Need to print separate token in a string in different line, but can't figure out to print out a new line.
From the tutorial I have, it says "nwln" in the examples, but it doesn't work in my code.
The code I have now only prints all the words in one line no spaces.
lab2:
cmp [ecx],byte ' '
je lab1
cmp [ecx], byte 0
je lab3
inc edx
inc ecx
jmp lab2
lab1:
sub ecx,edx
mov eax, SYS_WRITE
mov ebx, STDOUT
int 80h
add ecx, edx
inc ecx
mov edx,0
jmp lab2
ok I think I have solved it by using another variable newline in .data and another register to print a new line
Since you appear to be using NASM on Linux. nwln is a macro that is part of an Assembler Tutorial based on the code from the book Guide to Assembly Language Programming in Linux. The library is made up of a macro called nwln that prints the LineFeed(LF) character 0x0a to standard output. You can download the files io.mac and io.o from the link above. They are contained inside the ZIP file for NASM/Linux. You copy io.mac and io.o to your project directory. You have to include the macro file at the top of your program. Your code would look something like:
%include "io.mac"
SYS_EXIT equ 1
SYS_READ equ 3
SYS_WRITE equ 4
STDIN equ 0
STDOUT equ 1
section .text
global main
main:
mov ecx,msg3
mov edx,0 ; Set the length
jmp lab2
lab2:
cmp [ecx],byte ' '
je lab1
cmp [ecx], byte 0
je lab3
inc edx
inc ecx
jmp lab2
lab1:
sub ecx,edx
mov eax, SYS_WRITE
mov ebx, STDOUT
int 80h
nwln
add ecx, edx
inc ecx
mov edx,0
jmp lab2
lab3:
sub ecx,edx
mov eax, SYS_WRITE
mov ebx, STDOUT
int 80h
nwln
mov eax, SYS_EXIT
int 80h
segment .data
msg3 db 'this string', 0x0
To compile and link in a 32-bit environment you'd use something like:
nasm -f elf32 project.asm
ld -emain -melf_i386 -o project project.o io.o
You need to add io.o as a linker object to resolve the functions that are needed by the macros.
If you don't wish to rely on io.o the code below contains the equivalent macro and function that will implement nwln a similar way:
%macro nwln 0
call proc_nwln
%endmacro
SYS_EXIT equ 1
SYS_READ equ 3
SYS_WRITE equ 4
STDIN equ 0
STDOUT equ 1
section .text
global main
main:
mov ecx,msg3
mov edx,0 ; Set the length
jmp lab2
lab2:
cmp [ecx],byte ' '
je lab1
cmp [ecx], byte 0
je lab3
inc edx
inc ecx
jmp lab2
lab1:
sub ecx,edx
mov eax, SYS_WRITE
mov ebx, STDOUT
int 80h
nwln
add ecx, edx
inc ecx
mov edx,0
jmp lab2
lab3:
sub ecx,edx
mov eax, SYS_WRITE
mov ebx, STDOUT
int 80h
nwln
mov eax, SYS_EXIT
int 80h
proc_nwln:
pusha
mov eax, SYS_WRITE
mov ebx, STDOUT
mov ecx, new_line
mov edx, 0x1
int 0x80
popa
ret
segment .data
msg3 db 'this string', 0x0
new_line db 0x0a
You can then compile with something like:
nasm -f elf32 project.asm
ld -emain -melf_i386 -o project project.o
Related
When I run this program it says:
jdoodle.asm:9: error: invalid combination of opcode and operands
The problem is the AND al, ah. The rest of the code should be correct, I just need to know how to solve this problem because as it seems I can't do an AND between 2 registers.
section .text
global _start
_start:
call _input
mov al, input
mov ah, maschera
and al, ah
mov input, al
call _output
jmp _exit
_input:
mov eax, 3
mov ebx, 0
mov ecx, input
mov edx, 1
int 80h
ret
_output:
mov eax, 4
mov ebx, 1
mov ecx, input
mov edx, 1
int 80h
ret
_exit:
mov eax, 1
int 80h
section .data
maschera: db 11111111b
segment .bss
input resb 1
MASM/TASM/JWASM syntax is different from NASM. If you want to load/store data at an address you need to explicitly use square brackets. If you want to use the MOV instruction to place the address of a label in a variable you do not use square brackets. Square brackets are like a de-reference operator.
