1

I found "hello world" and wrote it. nano hello.s

this code

.data
msg:
.string  "Hello, world!\n"
len = . - msg
.text
global _start
_start:
    movl    $len,%edx
    movl    $msg,%ecx
    movl    $1,%ebx
    movl    $4,%eax
    int     $0x80
    movl    $0,%ebx
    movl    $1,%eax
    int     $0x80

I've done as -o hello.o hello.s I've given an error

hello.s:6: Error: no such instruction: global _start

delete global _start.

I've done

ld -s -o hello.o hello*

error 

ld: hello: No such file: No such file or directory

Where am I mistaking?

p/s debian, amd64.

2
  • Its hard to tell what you are asking. You did run the assembler when you got the error about "global _start". You should look in the manual for the assembler to see what is wrong about that line. Maybe its not supposed to have a space or maybe global needs a <dot> "." in front.
    – Lee Meador
    Feb 15, 2013 at 19:15
  • Use also the gcc compiler, and look inside its generated assembly code, e.g. gcc -Wall -fverbose-asm -O -S file.c then look inside file.s Feb 15, 2013 at 21:40

1 Answer 1

2

Try .globl _start or .global _start.

You may try ununderscored start in case you run into a problem with the entry point.

Finally, if you're making a 64-bit executable, you probably need to use a different system call interface, not int 0x80 but syscall. More on that here.

1
  • Furthermore... ld -o hello hello.o the -o switch specifies the output filename, hello.o is the file ld is working on. To get 32-bit code from a 64-bit ld, -m elf_i386. The old int 0x80 system calls will work in 64-bit code, but it isn't right. push reg32 will not work in 64-bit code! Feb 15, 2013 at 21:14

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.