changeset 254:155799f6cfa5

Add documentation for the FILL pseudo operation
author William Astle <lost@l-w.ca>
date Wed, 30 Jan 2013 21:32:14 -0700
parents ed1009bce533
children 67acad9db5b3
files docs/manual.docbook.sgml docs/manual/c685.html docs/manual/c693.html docs/manual/c871.html docs/manual/c879.html docs/manual/c933.html docs/manual/c941.html docs/manual/index.html docs/manual/manual.html docs/manual/manual.pdf docs/manual/x200.html docs/manual/x37.html docs/manual/x483.html docs/manual/x491.html docs/manual/x506.html docs/manual/x514.html docs/manual/x527.html docs/manual/x535.html docs/manual/x591.html docs/manual/x599.html docs/manual/x785.html docs/manual/x793.html docs/manual/x799.html docs/manual/x807.html docs/manual/x856.html docs/manual/x864.html
diffstat 26 files changed, 3044 insertions(+), 2997 deletions(-) [+]
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/docs/manual.docbook.sgml	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ b/docs/manual.docbook.sgml	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -714,6 +714,17 @@
 </listitem>
 </varlistentry>
 
+<varlistentry>
+<term>FILL <parameter>size</parameter>,<parameter>byte</parameter></term>
+<listitem>
+
+<para>
+Insert <parameter>size</parameter> bytes of <parameter>byte</parameter>.
+</para>
+
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
 </variablelist>
 
 </section>
--- a/docs/manual/c685.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,336 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->LWLINK</TITLE
-><META
-NAME="GENERATOR"
-CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
-REL="HOME"
-TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
-HREF="index.html"><LINK
-REL="PREVIOUS"
-TITLE="Assembler Modes and Pragmas"
-HREF="x591.html"><LINK
-REL="NEXT"
-TITLE="Linker Operation"
-HREF="x785.html"></HEAD
-><BODY
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-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="x591.html"
-ACCESSKEY="P"
->Prev</A
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="80%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="bottom"
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="10%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="bottom"
-><A
-HREF="x785.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-><HR
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-WIDTH="100%"></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><H1
-><A
-NAME="AEN685"
-></A
->Chapter 4. LWLINK</H1
-><P
->The LWTOOLS linker is called LWLINK. This chapter documents the various features
-of the linker.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><H1
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><A
-NAME="AEN688"
->4.1. Command Line Options</A
-></H1
-><P
->The binary for LWLINK is called "lwlink". Note that the binary is in lower
-case. lwlink takes the following command line arguments.</P
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--decb</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-b</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->Selects the DECB output format target. This is equivalent to <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--format=decb</CODE
-></P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--output=FILE</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-o FILE</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This option specifies the name of the output file. If not specified, the
-default is <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->a.out</CODE
->.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--format=TYPE</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-f TYPE</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This option specifies the output format. Valid values are <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->decb</CODE
->
-and <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->raw</CODE
-></P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--raw</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-r</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This option specifies the raw output format.
-It is equivalent to <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--format=raw</CODE
->
-and <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-f raw</CODE
-></P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--script=FILE</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-s</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This option allows specifying a linking script to override the linker's
-built in defaults.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--section-base=SECT=BASE</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->Cause section SECT to load at base address BASE. This will be prepended
-to the built-in link script. It is ignored if a link script is provided.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--map=FILE</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-m FILE</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This will output a description of the link result to FILE.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--library=LIBSPEC</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-l LIBSPEC</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->Load a library using the library search path. LIBSPEC will have "lib" prepended
-and ".a" appended.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--library-path=DIR</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-L DIR</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->Add DIR to the library search path.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--debug</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-d</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This option increases the debugging level. It is only useful for LWTOOLS
-developers.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--help</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-?</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This provides a listing of command line options and a brief description
-of each.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--usage</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This will display a usage summary
-of each command line option.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--version</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-V</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This will display the version of LWLINK.</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="x591.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="x785.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="left"
-VALIGN="top"
->Assembler Modes and Pragmas</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="34%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="top"
->&nbsp;</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="top"
->Linker Operation</TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></BODY
-></HTML
->
\ No newline at end of file
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/docs/manual/c693.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -0,0 +1,336 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<HTML
+><HEAD
+><TITLE
+>LWLINK</TITLE
+><META
+NAME="GENERATOR"
+CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
+REL="HOME"
+TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
+HREF="index.html"><LINK
+REL="PREVIOUS"
+TITLE="Assembler Modes and Pragmas"
+HREF="x599.html"><LINK
+REL="NEXT"
+TITLE="Linker Operation"
+HREF="x793.html"></HEAD
+><BODY
+CLASS="CHAPTER"
+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="x599.html"
+ACCESSKEY="P"
+>Prev</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="80%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="10%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+><A
+HREF="x793.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="CHAPTER"
+><H1
+><A
+NAME="AEN693"
+></A
+>Chapter 4. LWLINK</H1
+><P
+>The LWTOOLS linker is called LWLINK. This chapter documents the various features
+of the linker.</P
+><DIV
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><H1
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><A
+NAME="AEN696"
+>4.1. Command Line Options</A
+></H1
+><P
+>The binary for LWLINK is called "lwlink". Note that the binary is in lower
+case. lwlink takes the following command line arguments.</P
+><P
+></P
+><DIV
+CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
+><DL
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--decb</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-b</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>Selects the DECB output format target. This is equivalent to <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--format=decb</CODE
+></P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--output=FILE</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-o FILE</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This option specifies the name of the output file. If not specified, the
+default is <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>a.out</CODE
+>.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--format=TYPE</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-f TYPE</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This option specifies the output format. Valid values are <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>decb</CODE
+>
+and <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>raw</CODE
+></P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--raw</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-r</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This option specifies the raw output format.
+It is equivalent to <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--format=raw</CODE
+>
+and <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-f raw</CODE
+></P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--script=FILE</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-s</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This option allows specifying a linking script to override the linker's
+built in defaults.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--section-base=SECT=BASE</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>Cause section SECT to load at base address BASE. This will be prepended
+to the built-in link script. It is ignored if a link script is provided.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--map=FILE</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-m FILE</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This will output a description of the link result to FILE.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--library=LIBSPEC</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-l LIBSPEC</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>Load a library using the library search path. LIBSPEC will have "lib" prepended
+and ".a" appended.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--library-path=DIR</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-L DIR</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>Add DIR to the library search path.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--debug</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-d</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This option increases the debugging level. It is only useful for LWTOOLS
+developers.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--help</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-?</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This provides a listing of command line options and a brief description
+of each.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--usage</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This will display a usage summary
+of each command line option.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--version</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-V</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This will display the version of LWLINK.</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="x599.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="x793.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Assembler Modes and Pragmas</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="34%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="top"
+>&nbsp;</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Linker Operation</TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+></DIV
+></BODY
+></HTML
+>
\ No newline at end of file
--- a/docs/manual/c871.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,270 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->Libraries and LWAR</TITLE
-><META
-NAME="GENERATOR"
-CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
-REL="HOME"
-TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
-HREF="index.html"><LINK
-REL="PREVIOUS"
-TITLE="Format Specific Linking Notes"
-HREF="x856.html"><LINK
-REL="NEXT"
-TITLE="Object Files"
-HREF="c933.html"></HEAD
-><BODY
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-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="x856.html"
-ACCESSKEY="P"
->Prev</A
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="80%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="bottom"
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="10%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="bottom"
-><A
-HREF="c933.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-><HR
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-WIDTH="100%"></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><H1
-><A
-NAME="AEN871"
-></A
->Chapter 5. Libraries and LWAR</H1
-><P
->LWTOOLS also includes a tool for managing libraries. These are analogous to
-the static libraries created with the "ar" tool on POSIX systems. Each library
-file contains one or more object files. The linker will treat the object
-files within a library as though they had been specified individually on
-the command line except when resolving external references. External references
-are looked up first within the object files within the library and then, if
-not found, the usual lookup based on the order the files are specified on
-the command line occurs.</P
-><P
->The tool for creating these libary files is called LWAR.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><H1
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><A
-NAME="AEN875"
->5.1. Command Line Options</A
-></H1
-><P
->The binary for LWAR is called "lwar". Note that the binary is in lower
-case. The options lwar understands are listed below. For archive manipulation
-options, the first non-option argument is the name of the archive. All other
-non-option arguments are the names of files to operate on.</P
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--add</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-a</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This option specifies that an archive is going to have files added to it.
-If the archive does not already exist, it is created. New files are added
-to the end of the archive.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--create</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-c</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This option specifies that an archive is going to be created and have files
-added to it. If the archive already exists, it is truncated.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--merge</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-m</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->If specified, any files specified to be added to an archive will be checked
-to see if they are archives themselves. If so, their constituent members are
-added to the archive. This is useful for avoiding archives containing archives.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--list</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-l</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This will display a list of the files contained in the archive.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--debug</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-d</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This option increases the debugging level. It is only useful for LWTOOLS
-developers.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--help</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-?</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This provides a listing of command line options and a brief description
-of each.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--usage</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This will display a usage summary
-of each command line option.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->--version</CODE
->, <CODE
-CLASS="OPTION"
->-V</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This will display the version of LWLINK.
-of each.</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="x856.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="c933.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="left"
-VALIGN="top"
->Format Specific Linking Notes</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="34%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="top"
->&nbsp;</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="top"
->Object Files</TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></BODY
-></HTML
->
\ No newline at end of file
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/docs/manual/c879.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -0,0 +1,270 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<HTML
+><HEAD
+><TITLE
+>Libraries and LWAR</TITLE
+><META
+NAME="GENERATOR"
+CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
+REL="HOME"
+TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
+HREF="index.html"><LINK
+REL="PREVIOUS"
+TITLE="Format Specific Linking Notes"
+HREF="x864.html"><LINK
+REL="NEXT"
+TITLE="Object Files"
+HREF="c941.html"></HEAD
+><BODY
+CLASS="CHAPTER"
+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="x864.html"
+ACCESSKEY="P"
+>Prev</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="80%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="10%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+><A
+HREF="c941.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="CHAPTER"
+><H1
+><A
+NAME="AEN879"
+></A
+>Chapter 5. Libraries and LWAR</H1
+><P
+>LWTOOLS also includes a tool for managing libraries. These are analogous to
+the static libraries created with the "ar" tool on POSIX systems. Each library
+file contains one or more object files. The linker will treat the object
+files within a library as though they had been specified individually on
+the command line except when resolving external references. External references
+are looked up first within the object files within the library and then, if
+not found, the usual lookup based on the order the files are specified on
+the command line occurs.</P
+><P
+>The tool for creating these libary files is called LWAR.</P
+><DIV
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><H1
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><A
+NAME="AEN883"
+>5.1. Command Line Options</A
+></H1
+><P
+>The binary for LWAR is called "lwar". Note that the binary is in lower
+case. The options lwar understands are listed below. For archive manipulation
+options, the first non-option argument is the name of the archive. All other
+non-option arguments are the names of files to operate on.</P
+><P
+></P
+><DIV
+CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
+><DL
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--add</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-a</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This option specifies that an archive is going to have files added to it.
+If the archive does not already exist, it is created. New files are added
+to the end of the archive.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--create</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-c</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This option specifies that an archive is going to be created and have files
+added to it. If the archive already exists, it is truncated.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--merge</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-m</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>If specified, any files specified to be added to an archive will be checked
+to see if they are archives themselves. If so, their constituent members are
+added to the archive. This is useful for avoiding archives containing archives.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--list</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-l</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This will display a list of the files contained in the archive.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--debug</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-d</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This option increases the debugging level. It is only useful for LWTOOLS
+developers.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--help</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-?</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This provides a listing of command line options and a brief description
+of each.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--usage</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This will display a usage summary
+of each command line option.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>--version</CODE
+>, <CODE
+CLASS="OPTION"
+>-V</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This will display the version of LWLINK.
