Mercurial > hg > index.cgi
view docs/manual/x200.html @ 235:e3741cf53e00
Fix error messages related to undefined symbols in lwlink
Make lwlink not complain about seciton base and length symbols. Also silence
duplicate complaints about undefined symbols. There is no need to complain
about undefined symbols during the file/section resolution stage! If they
are truly undefined, they'll still be undefined at the reference resolution
stage.
author | William Astle <lost@l-w.ca> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 11 Aug 2012 15:18:58 -0600 |
parents | 2cc599f1bebf |
children | 155799f6cfa5 |
line wrap: on
line source
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> <HTML ><HEAD ><TITLE >Assembler Directives</TITLE ><META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK REL="HOME" TITLE="LW Tool Chain" HREF="index.html"><LINK REL="UP" TITLE="LWASM" HREF="c45.html"><LINK REL="PREVIOUS" TITLE="Numbers and Expressions" HREF="x192.html"><LINK REL="NEXT" TITLE="Macros" HREF="x483.html"></HEAD ><BODY CLASS="SECTION" BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" TEXT="#000000" LINK="#0000FF" VLINK="#840084" ALINK="#0000FF" ><DIV CLASS="NAVHEADER" ><TABLE SUMMARY="Header navigation table" WIDTH="100%" BORDER="0" CELLPADDING="0" CELLSPACING="0" ><TR ><TH COLSPAN="3" ALIGN="center" >LW Tool Chain</TH ></TR ><TR ><TD WIDTH="10%" ALIGN="left" VALIGN="bottom" ><A HREF="x192.html" ACCESSKEY="P" >Prev</A ></TD ><TD WIDTH="80%" ALIGN="center" VALIGN="bottom" >Chapter 3. LWASM</TD ><TD WIDTH="10%" ALIGN="right" VALIGN="bottom" ><A HREF="x483.html" ACCESSKEY="N" >Next</A ></TD ></TR ></TABLE ><HR ALIGN="LEFT" WIDTH="100%"></DIV ><DIV CLASS="SECTION" ><H1 CLASS="SECTION" ><A NAME="AEN200" >3.6. Assembler Directives</A ></H1 ><P >Various directives can be used to control the behaviour of the assembler or to include non-code/data in the resulting output. Those directives that are not described in detail in other sections of this document are described below.</P ><DIV CLASS="SECTION" ><H2 CLASS="SECTION" ><A NAME="AEN203" >3.6.1. Data Directives</A ></H2 ><P ></P ><DIV CLASS="VARIABLELIST" ><DL ><DT >FCB <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr[,...]</CODE >, .DB <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr[,...]</CODE >, .BYTE <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr[,...]</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Include one or more constant bytes (separated by commas) in the output.</P ></DD ><DT >FDB <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr[,...]</CODE >, .DW <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr[,...]</CODE >, .WORD <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr[,...]</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Include one or more words (separated by commas) in the output.</P ></DD ><DT >FQB <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr[,...]</CODE >, .QUAD <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr[,...]</CODE >, .4BYTE <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr[,...]</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Include one or more double words (separated by commas) in the output.</P ></DD ><DT >FCC <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE >, .ASCII <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE >, .STR <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Include a string of text in the output. The first character of the operand is the delimiter which must appear as the last character and cannot appear within the string. The string is included with no modifications></P ></DD ><DT >FCN <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE >, .ASCIZ <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE >, .STRZ <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Include a NUL terminated string of text in the output. The first character of the operand is the delimiter which must appear as the last character and cannot appear within the string. A NUL byte is automatically appended to the string.</P ></DD ><DT >FCS <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE >, .ASCIS <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE >, .STRS <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Include a string of text in the output with bit 7 of the final byte set. The first character of the operand is the delimiter which must appear as the last character and cannot appear within the string.</P ></DD ><DT >ZMB <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Include a number of NUL bytes in the output. The number must be fully resolvable during pass 1 of assembly so no forward or external references are permitted.</P ></DD ><DT >ZMD <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Include a number of zero words in the output. The number must be fully resolvable during pass 1 of assembly so no forward or external references are permitted.</P ></DD ><DT >ZMQ <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr<CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" ></CODE ></CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Include a number of zero double-words in the output. The number must be fully resolvable during pass 1 of assembly so no forward or external references are permitted.</P ></DD ><DT >RMB <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE >, .BLKB <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE >, .DS <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE >, .RS <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Reserve a number of bytes in the output. The number must be fully resolvable during pass 1 of assembly so no forward or external references are permitted. The value of the bytes is undefined.</P ></DD ><DT >RMD <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Reserve a number of words in the output. The number must be fully resolvable during pass 1 of assembly so no forward or external references are permitted. The value of the words is undefined.</P ></DD ><DT >RMQ <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Reserve a number of double-words in the output. The number must be fully resolvable during pass 1 of assembly so no forward or external references are permitted. The value of the double-words is undefined.</P ></DD ><DT >INCLUDEBIN <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >filename</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Treat the contents of <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >filename</CODE > as a string of bytes to be included literally at the current assembly point. This has the same effect as converting the file contents to a series of FCB statements and including those at the current assembly point.