I've been banging my head for days trying to figure this out, finally posting here for some help. This exercise is purely academic for me, but it's come to a point where I simply need to understand why this doesn't work or what I'm doing wrong.
section .text
global _start
_start:
pop eax
pop ebx
pop ecx
_exit:
mov eax, 1
mov ebx, 0
int 0x80
Compiling/linking with:
$ nasm -f elf -o test.o test.asm
$ gcc -o test test.o
Running it in gdb with argument of "5":
$ gdb test
...
(gdb) b _exit
Breakpoint 1 at 0x8048063
(gdb) r 5
Starting program: /home/rich/asm/test 5
Breakpoint 1, 0x08048063 in _exit ()
(gdb) i r
eax 0x2 2
ebx 0xbffff8b0 -1073743696
ecx 0xbffff8c8 -1073743672
edx 0x0 0
esp 0xbffff78c 0xbffff78c
ebp 0x0 0x0
...
So eax
makes sense here - it's 0x2, or 2, argc. My question is: how do I get the value "5" (or 0x5) into a register? As I understand it, ecx
is a pointer to my value 5, so how do I "dereference" it into a usable digit, i.e. one that I can do arithmetic things to?