Update display.c

Added the 95% completely wired up display driver implementation file
This commit is contained in:
2025-11-26 16:02:07 -08:00
committed by GitHub
parent 7e54f0de66
commit 4047bc3936

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@@ -1,36 +1,79 @@
#include "display.h"
#include "io.h" // Include your I/O header for port access
#include "io.h"
#include "vga.h"
// Initialize the display
void init_display(void) {
// Initialize VGA settings, if necessary
// This could involve setting up the VGA mode, etc.
set_display_mode(0x13); // Example: Set to 320x200 256-color mode
// Initialize the VGA driver. This typically sets up the 80x25 text mode,
// clears the screen, and sets the cursor.
vga_init();
}
// Enumerate connected displays
void enumerate_displays(void) {
// This is a simplified example. Actual enumeration may require
// reading from specific VGA registers or using BIOS interrupts.
// This function is often a complex operation in a real driver.
// In this simplified kernel/VGA text mode environment, we use printf
// to output a message and rely on the fact that VGA is present.
// For demonstration, we will just print a message
// In a real driver, you would check the VGA registers
// to determine connected displays.
clear_display();
// Here you would typically read from VGA registers to find connected displays
// For example, using inb() to read from VGA ports
// Clear the display before printing a message
vga_clear(vga_entry_color(VGA_COLOR_LIGHT_GREY, VGA_COLOR_BLACK));
// Output a simplified enumeration message
vga_printf("Display: Standard VGA Text Mode (80x25) Detected.\n");
// In a real driver, you would use inb() and outb() with specific VGA ports
// to read information (e.g., from the CRTC registers 0x3D4/0x3D5)
// to check for display presence or configuration.
}
// Set the display mode
// NOTE: Setting arbitrary VGA modes (like 0x13 for 320x200) is very complex
// and requires writing hundreds of register values, often done via BIOS in
// real mode. Since we are in protected mode and have a simple text driver,
// this function is kept simple or treated as a placeholder for full mode changes.
void set_display_mode(uint8_t mode) {
// Set the VGA mode by writing to the appropriate registers
// Check if the requested mode is a known mode (e.g., VGA Text Mode 3)
// For this example, we simply acknowledge the call.
// A true mode set would involve complex register sequencing.
// The provided vga.c is a Text Mode driver, so a graphical mode set
// like 0x13 (320x200 256-color) would break the existing vga_printf functionality.
// A simplified text-mode-specific response:
if (mode == 0x03) { // Mode 3 is standard 80x25 text mode
vga_printf("Display mode set to 80x25 Text Mode (Mode 0x03).\n");
vga_init(); // Re-initialize the text mode
} else {
// Simple I/O example based on the original structure (Caution: Incomplete for full mode set)
outb(VGA_PORT, mode); // Example function to write to a port
vga_printf("Attempting to set display mode to 0x%x. (Warning: May break current display)\n", mode);
}
}
// Clear the display
void clear_display(void) {
// Clear the display by filling it with a color
// This is a placeholder for actual clearing logic
// You would typically write to video memory here
// Use the VGA driver's clear function, typically clearing to black on light grey
// or black on black. We'll use the black on light grey from vga_init for consistency.
vga_clear(vga_entry_color(VGA_COLOR_BLACK, VGA_COLOR_LIGHT_GREY));
// Reset cursor to 0, 0
vga_set_cursor_position(0, 0);
}
// Helper function to write a string
void display_write_string(const char* str) {
// Use the VGA driver's string writing function
vga_write_string(str, my_strlen(str));
}
// Helper function to print a formatted string
void display_printf(const char* format, ...) {
// Use the VGA driver's printf function
va_list args;
va_start(args, format);
// The vga_printf function already handles the va_list internally,
// so we can just call it directly.
vga_printf(format, args);
va_end(args);
}