</P ><P > If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >filename</CODE > beings with a /, the file name will be taken as absolute. Otherwise, the current directory will be searched followed by the search path in the order specified.</P ><P > Please note that absolute path detection including drive letters will not function correctly on Windows platforms. Non-absolute inclusion will work, however.</P ></DD ></DL ></DIV ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="SECTION" ><H2 CLASS="SECTION" ><A NAME="AEN306" >3.6.2. Address Definition</A ></H2 ><P >The directives in this section all control the addresses of symbols or the assembly process itself.</P ><P ></P ><DIV CLASS="VARIABLELIST" ><DL ><DT >ORG <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Set the assembly address. The address must be fully resolvable on the first pass so no external or forward references are permitted. ORG is not permitted within sections when outputting to object files. For the DECB target, each ORG directive after which output is generated will cause a new preamble to be output. ORG is only used to determine the addresses of symbols when the raw target is used.</P ></DD ><DT ><CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >sym</CODE > EQU <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE >, <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >sym</CODE > = <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Define the value of <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >sym</CODE > to be <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE >.</P ></DD ><DT ><CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >sym</CODE > SET <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Define the value of <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >sym</CODE > to be <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE >. Unlike EQU, SET permits symbols to be defined multiple times as long as SET is used for all instances. Use of the symbol before the first SET statement that sets its value is undefined.</P ></DD ><DT >SETDP <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Inform the assembler that it can assume the DP register contains <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE >. This directive is only advice to the assembler to determine whether an address is in the direct page and has no effect on the contents of the DP register. The value must be fully resolved during the first assembly pass because it affects the sizes of subsequent instructions.</P ><P >This directive has no effect in the object file target.</P ></DD ><DT >ALIGN <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE >[,<CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >value</CODE >]</DT ><DD ><P >Force the current assembly address to be a multiple of <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE >. If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >value</CODE > is not specified, a series of NUL bytes is output to force the alignment, if required. Otherwise, the low order 8 bits of <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >value</CODE > will be used as the fill. The alignment value must be fully resolved on the first pass because it affects the addresses of subsquent instructions. However, <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >value</CODE > may include forward references; as long as it resolves to a constant for the second pass, the value will be accepted.</P ><P >Unless <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >value</CODE > is specified as something like $12, this directive is not suitable for inclusion in the middle of actual code. The default padding value is $00 which is intended to be used within data blocks. </P ></DD ></DL ></DIV ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="SECTION" ><H2 CLASS="SECTION" ><A NAME="AEN353" >3.6.3. Conditional Assembly</A ></H2 ><P >Portions of the source code can be excluded or included based on conditions known at assembly time. Conditionals can be nested arbitrarily deeply. The directives associated with conditional assembly are described in this section.</P ><P >All conditionals must be fully bracketed. That is, every conditional statement must eventually be followed by an ENDC at the same level of nesting.</P ><P >Conditional expressions are only evaluated on the first assembly pass. It is not possible to game the assembly process by having a conditional change its value between assembly passes. Due to the underlying architecture of LWASM, there is no possible utility to IFP1 and IFP2, nor can they, as of LWASM 3.0, actually be implemented meaningfully. Thus there is not and never will be any equivalent of IFP1 or IFP2 as provided by other assemblers. Use of those opcodes will throw a warning and be ignored.</P ><P >It is important to note that if a conditional does not resolve to a constant during the first parsing pass, an error will be thrown. This is unavoidable because the assembler must make a decision about which source to include and which source to exclude at this stage. Thus, expressions that work normally elsewhere will not work for conditions.</P ><P ></P ><DIV CLASS="VARIABLELIST" ><DL ><DT >IFEQ <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE > evaluates to zero, the conditional will be considered true.</P ></DD ><DT >IFNE <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE >, IF <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE > evaluates to a non-zero value, the conditional will be considered true.</P ></DD ><DT >IFGT <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE > evaluates to a value greater than zero, the conditional will be considered true.</P ></DD ><DT >IFGE <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE > evaluates to a value greater than or equal to zero, the conditional will be considered true.</P ></DD ><DT >IFLT <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE > evaluates to a value less than zero, the conditional will be considered true.</P ></DD ><DT >IFLE <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE > evaluates to a value less than or equal to zero , the conditional will be considered true.</P ></DD ><DT >IFDEF <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >sym</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >sym</CODE > is defined at this point in the assembly process, the conditional will be considered true.