+of each.</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="x864.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="c941.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Format Specific Linking Notes</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="34%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="top"
+>&nbsp;</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Object Files</TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+></DIV
+></BODY
+></HTML
+>
\ No newline at end of file
--- a/docs/manual/c933.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,376 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->Object Files</TITLE
-><META
-NAME="GENERATOR"
-CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
-REL="HOME"
-TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
-HREF="index.html"><LINK
-REL="PREVIOUS"
-TITLE="Libraries and LWAR"
-HREF="c871.html"></HEAD
-><BODY
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-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="c871.html"
-ACCESSKEY="P"
->Prev</A
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="80%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="bottom"
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="10%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="bottom"
->&nbsp;</TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-><HR
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-WIDTH="100%"></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="CHAPTER"
-><H1
-><A
-NAME="OBJCHAP"
-></A
->Chapter 6. Object Files</H1
-><P
->LWTOOLS uses a proprietary object file format. It is proprietary in the sense
-that it is specific to LWTOOLS, not that it is a hidden format. It would be
-hard to keep it hidden in an open source tool chain anyway. This chapter
-documents the object file format.</P
-><P
->An object file consists of a series of sections each of which contains a
-list of exported symbols, a list of incomplete references, and a list of
-"local" symbols which may be used in calculating incomplete references. Each
-section will obviously also contain the object code.</P
-><P
->Exported symbols must be completely resolved to an address within the
-section it is exported from. That is, an exported symbol must be a constant
-rather than defined in terms of other symbols.</P
-><P
->Each object file starts with a magic number and version number. The magic
-number is the string "LWOBJ16" for this 16 bit object file format. The only
-defined version number is currently 0. Thus, the first 8 bytes of the object
-file are <FONT
-COLOR="RED"
->4C574F424A313600</FONT
-></P
-><P
->Each section has the following items in order:</P
-><P
-></P
-><UL
-><LI
-><P
->section name</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->flags</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->list of local symbols (and addresses within the section)</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->list of exported symbols (and addresses within the section)</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->list of incomplete references along with the expressions to calculate them</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->the actual object code (for non-BSS sections)</P
-></LI
-></UL
-><P
->The section starts with the name of the section with a NUL termination
-followed by a series of flag bytes terminated by NUL. There are only two
-flag bytes defined. A NUL (0) indicates no more flags and a value of 1
-indicates the section is a BSS section. For a BSS section, no actual
-code is included in the object file.</P
-><P
->Either a NULL section name or end of file indicate the presence of no more
-sections.</P
-><P
->Each entry in the exported and local symbols table consists of the symbol
-(NUL terminated) followed by two bytes which contain the value in big endian
-order. The end of a symbol table is indicated by a NULL symbol name.</P
-><P
->Each entry in the incomplete references table consists of an expression
-followed by a 16 bit offset where the reference goes. Expressions are
-defined as a series of terms up to an "end of expression" term. Each term
-consists of a single byte which identifies the type of term (see below)
-followed by any data required by the term. Then end of the list is flagged
-by a NULL expression (only an end of expression term).</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="TABLE"
-><A
-NAME="AEN958"
-></A
-><P
-><B
->Table 6-1. Object File Term Types</B
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="1"
-FRAME="border"
-CLASS="CALSTABLE"
-><COL><COL><THEAD
-><TR
-><TH
->TERMTYPE</TH
-><TH
->Meaning</TH
-></TR
-></THEAD
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->00</TD
-><TD
->end of expression</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->01</TD
-><TD
->integer (16 bit in big endian order follows)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->02</TD
-><TD
->	external symbol reference (NUL terminated symbol name follows)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->03</TD
-><TD
->local symbol reference (NUL terminated symbol name follows)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->04</TD
-><TD
->operator (1 byte operator number)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->05</TD
-><TD
->section base address reference</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->FF</TD
-><TD
->This term will set flags for the expression. Each one of these terms will set a single flag. All of them should be specified first in an expression. If they are not, the behaviour is undefined. The byte following is the flag. Flag 01 indicates an 8 bit relocation. Flag 02 indicates a zero-width relocation (see the EXTDEP pseudo op in LWASM).</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->External references are resolved using other object files while local
-references are resolved using the local symbol table(s) from this file. This
-allows local symbols that are not exported to have the same names as
-exported symbols or external references.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="TABLE"
-><A
-NAME="AEN988"
-></A
-><P
-><B
->Table 6-2. Object File Operator Numbers</B
-></P
-><TABLE
-BORDER="1"
-FRAME="border"
-CLASS="CALSTABLE"
-><COL><COL><THEAD
-><TR
-><TH
->Number</TH
-><TH
->Operator</TH
-></TR
-></THEAD
-><TBODY
-><TR
-><TD
->01</TD
-><TD
->addition (+)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->02</TD
-><TD
->subtraction (-)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->03</TD
-><TD
->multiplication (*)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->04</TD
-><TD
->division (/)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->05</TD
-><TD
->modulus (%)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->06</TD
-><TD
->integer division (\) (same as division)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->07</TD
-><TD
->bitwise and</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->08</TD
-><TD
->bitwise or</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->09</TD
-><TD
->bitwise xor</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->0A</TD
-><TD
->boolean and</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->0B</TD
-><TD
->boolean or</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->0C</TD
-><TD
->unary negation, 2's complement (-)</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
->0D</TD
-><TD
->unary 1's complement (^)</TD
-></TR
-></TBODY
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-><P
->An expression is represented in a postfix manner with both operands for
-binary operators preceding the operator and the single operand for unary
-operators preceding the operator.</P
-></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="c871.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"
->&nbsp;</TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="left"
-VALIGN="top"
->Libraries and LWAR</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="34%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="top"
->&nbsp;</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="top"
->&nbsp;</TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></BODY
-></HTML
->
\ No newline at end of file
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/docs/manual/c941.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -0,0 +1,376 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<HTML
+><HEAD
+><TITLE
+>Object Files</TITLE
+><META
+NAME="GENERATOR"
+CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
+REL="HOME"
+TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
+HREF="index.html"><LINK
+REL="PREVIOUS"
+TITLE="Libraries and LWAR"
+HREF="c879.html"></HEAD
+><BODY
+CLASS="CHAPTER"
+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="c879.html"
+ACCESSKEY="P"
+>Prev</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="80%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="10%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+>&nbsp;</TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="CHAPTER"
+><H1
+><A
+NAME="OBJCHAP"
+></A
+>Chapter 6. Object Files</H1
+><P
+>LWTOOLS uses a proprietary object file format. It is proprietary in the sense
+that it is specific to LWTOOLS, not that it is a hidden format. It would be
+hard to keep it hidden in an open source tool chain anyway. This chapter
+documents the object file format.</P
+><P
+>An object file consists of a series of sections each of which contains a
+list of exported symbols, a list of incomplete references, and a list of
+"local" symbols which may be used in calculating incomplete references. Each
+section will obviously also contain the object code.</P
+><P
+>Exported symbols must be completely resolved to an address within the
+section it is exported from. That is, an exported symbol must be a constant
+rather than defined in terms of other symbols.</P
+><P
+>Each object file starts with a magic number and version number. The magic
+number is the string "LWOBJ16" for this 16 bit object file format. The only
+defined version number is currently 0. Thus, the first 8 bytes of the object
+file are <FONT
+COLOR="RED"
+>4C574F424A313600</FONT
+></P
+><P
+>Each section has the following items in order:</P
+><P
+></P
+><UL
+><LI
+><P
+>section name</P
+></LI
+><LI
+><P
+>flags</P
+></LI
+><LI
+><P
+>list of local symbols (and addresses within the section)</P
+></LI
+><LI
+><P
+>list of exported symbols (and addresses within the section)</P
+></LI
+><LI
+><P
+>list of incomplete references along with the expressions to calculate them</P
+></LI
+><LI
+><P
+>the actual object code (for non-BSS sections)</P
+></LI
+></UL
+><P
+>The section starts with the name of the section with a NUL termination
+followed by a series of flag bytes terminated by NUL. There are only two
+flag bytes defined. A NUL (0) indicates no more flags and a value of 1
+indicates the section is a BSS section. For a BSS section, no actual
+code is included in the object file.</P
+><P
+>Either a NULL section name or end of file indicate the presence of no more
+sections.</P
+><P
+>Each entry in the exported and local symbols table consists of the symbol
+(NUL terminated) followed by two bytes which contain the value in big endian
+order. The end of a symbol table is indicated by a NULL symbol name.</P
+><P
+>Each entry in the incomplete references table consists of an expression
+followed by a 16 bit offset where the reference goes. Expressions are
+defined as a series of terms up to an "end of expression" term. Each term
+consists of a single byte which identifies the type of term (see below)
+followed by any data required by the term. Then end of the list is flagged
+by a NULL expression (only an end of expression term).</P
+><DIV
+CLASS="TABLE"
+><A
+NAME="AEN966"
+></A
+><P
+><B
+>Table 6-1. Object File Term Types</B
+></P
+><TABLE
+BORDER="1"
+FRAME="border"
+CLASS="CALSTABLE"
+><COL><COL><THEAD
+><TR
+><TH
+>TERMTYPE</TH
+><TH
+>Meaning</TH
+></TR
+></THEAD
+><TBODY
+><TR
+><TD
+>00</TD
+><TD
+>end of expression</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>01</TD
+><TD
+>integer (16 bit in big endian order follows)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>02</TD
+><TD
+>	external symbol reference (NUL terminated symbol name follows)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>03</TD
+><TD
+>local symbol reference (NUL terminated symbol name follows)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>04</TD
+><TD
+>operator (1 byte operator number)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>05</TD
+><TD
+>section base address reference</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>FF</TD
+><TD
+>This term will set flags for the expression. Each one of these terms will set a single flag. All of them should be specified first in an expression. If they are not, the behaviour is undefined. The byte following is the flag. Flag 01 indicates an 8 bit relocation. Flag 02 indicates a zero-width relocation (see the EXTDEP pseudo op in LWASM).</TD
+></TR
+></TBODY
+></TABLE
+></DIV
+><P
+>External references are resolved using other object files while local
+references are resolved using the local symbol table(s) from this file. This
+allows local symbols that are not exported to have the same names as
+exported symbols or external references.</P
+><DIV
+CLASS="TABLE"
+><A
+NAME="AEN996"
+></A
+><P
+><B
+>Table 6-2. Object File Operator Numbers</B
+></P
+><TABLE
+BORDER="1"
+FRAME="border"
+CLASS="CALSTABLE"
+><COL><COL><THEAD
+><TR
+><TH
+>Number</TH
+><TH
+>Operator</TH
+></TR
+></THEAD
+><TBODY
+><TR
+><TD
+>01</TD
+><TD
+>addition (+)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>02</TD
+><TD
+>subtraction (-)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>03</TD
+><TD
+>multiplication (*)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>04</TD
+><TD
+>division (/)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>05</TD
+><TD
+>modulus (%)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>06</TD
+><TD
+>integer division (\) (same as division)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>07</TD
+><TD
+>bitwise and</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>08</TD
+><TD
+>bitwise or</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>09</TD
+><TD
+>bitwise xor</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>0A</TD
+><TD
+>boolean and</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>0B</TD
+><TD
+>boolean or</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>0C</TD
+><TD
+>unary negation, 2's complement (-)</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+>0D</TD
+><TD
+>unary 1's complement (^)</TD
+></TR
+></TBODY
+></TABLE
+></DIV
+><P
+>An expression is represented in a postfix manner with both operands for
+binary operators preceding the operator and the single operand for unary
+operators preceding the operator.</P
+></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="c879.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"
+>&nbsp;</TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Libraries and LWAR</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="34%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="top"
+>&nbsp;</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="top"
+>&nbsp;</TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+></DIV
+></BODY
+></HTML
+>
\ No newline at end of file
--- a/docs/manual/index.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ b/docs/manual/index.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -135,80 +135,80 @@
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.6.2. <A
-HREF="x200.html#AEN306"
+HREF="x200.html#AEN314"
 >Address Definition</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.6.3. <A
-HREF="x200.html#AEN353"
+HREF="x200.html#AEN361"
 >Conditional Assembly</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.6.4. <A
-HREF="x200.html#AEN418"
+HREF="x200.html#AEN426"
 >OS9 Target Directives</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.6.5. <A
-HREF="x200.html#AEN443"
+HREF="x200.html#AEN451"
 >Miscelaneous Directives</A
 ></DT
 ></DL
 ></DD
 ><DT
 >3.7. <A
-HREF="x483.html"
+HREF="x491.html"
 >Macros</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.8. <A
-HREF="x506.html"
+HREF="x514.html"
 >Structures</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.9. <A
-HREF="x527.html"
+HREF="x535.html"
 >Object Files and Sections</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.10. <A
-HREF="x591.html"
+HREF="x599.html"
 >Assembler Modes and Pragmas</A
 ></DT
 ></DL
 ></DD
 ><DT
 >4. <A
-HREF="c685.html"
+HREF="c693.html"
 >LWLINK</A
 ></DT
 ><DD
 ><DL
 ><DT
 >4.1. <A
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 ><DT
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 ></DT
 ><DT
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 ><DL
 ><DT
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@@ -217,21 +217,21 @@
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-HREF="c871.html"
+HREF="c879.html"
 >Libraries and LWAR</A
 ></DT
 ><DD
 ><DL
 ><DT
 >5.1. <A
-HREF="c871.html#AEN875"
+HREF="c879.html#AEN883"
 >Command Line Options</A
 ></DT
 ></DL
 ></DD
 ><DT
 >6. <A
-HREF="c933.html"
+HREF="c941.html"
 >Object Files</A
 ></DT
 ></DL
@@ -246,12 +246,12 @@
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >6-1. <A
-HREF="c933.html#AEN958"
+HREF="c941.html#AEN966"
 >Object File Term Types</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >6-2. <A
-HREF="c933.html#AEN988"
+HREF="c941.html#AEN996"
 >Object File Operator Numbers</A
 ></DT
 ></DL
--- a/docs/manual/manual.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ b/docs/manual/manual.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -132,80 +132,80 @@
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.6.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN306"
+HREF="#AEN314"
 >Address Definition</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.6.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN353"
+HREF="#AEN361"
 >Conditional Assembly</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
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+HREF="#AEN426"
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 ></DT
 ><DT
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+HREF="#AEN451"
 >Miscelaneous Directives</A
 ></DT
 ></DL
 ></DD
 ><DT
 >3.7. <A
-HREF="#AEN483"
+HREF="#AEN491"
 >Macros</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.8. <A
-HREF="#AEN506"
+HREF="#AEN514"
 >Structures</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
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+HREF="#AEN535"
 >Object Files and Sections</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >3.10. <A
-HREF="#AEN591"
+HREF="#AEN599"
 >Assembler Modes and Pragmas</A
 ></DT
 ></DL
 ></DD
 ><DT
 >4. <A
-HREF="#AEN685"
+HREF="#AEN693"
 >LWLINK</A
 ></DT
 ><DD
 ><DL
 ><DT
 >4.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN688"
+HREF="#AEN696"
 >Command Line Options</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >4.2. <A
-HREF="#AEN785"
+HREF="#AEN793"
 >Linker Operation</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >4.3. <A
-HREF="#AEN799"
+HREF="#AEN807"
 >Linking Scripts</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >4.4. <A
-HREF="#AEN856"
+HREF="#AEN864"
 >Format Specific Linking Notes</A
 ></DT
 ><DD
 ><DL
 ><DT
 >4.4.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN859"
