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18:05
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Q: Keyboard driver not printing anything on my x64 OS

AlexTheNewDevI have recently made an x86-64 OS and wanted to create a keyboard driver. I made basic logic for it and make it register its handler into IRQ1 tried it no faults were made but inside QEMU when I tap a key nothing happens. I will add my keyboard logic below. #include "io.h" #include "isr.h" #incl...

The problem isn't in the code you are showing. The log at least tells you that you got a timer interrupt nd then nothing else. It just so happens I saw the problem during the last question you asked but it wasn't related to your first problem. The issue is that interrupt handlers need to end with iretq to return from interrupt. You are using C functions for ISR handlers and those return with a ret. The result of using ret is that your function doesn't properly restore things like the RFLAGS including the Interrupt Flag. IF stays off after the ret and you get no more interrupts.
You need to create ISR handlers that return with IRETQ. Most people create the stubs in assembly that set up the stack frame, call a C function with a pointer to the stack frame and then do an IRETQ. The other alternative to get things going is to mark your isr handler functions (like isr32, isr33 etc) with the __attribute__((interrupt)) . This will cause an iretq to be used to return rather than a ret.
The interrupt attribute does have limitations and I generally don't recommend it. It is documented here: gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/… . I prefer to write the ISR stubs in assembler.
I see thank you i will look onto it.
Do i need to modify the keyboard registration logic after i have made these changes? As i think i modified ISR with the recommended assembly stubs, but i still receive the timer interrupt and nothing else.
I really can't tell without seeing all the code changes you have made. Can you make your Github available again? I noticed you made it unavailable after we dealt with your last question.
Alright give me a minute.
In idt.c you need to change all the entries to point to the assembly stubs. As an example from: idt_set_gate(32, (uint64_t)isr32, 0x08, 0x8E); to idt_set_gate(32, (uint64_t)isr32_stub, 0x08, 0x8E); . This code would have to be modified to send an EOI in the handlers to properly get future interrupts.
Your interrupt stubs still need some cleanup. You need to save (before the call to a C function) and restore (after the call) all the registers. You are pushing an extra 0 in all the ISRs. You need to push an extra 0 when there is no error code. isr8_stub should not be pushing the extra 0 because the CPU puts an error code on the stack automatically. You can see this table to see which exceptions push an error code automatically: wiki.osdev.org/Exceptions
As well you push rsp . That should be mov rdi, rsp because in the System V ABI calling convention the first parameter is passed to a function in RDI. This differs from the 32-bit C calling convention which passes all parameters on the stack. More on the 64-bit calling convention is here: wiki.osdev.org/System_V_ABI#x86-64 . Before calling the C functions in the stubs you should also issue a CLD instruction before the call. This is a requirement of the x86-64 ABI as well.
18:05
Are your free to check my code if its right now? Especially the stubs cleanup part, it was really time consuming.
I can check in in a little while. Just busy doing something at the moment
Yep no problem.
18:31
I did some debugging and interrupts are received not not just the timer interrupt i gotta do some fixes to vga when cleaning screen, then printing again as it prints at the row it left after clearing. anyways keyboard interrupt is received but something is still wrong as keyboard doesnt recognise/receive the keyboard interrupt. Thats why its not printing anything now.
18:47
I am looking at it now. I am doing some cleanup. The order you push things on the stack is a bit of a problem and you may have noticed the assembly code is a lot of copy and paste that can be reduced by using some macros. Give me about half an hour to come up with something a bit cleaner based on what you have.
Okay thanks!
 
1 hour later…
19:50
OKay, I have submitted a pull request. You can take a look at all the changes. But the big ones are that the stubs are generated using macros to reduce the copy and pasting. I have created an appropriate interrupt_frame structure that passes all the registers in. The stubs now push the segment selectors and set DS=ES=FS=GS to the kernel data selector (this will come in hnady when you use usermode).
I have the stubs calling interrupt_handler directly removing an extra layer to the interrupt processing. The interrupt number is now passed into interrupt handler as part of the interrupt_frame structure.
Oh wow thanks! If you don’t mind me asking how much have you been OS Developing?
Decades
Since the early 2000s
Wow nice!
Have you already developed your own os?
I have developed custom OSes for a client in the embedded space.
But I haven't made any of my small OS projects as a hobby available.
I see.
Oh and i ran the iso and looks like Unhandled Expection:32 Timer has occured.
20:02
I hang out mostly on OSDev, Stackoverflow, and Reddit helping people with their projects.
My bad it was unhandled interrupt i will handle it with a timer driver later.
Yes, basically for any interrupt you don't have registered it will display "unhandled". You can change that all you want. The keyboard should work and print characters to the console.
The keyboard was the only one you had registered a handler for.
Yep im gonna modify it a bit to stop spamming the unhandled interrupt.
Good idea.
I have to do some other things now. Good luck!

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