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NAMEyasm - The Yasm Modular AssemblerSYNOPSISyasm [-f format] [-o outfile] [other options...] {infile} yasm -h DESCRIPTIONThe Yasm Modular Assembler is a portable, retargetable assembler written under the “new” (2 or 3 clause) BSD license. Yasm currently supports the x86 and AMD64 instruction sets, accepts NASM and GAS assembler syntaxes, outputs binary, ELF32, ELF64, COFF, Win32, and Win64 object formats, and generates source debugging information in STABS, DWARF 2, and CodeView 8 formats.YASM consists of the yasm command, libyasm, the core backend library, and a large number of modules. Currently, libyasm and the loadable modules are statically built into the yasm executable. The yasm command assembles the file infile and directs output to the file outfile if specified. If outfile is not specified, yasm will derive a default output file name from the name of its input file, usually by appending .o or .obj, or by removing all extensions for a raw binary file. Failing that, the output file name will be yasm.out. If called with an infile of “-”, yasm assembles the standard input and directs output to the file outfile, or yasm.out if no outfile is specified. OPTIONSMany options may be given in one of two forms: either a dash followed by a single letter, or two dashes followed by a long option name. Options are listed in alphabetical order.General Options-a arch or --arch=arch: Select target architectureSelects the target architecture. The default architecture
is “x86”, which supports both the IA-32 and derivatives and
AMD64 instruction sets. To print a list of available architectures to standard
output, use “help” as arch. See yasm_arch(7) for a
list of supported architectures.
-f format or --oformat=format: Select object format Selects the output object format. The default object
format is “bin”, which is a flat format binary with no
relocation. To print a list of available object formats to standard output,
use “help” as format. See yasm_objfmts(7) for a
list of supported object formats.
-g debug or --dformat=debug: Select debugging format Selects the debugging format for debug information.
Debugging information can be used by a debugger to associate executable code
back to the source file or get data structure and type information. Available
debug formats vary between different object formats; yasm will error
when an invalid combination is selected. The default object format is selected
by the object format. To print a list of available debugging formats to
standard output, use “help” as debug. See
yasm_dbgfmts(7) for a list of supported debugging formats.
-L list or --lformat=list: Select list file format Selects the format/style of the output list file. List
files typically intermix the original source with the machine code generated
by the assembler. The default list format is “nasm”, which
mimics the NASM list file format. To print a list of available list file
formats to standard output, use “help” as list.
-l listfile or --list=listfile: Specify list filename Specifies the name of the output list file. If this
option is not used, no list file is generated.
-m machine or --machine=machine: Select target machine architecture Selects the target machine architecture. Essentially a
subtype of the selected architecture, the machine type selects between major
subsets of an architecture. For example, for the “x86”
architecture, the two available machines are “x86”, which is
used for the IA-32 and derivative 32-bit instruction set, and
“amd64”, which is used for the 64-bit instruction set. This
differentiation is required to generate the proper object file for relocatable
object formats such as COFF and ELF. To print a list of available machines for
a given architecture to standard output, use “help” as
machine and the given architecture using -a arch.
See yasm_arch(7) for more details.
-o filename or --objfile=filename: Specify object filename Specifies the name of the output file, overriding any
default name generated by Yasm.
-p parser or --parser=parser: Select parser Selects the parser (the assembler syntax). The default
parser is “nasm”, which emulates the syntax of NASM, the Netwide
Assembler. Another available parser is “gas”, which emulates the
syntax of GNU AS. To print a list of available parsers to standard output, use
“help” as parser. See yasm_parsers(7) for a list
of supported parsers.
-r preproc or --preproc=preproc: Select preprocessor Selects the preprocessor to use on the input file before
passing it to the parser. Preprocessors often provide macro functionality that
is not included in the main parser. The default preprocessor is
“nasm”, which is an imported version of the actual NASM
preprocessor. A “raw” preprocessor is also available, which
simply skips the preprocessing step, passing the input file directly to the
parser. To print a list of available preprocessors to standard output, use
“help” as preproc.
-h or --help: Print a summary of options Prints a summary of invocation options. All other options
are ignored, and no output file is generated.
