BIOS
The BIOS (an acronym for Basic Input/Output System and also known as the BIOS ROM or Xbox ROM) is a firmware image that is mapped to the top 16MiB of the CPU's physical address space (0xFF000000-0xFFFFFFFF). Like the standard PC BIOS, it is responsible for initializing the Xbox hardware and booting the system. Unlike the PC BIOS, however, the Xbox BIOS image also contains the kernel in a compressed and encrypted form.
On a standard Xbox, the BIOS image is stored in the Flash. The BIOS image is actually 256KiB, duplicated 4 times to fill the 1MiB ROM chip. You can verify this by running:
$ split -n 4 xbox.bin $ md5sum xa* 542c62cb976a4993c8c5027dff9638ce xaa 542c62cb976a4993c8c5027dff9638ce xab 542c62cb976a4993c8c5027dff9638ce xac 542c62cb976a4993c8c5027dff9638ce xad
You'll notice it is the same file repeated 4 times. That explains how some BIOS chips are 1MB and some are 256KiB. The next thing is that the BIOS is repeated from 0xFF000000 until it fills the rest of memory. In other words, that 256KiB of data is repeated 64 times.
Contents
Components
The BIOS is split into different components. These are largely the same from BIOS to BIOS, but with some differences.
3944 | 4034 | 4134 | 4817 | 5101 | 5530 | 5713 | 5838 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unknown | 0x00000 | 0x00000 | 0x00000 | 0x00000 | 0x00000 | 0x00000 | 0x00000 | 0x00000 |
X-Codes | 0x00080 | 0x00080 | 0x00080 | 0x00080 | 0x00080 | 0x00080 | 0x00080 | 0x00080 |
Copyright String | 0x00CFA | 0x00CFA | 0x00CFA | 0x00DB9 | 0x00E49 | 0x00E59 | 0x00E59 | 0x00DCC |
Kernel | 0x0619C | |||||||
Kernel Data Segment | 0x3944C | |||||||
2BL Always 0x6000 bytes |
0x39E00 | 0x39E00 | 0x39E00 | |||||
FBL Always 0x2880 bytes |
0x3D400 | 0x3D400 | 0x3D400 | 0x3D400 | 0x3D400 | |||
Decoy Boot Loader | 0x3FE00 | 0x3FE00 | 0x3FE00 | 0x3FE00 | 0x3FE00 | 0x3FE00 | 0x3FE00 | 0x3FE00 |
For information how these sections are used, see Boot Process.
Unknown
From 0x00000000 - 0x00000007F
Not sure what this does. Some people think it might be involved with initialising the MCPX[citation needed]. The Reset Vector on the Pentium 3 would mean that this wasn't called before the MCPX ROM[citation needed].
xcodes
These are the xcode operations run by the MCPX interpreter. The first couple of lines appear to be nonsense (they don't execute any functionality), but then the first actual codes that I have found are:
The xcodes in the BIOS versions 3944, 4034, 4134 all start with:
04 10 08 00 80 01 80 00 00
The xcodes in the BIOS versions 4817, 5101, 5530, 5713, 5838 all start with:
04 84 08 00 80 01 80 00 00
This leads me to believe that the first three BIOS versions that I have are compatible with the 1.0 MCPX, and the rest are compatible with the 1.1 MCPX.
Next, some people believed that there was another unknown section between the xcodes and the copyright string. As far as I can tell, that section was to allow the xcode instruction set to expand, as the 5838 BIOS has considerably more xcodes than the 3944 BIOS.
Copyright String
Literally contains the ASCII encoded text: "Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
" (57 bytes long).
Decoy bootloader
This is very similar to the MCPX ROM, only the xcode interpreter is different, and it doesn't include any decryption/hashing algorithms.