Writing network drivers for KolibriOS

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Revision as of 13:25, 24 January 2011 by Hidnplayr (talk | contribs)
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Intro

So, you want to write a new network driver for KolibriOS ?
Or you are just curious about how they work? Well, since a driver for an ethernet, pci card, such as the rtl8139, actually isnt that hard to understand,
I advice you to read the code of a driver and try to understand it.

Here are some facts, summed op in no-particular order:

  • Drivers are designed to handle more then one devices at once.
  • All device specific data is stored in a structure called the 'device structure'.
  • Network drivers are loaded by a program (NetCfg).
  • A program can communicate directly with the driver, using system function 68/17

IOCTL input

Here is a list of opcodes the network drivers should accept trhough the IOCTL structure:

0 - Getversion

standard for all drivers, not only network drivers

1 - Hook

Attach driver to a device


the HOOK procedure

This is a part of the service proc.

The application calling the hook procedure should give informationa bout the device with one of these structures:

IN: (ISA) <asm> type db 0 ; isa io_addr dw ? irq_line db ? </asm>

IN: (PCI) <asm> type db 1 ; pci pci_bus db ? pci_dev db ? </asm>

The driver should do the following:

  1. check if device is already listed in the drivers list
  2. allocate a device structure
  3. fill in io num, irq, device type, pointers to network procedures
  4. allocate buffers needed for the driver
  5. probe the device
  6. reset the device
  7. register device to kernel using NetRegDev

Then it should return the driver number, or -1 on error, in eax

The device stucture

This structure contains all information about the device the driver has. It is also used to communicate with kernel. It hold the MTU, driver functions to send/reset/.. the mac address,...

The top of the structure must always look like this: (Since it is shared by the driver and the kernel)

<asm> NET_DEVICE:

       .type           dd ?    ; Type field (ethernet/slip/...)
       .mtu            dd ?    ; Maximal Transmission Unit (in bytes)
       .name           dd ?    ; Ptr to 0 terminated string 
       .unload         dd ?    ; Ptrs to driver functions
       .reset          dd ?    ;
       .transmit       dd ?    ;
       .bytes_tx       dq ?    ; Statistics, updated by the driver
       .bytes_rx       dq ?    ;
       .packets_tx     dd ?    ;
       .packets_rx     dd ?    ;
       .end:

</asm>

This is appended by a Type-specific structure, for ethernet this will be: <asm>

       .set_mode       dd ?
       .get_mode       dd ?
       .set_MAC        dd ?
       .get_MAC        dd ?
       .mode           dd ?
       .mac            dp ?    

</asm>

These structures are defined in netdrv.inc

The place after these two common structs is to be used by the driver, to store store information about the device.

receiving mechanism

When a packet is received by the driver, the driver copies it into a buffer allocated using 'KernelAlloc'.
It then pushes a return address on the stack, where kernel should jump to when done handling the packet. This is followed bye the pushing of the buffer size and the buffer pointer (both are dwords, and must be pushed in this particular order)

Then the driver jumps to 'EthReceiver' (or another procedure for another network device type).
This kernel function will return with the 2 dwords removed from the stack.

sending mechanism

When the kernel needs to send a packet, it simple looks up the appropriate driver in it's driver table.
In the table it will find the pointer to the device structure, so the kernel can directly call the transmit function listed in the structure.

The kernel will, similary to the driver, when receiving a packet, push the size of packet, and pointer to packet, onto the stack. But not in the same order, it first pushes the dwords and then does a call. (so ptr will be at [esp+4] and size at [esp+8])