README for GAS A number of things have changed since version 1 and the wonderful world of gas looks very different. There's still a lot of irrelevant garbage lying around that will be cleaned up in time. Documentation is scarce, as are logs of the changes made since the last gas release. My apologies, and I'll try to get something useful. Unpacking and Installation - Summary ==================================== See ../binutils/README. To build just the assembler, make the target all-gas. Documentation ============= The GAS release includes texinfo source for its manual, which can be processed into `info' or `dvi' forms. The DVI form is suitable for printing or displaying; the commands for doing this vary from system to system. On many systems, `lpr -d' will print a DVI file. On others, you may need to run a program such as `dvips' to convert the DVI file into a form your system can print. If you wish to build the DVI file, you will need to have TeX installed on your system. You can rebuild it by typing: cd gas/doc make as.dvi The Info form is viewable with the GNU Emacs `info' subsystem, or the stand-alone `info' program, available as part of the GNU Texinfo distribution. To build the info files, you will need the `makeinfo' program. Type: cd gas/doc make info Specifying names for hosts and targets ====================================== The specifications used for hosts and targets in the `configure' script are based on a three-part naming scheme, but some short predefined aliases are also supported. The full naming scheme encodes three pieces of information in the following pattern: ARCHITECTURE-VENDOR-OS For example, you can use the alias `sun4' as a HOST argument or in a `--target=TARGET' option. The equivalent full name is `sparc-sun-sunos4'. The `configure' script accompanying GAS does not provide any query facility to list all supported host and target names or aliases. `configure' calls the Bourne shell script `config.sub' to map abbreviations to full names; you can read the script, if you wish, or you can use it to test your guesses on abbreviations--for example: % sh config.sub sun4 sparc-sun-sunos411 % sh config.sub sun3 m68k-sun-sunos411 % sh config.sub decstation mips-dec-ultrix42 % sh config.sub hp300bsd m68k-hp-bsd % sh config.sub i386v i386-unknown-sysv % sh config.sub i786v Invalid configuration `i786v': machine `i786v' not recognized `configure' options =================== Here is a summary of the `configure' options and arguments that are most often useful for building GAS. `configure' also has several other options not listed here. configure [--help] [--prefix=DIR] [--srcdir=PATH] [--host=HOST] [--target=TARGET] [--with-OPTION] [--enable-OPTION] You may introduce options with a single `-' rather than `--' if you prefer; but you may abbreviate option names if you use `--'. `--help' Print a summary of the options to `configure', and exit. `-prefix=DIR' Configure the source to install programs and files under directory `DIR'. `--srcdir=PATH' Look for the package's source code in directory DIR. Usually `configure' can determine that directory automatically. `--host=HOST' Configure GAS to run on the specified HOST. Normally the configure script can figure this out automatically. There is no convenient way to generate a list of all available hosts. `--target=TARGET' Configure GAS for cross-assembling programs for the specified TARGET. Without this option, GAS is configured to assemble .o files that run on the same machine (HOST) as GAS itself. There is no convenient way to generate a list of all available targets. `--enable-OPTION' These flags tell the program or library being configured to configure itself differently from the default for the specified host/target combination. See below for a list of `--enable' options recognized in the gas distribution. `configure' accepts other options, for compatibility with configuring other GNU tools recursively; but these are the only options that affect GAS or its supporting libraries. The `--enable' options recognized by software in the gas distribution are: `--enable-targets=...' This causes one or more specified configurations to be added to those for which BFD support is compiled. Currently gas cannot use any format other than its compiled-in default, so this option is not very useful. `--enable-bfd-assembler' This causes the assembler to use the new code being merged into it to use BFD data structures internally, and use BFD for writing object files. For most targets, this isn't supported yet. For most targets where it has been done, it's already the default. So generally you won't need to use this