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I'm trying to get a nasm program running. The following code:

segment .data

contAir:    dt 1.11330e-10
constOil:   dt 2.33656e-10

segment .text

global calc

calc:

mov edx, 0
push ebp
;mov ebp, esp

;mov eax, [ebp + 8]

ret

I get a segmentation fault (core dump) when pushing ebp on the stack. Why is that? I'm running this code on an Ubuntu virtual machine. Funny thing is, sometimes I get an "illegal instruction" error.

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  • Are you compiling it on the machine too?
    – akluth
    Apr 23, 2013 at 16:14
  • Yes. It is a C-program that uses some assembler code. But the C-code runs fine as far as my output shows me.
    – Florian
    Apr 23, 2013 at 16:22
  • Can you please add all the sources to your question?
    – akluth
    Apr 23, 2013 at 16:27
  • 2
    Technically, ret is not the proper way to exit your program and return back to the OS. You need to use exit or int 80, but since you said a C program, are you calling this? If so, you need to pop ebp before your ret
    – Gunner
    Apr 24, 2013 at 2:50

1 Answer 1

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I get a segmentation fault (core dump) when pushing ebp on the stack. Why is that? I'm running this code on an Ubuntu virtual machine. Funny thing is, sometimes I get an "illegal instruction" error.

I'd bet that you're not getting the segmentation fault at the push, but rather at the ret. What the ret instruction does is pop the return address from the stack (which typically will have been pushed there by a call instruction) and jumps to it.

So when you do this:

push ebp
ret

You're effectively jumping to whatever address happened to be stored in ebp.
You need to balance the stack before returning - i.e. each push-type instruction should have a corresponding pop-type instruction:

push ebp
; ... other code goes here ...
pop ebp
ret
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