</P ></DD ><DT >IFNDEF <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >sym</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >sym</CODE > is not defined at this point in the assembly process, the conditional will be considered true.</P ></DD ><DT >ELSE</DT ><DD ><P >If the preceding conditional at the same level of nesting was false, the statements following will be assembled. If the preceding conditional at the same level was true, the statements following will not be assembled. Note that the preceding conditional might have been another ELSE statement although this behaviour is not guaranteed to be supported in future versions of LWASM.</P ></DD ><DT >ENDC</DT ><DD ><P >This directive marks the end of a conditional construct. Every conditional construct must end with an ENDC directive.</P ></DD ></DL ></DIV ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="SECTION" ><H2 CLASS="SECTION" ><A NAME="AEN418" >3.6.4. OS9 Target Directives</A ></H2 ><P >This section includes directives that apply solely to the OS9 target.</P ><P ></P ><DIV CLASS="VARIABLELIST" ><DL ><DT >OS9 <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >syscall</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P > This directive generates a call to the specified system call. <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >syscall</CODE > may be an arbitrary expression. </P ></DD ><DT >MOD <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >size</CODE >,<CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >name</CODE >,<CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >type</CODE >,<CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >flags</CODE >,<CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >execoff</CODE >,<CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >datasize</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P > This tells LWASM that the beginning of the actual module is here. It will generate a module header based on the parameters specified. It will also begin calcuating the module CRC. </P ><P > The precise meaning of the various parameters is beyond the scope of this document since it is not a tutorial on OS9 module programming. </P ></DD ><DT >EMOD</DT ><DD ><P > This marks the end of a module and causes LWASM to emit the calculated CRC for the module. </P ></DD ></DL ></DIV ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="SECTION" ><H2 CLASS="SECTION" ><A NAME="AEN443" >3.6.5. Miscelaneous Directives</A ></H2 ><P >This section includes directives that do not fit into the other categories.</P ><P ></P ><DIV CLASS="VARIABLELIST" ><DL ><DT >INCLUDE <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >filename</CODE >, USE <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >filename</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P > Include the contents of <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >filename</CODE > at this point in the assembly as though it were a part of the file currently being processed. Note that if whitespace appears in the name of the file, you must enclose <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >filename</CODE > in quotes.</P ><P >Note that the USE variation is provided only for compatibility with other assemblers. It is recommended to use the INCLUDE variation.</P ><P >If <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >filename</CODE > begins with a "/", it is interpreted as an absolute path. If it does not, the search path will be used to find the file. First, the directory containing the file that contains this directive. (Includes within an included file are relative to the included file, not the file that included it.) If the file is not found there, the include path is searched. If it is still not found, an error will be thrown. Note that the current directory as understood by your shell or operating system is not searched.</P ></DD ><DT >END <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >[expr]</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >This directive causes the assembler to stop assembling immediately as though it ran out of input. For the DECB target only, <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE > can be used to set the execution address of the resulting binary. For all other targets, specifying <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >expr</CODE > will cause an error.</P ></DD ><DT >ERROR <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Causes a custom error message to be printed at this line. This will cause assembly to fail. This directive is most useful inside conditional constructs to cause assembly to fail if some condition that is known bad happens. Everything from the directive to the end of the line is considered the error message.</P ></DD ><DT >WARNING <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >Causes a custom warning message to be printed at this line. This will not cause assembly to fail. This directive is most useful inside conditional constructs or include files to alert the programmer to a deprecated feature being used or some other condition that may cause trouble later, but which may, in fact, not cause any trouble.</P ></DD ><DT >.MODULE <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE ></DT ><DD ><P >This directive is ignored for most output targets. If the output target supports encoding a module name into it, <CODE CLASS="PARAMETER" >string</CODE > will be used as the module name.</P ><P >As of version 3.0, no supported output targets support this directive.</P ></DD ></DL ></DIV ></DIV ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="NAVFOOTER" ><HR ALIGN="LEFT" WIDTH="100%"><TABLE SUMMARY="Footer navigation table" WIDTH="100%" BORDER="0" CELLPADDING="0" CELLSPACING="0" ><TR ><TD WIDTH="33%" ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" ><A HREF="x192.html" ACCESSKEY="P" >Prev</A ></TD ><TD WIDTH="34%" ALIGN="center" VALIGN="top" ><A HREF="index.html" ACCESSKEY="H" >Home</A ></TD ><TD WIDTH="33%" ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top" ><A HREF="x483.html" ACCESSKEY="N" >Next</A ></TD ></TR ><TR ><TD WIDTH="33%" ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" >Numbers and Expressions</TD ><TD WIDTH="34%" ALIGN="center" VALIGN="top" ><A HREF="c45.html" ACCESSKEY="U" >Up</A ></TD ><TD WIDTH="33%" ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top" >Macros</TD ></TR ></TABLE ></DIV ></BODY ></HTML >