+HREF="#AEN867"
 >OS9 Modules</A
 ></DT
 ></DL
@@ -214,14 +214,14 @@
 ></DD
 ><DT
 >5. <A
-HREF="#AEN871"
+HREF="#AEN879"
 >Libraries and LWAR</A
 ></DT
 ><DD
 ><DL
 ><DT
 >5.1. <A
-HREF="#AEN875"
+HREF="#AEN883"
 >Command Line Options</A
 ></DT
 ></DL
@@ -243,12 +243,12 @@
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >6-1. <A
-HREF="#AEN958"
+HREF="#AEN966"
 >Object File Term Types</A
 ></DT
 ><DT
 >6-2. <A
-HREF="#AEN988"
+HREF="#AEN996"
 >Object File Operator Numbers</A
 ></DT
 ></DL
@@ -1064,6 +1064,24 @@
 not function correctly on Windows platforms.  Non-absolute inclusion will
 work, however.</P
 ></DD
+><DT
+>FILL <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>size</CODE
+>,<CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>byte</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>Insert <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>size</CODE
+> bytes of <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>byte</CODE
+>.</P
+></DD
 ></DL
 ></DIV
 ></DIV
@@ -1072,7 +1090,7 @@
 ><HR><H3
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN306"
+NAME="AEN314"
 >3.6.2. Address Definition</A
 ></H3
 ><P
@@ -1208,7 +1226,7 @@
 ><HR><H3
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN353"
+NAME="AEN361"
 >3.6.3. Conditional Assembly</A
 ></H3
 ><P
@@ -1371,7 +1389,7 @@
 ><HR><H3
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN418"
+NAME="AEN426"
 >3.6.4. OS9 Target Directives</A
 ></H3
 ><P
@@ -1438,7 +1456,7 @@
 ><HR><H3
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN443"
+NAME="AEN451"
 >3.6.5. Miscelaneous Directives</A
 ></H3
 ><P
@@ -1552,7 +1570,7 @@
 ><HR><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN483"
+NAME="AEN491"
 >3.7. Macros</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -1651,7 +1669,7 @@
 ><HR><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN506"
+NAME="AEN514"
 >3.8. Structures</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -1744,7 +1762,7 @@
 ><HR><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN527"
+NAME="AEN535"
 >3.9. Object Files and Sections</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -1961,7 +1979,7 @@
 ><HR><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN591"
+NAME="AEN599"
 >3.10. Assembler Modes and Pragmas</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -2236,7 +2254,7 @@
 CLASS="CHAPTER"
 ><HR><H1
 ><A
-NAME="AEN685"
+NAME="AEN693"
 ></A
 >Chapter 4. LWLINK</H1
 ><P
@@ -2247,7 +2265,7 @@
 ><HR><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN688"
+NAME="AEN696"
 >4.1. Command Line Options</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -2444,7 +2462,7 @@
 ><HR><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN785"
+NAME="AEN793"
 >4.2. Linker Operation</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -2500,7 +2518,7 @@
 ><HR><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN799"
+NAME="AEN807"
 >4.3. Linking Scripts</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -2678,7 +2696,7 @@
 ><HR><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN856"
+NAME="AEN864"
 >4.4. Format Specific Linking Notes</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -2691,7 +2709,7 @@
 ><HR><H3
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN859"
+NAME="AEN867"
 >4.4.1. OS9 Modules</A
 ></H3
 ><P
@@ -2767,7 +2785,7 @@
 CLASS="CHAPTER"
 ><HR><H1
 ><A
-NAME="AEN871"
+NAME="AEN879"
 ></A
 >Chapter 5. Libraries and LWAR</H1
 ><P
@@ -2786,7 +2804,7 @@
 ><HR><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN875"
+NAME="AEN883"
 >5.1. Command Line Options</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -2987,7 +3005,7 @@
 ><DIV
 CLASS="TABLE"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN958"
+NAME="AEN966"
 ></A
 ><P
 ><B
@@ -3059,7 +3077,7 @@
 ><DIV
 CLASS="TABLE"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN988"
+NAME="AEN996"
 ></A
 ><P
 ><B
Binary file docs/manual/manual.pdf has changed
--- a/docs/manual/x200.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ b/docs/manual/x200.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@
 HREF="x192.html"><LINK
 REL="NEXT"
 TITLE="Macros"
-HREF="x483.html"></HEAD
+HREF="x491.html"></HEAD
 ><BODY
 CLASS="SECTION"
 BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF"
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@
 ALIGN="right"
 VALIGN="bottom"
 ><A
-HREF="x483.html"
+HREF="x491.html"
 ACCESSKEY="N"
 >Next</A
 ></TD
@@ -294,6 +294,24 @@
 not function correctly on Windows platforms.  Non-absolute inclusion will
 work, however.</P
 ></DD
+><DT
+>FILL <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>size</CODE
+>,<CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>byte</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>Insert <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>size</CODE
+> bytes of <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>byte</CODE
+>.</P
+></DD
 ></DL
 ></DIV
 ></DIV
@@ -302,7 +320,7 @@
 ><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN306"
+NAME="AEN314"
 >3.6.2. Address Definition</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -438,7 +456,7 @@
 ><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN353"
+NAME="AEN361"
 >3.6.3. Conditional Assembly</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -601,7 +619,7 @@
 ><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN418"
+NAME="AEN426"
 >3.6.4. OS9 Target Directives</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -668,7 +686,7 @@
 ><H2
 CLASS="SECTION"
 ><A
-NAME="AEN443"
+NAME="AEN451"
 >3.6.5. Miscelaneous Directives</A
 ></H2
 ><P
@@ -811,7 +829,7 @@
 ALIGN="right"
 VALIGN="top"
 ><A
-HREF="x483.html"
+HREF="x491.html"
 ACCESSKEY="N"
 >Next</A
 ></TD
--- a/docs/manual/x37.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ b/docs/manual/x37.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@
 ><P
 >LWASM supports generating a proprietary object file format which is
 described in <A
-HREF="c933.html"
+HREF="c941.html"
 >Chapter 6</A
 >. LWLINK is then used to link these
 object files into a final binary in any of LWLINK's supported binary
--- a/docs/manual/x483.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,234 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->Macros</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="Assembler Directives"
-HREF="x200.html"><LINK
-REL="NEXT"
-TITLE="Structures"
-HREF="x506.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="x200.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="x506.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-><HR
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-WIDTH="100%"></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><H1
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><A
-NAME="AEN483"
->3.7. Macros</A
-></H1
-><P
->LWASM is a macro assembler. A macro is simply a name that stands in for a
-series of instructions. Once a macro is defined, it is used like any other
-assembler directive. Defining a macro can be considered equivalent to adding
-additional assembler directives.</P
-><P
->Macros may accept parameters. These parameters are referenced within a
-macro by the a backslash ("\") followed by a digit 1 through 9 for the first
-through ninth parameters. They may also be referenced by enclosing the
-decimal parameter number in braces ("{num}"). The special expansion "\*"
-translates to the exact parameter string, including all parameters, passed
-to the macro. These parameter references are replaced with the verbatim text
-of the parameter passed to the macro. A reference to a non-existent
-parameter will be replaced by an empty string. Macro parameters are expanded
-everywhere on each source line. That means the parameter to a macro could be
-used as a symbol or it could even appear in a comment or could cause an
-entire source line to be commented out when the macro is expanded. </P
-><P
->Parameters passed to a macro are separated by commas and the parameter list
-is terminated by any whitespace. This means that neither a comma nor whitespace
-may be included in a macro parameter.</P
-><P
->Macro expansion is done recursively. That is, within a macro, macros are
-expanded. This can lead to infinite loops in macro expansion. If the assembler
-hangs for a long time while assembling a file that uses macros, this may be
-the reason.</P
-><P
->Each macro expansion receives its own local symbol context which is not
-inherited by any macros called by it nor is it inherited from the context
-the macro was instantiated in. That means it is possible to use local symbols
-within macros without having them collide with symbols in other macros or
-outside the macro itself. However, this also means that using a local symbol
-as a parameter to a macro, while legal, will not do what it would seem to do
-as it will result in looking up the local symbol in the macro's symbol context
-rather than the enclosing context where it came from, likely yielding either
-an undefined symbol error or bizarre assembly results.</P
-><P
->Note that there is no way to define a macro as local to a symbol context. All
-macros are part of the global macro namespace. However, macros have a separate
-namespace from symbols so it is possible to have a symbol with the same name
-as a macro.</P
-><P
->Macros are defined only during the first pass. Macro expansion also
-only occurs during the first pass. On the second pass, the macro
-definition is simply ignored. Macros must be defined before they are used.</P
-><P
->The following directives are used when defining macros.</P
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->macroname</CODE
-> MACRO [NOEXPAND]</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This directive is used to being the definition of a macro called
-<CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->macroname</CODE
->. If <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->macroname</CODE
-> already
-exists, it is considered an error. Attempting to define a macro within a
-macro is undefined. It may work and it may not so the behaviour should not
-be relied upon.</P
-><P
->If NOEXPAND is specified, the macro will not be expanded in a program
-listing. Instead, all bytes emitted by all instructions within the macro
-will appear to be emitted on the line where the macro is invoked, starting
-at the address of the line of the invokation. If the macro uses ORG or other
-directives that define symbols or change the assembly address, these things
-will also be hidden (except in the symbol table) and the output bytes will
-appear with incorrect address attribution. Thus, NOEXPAND should only be
-used for macros that do not mess with the assembly address or otherwise
-define symbols that should be visible.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->ENDM</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This directive indicates the end of the macro currently being defined. It
-causes the assembler to resume interpreting source lines as normal.</P
-></DD
-></DL
-></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="x200.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="x506.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="left"
-VALIGN="top"
->Assembler Directives</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="34%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="top"
-><A
-HREF="c45.html"
-ACCESSKEY="U"
->Up</A
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="top"
->Structures</TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></BODY
-></HTML
->
\ No newline at end of file
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/docs/manual/x491.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -0,0 +1,234 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<HTML
+><HEAD
+><TITLE
+>Macros</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="Assembler Directives"
+HREF="x200.html"><LINK
+REL="NEXT"
+TITLE="Structures"
+HREF="x514.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="x200.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="x514.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><H1
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><A
+NAME="AEN491"
+>3.7. Macros</A
+></H1
+><P
+>LWASM is a macro assembler. A macro is simply a name that stands in for a
+series of instructions. Once a macro is defined, it is used like any other
+assembler directive. Defining a macro can be considered equivalent to adding
+additional assembler directives.</P
+><P
+>Macros may accept parameters. These parameters are referenced within a
+macro by the a backslash ("\") followed by a digit 1 through 9 for the first
+through ninth parameters. They may also be referenced by enclosing the
+decimal parameter number in braces ("{num}"). The special expansion "\*"
+translates to the exact parameter string, including all parameters, passed
+to the macro. These parameter references are replaced with the verbatim text
+of the parameter passed to the macro. A reference to a non-existent
+parameter will be replaced by an empty string. Macro parameters are expanded
+everywhere on each source line. That means the parameter to a macro could be
+used as a symbol or it could even appear in a comment or could cause an
+entire source line to be commented out when the macro is expanded. </P
+><P
+>Parameters passed to a macro are separated by commas and the parameter list
+is terminated by any whitespace. This means that neither a comma nor whitespace
+may be included in a macro parameter.</P
+><P
+>Macro expansion is done recursively. That is, within a macro, macros are
+expanded. This can lead to infinite loops in macro expansion. If the assembler
+hangs for a long time while assembling a file that uses macros, this may be
+the reason.</P
+><P
+>Each macro expansion receives its own local symbol context which is not
+inherited by any macros called by it nor is it inherited from the context
+the macro was instantiated in. That means it is possible to use local symbols
+within macros without having them collide with symbols in other macros or
+outside the macro itself. However, this also means that using a local symbol
+as a parameter to a macro, while legal, will not do what it would seem to do
+as it will result in looking up the local symbol in the macro's symbol context
+rather than the enclosing context where it came from, likely yielding either
+an undefined symbol error or bizarre assembly results.</P
+><P
+>Note that there is no way to define a macro as local to a symbol context. All
+macros are part of the global macro namespace. However, macros have a separate
+namespace from symbols so it is possible to have a symbol with the same name
+as a macro.</P
+><P
+>Macros are defined only during the first pass. Macro expansion also
+only occurs during the first pass. On the second pass, the macro
+definition is simply ignored. Macros must be defined before they are used.</P
+><P
+>The following directives are used when defining macros.</P
+><P
+></P
+><DIV
+CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
+><DL
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>macroname</CODE
+> MACRO [NOEXPAND]</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This directive is used to being the definition of a macro called
+<CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>macroname</CODE
+>. If <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>macroname</CODE
+> already
+exists, it is considered an error. Attempting to define a macro within a
+macro is undefined. It may work and it may not so the behaviour should not
+be relied upon.</P
+><P
+>If NOEXPAND is specified, the macro will not be expanded in a program
+listing. Instead, all bytes emitted by all instructions within the macro
+will appear to be emitted on the line where the macro is invoked, starting
+at the address of the line of the invokation. If the macro uses ORG or other
+directives that define symbols or change the assembly address, these things
+will also be hidden (except in the symbol table) and the output bytes will
+appear with incorrect address attribution. Thus, NOEXPAND should only be
+used for macros that do not mess with the assembly address or otherwise
+define symbols that should be visible.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>ENDM</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This directive indicates the end of the macro currently being defined. It
+causes the assembler to resume interpreting source lines as normal.</P
+></DD
+></DL
+></DIV
+></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="NAVFOOTER"
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"><TABLE
+SUMMARY="Footer navigation table"
+WIDTH="100%"
+BORDER="0"
+CELLPADDING="0"
+CELLSPACING="0"
+><TR
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+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="top"
+><A
+HREF="x200.html"
+ACCESSKEY="P"
+>Prev</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="34%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="top"
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+HREF="index.html"
+ACCESSKEY="H"
+>Home</A
+></TD
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+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="top"
+><A
+HREF="x514.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Assembler Directives</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="34%"
+ALIGN="center"
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+ACCESSKEY="U"
+>Up</A
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+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Structures</TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+></DIV
+></BODY
+></HTML
+>
\ No newline at end of file
--- a/docs/manual/x506.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,228 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->Structures</TITLE
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-NAME="GENERATOR"
-CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
-REL="HOME"
-TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
-HREF="index.html"><LINK
-REL="UP"
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-HREF="c45.html"><LINK
-REL="PREVIOUS"
-TITLE="Macros"
-HREF="x483.html"><LINK
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-TITLE="Object Files and Sections"
-HREF="x527.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
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-><TD
-WIDTH="10%"
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-HREF="x483.html"
-ACCESSKEY="P"
->Prev</A
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-><TD
-WIDTH="80%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="bottom"
->Chapter 3. LWASM</TD
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-VALIGN="bottom"
-><A
-HREF="x527.html"
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->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-><HR
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-WIDTH="100%"></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><H1
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><A
-NAME="AEN506"
->3.8. Structures</A
-></H1
-><P
->&#13;Structures are used to group related data in a fixed structure. A structure
-consists a number of fields, defined in sequential order and which take up
-specified size.  The assembler does not enforce any means of access within a
-structure; it assumes that whatever you are doing, you intended to do. 
