why .bss explicitly initialize global variable to zero?-Collection of common programming errors
The data for the .bss section isn’t stored in the compiled object files because, well, there is no data-the compiler puts variables in that segment precisely because they should be zero-initialized.
When the OS loads the executable, it just looks at the size of the .bss segment, allocates that much memory, and zero-initializes it for you. By not storing that data in the executable file, it reduces loading times.
If you want data to be initialized with certain data, then give it an initializer in your code. The compiler will then put it in the .data segment (initialized data) instead of .bss (uninitialized data). When the OS then loads the executable, it will allocate the memory for the data and then copy it in from the executable. This takes extra I/O, but your data is explicitly initialized how you want it.
Alternatively, you could leave the data stay in the .bss segment and then initialize it yourself at runtime. If the data is quick and easy to generate at runtime, it might be faster to recompute it at startup rather then read it off of disk. But those situations are probably rare.