Protected mode programming?
What are major differences between Real Mode Programming and Protect Mode Programming?
Also is there a good book out there that explains how protect mode programming works, because I got a couple of assembler books, but all of them refuse to talk about protect mode programming. WHy?
BM
It gets pretty indepth, so I''m going to post a link to it.
http://www.nondot.org/sabre/os/articles/ProtectedMode/
That has a good amount of articles that should cover what your looking for.
Glandalf
http://www.nondot.org/sabre/os/articles/ProtectedMode/
That has a good amount of articles that should cover what your looking for.
Glandalf
The most noticable difference is the memory model - Real-mode is a p.i.t.a., protected is verra naice.
In the hay-days 386enh Win16 was the primary way to access protected mode as well as something called DOS4GW which was made by Watcom and is now discontinued IIRC.
There''s a free IDE called masm, and tutorials on how to use it (search for masm and Icezillain), which is for programming Windows in x86.
I think SAMS published a book called "Make your own 32 OS" which covered protected mode asm.
Magmai Kai Holmlor
- Not For Rent
In the hay-days 386enh Win16 was the primary way to access protected mode as well as something called DOS4GW which was made by Watcom and is now discontinued IIRC.
There''s a free IDE called masm, and tutorials on how to use it (search for masm and Icezillain), which is for programming Windows in x86.
I think SAMS published a book called "Make your own 32 OS" which covered protected mode asm.
Magmai Kai Holmlor
- Not For Rent
quote:Original post by Magmai Kai Holmlor
I think SAMS published a book called "Make your own 32 OS" which covered protected mode asm.
That was Make your own 32-bit OS (in 24 days? ), but other than that you''re right.
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