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I have a question about the following code provided by an OBJDump. I realize that the .data segment in a binary indicates statically defined data, however this following code does not appear as expected.

0000000000600348 <.data>:
  600348:   48                      rex.W
  600349:   65                      gs
  60034a:   6c                      insb   (%dx),%es:(%rdi)
  60034b:   6c                      insb   (%dx),%es:(%rdi)
  60034c:   6f                      outsl  %ds:(%rsi),(%dx)
  60034d:   20 57 6f                and    %dl,0x6f(%rdi)
  600350:   72 6c                   jb     0x6003be
  600352:   64 21 0a                and    %ecx,%fs:(%rdx)

What I originally wrote was something along the lines of

SEGMENT .data
  msg: dw "Hello World!",0xa,0x0
  msg_len: equ msg-$

Is this the same data just portrayed in a different fashion?

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    Yes. Take an ASCII chart and see. This nonsense code is what happens when you disassemble text.
    – harold
    Jul 4, 2012 at 19:44
  • @harold You know I have been working at this for about 2 hours now trying to decipher this and never once realized it was corresponding to the hex values......... Jul 4, 2012 at 19:45

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You should use something like this "readelf -x .data ./binary" or "objdump -s -j .data ./binary" This will output it as you want it. Hope this helps

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