option. Supported platforms =================== At this point I believe gas to be ANSI only code for most target cpu's. That is, there should be relatively few, if any host system dependencies. So porting (as a cross-assembler) to hosts not yet supported should be fairly easy. Porting to a new target shouldn't be too tough if it's a variant of one already supported. Native assembling should work on: sun3 sun4 386bsd bsd/386 delta (m68k-sysv from Motorola) delta88 (m88k-sysv from Motorola) GNU/linux m68k hpux 8.0 (hpux 7.0 may be a problem) vax bsd, ultrix, vms hp9000s300 decstation irix 4 irix 5 miniframe (m68k-sysv from Convergent Technologies) i386-aix (ps/2) hppa (hpux 4.3bsd, osf1) AIX unixware sco 3.2v4.2 sco openserver 5.0 (a.k.a. 3.2v5.0 ) sparc solaris ns32k (netbsd, lites) I believe that gas as a cross-assembler can currently be targeted for most of the above hosts, plus arm decstation-bsd (a.out format, to be used in BSD 4.4) ebmon29k go32 (DOS on i386, with DJGPP -- old a.out version) h8/300, h8/500 (Hitachi) i386-aix (ps/2) i960-coff mips ecoff (decstation-ultrix, iris, mips magnum, mips-idt-ecoff) Mitsubishi d10v and d30v nindy960 powerpc EABI SH (Hitachi) sco386 TI tic30 and tic80 vax bsd or ultrix? vms vxworks68k vxworks960 z8000 (Zilog) MIPS ECOFF support has been added, but GAS will not run a C-style preprocessor. If you want that, rename your file to have a ".S" suffix, and run gcc on it. Or run "gcc -xassembler-with-cpp foo.s". Support for ELF should work now for sparc, hppa, i386, alpha, m68k, MIPS, powerpc. Support for sequent (ns32k), tahoe, i860 may be suffering from bitrot. If you try out gas on some host or target not listed above, please let me know the results, so I can update the list. Compiler Support Hacks ====================== On a few targets, the assembler has been modified to support a feature that is potentially useful when assembling compiler output, but which may confuse assembly language programmers. If assembler encounters a .word pseudo-op of the form symbol1-symbol2 (the difference of two symbols), and the difference of those two symbols will not fit in 16 bits, the assembler will create a branch around a long jump to symbol1, and insert this into the output directly before the next label: The .word will (instead of containing garbage, or giving an error message) contain (the address of the long jump)-symbol2. This allows the assembler to assemble jump tables that jump to locations very far away into code that works properly. If the next label is more than 32K away from the .word, you lose (silently); RMS claims this will never happen. If the -K option is given, you will get a warning message when this happens. REPORTING BUGS IN GAS ===================== Bugs in gas should be reported to: bug-gnu-utils@gnu.org. They may be cross-posted to gcc-bugs@gnu.org if they affect the use of gas with gcc. They should not be reported just to gcc-bugs, since not all of the maintainers read that list. If you report a bug in GAS, please remember to include: A description of exactly what went wrong, and exactly what should have happened instead. The type of machine (VAX, 68020, etc) and operating system (BSD, SunOS, DYNIX, VMS, etc) GAS was running on. The configuration name(s) given to the "configure" script. The "config.status" file should have this information. The options given to GAS at run time. The actual input file that caused the problem. It is silly to report a bug in GAS without including an input file for GAS. Don't ask us to generate the file just because you made it from files you think we have access to. 1. You might be mistaken. 2. It might take us a lot of time to install things to regenerate that file. 3. We might get a different file from the one you got, and might not see any bug. To save us these delays and uncertainties, always send the input file for the program that failed. A smaller test case that demonstrates the problem is of course preferable, but be sure it is a complete input file, and that it really does demonstrate the problem; but if paring it down would cause large delays in filing the bug report, don't bother. If the input file is very large, and you are on the internet, you may want to make it available for anonymous FTP instead of mailing it. If you do, include instructions for FTP'ing it in your bug report. If you expect to be contributing a large number of test cases, it would be helpful if you would look at the test suite included in the release (based on the Deja Gnu testing framework, available from the usual ftp sites) and write test cases to fit into that framework. This is certainly not required.