-There are two pseudo ops that are used for defining structures.&#13;</P
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->structname</CODE
-> STRUCT</DT
-><DD
-><P
->&#13;This directive is used to begin the definition of a structure with name
-<CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->structname</CODE
->.  Subsequent statements all form part of
-the structure definition until the end of the structure is declared.&#13;</P
-></DD
-><DT
->ENDSTRUCT, ENDS</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This directive ends the definition of the structure. ENDSTRUCT is the
-preferred form. Prior to version 3.0 of LWASM, ENDS was used to end a
-section instead of a structure.</P
-></DD
-></DL
-></DIV
-><P
->&#13;Within a structure definition, only reservation pseudo ops are permitted.
-Anything else will cause an assembly error.</P
-><P
-> Once a structure is defined, you can reserve an area of memory in the
-same structure by using the structure name as the opcode.  Structures can
-also contain fields that are themselves structures.  See the example
-below.</P
-><PRE
-CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
->tstruct2  STRUCT
-f1        rmb 1
-f2        rmb 1
-          ENDSTRUCT
-
-tstruct   STRUCT
-field1    rmb 2
-field2    rmb 3
-field3    tstruct2
-          ENDSTRUCT
-
-          ORG $2000
-var1      tstruct
-var2      tstruct2</PRE
-><P
->Fields are referenced using a dot (.) as a separator. To refer to the
-generic offset within a structure, use the structure name to the left of the
-dot.  If referring to a field within an actual variable, use the variable's
-symbol name to the left of the dot.</P
-><P
->You can also refer to the actual size of a structure (or a variable
-declared as a structure) using the special symbol sizeof{structname} where
-structname will be the name of the structure or the name of the
-variable.</P
-><P
->Essentially, structures are a shortcut for defining a vast number of
-symbols.  When a structure is defined, the assembler creates symbols for the
-various fields in the form structname.fieldname as well as the appropriate
-sizeof{structname} symbol.  When a variable is declared as a structure, the
-assembler does the same thing using the name of the variable.  You will see
-these symbols in the symbol table when the assembler is instructed to
-provide a listing.  For instance, the above listing will create the
-following symbols (symbol values in parentheses): tstruct2.f1 (0),
-tstruct2.f2 (1), sizeof{tstruct2} (2), tstruct.field1 (0), tstruct.field2
-(2), tstruct.field3 (5), tstruct.field3.f1 (5), tstruct.field3.f2 (6),
-sizeof{tstruct.field3} (2), sizeof{tstruct} (7), var1 {$2000}, var1.field1
-{$2000}, var1.field2 {$2002}, var1.field3 {$2005}, var1.field3.f1 {$2005},
-var1.field3.f2 {$2006}, sizeof(var1.field3} (2), sizeof{var1} (7), var2
-($2007), var2.f1 ($2007), var2.f2 ($2008), sizeof{var2} (2).  </P
-></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="x483.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="x527.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="left"
-VALIGN="top"
->Macros</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="34%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="top"
-><A
-HREF="c45.html"
-ACCESSKEY="U"
->Up</A
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="top"
->Object Files and Sections</TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></BODY
-></HTML
->
\ No newline at end of file
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/docs/manual/x514.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -0,0 +1,228 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<HTML
+><HEAD
+><TITLE
+>Structures</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="Macros"
+HREF="x491.html"><LINK
+REL="NEXT"
+TITLE="Object Files and Sections"
+HREF="x535.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="x491.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="x535.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><H1
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><A
+NAME="AEN514"
+>3.8. Structures</A
+></H1
+><P
+>&#13;Structures are used to group related data in a fixed structure. A structure
+consists a number of fields, defined in sequential order and which take up
+specified size.  The assembler does not enforce any means of access within a
+structure; it assumes that whatever you are doing, you intended to do. 
+There are two pseudo ops that are used for defining structures.&#13;</P
+><P
+></P
+><DIV
+CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
+><DL
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>structname</CODE
+> STRUCT</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>&#13;This directive is used to begin the definition of a structure with name
+<CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>structname</CODE
+>.  Subsequent statements all form part of
+the structure definition until the end of the structure is declared.&#13;</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>ENDSTRUCT, ENDS</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This directive ends the definition of the structure. ENDSTRUCT is the
+preferred form. Prior to version 3.0 of LWASM, ENDS was used to end a
+section instead of a structure.</P
+></DD
+></DL
+></DIV
+><P
+>&#13;Within a structure definition, only reservation pseudo ops are permitted.
+Anything else will cause an assembly error.</P
+><P
+> Once a structure is defined, you can reserve an area of memory in the
+same structure by using the structure name as the opcode.  Structures can
+also contain fields that are themselves structures.  See the example
+below.</P
+><PRE
+CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
+>tstruct2  STRUCT
+f1        rmb 1
+f2        rmb 1
+          ENDSTRUCT
+
+tstruct   STRUCT
+field1    rmb 2
+field2    rmb 3
+field3    tstruct2
+          ENDSTRUCT
+
+          ORG $2000
+var1      tstruct
+var2      tstruct2</PRE
+><P
+>Fields are referenced using a dot (.) as a separator. To refer to the
+generic offset within a structure, use the structure name to the left of the
+dot.  If referring to a field within an actual variable, use the variable's
+symbol name to the left of the dot.</P
+><P
+>You can also refer to the actual size of a structure (or a variable
+declared as a structure) using the special symbol sizeof{structname} where
+structname will be the name of the structure or the name of the
+variable.</P
+><P
+>Essentially, structures are a shortcut for defining a vast number of
+symbols.  When a structure is defined, the assembler creates symbols for the
+various fields in the form structname.fieldname as well as the appropriate
+sizeof{structname} symbol.  When a variable is declared as a structure, the
+assembler does the same thing using the name of the variable.  You will see
+these symbols in the symbol table when the assembler is instructed to
+provide a listing.  For instance, the above listing will create the
+following symbols (symbol values in parentheses): tstruct2.f1 (0),
+tstruct2.f2 (1), sizeof{tstruct2} (2), tstruct.field1 (0), tstruct.field2
+(2), tstruct.field3 (5), tstruct.field3.f1 (5), tstruct.field3.f2 (6),
+sizeof{tstruct.field3} (2), sizeof{tstruct} (7), var1 {$2000}, var1.field1
+{$2000}, var1.field2 {$2002}, var1.field3 {$2005}, var1.field3.f1 {$2005},
+var1.field3.f2 {$2006}, sizeof(var1.field3} (2), sizeof{var1} (7), var2
+($2007), var2.f1 ($2007), var2.f2 ($2008), sizeof{var2} (2).  </P
+></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="x491.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="x535.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Macros</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="34%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="top"
+><A
+HREF="c45.html"
+ACCESSKEY="U"
+>Up</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Object Files and Sections</TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+></DIV
+></BODY
+></HTML
+>
\ No newline at end of file
--- a/docs/manual/x527.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,352 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->Object Files and Sections</TITLE
-><META
-NAME="GENERATOR"
-CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
-REL="HOME"
-TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
-HREF="index.html"><LINK
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-TITLE="LWASM"
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-REL="PREVIOUS"
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-TITLE="Assembler Modes and Pragmas"
-HREF="x591.html"></HEAD
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-CLASS="SECTION"
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->LW Tool Chain</TH
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-WIDTH="10%"
-ALIGN="left"
-VALIGN="bottom"
-><A
-HREF="x506.html"
-ACCESSKEY="P"
->Prev</A
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="80%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="bottom"
->Chapter 3. LWASM</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="10%"
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-VALIGN="bottom"
-><A
-HREF="x591.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-><HR
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-WIDTH="100%"></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><H1
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><A
-NAME="AEN527"
->3.9. Object Files and Sections</A
-></H1
-><P
->The object file target is very useful for large project because it allows
-multiple files to be assembled independently and then linked into the final
-binary at a later time. It allows only the small portion of the project
-that was modified to be re-assembled rather than requiring the entire set
-of source code to be available to the assembler in a single assembly process.
-This can be particularly important if there are a large number of macros,
-symbol definitions, or other metadata that uses resources at assembly time.
-By far the largest benefit, however, is keeping the source files small enough
-for a mere mortal to find things in them.</P
-><P
->With multi-file projects, there needs to be a means of resolving references to
-symbols in other source files. These are known as external references. The
-addresses of these symbols cannot be known until the linker joins all the
-object files into a single binary. This means that the assembler must be
-able to output the object code without knowing the value of the symbol. This
-places some restrictions on the code generated by the assembler. For
-example, the assembler cannot generate direct page addressing for instructions
-that reference external symbols because the address of the symbol may not
-be in the direct page. Similarly, relative branches and PC relative addressing
-cannot be used in their eight bit forms. Everything that must be resolved
-by the linker must be assembled to use the largest address size possible to
-allow the linker to fill in the correct value at link time. Note that the
-same problem applies to absolute address references as well, even those in
-the same source file, because the address is not known until link time.</P
-><P
->It is often desired in multi-file projects to have code of various types grouped
-together in the final binary generated by the linker as well. The same applies
-to data. In order for the linker to do that, the bits that are to be grouped
-must be tagged in some manner. This is where the concept of sections comes in.
-Each chunk of code or data is part of a section in the object file. Then,
-when the linker reads all the object files, it coalesces all sections of the
-same name into a single section and then considers it as a unit.</P
-><P
->The existence of sections, however, raises a problem for symbols even
-within the same source file. Thus, the assembler must treat symbols from
-different sections within the same source file in the same manner as external
-symbols. That is, it must leave them for the linker to resolve at link time,
-with all the limitations that entails.</P
-><P
->In the object file target mode, LWASM requires all source lines that
-cause bytes to be output to be inside a section. Any directives that do
-not cause any bytes to be output can appear outside of a section. This includes
-such things as EQU or RMB. Even ORG can appear outside a section. ORG, however,
-makes no sense within a section because it is the linker that determines
-the starting address of the section's code, not the assembler.</P
-><P
->All symbols defined globally in the assembly process are local to the 
-source file and cannot be exported. All symbols defined within a section are
-considered local to the source file unless otherwise explicitly exported.
-Symbols referenced from external source files must be declared external,
-either explicitly or by asking the assembler to assume that all undefined
-symbols are external.</P
-><P
->It is often handy to define a number of memory addresses that will be
-used for data at run-time but which need not be included in the binary file.
-These memory addresses are not initialized until run-time, either by the
-program itself or by the program loader, depending on the operating environment.
