Monday, January 9, 2017
On 1:25 AM by Unknown in Computer No comments
This document has been created to give you a better
understanding of how the personal computer works and what it does each
time you press the power button.
Powering on the computer
When you first press the power button, the computer sends a signal to the computer power supply, which converts the alternating current (AC) to a direct current (DC). This supplies the computer and its components with the proper amount of voltage and electricity.
Once the computer and its components have received ample power and the power supply reports no errors it sends a signal (using transistors) to the motherboard and the computer processor (CPU). While this is happening, the processor will clear any leftover data in the memory registers and give the CPU program counter
a F000 hexadecimal number. This number is the location of the first
instruction and tells the CPU that it's ready to process the
instructions contained in the basic input/output system (BIOS).
BIOS and the POST
When the computer first looks at the BIOS, it begins the power-on self-test (POST)
sequence to make sure the components in the computer are present and
functioning properly. If the computer does not pass any of these tests,
it will encounter an irregular POST. An irregular POST is a beep code
that is different from the standard one or two beeps. For example, an
irregular POST could generate no beeps at all or a combination of
different beeps to indicate the cause of the failure.
If the computer passes POST, it looks at the first 64-bytes of memory located in the CMOS chip, which is kept alive by the CMOS battery
even when the computer is turned off. This chip contains information
such as the system time and date and information about all the hardware
installed in your computer.
After loading the CMOS information, the POST will
begin inspecting and comparing the system settings with what is
installed in the computer. If no errors are found it will then load the
basic device drivers and interrupt handlers for hardware such as the
hard drive, keyboard, mouse, floppy drive. These basic drivers allow the
CPU to communicate with these hardware devices and allow the computer
to continue its boot process.
Next, the POST will check the real-time clock (RTC) or system timer and the computer system bus
to make sure both of these are properly working on the computer.
Finally, you'll get a picture on your display after the POST has loaded
the memory contained on the display adapter and has made it part of the overall system BIOS.
Next, the BIOS checks to see if it's performing a cold boot or warm boot
(reboot) by looking at the memory address 0000:0472. If it sees 1234h
the BIOS knows that this is a reboot and skips the remainder of the POST
steps.
If 1234h is not seen, the BIOS knows that this is a
cold boot and will continue running additional POST steps. Next, it
tests the computer memory (RAM)
installed in the computer by writing to each chip. With early
computers, you can see it performing the step as it counts the total
installed memory as it's booting.
Finally, the POST will send signals to the computer
floppy, optical, and hard drive to test these drives. If all drives
pass the test, the POST is complete and instruct the computer to start
the process of loading the operating system.
Booting the operating system
After the computer has passed the POST, the computer will start the boot
process. This process is what loads the operating system and all of
it's associated files. Because Microsoft Windows is the most commonly
used operating system, this section will cover the process of loading
Microsoft Windows.
The BIOS first hands control over to the bootstrap loader,
which looks at the boot sector of the hard drive. If your boot sequence
in CMOS setup is not setup to look at the hard drive first, it may look
at the boot sector on any inserted floppy disk drive or optical disc
first before doing this.
In this example, the Microsoft Windows XP NT Loader (NTLDR)
is found on the boot sector and tells the computer where to find the
remaining code on the hard drive. Next, Windows loads the ntdetect.com
file, which displays the Windows splash screen and loads the Windows Registry.
After loading the Registry, Windows begins to load dozens of low-level
programs that make up the operating system into memory. Many of the
initially loaded programs are what allow Windows to communicate with the
essential hardware and other programs running on the computer.
After the Registry has loaded the initial basic hardware devices, it begins to load Plug-and-Play devices, PCI, and ISA
devices. After loading all these devices, Windows loads full support of
the hard drive, partitions, and any other disk drives and then moves to
all other drivers that have been installed.
Finally, after successfully completing the above steps any additional required services are loaded and Windows starts.
Hardware devices communicating with the computer
After the computer has loaded the operating system,
hardware attached to the computer must be able to communicate with the
CPU. Hardware communication is done by using an interrupt request (IRQ). Each time hardware needs the attention of the computer the interrupt controller sends the request (INTR)
to the CPU to stop what it is doing to process the request. Anything
that was being currently done by the CPU is put on hold and stored as a
memory address in the memory stack and is returned to after the
interrupt request is processed.
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