In 32-bit code you will want to ensure addresses are loaded into 32-bit registers. Any address above 255 won't fit in an 8 byte register, any address above 65535 won't fit in a 16-bit register.
The code you were probably looking for is:
section .text
global _start
_start:
call _input
mov al, [input]
mov ah, [maschera]
and al, ah
mov [input], al
call _output
jmp _exit
_input:
mov eax, 3
mov ebx, 0
mov ecx, input
mov edx, 1
int 80h
ret
_output:
mov eax, 4
mov ebx, 1
mov ecx, input
mov edx, 1
int 80h
ret
_exit:
mov eax, 1
int 80h
section .data
maschera: db 11111111b
segment .bss
input resb 1
I'm trying to make a very simple assembly program run, however I seem to get segfaults whatever I do.
Here is my code (should print 'a' on a linux machine)
section .data
buffer times 50 db 97
pointer db 0
section .text
global _start
_start:
mov ECX , pointer
mov EDX , [buffer + ECX]
mov EAX , 4
mov EBX , 1
mov ECX , EDX
mov EDX , 1
int 0x80
It causes a segfault on the first MOV but it seems obvious to me that it should work.
I reduced it to almost nothing and it still segfault.
section .data
msg db "hello"
section .text
global _start
_start:
mov EAX,1
I've run this succesfully:
section .text
global _start
_start:
mov ax, 0b
dec ax
sub ax, 11111111b
mov bx, 97
add ax, bx
mov [INVENTORY], ax ; put a in first inventory pos
mov eax, 4
mov ebx, 1
mov ecx, INVENTORY
mov edx, 1
int 0x80
mov ax, [INVENTORY]
add ax, 1
mov [INVENTORY + 1], ax ; put b in second inventory pos
mov [VAR], ax
mov eax, 4
mov ebx, 1
mov ecx, VAR
mov edx, 1
int 0x80
mov eax, 4
mov ebx, 1
mov ecx, '\n'
mov edx, 1
int 0x80
mov eax,1
int 0x80
_newline:
section .data
VAR DW 0
INVENTORY TIMES 8 DW 0
Is it possible that it has to do with the symbols I use for newlines or tabs? I generate the assembly from java and I use \t for tabs and \n for new lines (and spaces so it doesn't look too bad.
I'm using NASM and I'm running it here:
https://www.tutorialspoint.com/compile_assembly_online.php
Thank you!
If you are just trying to print out a set of 'a's.
section .data
buffer times 50 db 97
len.buffer equ $-buffer
pointer db 0
section .text
global _start
_start:
; ssize_t write(int fd, const void *buf, size_t count);
; i386 ebx ecx edx esi edi ebp
mov EAX , 4 ; write syscall
mov EBX , 1 ; std out
lea ecx, [buffer] ; buffer
mov edx, len.buffer ; size
int 0x80
_exit:
mov eax, 1 ; exit syscall
int 0x80
output:
./yvon_001
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa\ndavid#ubuntuserver00A:~/asm$ ./yvon_001
In the end #MichealPetch was right, I needed to add an EXIT syscall at the end of the code. The sample I tried still did a SEGFAULT because I was moving pointer instead of [pointer] in a registry.
Thanks for comments and answers!