-Such sections are often known as BSS sections. LWASM supports generating
-sections with a BSS attribute set which causes the section definition including
-symbols exported from that section and those symbols required to resolve
-references from the local file, but with no actual code in the object file.
-It is illegal for any source lines within a BSS flagged section to cause any
-bytes to be output.</P
-><P
->The following directives apply to section handling.</P
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
->SECTION <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->name[,flags]</CODE
->, SECT <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->name[,flags]</CODE
->, .AREA <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->name[,flags]</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->Instructs the assembler that the code following this directive is to be
-considered part of the section <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->name</CODE
->. A section name
-may appear multiple times in which case it is as though all the code from
-all the instances of that section appeared adjacent within the source file.
-However, <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->flags</CODE
-> may only be specified on the first
-instance of the section.</P
-><P
-><CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->flags</CODE
-> is a comma separated list of flags. If a
-flag is "bss", the section will be treated as a BSS section and no
-statements that generate output are permitted.</P
-><P
->If the flag is "constant",
-the same restrictions apply as for BSS sections.  Additionally, all symbols
-defined in a constant section define absolute values and will not be
-adjusted by the linker at link time.  Constant sections cannot define
-complex expressions for symbols; the value must be fully defined at assembly
-time.  Additionally, multiple instances of a constant section do not
-coalesce into a single addressing unit; each instance starts again at offset
-0.</P
-><P
->If the section name is "bss" or ".bss" in any combination of upper and
-lower case, the section is assumed to be a BSS section. In that case,
-the flag <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->!bss</CODE
-> can be used to override this assumption.</P
-><P
-> If the section name is "_constants" or "_constant", in any
-combination of upper and lower case, the section is assumed to be a constant
-section.  This assumption can be overridden with the "!constant"
-flag.</P
-><P
->If assembly is already happening within a section, the section is implicitly
-ended and the new section started. This is not considered an error although
-it is recommended that all sections be explicitly closed.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->ENDSECTION, ENDSECT</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This directive ends the current section. This puts assembly outside of any
-sections until the next SECTION directive. ENDSECTION is the preferred form.
-Prior to version 3.0 of LWASM, ENDS could also be used to end a section but
-as of version 3.0, it is now an alias for ENDSTRUCT instead.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
-> EXTERN, <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
-> EXTERNAL, <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
-> IMPORT</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This directive defines <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
-> as an external symbol.
-This directive may occur at any point in the source code. EXTERN definitions
-are resolved on the first pass so an EXTERN definition anywhere in the
-source file is valid for the entire file. The use of this directive is
-optional when the assembler is instructed to assume that all undefined
-symbols are external. In fact, in that mode, if the symbol is referenced
-before the EXTERN directive, an error will occur.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
-> EXPORT, <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
-> .GLOBL, EXPORT <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
->, .GLOBL <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This directive defines <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
-> as an exported symbol.
-This directive may occur at any point in the source code, even before the
-definition of the exported symbol.</P
-><P
->Note that <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
-> may appear as the operand or as the
-statement's symbol. If there is a symbol on the statement, that will
-take precedence over any operand that is present.</P
-></DD
-><DT
-><CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
-> EXTDEP</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This directive forces an external dependency on
-<CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->sym</CODE
->, even if it is never referenced anywhere else in
-this file.</P
-></DD
-></DL
-></DIV
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NAVFOOTER"
-><HR
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-WIDTH="100%"><TABLE
-SUMMARY="Footer navigation table"
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\ No newline at end of file
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/docs/manual/x535.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -0,0 +1,352 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<HTML
+><HEAD
+><TITLE
+>Object Files and Sections</TITLE
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+SUMMARY="Header navigation table"
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+>LW Tool Chain</TH
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
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+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+><A
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+ACCESSKEY="P"
+>Prev</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="80%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+>Chapter 3. LWASM</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="10%"
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+VALIGN="bottom"
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+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
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+></TABLE
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><H1
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><A
+NAME="AEN535"
+>3.9. Object Files and Sections</A
+></H1
+><P
+>The object file target is very useful for large project because it allows
+multiple files to be assembled independently and then linked into the final
+binary at a later time. It allows only the small portion of the project
+that was modified to be re-assembled rather than requiring the entire set
+of source code to be available to the assembler in a single assembly process.
+This can be particularly important if there are a large number of macros,
+symbol definitions, or other metadata that uses resources at assembly time.
+By far the largest benefit, however, is keeping the source files small enough
+for a mere mortal to find things in them.</P
+><P
+>With multi-file projects, there needs to be a means of resolving references to
+symbols in other source files. These are known as external references. The
+addresses of these symbols cannot be known until the linker joins all the
+object files into a single binary. This means that the assembler must be
+able to output the object code without knowing the value of the symbol. This
+places some restrictions on the code generated by the assembler. For
+example, the assembler cannot generate direct page addressing for instructions
+that reference external symbols because the address of the symbol may not
+be in the direct page. Similarly, relative branches and PC relative addressing
+cannot be used in their eight bit forms. Everything that must be resolved
+by the linker must be assembled to use the largest address size possible to
+allow the linker to fill in the correct value at link time. Note that the
+same problem applies to absolute address references as well, even those in
+the same source file, because the address is not known until link time.</P
+><P
+>It is often desired in multi-file projects to have code of various types grouped
+together in the final binary generated by the linker as well. The same applies
+to data. In order for the linker to do that, the bits that are to be grouped
+must be tagged in some manner. This is where the concept of sections comes in.
+Each chunk of code or data is part of a section in the object file. Then,
+when the linker reads all the object files, it coalesces all sections of the
+same name into a single section and then considers it as a unit.</P
+><P
+>The existence of sections, however, raises a problem for symbols even
+within the same source file. Thus, the assembler must treat symbols from
+different sections within the same source file in the same manner as external
+symbols. That is, it must leave them for the linker to resolve at link time,
+with all the limitations that entails.</P
+><P
+>In the object file target mode, LWASM requires all source lines that
+cause bytes to be output to be inside a section. Any directives that do
+not cause any bytes to be output can appear outside of a section. This includes
+such things as EQU or RMB. Even ORG can appear outside a section. ORG, however,
+makes no sense within a section because it is the linker that determines
+the starting address of the section's code, not the assembler.</P
+><P
+>All symbols defined globally in the assembly process are local to the 
+source file and cannot be exported. All symbols defined within a section are
+considered local to the source file unless otherwise explicitly exported.
+Symbols referenced from external source files must be declared external,
+either explicitly or by asking the assembler to assume that all undefined
+symbols are external.</P
+><P
+>It is often handy to define a number of memory addresses that will be
+used for data at run-time but which need not be included in the binary file.
+These memory addresses are not initialized until run-time, either by the
+program itself or by the program loader, depending on the operating environment.
+Such sections are often known as BSS sections. LWASM supports generating
+sections with a BSS attribute set which causes the section definition including
+symbols exported from that section and those symbols required to resolve
+references from the local file, but with no actual code in the object file.
+It is illegal for any source lines within a BSS flagged section to cause any
+bytes to be output.</P
+><P
+>The following directives apply to section handling.</P
+><P
+></P
+><DIV
+CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
+><DL
+><DT
+>SECTION <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>name[,flags]</CODE
+>, SECT <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>name[,flags]</CODE
+>, .AREA <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>name[,flags]</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>Instructs the assembler that the code following this directive is to be
+considered part of the section <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>name</CODE
+>. A section name
+may appear multiple times in which case it is as though all the code from
+all the instances of that section appeared adjacent within the source file.
+However, <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>flags</CODE
+> may only be specified on the first
+instance of the section.</P
+><P
+><CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>flags</CODE
+> is a comma separated list of flags. If a
+flag is "bss", the section will be treated as a BSS section and no
+statements that generate output are permitted.</P
+><P
+>If the flag is "constant",
+the same restrictions apply as for BSS sections.  Additionally, all symbols
+defined in a constant section define absolute values and will not be
+adjusted by the linker at link time.  Constant sections cannot define
+complex expressions for symbols; the value must be fully defined at assembly
+time.  Additionally, multiple instances of a constant section do not
+coalesce into a single addressing unit; each instance starts again at offset
+0.</P
+><P
+>If the section name is "bss" or ".bss" in any combination of upper and
+lower case, the section is assumed to be a BSS section. In that case,
+the flag <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>!bss</CODE
+> can be used to override this assumption.</P
+><P
+> If the section name is "_constants" or "_constant", in any
+combination of upper and lower case, the section is assumed to be a constant
+section.  This assumption can be overridden with the "!constant"
+flag.</P
+><P
+>If assembly is already happening within a section, the section is implicitly
+ended and the new section started. This is not considered an error although
+it is recommended that all sections be explicitly closed.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>ENDSECTION, ENDSECT</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This directive ends the current section. This puts assembly outside of any
+sections until the next SECTION directive. ENDSECTION is the preferred form.
+Prior to version 3.0 of LWASM, ENDS could also be used to end a section but
+as of version 3.0, it is now an alias for ENDSTRUCT instead.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+> EXTERN, <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+> EXTERNAL, <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+> IMPORT</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This directive defines <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+> as an external symbol.
+This directive may occur at any point in the source code. EXTERN definitions
+are resolved on the first pass so an EXTERN definition anywhere in the
+source file is valid for the entire file. The use of this directive is
+optional when the assembler is instructed to assume that all undefined
+symbols are external. In fact, in that mode, if the symbol is referenced
+before the EXTERN directive, an error will occur.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+> EXPORT, <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+> .GLOBL, EXPORT <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+>, .GLOBL <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This directive defines <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+> as an exported symbol.
+This directive may occur at any point in the source code, even before the
+definition of the exported symbol.</P
+><P
+>Note that <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+> may appear as the operand or as the
+statement's symbol. If there is a symbol on the statement, that will
+take precedence over any operand that is present.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+><CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+> EXTDEP</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This directive forces an external dependency on
+<CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>sym</CODE
+>, even if it is never referenced anywhere else in
+this file.</P
+></DD
+></DL
+></DIV
+></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="NAVFOOTER"
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"><TABLE
+SUMMARY="Footer navigation table"
+WIDTH="100%"
+BORDER="0"
+CELLPADDING="0"
+CELLSPACING="0"
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+></BODY
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+>
\ No newline at end of file
--- a/docs/manual/x591.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,410 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->Assembler Modes and Pragmas</TITLE
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-NAME="GENERATOR"
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-TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
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-><DIV
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><H1
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><A
-NAME="AEN591"
->3.10. Assembler Modes and Pragmas</A
-></H1
-><P
->There are a number of options that affect the way assembly is performed.
-Some of these options can only be specified on the command line because
-they determine something absolute about the assembly process. These include
-such things as the output target. Other things may be switchable during
-the assembly process. These are known as pragmas and are, by definition,
-not portable between assemblers.</P
-><P
->LWASM supports a number of pragmas that affect code generation or
-otherwise affect the behaviour of the assembler. These may be specified by
-way of a command line option or by assembler directives. The directives
-are as follows.</P
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
->PRAGMA <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->pragma[,...]</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->Specifies that the assembler should bring into force all <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->pragma</CODE
->s
-specified. Any unrecognized pragma will cause an assembly error. The new
-pragmas will take effect immediately. This directive should be used when
-the program will assemble incorrectly if the pragma is ignored or not supported.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->*PRAGMA <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->pragma[,...]</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This is identical to the PRAGMA directive except no error will occur with
-unrecognized or unsupported pragmas. This directive, by virtue of starting
-with a comment character, will also be ignored by assemblers that do not
-support this directive. Use this variation if the pragma is not required
-for correct functioning of the code.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->*PRAGMAPUSH <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->pragma[,...]</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This directive saves the current state of the specified pragma(s) for later retrieval. See discussion below for more information.</P
-><P
->This directive will not throw any errors for any reason.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->*PRAGMAPOP <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->pragma[,...]</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This directive restores the previously saved state of the specified pragma(s). See discussion below for more information.</P
-><P
->This directive will not throw any errors for any reason.</P
-></DD
-></DL
-></DIV
-><P
->Each pragma supported has a positive version and a negative version. 
-The positive version enables the pragma while the negative version disables
-it.  The negatitve version is simply the positive version with "no" prefixed
-to it.  For instance, "pragma" vs.  "nopragma".  When only one version is
-listed below, its opposite can be obtained by prepending "no" if it is not
-present or removing "no" from the beginning if it is present.</P
-><P
->Pragmas are not case sensitive.</P
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
->index0tonone</DT
-><DD
-><P
->When in force, this pragma enables an optimization affecting indexed addressing
-modes. When the offset expression in an indexed mode evaluates to zero but is
-not explicity written as 0, this will replace the operand with the equivalent
-no offset mode, thus creating slightly faster code. Because of the advantages
-of this optimization, it is enabled by default.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->cescapes</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This pragma will cause strings in the FCC, FCS, and FCN pseudo operations to
-have C-style escape sequences interpreted. The one departure from the official
-spec is that unrecognized escape sequences will return either the character
-immediately following the backslash or some undefined value. Do not rely
-on the behaviour of undefined escape sequences.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->importundefexport</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This pragma is only valid for targets that support external references. When
-in force, it will cause the EXPORT directive to act as IMPORT if the symbol
-to be exported is not defined.  This is provided for compatibility with the
-output of gcc6809 and should not be used in hand written code.  Because of
-the confusion this pragma can cause, it is disabled by default.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->undefextern</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This pragma is only valid for targets that support external references. When in
-force, if the assembler sees an undefined symbol on the second pass, it will
-automatically define it as an external symbol. This automatic definition will
-apply for the remainder of the assembly process, even if the pragma is
-subsequently turned off. Because this behaviour would be potentially surprising,
-this pragma defaults to off.</P
-><P
->The primary use for this pragma is for projects that share a large number of
-symbols between source files. In such cases, it is impractical to enumerate
-all the external references in every source file. This allows the assembler
-and linker to do the heavy lifting while not preventing a particular source
-module from defining a local symbol of the same name as an external symbol
-if it does not need the external symbol. (This pragma will not cause an
-automatic external definition if there is already a locally defined symbol.)</P
-><P
->This pragma will often be specified on the command line for large projects.