--version: Get the Yasm version This option causes Yasm to prints the version number of
Yasm as well as a license summary to standard output. All other options are
ignored, and no output file is generated.
Warning Options-W options have two contrary forms: -Wname and -Wno-name. Only the non-default forms are shown here.The warning options are handled in the order given on the command line, so if -w is followed by -Worphan-labels, all warnings are turned off except for orphan-labels. -w: Inhibit all warning messages This option causes Yasm to inhibit all warning messages.
As discussed above, this option may be followed by other options to re-enable
specified warnings.
-Werror: Treat warnings as errors This option causes Yasm to treat all warnings as errors.
Normally warnings do not prevent an object file from being generated and do
not result in a failure exit status from yasm, whereas errors do. This
option makes warnings equivalent to errors in terms of this behavior.
-Wno-unrecognized-char: Do not warn on unrecognized input characters Causes Yasm to not warn on unrecognized characters found
in the input. Normally Yasm will generate a warning for any non-ASCII
character found in the input file.
-Worphan-labels: Warn on labels lacking a trailing option When using the NASM-compatible parser, causes Yasm to
warn about labels found alone on a line without a trailing colon. While these
are legal labels in NASM syntax, they may be unintentional, due to typos or
macro definition ordering.
-X style: Change error/warning reporting style Selects a specific output style for error and warning
messages. The default is “gnu” style, which mimics the output of
gcc. The “vc” style is also available, which mimics the
output of Microsoft´s Visual C++ compiler.
This option is available so that Yasm integrates more naturally into IDE environments such as Visual Studio or Emacs, allowing the IDE to correctly recognize the error/warning message as such and link back to the offending line of source code. Preprocessor OptionsWhile these preprocessor options theoretically will affect any preprocessor, the only preprocessor currently in Yasm is the “nasm” preprocessor.-D macro[=value]: Pre-define a macro Pre-defines a single-line macro. The value is optional
(if no value is given, the macro is still defined, but to an empty
value).
-e or --preproc-only: Only preprocess Stops assembly after the preprocessing stage;
preprocessed output is sent to the specified output name or, if no output name
is specified, the standard output. No object file is produced.
-I path: Add include file path Adds directory path to the search path for include
files. The search path defaults to only including the directory in which the
source file resides.
-P filename: Pre-include a file Pre-includes file filename, making it look as
though filename was prepended to the input. Can be useful for
prepending multi-line macros that the -D can´t support.
-U macro: Undefine a macro Undefines a single-line macro (may be either a built-in
macro or one defined earlier in the command line with -D.
EXAMPLESTo assemble NASM syntax, 32-bit x86 source source.asm into ELF file source.o, warning on orphan labels:yasm -f elf32 -Worphan-labels source.asm To assemble NASM syntax AMD64 source x.asm into Win64 file object.obj: yasm -f win64 -o object.obj x.asm To assemble already preprocessed NASM syntax x86 source y.asm into flat binary file y.com: yasm -f bin -r raw -o y.com y.asm DIAGNOSTICSThe yasm command exits 0 on success, and nonzero if an error occurs.COMPATIBILITYYasm´s NASM parser and preprocessor, while they strive to be as compatible as possible with NASM, have a few incompatibilities due to YASM´s different internal structure.Yasm´s GAS parser and preprocessor are missing a number of features present in GNU AS. RESTRICTIONSAs object files are often architecture and machine dependent, not all combinations of object formats, architectures, and machines are legal; trying to use an invalid combination will result in an error.There is no support for symbol maps. SEE ALSOyasm_arch(7), yasm_dbgfmts(7), yasm_objfmts(7), yasm_parsers(7)Related tools: as(1), ld(1), nasm(1) BUGSWhen using the “x86” architecture, it is overly easy to generate AMD64 code (using the BITS 64 directive) and generate a 32-bit object file (by failing to specify -m amd64 or selecting a 64-bit object format such as ELF64 on the command line).AUTHORPeter Johnson <peter@tortall.net>Author.
COPYRIGHTCopyright © 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Peter Johnson
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