view src/output.c @ 85:918be0c02239

Started adding object target output
author lost
date Fri, 16 Jan 2009 05:14:49 +0000
parents 6de358e7903f
children 033a328a10ae
line wrap: on
line source

/*
output.c
Copyright © 2009 William Astle

This file is part of LWASM.

LWASM is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later
version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for
more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.


Contains the code for actually outputting the assembled code
*/

//#include <ctype.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <stdio.h>
//#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#define __output_c_seen__
//#include "instab.h"
#include "lwasm.h"
#include "util.h"

void write_code_raw(asmstate_t *as, FILE *of);
void write_code_decb(asmstate_t *as, FILE *of);
void write_code_rawrel(asmstate_t *as, FILE *of);
void write_code_obj(asmstate_t *as, FILE *of);

// this prevents warnings about not using the return value of fwrite()
#define writebytes(s, l, c, f)	do { int r; r = fwrite((s), (l), (c), (f)); } while (0)

void lwasm_output(asmstate_t *as)
{
	FILE *of;
	
	if (as -> errorcount > 0)
	{
		fprintf(stderr, "Not doing output due to assembly errors.\n");
		return;
	}
	
	of = fopen(as -> outfile, "wb");
	if (!of)
	{
		fprintf(stderr, "Cannot open '%s' for output", as -> outfile);
		perror("");
		return;
	}

	switch (as -> outformat)
	{
	case OUTPUT_RAW:
		write_code_raw(as, of);
		break;
		
	case OUTPUT_DECB:
		write_code_decb(as, of);
		break;
		
	case OUTPUT_RAWREL:
		write_code_rawrel(as, of);
		break;
	
	case OUTPUT_OBJ:
		write_code_obj(as, of);
		break;

	default:
		fprintf(stderr, "BUG: unrecognized output format when generating output file\n");
		fclose(of);
		unlink(as -> outfile);
		return;
	}

	fclose(of);
}

/*
rawrel output treats an ORG directive as an offset from the start of the
file. Undefined results will occur if an ORG directive moves the output
pointer backward. This particular implementation uses "fseek" to handle
ORG requests and to skip over RMBs.

This simple brain damanged method simply does an fseek before outputting
each instruction.
*/
void write_code_rawrel(asmstate_t *as, FILE *of)
{
	lwasm_line_t *cl;
	
	for (cl = as -> lineshead; cl; cl = cl -> next)
	{
		if (cl -> codelen == 0)
			continue;
		
		fseek(of, cl -> codeaddr, SEEK_SET);
		writebytes(cl -> bytes, cl -> codelen, 1, of);
	}
}

/*
raw merely writes all the bytes directly to the file as is. ORG is just a
reference for the assembler to handle absolute references. Multiple ORG
statements will produce mostly useless results
*/
void write_code_raw(asmstate_t *as, FILE *of)
{
	lwasm_line_t *cl;
	
	for (cl = as -> lineshead; cl; cl = cl -> next)
	{
		if (cl -> nocodelen)
		{
			int i;
			for (i = 0; i < cl -> nocodelen; i++)
				writebytes("\0", 1, 1, of);
			continue;
		}
		writebytes(cl -> bytes, cl -> codelen, 1, of);
	}
}

void write_code_decb(asmstate_t *as, FILE *of)
{
	long preambloc;
	lwasm_line_t *cl;
	int blocklen = -1;
	int nextcalc = -1;
	unsigned char outbuf[5];
	
	for (cl = as -> lineshead; cl; cl = cl -> next)
	{
		if (cl -> nocodelen)
			continue;
		if (cl -> codeaddr != nextcalc && cl -> codelen > 0)
		{
			// need preamble here
			if (blocklen > 0)
			{
				// update previous preamble if needed
				fseek(of, preambloc, SEEK_SET);
				outbuf[0] = (blocklen >> 8) & 0xFF;
				outbuf[1] = blocklen & 0xFF;
				writebytes(outbuf, 2, 1, of);
				fseek(of, 0, SEEK_END);
			}
			blocklen = 0;
			nextcalc = cl -> codeaddr;
			outbuf[0] = 0x00;
			outbuf[1] = 0x00;
			outbuf[2] = 0x00;
			outbuf[3] = (nextcalc >> 8) & 0xFF;
			outbuf[4] = nextcalc & 0xFF;
			preambloc = ftell(of) + 1;
			writebytes(outbuf, 5, 1, of);
		}
		nextcalc += cl -> codelen;
		writebytes(cl -> bytes, cl -> codelen, 1, of);
		blocklen += cl -> codelen;
	}
	if (blocklen > 0)
	{
		fseek(of, preambloc, SEEK_SET);
		outbuf[0] = (blocklen >> 8) & 0xFF;
		outbuf[1] = blocklen & 0xFF;
		writebytes(outbuf, 2, 1, of);
		fseek(of, 0, SEEK_END);
	}
	
	// now write postamble
	outbuf[0] = 0xFF;
	outbuf[1] = 0x00;
	outbuf[2] = 0x00;
	outbuf[3] = (as -> execaddr >> 8) & 0xFF;
	outbuf[4] = (as -> execaddr) & 0xFF;
	writebytes(outbuf, 5, 1, of);
}

void write_code_obj_sbadd(sectiontab_t *s, unsigned char b)
{
	if (s -> oblen >= s -> obsize)
	{
		s -> obytes = lwasm_realloc(s -> obytes, s -> obsize + 128);
		s -> obsize += 128;
	}
	s -> obytes[s -> oblen] = b;
	s -> oblen += 1;
}

void write_code_obj(asmstate_t *as, FILE *of)
{
	lwasm_line_t *l;
	int i;

	// output the magic number and file header
	writebytes("LWOBJ16\0", 8, 1, of);
	
	// run through the entire system and build the byte streams for each
	// section; at the same time, generate a list of "local" symbols to
	// output for each section
	// NOTE: for "local" symbols, we will append \x01 and the ascii string
	// of the context identifier (so sym in context 1 would be "sym\x011"
	// we can do this because the linker can handle symbols with any
	// character other than NUL.
	// also we will generate a list of incomplete references for each
	// section along with the actual definition that will be output
	
	// once all this information is generated, we will output each section
	// to the file
	
	// NOTE: we build everything in memory then output it because the
	// assembler accepts multiple instances of the same section but the
	// linker expects only one instance of each section in the object file
	// so we need to collect all the various pieces of a section together
	// (also, the assembler treated multiple instances of the same section
	// as continuations of previous sections so we would need to collect
	// them together anyway.
	
	for (l = as -> lineshead; l; l = l -> next)
	{
		if (l -> sect)
		{
			// we're in a section - need to output some bytes
			for (i = 0; i < l -> codelen; i++)
				write_code_obj_sbadd(l -> sect, l -> bytes[i]);
			for (i = 0; i < l -> nocodelen; i++)
				write_code_obj_sbadd(l -> sect, 0);
			
			// do we have a "relocation"? If so, add a reference to the
			// relocation table
			if (l -> relocoff >= 0)
			{
			
			}
		}
	}
}