-However, depending on the specific dynamics of the project, it may be sufficient
-for one or two files to use this pragma internally.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->export</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This pragma causes all symbols to be added to the export list
-automatically.  This is useful when a large number of symbols need to be
-exported but you do not wish to include an EXPORT directive for all of them. 
-This is often useful on the command line but might be useful even inline
-with the PRAGMA directive if a large number of symbols in a row are to be
-exported.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->dollarlocal</DT
-><DD
-><P
->When set, a "$" in a symbol makes it local. When not set, "$" does not
-cause a symbol to be local.  It is set by default except when using the OS9
-target.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->dollarnotlocal</DT
-><DD
-><P
-> This is the same as the "dollarlocal" pragma except its sense is
-reversed.  That is, "dollarlocal" and "nodollarnotlocal" are equivalent and
-"nodollarlocal" and "dollarnotlocal" are equivalent.  </P
-></DD
-><DT
->pcaspcr</DT
-><DD
-><P
-> Normally, LWASM makes a distinction between PC and PCR in program
-counter relative addressing. In particular, the use of PC means an absolute
-offset from PC while PCR causes the assembler to calculate the offset to the
-specified operand and use that as the offset from PC. By setting this
-pragma, you can have PC treated the same as PCR. </P
-></DD
-><DT
->shadow</DT
-><DD
-><P
->When this pragma is in effect, it becomes possible to define a macro
-that matches an internal operation code. Thus, it makes it possible to
-redefine either CPU instructions or pseudo operations. Because this feature
-is of dubious utility, it is disabled by default.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->nolist</DT
-><DD
-><P
->Lines where this pragma is in effect will not appear in the assembly
-listing.  Also, any symbols defined under this pragma will not show up in
-the symbol list.  This is most useful in include files to avoid spamming the
-assembly listing with dozens, hundreds, or thousands of irrelevant
-symbols.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->autobranchlength</DT
-><DD
-><P
->One of the perennial annoyances for 6809 programmers is that the
-mneumonics for the short and long branch instructions are different (bxx vs. 
-lbxx), which is at odds with the rest of the instruction set.  This pragma
-is a solution to those annoying byte overflow errors that short branch
-instructions tend to aquire.</P
-><P
->When this pragma is in effect, which is not the default, whenever any
-relative branch instruction is used, its size will be automatically
-determined based on the actual distance to the destination.  In other words,
-one can write code with long or short branches everywhere and the assembler
-will choose a size for the branch.</P
-><P
->Also, while this pragma is in effect, the &#62; and &#60; symbols can be used
-to force the branch size, analogous to their use for other instructions with
-&#60; forcing 8 bit offsets and &#62; forcing 16 bit offets.</P
-><P
->Because this pragma leads to source that is incompatible with other
-assemblers, it is strongly recommended that it be invoked using the PRAGMA
-directive within the source code rather than on the command line or via the
-*PRAGMA directive.  This way, an error will be raised if someone tries to
-assemble the code under a different assembler.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->nosymbolcase, symbolnocase</DT
-><DD
-><P
->Any symbol defined while this pragma is in force will be treated as
-case insensitive, regardless whether the pragma is in force when the symbol
-is referenced.</P
-><P
->It is important to note that this pragma will not work as expected in
-all cases when using the object file assembly target.  It is intended for
-use only when the assembler will be producing the final binary.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->condundefzero</DT
-><DD
-><P
->This pragma will cause the assembler to change the way it handles
-symbols in conditional expressions.  Ordinarily, any symbol that is not
-defined prior to the conditional will throw an undefined symbol error.  With
-this pragma in effect, symbols that are not yet defined at the point the
-conditional is encountered will be treated as zero.</P
-><P
->This is not the default because it encourages poor code design. One
-should use the "IFDEF" or "IFNDEF" conditionals to test for the presence of
-a symbol.</P
-><P
->It is important to note that if a symbol is defined but it does not
-yet evaluate to a constant value at the point where the conditional appears,
-the assembler will still complain about a non constant condition.</P
-></DD
-></DL
-></DIV
-><P
->As a convenience, each input file has a pragma state stack. This
-allows, through the use of *PRAGMAPUSH and *PRAGMAPOP, a file to change a
-pragma state and then restore it to the precise state it had previously. 
-If, at the end of an input file, all pragma states have not been popped,
-they will be removed from the stack.  Thus, it is critical to employ
-*PRAGMAPOP correctly. Because each input file has its own pragma stack,
-using *PRAGMAPUSH in one file and *PRAGMAPOP in another file will not
-work.</P
-><P
->Pragma stacks are more useful in include files, in particular in
-conjunction with the nolist pragma.  One can push the state of the nolist
-pragma, engage the nolist pragma, and then pop the state of the nolist
-pragma at the end of the include file.  This will cause the entire include
-file to operate under the nolist pragma.  However, if the file is included
-while nolist is already engaged, it will not undo that state.</P
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NAVFOOTER"
-><HR
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-WIDTH="100%"><TABLE
-SUMMARY="Footer navigation table"
-WIDTH="100%"
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\ No newline at end of file
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/docs/manual/x599.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -0,0 +1,410 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<HTML
+><HEAD
+><TITLE
+>Assembler Modes and Pragmas</TITLE
+><META
+NAME="GENERATOR"
+CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
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+>LW Tool Chain</TH
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+ACCESSKEY="P"
+>Prev</A
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+><TD
+WIDTH="80%"
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+>Chapter 3. LWASM</TD
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+WIDTH="10%"
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+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
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+></TR
+></TABLE
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><H1
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><A
+NAME="AEN599"
+>3.10. Assembler Modes and Pragmas</A
+></H1
+><P
+>There are a number of options that affect the way assembly is performed.
+Some of these options can only be specified on the command line because
+they determine something absolute about the assembly process. These include
+such things as the output target. Other things may be switchable during
+the assembly process. These are known as pragmas and are, by definition,
+not portable between assemblers.</P
+><P
+>LWASM supports a number of pragmas that affect code generation or
+otherwise affect the behaviour of the assembler. These may be specified by
+way of a command line option or by assembler directives. The directives
+are as follows.</P
+><P
+></P
+><DIV
+CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
+><DL
+><DT
+>PRAGMA <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>pragma[,...]</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>Specifies that the assembler should bring into force all <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>pragma</CODE
+>s
+specified. Any unrecognized pragma will cause an assembly error. The new
+pragmas will take effect immediately. This directive should be used when
+the program will assemble incorrectly if the pragma is ignored or not supported.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>*PRAGMA <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>pragma[,...]</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This is identical to the PRAGMA directive except no error will occur with
+unrecognized or unsupported pragmas. This directive, by virtue of starting
+with a comment character, will also be ignored by assemblers that do not
+support this directive. Use this variation if the pragma is not required
+for correct functioning of the code.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>*PRAGMAPUSH <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>pragma[,...]</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This directive saves the current state of the specified pragma(s) for later retrieval. See discussion below for more information.</P
+><P
+>This directive will not throw any errors for any reason.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>*PRAGMAPOP <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>pragma[,...]</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This directive restores the previously saved state of the specified pragma(s). See discussion below for more information.</P
+><P
+>This directive will not throw any errors for any reason.</P
+></DD
+></DL
+></DIV
+><P
+>Each pragma supported has a positive version and a negative version. 
+The positive version enables the pragma while the negative version disables
+it.  The negatitve version is simply the positive version with "no" prefixed
+to it.  For instance, "pragma" vs.  "nopragma".  When only one version is
+listed below, its opposite can be obtained by prepending "no" if it is not
+present or removing "no" from the beginning if it is present.</P
+><P
+>Pragmas are not case sensitive.</P
+><P
+></P
+><DIV
+CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
+><DL
+><DT
+>index0tonone</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>When in force, this pragma enables an optimization affecting indexed addressing
+modes. When the offset expression in an indexed mode evaluates to zero but is
+not explicity written as 0, this will replace the operand with the equivalent
+no offset mode, thus creating slightly faster code. Because of the advantages
+of this optimization, it is enabled by default.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>cescapes</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This pragma will cause strings in the FCC, FCS, and FCN pseudo operations to
+have C-style escape sequences interpreted. The one departure from the official
+spec is that unrecognized escape sequences will return either the character
+immediately following the backslash or some undefined value. Do not rely
+on the behaviour of undefined escape sequences.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>importundefexport</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This pragma is only valid for targets that support external references. When
+in force, it will cause the EXPORT directive to act as IMPORT if the symbol
+to be exported is not defined.  This is provided for compatibility with the
+output of gcc6809 and should not be used in hand written code.  Because of
+the confusion this pragma can cause, it is disabled by default.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>undefextern</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This pragma is only valid for targets that support external references. When in
+force, if the assembler sees an undefined symbol on the second pass, it will
+automatically define it as an external symbol. This automatic definition will
+apply for the remainder of the assembly process, even if the pragma is
+subsequently turned off. Because this behaviour would be potentially surprising,
+this pragma defaults to off.</P
+><P
+>The primary use for this pragma is for projects that share a large number of
+symbols between source files. In such cases, it is impractical to enumerate
+all the external references in every source file. This allows the assembler
+and linker to do the heavy lifting while not preventing a particular source
+module from defining a local symbol of the same name as an external symbol
+if it does not need the external symbol. (This pragma will not cause an
+automatic external definition if there is already a locally defined symbol.)</P
+><P
+>This pragma will often be specified on the command line for large projects.
+However, depending on the specific dynamics of the project, it may be sufficient
+for one or two files to use this pragma internally.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>export</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This pragma causes all symbols to be added to the export list
+automatically.  This is useful when a large number of symbols need to be
+exported but you do not wish to include an EXPORT directive for all of them. 
+This is often useful on the command line but might be useful even inline
+with the PRAGMA directive if a large number of symbols in a row are to be
+exported.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>dollarlocal</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>When set, a "$" in a symbol makes it local. When not set, "$" does not
+cause a symbol to be local.  It is set by default except when using the OS9
+target.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>dollarnotlocal</DT
+><DD
+><P
+> This is the same as the "dollarlocal" pragma except its sense is
+reversed.  That is, "dollarlocal" and "nodollarnotlocal" are equivalent and
+"nodollarlocal" and "dollarnotlocal" are equivalent.  </P
+></DD
+><DT
+>pcaspcr</DT
+><DD
+><P
+> Normally, LWASM makes a distinction between PC and PCR in program
+counter relative addressing. In particular, the use of PC means an absolute
+offset from PC while PCR causes the assembler to calculate the offset to the
+specified operand and use that as the offset from PC. By setting this
+pragma, you can have PC treated the same as PCR. </P
+></DD
+><DT
+>shadow</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>When this pragma is in effect, it becomes possible to define a macro
+that matches an internal operation code. Thus, it makes it possible to
+redefine either CPU instructions or pseudo operations. Because this feature
+is of dubious utility, it is disabled by default.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>nolist</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>Lines where this pragma is in effect will not appear in the assembly
+listing.  Also, any symbols defined under this pragma will not show up in
+the symbol list.  This is most useful in include files to avoid spamming the
+assembly listing with dozens, hundreds, or thousands of irrelevant
+symbols.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>autobranchlength</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>One of the perennial annoyances for 6809 programmers is that the
+mneumonics for the short and long branch instructions are different (bxx vs. 
+lbxx), which is at odds with the rest of the instruction set.  This pragma
+is a solution to those annoying byte overflow errors that short branch
+instructions tend to aquire.</P
+><P
+>When this pragma is in effect, which is not the default, whenever any
+relative branch instruction is used, its size will be automatically
+determined based on the actual distance to the destination.  In other words,
+one can write code with long or short branches everywhere and the assembler
+will choose a size for the branch.</P
+><P
+>Also, while this pragma is in effect, the &#62; and &#60; symbols can be used
+to force the branch size, analogous to their use for other instructions with
+&#60; forcing 8 bit offsets and &#62; forcing 16 bit offets.</P
+><P
+>Because this pragma leads to source that is incompatible with other
+assemblers, it is strongly recommended that it be invoked using the PRAGMA
+directive within the source code rather than on the command line or via the
+*PRAGMA directive.  This way, an error will be raised if someone tries to
+assemble the code under a different assembler.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>nosymbolcase, symbolnocase</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>Any symbol defined while this pragma is in force will be treated as
+case insensitive, regardless whether the pragma is in force when the symbol
+is referenced.</P
+><P
+>It is important to note that this pragma will not work as expected in
+all cases when using the object file assembly target.  It is intended for
+use only when the assembler will be producing the final binary.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>condundefzero</DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This pragma will cause the assembler to change the way it handles
+symbols in conditional expressions.  Ordinarily, any symbol that is not
+defined prior to the conditional will throw an undefined symbol error.  With
+this pragma in effect, symbols that are not yet defined at the point the
+conditional is encountered will be treated as zero.</P
+><P
+>This is not the default because it encourages poor code design. One
+should use the "IFDEF" or "IFNDEF" conditionals to test for the presence of
+a symbol.</P
+><P
+>It is important to note that if a symbol is defined but it does not
+yet evaluate to a constant value at the point where the conditional appears,
+the assembler will still complain about a non constant condition.</P
+></DD
+></DL
+></DIV
+><P
+>As a convenience, each input file has a pragma state stack. This
+allows, through the use of *PRAGMAPUSH and *PRAGMAPOP, a file to change a
+pragma state and then restore it to the precise state it had previously. 
+If, at the end of an input file, all pragma states have not been popped,
+they will be removed from the stack.  Thus, it is critical to employ
+*PRAGMAPOP correctly. Because each input file has its own pragma stack,
+using *PRAGMAPUSH in one file and *PRAGMAPOP in another file will not
+work.</P
+><P
+>Pragma stacks are more useful in include files, in particular in
+conjunction with the nolist pragma.  One can push the state of the nolist
+pragma, engage the nolist pragma, and then pop the state of the nolist
+pragma at the end of the include file.  This will cause the entire include
+file to operate under the nolist pragma.  However, if the file is included
+while nolist is already engaged, it will not undo that state.</P
+></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="NAVFOOTER"
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"><TABLE
+SUMMARY="Footer navigation table"
+WIDTH="100%"
+BORDER="0"
+CELLPADDING="0"
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+>
\ No newline at end of file
--- a/docs/manual/x785.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,191 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->Linker Operation</TITLE
-><META
-NAME="GENERATOR"
-CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
-REL="HOME"
-TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
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->LW Tool Chain</TH
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->Next</A
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-WIDTH="100%"></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><H1
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><A
-NAME="AEN785"
->4.2. Linker Operation</A
-></H1
-><P
->&#13;LWLINK takes one or more files in supported input formats and links them
-into a single binary. Currently supported formats are the LWTOOLS object
-file format and the archive format used by LWAR. While the precise method is
-slightly different, linking can be conceptualized as the following steps.&#13;</P
-><P
-></P
-><OL
-TYPE="1"
-><LI
-><P
->First, the linker loads a linking script. If no script is specified, it
-loads a built-in default script based on the output format selected. This
-script tells the linker how to lay out the various sections in the final
-binary.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Next, the linker reads all the input files into memory. At this time, it
-flags any format errors in those files. It constructs a table of symbols
-for each object at this time.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->The linker then proceeds with organizing the sections loaded from each file
-according to the linking script. As it does so, it is able to assign addresses
-to each symbol defined in each object file. At this time, the linker may
-also collapse different instances of the same section name into a single
-section by appending the data from each subsequent instance of the section
-to the first instance of the section.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->Next, the linker looks through every object file for every incomplete reference.
-It then attempts to fully resolve that reference. If it cannot do so, it
-throws an error. Once a reference is resolved, the value is placed into
-the binary code at the specified section. It should be noted that an
-incomplete reference can reference either a symbol internal to the object
-file or an external symbol which is in the export list of another object
-file.</P
-></LI
-><LI
-><P
->If all of the above steps are successful, the linker opens the output file
-and actually constructs the binary.</P
-></LI
-></OL
-></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="NAVFOOTER"
-><HR
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-SUMMARY="Footer navigation table"
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\ No newline at end of file
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/docs/manual/x793.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -0,0 +1,191 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<HTML
+><HEAD
+><TITLE
+>Linker Operation</TITLE
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+NAME="GENERATOR"
+CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
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+HREF="index.html"><LINK
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+HREF="x807.html"></HEAD
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+BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF"
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+VLINK="#840084"
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+SUMMARY="Header navigation table"
+WIDTH="100%"
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+>LW Tool Chain</TH
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+ACCESSKEY="P"
+>Prev</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="80%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="bottom"
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+WIDTH="10%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+><A
+HREF="x807.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
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+></TABLE
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><H1
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><A
+NAME="AEN793"
+>4.2. Linker Operation</A
+></H1
+><P
+>&#13;LWLINK takes one or more files in supported input formats and links them
+into a single binary. Currently supported formats are the LWTOOLS object
+file format and the archive format used by LWAR. While the precise method is
+slightly different, linking can be conceptualized as the following steps.&#13;</P
+><P
+></P
+><OL
+TYPE="1"
+><LI
+><P
+>First, the linker loads a linking script. If no script is specified, it
+loads a built-in default script based on the output format selected. This
+script tells the linker how to lay out the various sections in the final
+binary.</P
+></LI
+><LI
+><P
+>Next, the linker reads all the input files into memory. At this time, it
+flags any format errors in those files. It constructs a table of symbols
+for each object at this time.</P
+></LI
+><LI
+><P
+>The linker then proceeds with organizing the sections loaded from each file
+according to the linking script. As it does so, it is able to assign addresses
+to each symbol defined in each object file. At this time, the linker may
+also collapse different instances of the same section name into a single
+section by appending the data from each subsequent instance of the section
+to the first instance of the section.</P
+></LI
+><LI
+><P
+>Next, the linker looks through every object file for every incomplete reference.
+It then attempts to fully resolve that reference. If it cannot do so, it
+throws an error. Once a reference is resolved, the value is placed into
+the binary code at the specified section. It should be noted that an
+incomplete reference can reference either a symbol internal to the object
+file or an external symbol which is in the export list of another object
+file.</P
+></LI
+><LI
+><P
+>If all of the above steps are successful, the linker opens the output file
+and actually constructs the binary.</P
+></LI
+></OL
+></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="NAVFOOTER"
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"><TABLE
+SUMMARY="Footer navigation table"
+WIDTH="100%"
+BORDER="0"
+CELLPADDING="0"
+CELLSPACING="0"
+><TR
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+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="top"
+><A
+HREF="c693.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="x807.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="top"
+>LWLINK</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="34%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="top"
+><A
+HREF="c693.html"
+ACCESSKEY="U"
+>Up</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Linking Scripts</TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+></DIV
+></BODY
+></HTML
+>
\ No newline at end of file
--- a/docs/manual/x799.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,313 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->Linking Scripts</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="LWLINK"
-HREF="c685.html"><LINK
-REL="PREVIOUS"
-TITLE="Linker Operation"
-HREF="x785.html"><LINK
-REL="NEXT"
-TITLE="Format Specific Linking Notes"
-HREF="x856.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="x785.html"
-ACCESSKEY="P"
->Prev</A
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="80%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="bottom"
->Chapter 4. LWLINK</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="10%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="bottom"
-><A
-HREF="x856.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-><HR
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-WIDTH="100%"></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><H1
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><A
-NAME="AEN799"
->4.3. Linking Scripts</A
-></H1
-><P
->A linker script is used to instruct the linker about how to assemble the
-various sections into a completed binary. It consists of a series of
-directives which are considered in the order they are encountered.</P
-><P
->The sections will appear in the resulting binary in the order they are
-specified in the script file. If a referenced section is not found, the linker will behave as though the
-section did exist but had a zero size, no relocations, and no exports.
-A section should only be referenced once. Any subsequent references will have
-an undefined effect.</P
-><P
->All numbers are in linking scripts are specified in hexadecimal. All directives
-are case sensitive although the hexadecimal numbers are not.</P
-><P
->A section name can be specified as a "*", then any section not
-already matched by the script will be matched. The "*" can be followed
-by a comma and a flag to narrow the section down slightly, also.
-If the flag is "!bss", then any section that is not flagged as a bss section
-will be matched. If the flag is "bss", then any section that is flagged as
-bss will be matched.</P
-><P
->The following directives are understood in a linker script.</P
-><P
-></P
-><DIV
-CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
-><DL
-><DT
->sectopt <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->section</CODE
-> padafter <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->byte,...</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->&#13;This will cause the linker to append the specified list of byte values
-(specified in hexadecimal separated by commas) to the end of the named
-section.  This is done once all instances of the specified section are
-collected together.  This has no effect if the specified section does not
-appear anywhere in any of the objects specified for linking. &#13;</P
-><P
->&#13;If code depends on the presence of this padding somewhere, it is sufficient
-to include an empty section of the specified name in the object that depends
-on it.&#13;</P
-></DD
-><DT
->define basesympat <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->string</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->&#13;This causes the linker to define a symbol for the ultimate base address of
-each section using the pattern specified by <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->string</CODE
->. 
-In the string, %s can appear exactly once and will be replaced with the
-section name.  The base address is calculated after all instances of each
-section have been collapsed together.&#13;</P
-><P
->&#13;It should be noted that if none of the objects to be linked contains a
-particular section name, there will be no base symbol defined for it, even
-if it is listed explicitly in the link script.  If code depends on the
-presence of these symbols, it is sufficient to include an empty section of
-the specified name in the object that depends on it.&#13;</P
-><P
->  If the pattern resolves to the same string for multiple
-sections, the results are undefined.&#13;</P
-></DD
-><DT
->define lensympat <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->string</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->&#13;This causes the linker to define a symbol for the ultimate length of each
-section using the pattern specified by <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->string</CODE
->.  In
-the string, %s can appear exactly once and will be replaced with the section
-name.  The length is calculated after all instances of a section have been
-collapsed together.&#13;</P
-><P
->&#13;It should be noted that if none of the objects to be linked contains a
-particular section name, there will be no length symbol defined for it, even
-if it is listed explicitly in the link script.  If code depends on the
-presence of these symbols, it is sufficient to include an empty section of
-the specified name in the object that depends on it.&#13;</P
-><P
->If the pattern resolves to the same string for multiple
-sections, the results are undefined.&#13;</P
-></DD
-><DT
->section <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->name</CODE
-> load <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->addr</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->&#13;This causes the section <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->name</CODE
-> to load at
-<CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->addr</CODE
->. For the raw target, only one "load at" entry is
-allowed for non-bss sections and it must be the first one. For raw targets,
-it affects the addresses the linker assigns to symbols but has no other
-affect on the output. bss sections may all have separate load addresses but
-since they will not appear in the binary anyway, this is okay.</P
-><P
->For the decb target, each "load" entry will cause a new "block" to be
-output to the binary which will contain the load address. It is legal for
-sections to overlap in this manner - the linker assumes the loader will sort
-everything out.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->section <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->name</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->&#13;This will cause the section <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->name</CODE
-> to load after the previously listed
-section.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->entry <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->addr or sym</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This will cause the execution address (entry point) to be the address
-specified (in hex) or the specified symbol name. The symbol name must
-match a symbol that is exported by one of the object files being linked.
-This has no effect for targets that do not encode the entry point into the
-resulting file. If not specified, the entry point is assumed to be address 0
-which is probably not what you want. The default link scripts for targets
-that support this directive automatically starts at the beginning of the
-first section (usually "init" or "code") that is emitted in the binary.</P
-></DD
-><DT
->pad <CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->size</CODE
-></DT
-><DD
-><P
->This will cause the output file to be padded with NUL bytes to be exactly
-<CODE
-CLASS="PARAMETER"
->size</CODE
-> bytes in length. This only makes sense for a raw target.</P
-></DD
-></DL
-></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="x785.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="x856.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-><TR
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="left"
-VALIGN="top"
->Linker Operation</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="34%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="top"
-><A
-HREF="c685.html"
-ACCESSKEY="U"
->Up</A
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="33%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="top"
->Format Specific Linking Notes</TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-></DIV
-></BODY
-></HTML
->
\ No newline at end of file
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/docs/manual/x807.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -0,0 +1,313 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<HTML
+><HEAD
+><TITLE
+>Linking Scripts</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="LWLINK"
+HREF="c693.html"><LINK
+REL="PREVIOUS"
+TITLE="Linker Operation"
+HREF="x793.html"><LINK
+REL="NEXT"
+TITLE="Format Specific Linking Notes"
+HREF="x864.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="x793.html"
+ACCESSKEY="P"
+>Prev</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="80%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+>Chapter 4. LWLINK</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="10%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+><A
+HREF="x864.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><H1
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><A
+NAME="AEN807"
+>4.3. Linking Scripts</A
+></H1
+><P
+>A linker script is used to instruct the linker about how to assemble the
+various sections into a completed binary. It consists of a series of
+directives which are considered in the order they are encountered.</P
+><P
+>The sections will appear in the resulting binary in the order they are
+specified in the script file. If a referenced section is not found, the linker will behave as though the
+section did exist but had a zero size, no relocations, and no exports.
+A section should only be referenced once. Any subsequent references will have
+an undefined effect.</P
+><P
+>All numbers are in linking scripts are specified in hexadecimal. All directives
+are case sensitive although the hexadecimal numbers are not.</P
+><P
+>A section name can be specified as a "*", then any section not
+already matched by the script will be matched. The "*" can be followed
+by a comma and a flag to narrow the section down slightly, also.
