In memory of Ben “bushing” Byer, who passed away on Monday, February 8th, 2016.

Difference between revisions of "Hardware/Starlet"

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Revision as of 07:04, 27 September 2022

The Hollywood includes an ARM9 core to handle I/O and security, nicknamed the Starlet by fail0verflow, but internally known as the IOP, short for Input/Output Processor. This is a very interesting piece of hardware, as it basically does everything that makes a Wii different from a GameCube.

The Starlet contains an internal 96KB SRAM; if IOS needs more memory, it can lock part of MEM2 to prevent Broadway access.

Note: this page is incomplete. Please expand it as you see fit!

Specs

  • NEC ARM926EJ-S SoC. See also ChipWorks.
  • Big endian for compatibility with the Broadway
  • ARM and thumb instruction set
  • Clocked at 243MHz (Hollywood clock)

Exceptions

Exception vectors are located at ffff0000. Each exception is given 4 bytes, and usually branches elsewhere.

Index mini name Description
0 v_reset Hardware reset, also typically set as the entrypoint
1 v_undf Undefined instruction, used by IOS syscalls
2 v_swi Generated by the SVC instruction, used for IOS debug calls
3 v_instr_abrt Instruction abort
4 v_data_abrt Data abort
5 v_reserved Reserved
6 v_irq IRQ
7 v_fiq FIQ

Boot

See also: boot process

Starlet is the first processor to run code in the Wii.

  • Starlet boots from an internal Mask ROM, BOOT0 (about 1300 bytes of code out of 4K possible)
  • boot0 decrypts, verifies, and runs the first few blocks of NAND, BOOT1 (up to the first 48 pages of flash)
  • boot1 locates, loads, decrypts, verifies, and runs BOOT2
  • boot2 bootstrap then loads the embedded ELF file
  • boot2 starts the IOS
  • IOS loads code into the EXI buffer and bootstraps the Broadway

Links

More information about the Starlet: