Memory layout
Revision as of 18:42, 24 November 2012 by Yellows8 (talk | contribs) (→ARM11 User-land memory regions)
Physical memory regions
Address | Size | Description |
---|---|---|
0x0 | 0x10000 | Bootrom (super secret code/data @ 0x8000) |
0x10000 | 0x10000 | Bootrom mirror |
0x10000000 | ? | IO memory |
0x1FF00000 | 0x80000 | DSP memory |
0x1FF80000 | 0x80000 | AXI WRAM |
0x20000000 | 0x8000000 | FCRAM |
ARM11 User-land memory regions
Virtual Address | Region Max Size | Description |
---|---|---|
0x00100000 / 0x14000000 | 0x03F00000 | The ExeFS:/.code is loaded here, executables must be loaded to the 0x00100000 region when the exheader "special memory" flag is clear. The 0x03F00000-byte size restriction only applies when this flag is clear. Executables are usually loaded to 0x14000000 when the exheader "special memory" flag is set, however this address can be arbitrary. |
0x08000000 | 0x08000000 | Heap mapped by ControlMemory |
0x10000000-StackSize | StackSize from process exheader | Stack for the main-thread, initialized by the ARM11 kernel. |
0x10000000 | 0x04000000 | Applications usually map this region for HID |
0x14000000 | 0x08000000 | Can be mapped by ControlMemory |
0x1EC00000 | IO registers, the mapped IO pages which each process can access is specified in the CXI exheader.(Applications normally don't have access to registers in this range) |
All executable pages are read-only, and data pages have the execute-never permission set. Normally .text from the loaded ExeFS:/.code is the only mapped executable memory. Executable CROs can be loaded into memory, once loaded the CRO .text section memory page permissions are changed via ControlProcessMemory from RW- to R-X. The address and size of each ExeFS:/.code section is stored in the exheader, the permissions for each section is: .text R-X, .rodata R--, .data RW-, and .bss RW-. The loaded .code is mapped to the addresses specified in the exheader by the ARM11 kernel. The stack permissions is initialized by the ARM11 kernel: RW-. The heap permissions is normally RW-.