+If the flag is "!bss", then any section that is not flagged as a bss section
+will be matched. If the flag is "bss", then any section that is flagged as
+bss will be matched.</P
+><P
+>The following directives are understood in a linker script.</P
+><P
+></P
+><DIV
+CLASS="VARIABLELIST"
+><DL
+><DT
+>sectopt <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>section</CODE
+> padafter <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>byte,...</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>&#13;This will cause the linker to append the specified list of byte values
+(specified in hexadecimal separated by commas) to the end of the named
+section.  This is done once all instances of the specified section are
+collected together.  This has no effect if the specified section does not
+appear anywhere in any of the objects specified for linking. &#13;</P
+><P
+>&#13;If code depends on the presence of this padding somewhere, it is sufficient
+to include an empty section of the specified name in the object that depends
+on it.&#13;</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>define basesympat <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>string</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>&#13;This causes the linker to define a symbol for the ultimate base address of
+each section using the pattern specified by <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>string</CODE
+>. 
+In the string, %s can appear exactly once and will be replaced with the
+section name.  The base address is calculated after all instances of each
+section have been collapsed together.&#13;</P
+><P
+>&#13;It should be noted that if none of the objects to be linked contains a
+particular section name, there will be no base symbol defined for it, even
+if it is listed explicitly in the link script.  If code depends on the
+presence of these symbols, it is sufficient to include an empty section of
+the specified name in the object that depends on it.&#13;</P
+><P
+>  If the pattern resolves to the same string for multiple
+sections, the results are undefined.&#13;</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>define lensympat <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>string</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>&#13;This causes the linker to define a symbol for the ultimate length of each
+section using the pattern specified by <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>string</CODE
+>.  In
+the string, %s can appear exactly once and will be replaced with the section
+name.  The length is calculated after all instances of a section have been
+collapsed together.&#13;</P
+><P
+>&#13;It should be noted that if none of the objects to be linked contains a
+particular section name, there will be no length symbol defined for it, even
+if it is listed explicitly in the link script.  If code depends on the
+presence of these symbols, it is sufficient to include an empty section of
+the specified name in the object that depends on it.&#13;</P
+><P
+>If the pattern resolves to the same string for multiple
+sections, the results are undefined.&#13;</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>section <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>name</CODE
+> load <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>addr</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>&#13;This causes the section <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>name</CODE
+> to load at
+<CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>addr</CODE
+>. For the raw target, only one "load at" entry is
+allowed for non-bss sections and it must be the first one. For raw targets,
+it affects the addresses the linker assigns to symbols but has no other
+affect on the output. bss sections may all have separate load addresses but
+since they will not appear in the binary anyway, this is okay.</P
+><P
+>For the decb target, each "load" entry will cause a new "block" to be
+output to the binary which will contain the load address. It is legal for
+sections to overlap in this manner - the linker assumes the loader will sort
+everything out.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>section <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>name</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>&#13;This will cause the section <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>name</CODE
+> to load after the previously listed
+section.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>entry <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>addr or sym</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This will cause the execution address (entry point) to be the address
+specified (in hex) or the specified symbol name. The symbol name must
+match a symbol that is exported by one of the object files being linked.
+This has no effect for targets that do not encode the entry point into the
+resulting file. If not specified, the entry point is assumed to be address 0
+which is probably not what you want. The default link scripts for targets
+that support this directive automatically starts at the beginning of the
+first section (usually "init" or "code") that is emitted in the binary.</P
+></DD
+><DT
+>pad <CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>size</CODE
+></DT
+><DD
+><P
+>This will cause the output file to be padded with NUL bytes to be exactly
+<CODE
+CLASS="PARAMETER"
+>size</CODE
+> bytes in length. This only makes sense for a raw target.</P
+></DD
+></DL
+></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="x793.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="x864.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
+></TD
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Linker Operation</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="34%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="top"
+><A
+HREF="c693.html"
+ACCESSKEY="U"
+>Up</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="top"
+>Format Specific Linking Notes</TD
+></TR
+></TABLE
+></DIV
+></BODY
+></HTML
+>
\ No newline at end of file
--- a/docs/manual/x856.html	Sat Jan 26 22:27:29 2013 -0700
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,224 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
-<HTML
-><HEAD
-><TITLE
->Format Specific Linking Notes</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="LWLINK"
-HREF="c685.html"><LINK
-REL="PREVIOUS"
-TITLE="Linking Scripts"
-HREF="x799.html"><LINK
-REL="NEXT"
-TITLE="Libraries and LWAR"
-HREF="c871.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="x799.html"
-ACCESSKEY="P"
->Prev</A
-></TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="80%"
-ALIGN="center"
-VALIGN="bottom"
->Chapter 4. LWLINK</TD
-><TD
-WIDTH="10%"
-ALIGN="right"
-VALIGN="bottom"
-><A
-HREF="c871.html"
-ACCESSKEY="N"
->Next</A
-></TD
-></TR
-></TABLE
-><HR
-ALIGN="LEFT"
-WIDTH="100%"></DIV
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><H1
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><A
-NAME="AEN856"
->4.4. Format Specific Linking Notes</A
-></H1
-><P
->Some formats require special information to be able to generate actual
-binaries.  If the specific format you are interested in is not listed in
-this section, then there is nothing special you need to know about to create
-a final binary.</P
-><DIV
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><H2
-CLASS="SECTION"
-><A
-NAME="AEN859"
->4.4.1. OS9 Modules</A
-></H2
-><P
->OS9 modules need to embed several items into the module header. These
-items are the type of module, the langauge of the module, the module
-attributes, the module revision number, the data size (bss), and the
-execution offset.  These are all either calculated or default to reasonable
-values.</P
-><P
->The data size is calcuated as the sum of all sections named "bss" or
-".bss" in all object files that are linked together.</P
-><P
->The execution offset is calculated from the address of the special
-symbol "__start" which must be an exported (external) symbol in one of the
-objects to be linked.</P
-><P
->The type defaults to "Prgrm" or "Program module". The language
-defaults to "Objct" or "6809 object code".  Attributes default to enabling
-the re-entrant flag.  And finally, the revision defaults to zero.</P
-><P
->The embedded module name is the output filename. If the output
-filename includes more than just the filename, this will probably not be
-what you want.</P
-><P
->The type, language, attributes, revision, and module name can all be
-overridden by providing a special section in exactly one of the object files
-to be linked.  This section is called "__os9" (note the two underscores). 
-To override the type, language, attributes, or revision values, define a
-non-exported symbol in this section called "type", "lang", "attr", or "rev"
-respectively.  Any other symbols defined are ignored.  To override the
-module name, include as the only actual code in the section a NUL terminated
-string (the FCN directive is useful for this).  If there is no code in the
-section or it beings with a NUL, the default name will be used.  Any of the
-preceeding that are not defined in the special section will retain their
-default values.</P
-><P
->The built-in link script for OS9 modules will place the following
-sections, in order, in the module: "code", ".text", "data", ".data".  It
-will merge all sections with the name "bss" or ".bss" into the "data"
-section.  All other section names are ignored.  What this means is that you
-must define your data variables in the a section called "bss" or ".bss" even
-though you will be refencing them all as offsets from U.  This does have the
-unpleasant side effect that all BSS references will end up being 16 bit
-offsets because the assembler cannot know what the offset will be once the
-linker is finished its work.  Thus, if the tightest possible code is
-required, having LWASM directly output the module is a better choice.</P
-><P
->While the built-in link script is probably sufficient for most
-purposes, you can provide your own script.  If you provide a custom link
-script, you must start your code and data sections at location 000D to
-accommodate the module header.  Otherwise, you will have an incorrect
-location for the execution offset.  You must use the ENTRY directive in the
-script to define the entry point for the module.</P
-><P
->It should also be obvious from the above that you cannot mix the bss
-(rmb) definitions with the module code when linking separately.  Those
-familiar with typical module creation will probably find this an unpleasant
-difference but it is unavoidable.</P
-><P
->It should also be noted that direct page references should also be
-avoided because you cannot know ahead of time whether the linker is going to
-end up putting a particular variable in the first 256 bytes of the module's
-data space.  If, however, you know for certain you will have less than 256
-bytes of defined data space across all of the object files that will be
-linked, you can instead use forced DP addressing for your data addresses
-instead of the ,u notation.  When linking with 3rd party libraries, this
-practice should be avoided.  Also, when creating libraries, always use the
-offset from U technique.</P
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--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/docs/manual/x864.html	Wed Jan 30 21:32:14 2013 -0700
@@ -0,0 +1,224 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<HTML
+><HEAD
+><TITLE
+>Format Specific Linking Notes</TITLE
+><META
+NAME="GENERATOR"
+CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"><LINK
+REL="HOME"
+TITLE="LW Tool Chain"
+HREF="index.html"><LINK
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+TITLE="LWLINK"
+HREF="c693.html"><LINK
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+><BODY
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+BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF"
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+VLINK="#840084"
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+SUMMARY="Header navigation table"
+WIDTH="100%"
+BORDER="0"
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+><TH
+COLSPAN="3"
+ALIGN="center"
+>LW Tool Chain</TH
+></TR
+><TR
+><TD
+WIDTH="10%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+><A
+HREF="x807.html"
+ACCESSKEY="P"
+>Prev</A
+></TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="80%"
+ALIGN="center"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+>Chapter 4. LWLINK</TD
+><TD
+WIDTH="10%"
+ALIGN="right"
+VALIGN="bottom"
+><A
+HREF="c879.html"
+ACCESSKEY="N"
+>Next</A
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+></TABLE
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><H1
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><A
+NAME="AEN864"
+>4.4. Format Specific Linking Notes</A
+></H1
+><P
+>Some formats require special information to be able to generate actual
+binaries.  If the specific format you are interested in is not listed in
+this section, then there is nothing special you need to know about to create
+a final binary.</P
+><DIV
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><H2
+CLASS="SECTION"
+><A
+NAME="AEN867"
+>4.4.1. OS9 Modules</A
+></H2
+><P
+>OS9 modules need to embed several items into the module header. These
+items are the type of module, the langauge of the module, the module
+attributes, the module revision number, the data size (bss), and the
+execution offset.  These are all either calculated or default to reasonable
+values.</P
+><P
+>The data size is calcuated as the sum of all sections named "bss" or
+".bss" in all object files that are linked together.</P
+><P
+>The execution offset is calculated from the address of the special
+symbol "__start" which must be an exported (external) symbol in one of the
+objects to be linked.</P
+><P
+>The type defaults to "Prgrm" or "Program module". The language
+defaults to "Objct" or "6809 object code".  Attributes default to enabling
+the re-entrant flag.  And finally, the revision defaults to zero.</P
+><P
+>The embedded module name is the output filename. If the output
+filename includes more than just the filename, this will probably not be
+what you want.</P
+><P
+>The type, language, attributes, revision, and module name can all be
+overridden by providing a special section in exactly one of the object files
+to be linked.  This section is called "__os9" (note the two underscores). 
+To override the type, language, attributes, or revision values, define a
+non-exported symbol in this section called "type", "lang", "attr", or "rev"
+respectively.  Any other symbols defined are ignored.  To override the
+module name, include as the only actual code in the section a NUL terminated
+string (the FCN directive is useful for this).  If there is no code in the
+section or it beings with a NUL, the default name will be used.  Any of the
+preceeding that are not defined in the special section will retain their
+default values.</P
+><P
+>The built-in link script for OS9 modules will place the following
+sections, in order, in the module: "code", ".text", "data", ".data".  It
+will merge all sections with the name "bss" or ".bss" into the "data"
+section.  All other section names are ignored.  What this means is that you
+must define your data variables in the a section called "bss" or ".bss" even
+though you will be refencing them all as offsets from U.  This does have the
+unpleasant side effect that all BSS references will end up being 16 bit
+offsets because the assembler cannot know what the offset will be once the
+linker is finished its work.  Thus, if the tightest possible code is
+required, having LWASM directly output the module is a better choice.</P
+><P
+>While the built-in link script is probably sufficient for most
+purposes, you can provide your own script.  If you provide a custom link
+script, you must start your code and data sections at location 000D to
+accommodate the module header.  Otherwise, you will have an incorrect
+location for the execution offset.  You must use the ENTRY directive in the
+script to define the entry point for the module.</P
+><P
+>It should also be obvious from the above that you cannot mix the bss
+(rmb) definitions with the module code when linking separately.  Those
+familiar with typical module creation will probably find this an unpleasant
+difference but it is unavoidable.</P
+><P
+>It should also be noted that direct page references should also be
+avoided because you cannot know ahead of time whether the linker is going to
+end up putting a particular variable in the first 256 bytes of the module's
+data space.  If, however, you know for certain you will have less than 256
+bytes of defined data space across all of the object files that will be
+linked, you can instead use forced DP addressing for your data addresses
+instead of the ,u notation.  When linking with 3rd party libraries, this
+practice should be avoided.  Also, when creating libraries, always use the
+offset from U technique.</P
+></DIV
+></DIV
+><DIV
+CLASS="NAVFOOTER"
+><HR
+ALIGN="LEFT"
+WIDTH="100%"><TABLE
+SUMMARY="Footer navigation table"
+WIDTH="100%"
+BORDER="0"
+CELLPADDING="0"
+CELLSPACING="0"
+><TR
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+WIDTH="33%"
+ALIGN="left"
+VALIGN="top"
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+HREF="x807.html"
+ACCESSKEY="P"
+>Prev</A
+></TD
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+WIDTH="34%"
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+ACCESSKEY="H"
+>Home</A
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+>Up</A
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