I'm trying to learn the basics of assembly but can't get across on how to display results stored in memory.
section .data
num1 db 1,2,3,4,5
num2 db 1,2,3,4,5
output: db 'The dot product is "'
outputLen1 : equ $-output
output2: db '" in Hex!', 10
output2Len : equ $-output2
section .bss
dotProd resw 1 ; store dot product in here
section .text
global _start
_start:
mov eax, 0
mov ecx, 5
mov edi, 0
mov esi, 0
looper: mov ax, [edi + num1]
mov dx, [esi + num2]
mul dx
add [dotProd], ax
cmp cx, 1
je printOutput
inc edi
inc esi
dec cx
jmp looper ; go back to looper
printOutput:
mov eax,4 ; The system call for write (sys_write)
mov ebx,1 ; File descriptor 1 - standard output
mov ecx, output ;
mov edx, outputLen1 ;
int 80h ; Call the kernel
mov eax, 4
mov ebx, 1
mov ecx, dotProd,
mov edx, 1
int 80h
mov eax, 4
mov ebx, 1
mov ecx, output2,
mov edx, output2Len
int 80h
jmp done
done:
mov eax,1 ; The system call for exit (sys_exit)
mov ebx,0 ; Exit with return code of 0 (no error)
int 80h
What I'm trying to do is get the dot product of the two list of numbers and display it on the screen. However, I keep getting random letters which I believe are hex representations of the real decimal value. How can I convert it to decimal? The current value display is 7, which should is the equivalent ASCII char for 55, which in this case is the dot product of both list of numbers.
esi and edi must be increased such that it points to next element of array.(in this particular example, only one of them is sufficient).
declare mun1 andnum2 as dd, instead of db (see here).
Also, you have to have method for printing number.(see this and this).
Below is a complete code which uses printf.
;file_name:test.asm
;assemble and link with:
;nasm -f elf test.asm && gcc -m32 -o test test.o
extern printf
%macro push_reg 0
push eax
push ebx
push ecx
push edx
%endmacro
%macro pop_reg 0
pop edx
pop ecx
pop ebx
pop eax
%endmacro
section .data
num1: dd 1,2,3,4,5
num2: dd 1,2,3,4,5
msg: db "Dot product is %d",10,0
section .bss
dotProd resd 1 ; store dot product in here
section .text
global main
main:
mov eax, 0
mov ecx, 5
mov edx, 0
mov esi, 0
mov dword[dotProd], 0h
looper: mov eax, dword[esi + num1]
mov edx, dword[esi + num2]
mul edx
add [dotProd], eax
cmp cx, 1
je printOutput
add esi,4
dec cx
jmp looper ; go back to looper
printOutput:
push_reg
push dword[dotProd]
push dword msg
call printf
add esp,8
pop_reg
jmp done
done:
mov eax,1 ; The system call for exit (sys_exit)
mov ebx,0 ; Exit with return code of 0 (no error)
int 80h
On NASM in Arch Linux, how can I append the character zero ('0') to a 32 bit variable? My reason for wanting to do this is so that I can output the number 10 by setting a single-digit input to 1 and appending a zero. I need to figure out how to append the zero.
The desirable situation:
Please enter a number: 9
10
Using this method, I want to be able to do this:
Please enter a number: 9999999
10000000
How can I do this?
Thanks in advance,
RileyH
Well, as Bo says... but I was bored. You seem resistant to doing this the easy way (convert your input to a number, add 1, and convert it back to text) so I tried it using characters. This is what I came up with. It's horrid, but "seems to work".
; enter a number and add 1 - the hard way!
; nasm -f elf32 myprog.asm
; ld -o myprog myprog.o -melf_i386
global _start
; you may have these in an ".inc" file
sys_exit equ 1
sys_read equ 3
sys_write equ 4
stdin equ 0
stdout equ 1
stderr equ 2
LF equ 10
section .data
prompt db "Enter a number - not more than 10 digits - no nondigits.", LF
prompt_size equ $ - prompt
errmsg db "Idiot human! Follow instructions next time!", LF
errmsg_size equ $ - errmsg
section .bss
buffer resb 16
fakecarry resb 1
section .text
_start:
nop
mov eax, sys_write
mov ebx, stdout
mov ecx, prompt
mov edx, prompt_size
int 80h
mov eax, sys_read
mov ebx, stdin
mov ecx, buffer + 1 ; leave a space for an extra digit in front
mov edx, 11
int 80h
cmp byte [buffer + 1 + eax - 1], LF
jz goodinput
; pesky user has tried to overflow us!
