I would like to learn how to write assembly programs for the command line that with as little alteration as is feasable will compile both in Cygwin and in other flavors of Unix like Linux and/or FreeBSD.
I am targeting only x64 CPUs and I'm perfectly happy to use libc calls instead of direct syscalls or interrupts. I'm hoping to use nasm+gcc, or perhaps fasm to do the deed. Crosspiling is not a concern, I'll build cygwin binaries in cygwin and unix binaries in unix. But I'm confused by the differences in calling convention/ABI between Windows and/or Cygwin and Linux? For example, I can get this to compile and run in Cygwin: ``` global main extern puts section .text main: sub rsp, 20h ; Reserve the shadow space mov rcx, message ; First argument is address of message call puts ; puts(message) add rsp, 20h ; Remove shadow space ret message: db 'Hello', 0 ; C strings need a zero byte at the end ``` but it segfaults in Linux (and complains about "Symbol `puts' causes overflow in R_X86_64_PC32 relocation") and I can get the following to compile and run in Linux: ``` extern puts global main section .text main: mov rdi,message call puts ret message: db "Hello World",0 ``` but *that* segfaults in cygwin. TL;DR: I think I could get a lot more done if I could start from a single Hello World asm file that can compile and run in both places, calling out to puts or something simple like that. Any help would be appreciated, I hope everything about my question makes sense. :) - - Jesse -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple