Update posts for x86_64 version 0.7.0 (#607)

This commit is contained in:
Philipp Oppermann
2019-05-09 15:00:49 +02:00
committed by GitHub
parent e2f0881701
commit 0632a0de80
6 changed files with 42 additions and 42 deletions

View File

@@ -225,7 +225,7 @@ The _Privilege Stack Table_ is used by the CPU when the privilege level changes.
### Creating a TSS
Let's create a new TSS that contains a separate double fault stack in its interrupt stack table. For that we need a TSS struct. Fortunately, the `x86_64` crate already contains a [`TaskStateSegment` struct] that we can use.
[`TaskStateSegment` struct]: https://docs.rs/x86_64/0.6.0/x86_64/structures/tss/struct.TaskStateSegment.html
[`TaskStateSegment` struct]: https://docs.rs/x86_64/0.7.0/x86_64/structures/tss/struct.TaskStateSegment.html
We create the TSS in a new `gdt` module (the name will make sense later):
@@ -371,8 +371,8 @@ pub fn init() {
We reload the code segment register using [`set_cs`] and to load the TSS using [`load_tss`]. The functions are marked as `unsafe`, so we need an `unsafe` block to invoke them. The reason is that it might be possible to break memory safety by loading invalid selectors.
[`set_cs`]: https://docs.rs/x86_64/0.6.0/x86_64/instructions/segmentation/fn.set_cs.html
[`load_tss`]: https://docs.rs/x86_64/0.6.0/x86_64/instructions/tables/fn.load_tss.html
[`set_cs`]: https://docs.rs/x86_64/0.7.0/x86_64/instructions/segmentation/fn.set_cs.html
[`load_tss`]: https://docs.rs/x86_64/0.7.0/x86_64/instructions/tables/fn.load_tss.html
Now that we loaded a valid TSS and interrupt stack table, we can set the stack index for our double fault handler in the IDT: