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I have recently been studying some bootstrap code which was intended for use with a floppy drive. My goal is to modify the program so that it uses my USB flash drive. Now I see how the INT 13H function has been used with the floppy device, but I guess my question is, how will communicating with the USB drive differ?

For example, here is a snippet of the floppy code (GNU assembler):



    movb    $0x00,%dl       /* select 1st floppy */

    /* later */

    movw    sec,%cx		/* get sector number */
    movw    head,%dx	/* get head number */

    movw    $0x0201,%ax	/* read 1 sector */
    int $0x13

Now I have read that moving 0x80 into %dl will select the first HDD in the BIOS. In my particular bios I can change the drive order, which would include a USB drive. I am quite sure this is becoming BIOS dependant, but I was thinking that the order listed in the BIOS could correspond to the value I move into %dl. I need to track down some documentation...

I am really unfamiliar with working with block devices as it is, can someone point me to a good place to start learning more?

Thanks!

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The flash drive is only available if the BIOS supports it. And if it does, it would probably let you boot from it already. Most of this is done by emulation, so the calls to boot the flash drive are probably the same.

I've dumped out the boot blocks from my thumb drives, and have found both floppy and hard drive formats.

Maybe you should just try a bunch of numbers for accessing the drives and see which ones answer.

I think Google is your friend here. Start with "INT 13H". And ask more questions.

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