KBL Param: Difference between revisions

From Vita Development Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 37: Line 37:
| 0x6C || 0x4 || Boot type indicator (0x20000 on resume), 0x1 = no suspend/boot logo
| 0x6C || 0x4 || Boot type indicator (0x20000 on resume), 0x1 = no suspend/boot logo
|-
|-
| 0x70 || 0x10 || Some serial
| 0x70 || 0x10 || OpenPsId
|-
|-
| 0x80 || 0x4 || <code>secure_kernel.enp</code> raw data paddr (optional)
| 0x80 || 0x4 || <code>secure_kernel.enp</code> raw data paddr (optional)

Revision as of 16:52, 18 July 2017

The sysroot buffer is a 0x100 or 0x200 sized buffer passed to the secure kernel bootloader in the scratch space and contains all sorts of flags and system parameters. This buffer is copied to the secure kernel, the non-secure kernel loader, and the non-secure kernel and is used by many functions to check for features that are enabled for the system.

Offset Size Description
0x00 0x2 Version (usually 1)
0x02 0x2 Sysroot size (0x100 or 0x200)
0x04 0x4 Current Firmware Version
0x08 0x4 Firmware Version Shipped from Factory
0x2C 0x8 Bitfield flags 1
0x40 0x4 Devkit Function address 1
0x44 0x4 Devkit UID 1
0x48 0x4 Devkit Function address 1
0x4C 0x4 ASLR Seed
0x50 0x4 Devkit Config Flags1 (0x80000001 or 0x80000003)
0x54 0x4 Devkit Config Flags2 (0x0)
0x58 0x4 Devkit Config ??
0x5C 0x4 Devkit Config Flags3 (0x20000010)
0x60 0x4 DRAM base paddr
0x64 0x4 DRAM size
0x6C 0x4 Boot type indicator (0x20000 on resume), 0x1 = no suspend/boot logo
0x70 0x10 OpenPsId
0x80 0x4 secure_kernel.enp raw data paddr (optional)
0x84 0x4 secure_kernel.enp size (optional)
0x90 0x4 kprx_auth_sm.self raw data paddr
0x94 0x4 kprx_auth_sm.self size
0x98 0x4 prog_rvk.srvk raw data paddr
0x9C 0x4 prog_rvk.srvk size
0xA0 0x2 Model (0x1000)
0xA2 0x2 Device type (0x401 = retail device, 0x101 = devkit device)
0xA4 0x2 Device config (0x1000 = standard form, 0x102 = pstv)
0xA6 0x2 Type (0x300 = retail, 0x100 = devkit)
0xB0 0x10 Session ID
0xC4 0x4 Boot type indicator (0x80 on resume)
0xD0 0x4 Saved context paddr
0xF8 0x4 BootLoader Revision
0xFC 0x4 Sysroot Magic value (0xCBAC03AA)
0x100 0x20 Encrypted Session Key (FW 2.12+)

Bitfield Flags

DIP Switches

To convert the bit number to the offset and bit: offset = start_offset + (bit_num / 32) * 4, bit = (bit_num % 32) << 1

CP Information

Bits 0-31 is a 32-bit integer of the current time on the devkit CP clock. This is duplicated in bits 64-95. Bits 32-47 is a 16-bit integer of the CP version and bits 48-63 is a 16-bit integer of the CP build ID. All integers are little-endian. On non-devkits, these fields are zero. Bits 0-63 are also usable as general purpose switches exposed with sceKernelSetDipsw, sceKernelClearDipsw, and sceKernelCheckDipsw but they do not change anything in hardware (only cached values are overwritten).

User Flags

Bits 96-127 does not seem to be used in the kernel.

SDK Flags

Bits 128-159 are used to store devkit flags. It does not appear to be used in other models.

Bit Description
159 Devkit in Development Mode

Shell Flags

Bits 160-191 are used for SceShell flags.

Bit Description

Debug Flags

Bits 192-223 are for various debugging options.

Bit Description
197 Enable kernel console logging
211 Enable user UART console logging

System Flags

Bits 224-255 are used for various system options.

Bit Description