; flush the buffer, yell at him, and kick him out!
sub esp, 4 ; temporary "buffer"
flush:
mov eax, sys_read
; ebx still okay
mov ecx, esp ; buffer is on the stack
mov edx, 1
int 80h
cmp byte [ecx], LF
jnz flush
add esp, 4 ; "free" our "buffer"
jmp errexit
goodinput:
lea esi, [buffer + eax - 1] ; end of input characters
mov byte [fakecarry], 1 ; only because we want to add 1
xor edx, edx ; count length as we go
next:
; check for valid decimal digit
mov al, [esi]
cmp al, '0'
jb errexit
cmp al, '9'
ja errexit
add al, [fakecarry] ; from previous digit, or first... to add 1
mov byte [fakecarry], 0 ; reset it for next time
cmp al, '9' ; still good digit?
jna nocarry
; fake a "carry" for next digit
mov byte [fakecarry], 1
mov al, '0'
cmp esi, buffer + 1
jnz nocarry
; if first digit entered, we're done
; save last digit and add one ('1') into the space we left
mov [esi], al
inc edx
dec esi
mov byte [esi], '1'
inc edx
dec esi
jmp done
nocarry:
mov [esi], al
inc edx
dec esi
cmp esi, buffer
jnz next
done:
inc edx
inc edx
mov ecx, esi ; should be either buffer + 1, or buffer
mov ebx, stdout
mov eax, sys_write
int 80h
xor eax, eax ; claim "no error"
exit:
mov ebx, eax
mov eax, sys_exit
int 80h
errexit:
mov edx, errmsg_size
mov ecx, errmsg
mov ebx, stderr
mov eax, sys_write
int 80h
mov ebx, -1
jmp exit
;-----------------------------
Is that what you had in mind?
Currently I'm trying to loop over every single byte in a buffer (read from a file) and compare it to see if any of them is a whitespace, and write them to STDOUT. For some reason the program compiles and runs fine, but produces zero output.
section .data
bufsize dw 1024
section .bss
buf resb 1024
section .text
global _start
_start:
; open the file provided form cli in read mode
mov edi, 0
pop ebx
pop ebx
pop ebx
mov eax, 5
mov ecx, 0
int 80h
; write the contents in to the buffer 'buf'
mov eax, 3
mov ebx, eax
mov ecx, buf
mov edx, bufsize
int 80h
; write the value at buf+edi to STDOUT
mov eax, 4
mov ebx, 1
mov ecx, [buf+edi]
mov edx, 1
int 80h
; if not equal to whitespace, jump to the loop
cmp byte [buf+edi], 0x20
jne loop
loop:
; increment the loop counter
add edi, 1
mov eax, 4
mov ebx, 1
mov ecx, [buf+edi]
int 80h
; compare the value at buf+edi with the HEX for whitespace
cmp byte [buf+edi], 0x20
jne loop
; exit the program
mov eax, 1
mov ebx, 0
int 80h
The main problem was that I didn't given the address of bufsize ([bufsize]), also the loops had some problems.
Here's the fixed version, thanks everyone for your input.
section .data
bufsize dd 1024
section .bss
buf: resb 1024
section .text
global _start
_start:
; open the file provided form cli in read mode
mov edi, 0
pop ebx
pop ebx
pop ebx
mov eax, 5
mov ecx, 0
int 80h
; write the contents in to the buffer 'buf'
mov eax, 3
mov ebx, eax
mov ecx, buf
mov edx, [bufsize]
int 80h
; write the value at buf+edi to STDOUT
; if equal to whitespace, done
loop:
cmp byte [buf+edi], 0x20
je done
mov eax, 4
mov ebx, 1
lea ecx, [buf+edi]
mov edx, 1
int 80h
; increment the loop counter
add edi, 1
jmp loop
done:
; exit the program
mov eax, 1
mov ebx, 0
int 80h