 0x10
jmp Print_String
.return:
ret
Joe db 'Hello!', 0
times 510-($-$$) db 0
dw 0xAA55
In the process of trying to debug this I realized that no matter what string I put in it always stops at a lower case L. I also at one point had the following line.
Message db 'Hello!', 0
as
Message db 'Hello!', 13, 10, 0 ;
as well as
Message db 'Hello!', 0x80, 0x0A, 0;
If I understand correctly 13 is carriage return, 10 is Line Feed, and 0 is the null termination character. I don't know what 0x80 or 0x0A represent. I just used them because that's what was in the tutorial on the site.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance.
Bootloader ASM
Re: Bootloader ASM
Some BIOSes will assume that your bootloader has BPB and they will overwrite part of your code. This is probably this case. Solution is remain BPB space on start of code like this:
Code: Select all
main:
jmp .code
times 0x3E db 0
.code:
Re: Bootloader ASM
Also note that you should clear the DF flag before using lodsb.
Re: Bootloader ASM
The code looks correct to me. I'd implement both Klakap's and iansjack's recommendations. iansjack's because the direction flag happens to be correct but could be changed by the BIOS, if I understand right. Klakap's because there's no chance that or...jz would jump on anything other than zero. Corruption of the string looks like the most likely thing.
About testing, I would try to avoid saying "it stops on an l" unless I'd tried moving the ls, perhaps by changing "Hello" to "Honaly" or something. I say "try" because I don't find it easy; I have a real problem with jumping to conclusions when I've been coding a bit too hard or too long. A bug comes up and I think I know exactly what it is when a little bit of reasoning would show I don't. I think this happens to everyone sooner or later, I hope you don't get it as badly as I do.
About testing, I would try to avoid saying "it stops on an l" unless I'd tried moving the ls, perhaps by changing "Hello" to "Honaly" or something. I say "try" because I don't find it easy; I have a real problem with jumping to conclusions when I've been coding a bit too hard or too long. A bug comes up and I think I know exactly what it is when a little bit of reasoning would show I don't. I think this happens to everyone sooner or later, I hope you don't get it as badly as I do.
Kaph — a modular OS intended to be easy and fun to administer and code for.
"May wisdom, fun, and the greater good shine forth in all your work." — Leo Brodie
"May wisdom, fun, and the greater good shine forth in all your work." — Leo Brodie
Re: Bootloader ASM
Thank you all for you replies. I managed to get it working before my question was put up after review, by going through another thread about the BIOS corrupting the BPB. and it looks like I ended up clearing the direction flag on accident anyways. I'll post my new code below.
I still have a few questions though.
First the padding. Klakap you indicate the padding should be "times 0x3E db 0" In the thread I found on this topic the suggestion was "times 0x5A db 0" is the amount arbitrary?
This may not be an easy question to answer but this code works fine on my custom built PC's, however I have two Dell Optiplex's here and both register the USB drive as being inserted but says it's not a valid boot drive. The bios is set to Legacy not UEFI and the only boot device selected is the USB stick any thoughts as to why this is? Is there something special about booting with a Dell BIOS?
Thanks all.
Code: Select all
BITS 16
org 0x7C00
jmp 0x0000:Boot
times 0x5a db 0
Boot:
cli
xor ax, ax
mov ds, ax
mov es, ax
mov ss, ax
mov sp, 0x9000
cld
sti
mov si, Msg
call Print_String
jmp $
Print_String:
lodsb
or al, al
jz .done
mov ah, 0x0E
int 0x10
jmp Print_String
.done:
ret
Msg: db "Hello!", 0x0D, 0x0A, 0
times 510-($-$$) db 0
dw 0xAA55
First the padding. Klakap you indicate the padding should be "times 0x3E db 0" In the thread I found on this topic the suggestion was "times 0x5A db 0" is the amount arbitrary?
This may not be an easy question to answer but this code works fine on my custom built PC's, however I have two Dell Optiplex's here and both register the USB drive as being inserted but says it's not a valid boot drive. The bios is set to Legacy not UEFI and the only boot device selected is the USB stick any thoughts as to why this is? Is there something special about booting with a Dell BIOS?
Thanks all.
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- Member
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Re: Bootloader ASM
The amount is enough to ensure none of your code ends up inside the BPB. The two suggested amounts are for different BPB sizes; 0x3E for FAT12 or FAT16 and 0x5A for FAT32. I think you could get away with less; you only need to avoid the geometry.Jhoozle wrote:First the padding. Klakap you indicate the padding should be "times 0x3E db 0" In the thread I found on this topic the suggestion was "times 0x5A db 0" is the amount arbitrary?
Some BIOSes will reject your drive if it's not partitioned appropriately. You don't have a partition table in your code, and I don't think Rufus will add one. There's an entire page on the wiki dedicated to this topic, although some of the advice may be outdated.Jhoozle wrote:This may not be an easy question to answer but this code works fine on my custom built PC's, however I have two Dell Optiplex's here and both register the USB drive as being inserted but says it's not a valid boot drive. The bios is set to Legacy not UEFI and the only boot device selected is the USB stick any thoughts as to why this is? Is there something special about booting with a Dell BIOS?
Re: Bootloader ASM
Thank you, sir. I'll give that a read.Octocontrabass wrote:The amount is enough to ensure none of your code ends up inside the BPB. The two suggested amounts are for different BPB sizes; 0x3E for FAT12 or FAT16 and 0x5A for FAT32. I think you could get away with less; you only need to avoid the geometry.Jhoozle wrote:First the padding. Klakap you indicate the padding should be "times 0x3E db 0" In the thread I found on this topic the suggestion was "times 0x5A db 0" is the amount arbitrary?
Some BIOSes will reject your drive if it's not partitioned appropriately. You don't have a partition table in your code, and I don't think Rufus will add one. There's an entire page on the wiki dedicated to this topic, although some of the advice may be outdated.Jhoozle wrote:This may not be an easy question to answer but this code works fine on my custom built PC's, however I have two Dell Optiplex's here and both register the USB drive as being inserted but says it's not a valid boot drive. The bios is set to Legacy not UEFI and the only boot device selected is the USB stick any thoughts as to why this is? Is there something special about booting with a Dell BIOS?