Developer(s) | GNU Project |
---|---|
Stable release | GNU Binutils 2.43.1[1]
/ 17 August 2024 |
Written in | C |
Platform | Cross-platform |
Type | Assembler |
License | GNU General Public License v3 |
Website | www |
The GNU Assembler, commonly known as gas or as, is the assembler developed by the GNU Project. It is the default back-end of GCC. It is used to assemble the GNU operating system and the Linux kernel, and various other software. It is a part of the GNU Binutils package.
The GAS executable is named as, the standard name for a Unix assembler. GAS is cross-platform, and both runs on and assembles for a number of different computer architectures. GAS is free software released under the GNU General Public License v3.
The first version of GAS was released in 1986–1987.[2] It was written by Dean Elsner and supported the VAX architecture.[2]
GAS supports a general syntax that works for all of the supported architectures. The general syntax includes assembler directives and a method for commenting. The default syntax is AT&T syntax.
GAS uses assembler directives (also known as pseudo ops), which are keywords beginning with a period that behave similarly to preprocessor directives in the C programming language. While most of the available assembler directives are valid regardless of the target architecture, some directives are machine dependent.[3]
Since version 2.10, Intel syntax can be used through use of the .intel_syntax
directive.[4][5][6]
GAS supports two comment styles.[7]
Multi-line
As in C, multi-line comments start and end with mirroring slash-asterisk pairs:
/*
comment
*/
Single-line
Single line comments have a few different formats varying on which architecture is being assembled for.
Being the back-end for a popular compiler suite, namely GCC, the GNU Assembler is very widely used in compiling modern free and open source software. GAS is often used as the assembler on Linux operating systems in conjunction with other GNU software. A modified version of GAS can also be found in the macOS development tools package since OS X.
A standard "Hello, world!" program for Linux on IA-32:
.global _start
.text
_start:
movl $4, %eax # 4 (code for "write" syscall) -> EAX register
movl $1, %ebx # 1 (file descriptor for stdout) -> EBX (1st argument to syscall)
movl $msg, %ecx # 32-bit address of msg string -> ECX (2nd argument)
movl $len, %edx # length of msg string -> EDX (3rd arg)
int $0x80 # interrupt with location 0x80 (128), which invokes the kernel's system call procedure
movl $1, %eax # 1 ("exit") -> EAX
movl $0, %ebx # 0 (with success) -> EBX
int $0x80 # see previous
.data
msg:
.ascii "Hello, world!\n" # inline ascii string
len = . - msg # assign (current address - address of msg start) to symbol "len"
A new pseudo-op .intel_syntax has been implemented to allow gas to parse i386 assembly programs with intel syntax.
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