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Hello!

I will work on a big Assembly project but now just started to learn this new language. I try to make some really simple examples like ones for c++ in highschool (sum two numbers, is a number prime, etc). Now I got to display all prime numbers up to n. The problem is that the application freezes at "call printf" and I have no idea why. Can you help me with this?

Please find the code below

.section    .data
prime_number_str:
.asciz	"%d "

.section    .text

.global 	_start
_start:
pushl	$20
call .first_prime_numbers
addl $4, %esp
pushl $0
call exit


.first_prime_numbers:   	#argument first n numbers
movl 4(%esp), %ecx 	#get the first argument
do_test:
pushl %ecx		#push function arguments
call .prime	
addl $4, %esp		#restore the stack

#if not prime jump to the next number	
cmpl $0, %eax
je no_not_prime

#print the number
pushl %eax			#save eax
pushl %ecx 			#first argument
pushl $prime_number_str		#text to print
call printf
addl $4, %esp
popl %eax			#restore eax

no_not_prime:
loop do_test
ret


.prime:     		#argument: number to check
movl 4(%esp), %eax 	#get the first argument

#divide the argument by 2	
xorl %edx, %edx				
movl $2, %ecx			
pushl %eax		#save the value of eax
divl %ecx		
movl %eax, %ecx		#init the counter register
popl %eax		#restore the value of eax

movl $1, %ebx		#assume the argument is prime
test_prime:
# if ecx == 1 then return exit the function
cmpl $1, %ecx		
jle return_value

pushl %eax		#save the old value of eax	

#divide the value by the value of counter	
xorl %edx, %edx		
divl %ecx		

#if the reminder is 0 then the number is not prime
cmpl $0, %edx	
popl %eax		#restore the value of eax	
je not_prime


subl $1, %ecx		#decrease counter
jmp test_prime		#try next division

not_prime:
movl $0, %ebx
return_value:
movl %ebx, %eax
ret
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2 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

It is probably because your registeries are all messed up after called printf, you need to save the registeries that you tend to use after printf and then restore them after the call.

This is something you should do Always when you do syscall or other calls that might tampere with your registeries.

Also you should look into gdb ( gnu debugger ) looks like you are coding GAS so if you are on a gnu / linux system try:

gdb youprogram

and then run it to see where it fails.

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vote up 0 vote down

Please also note, that in C/C++ you need to pop out the registers yourself (in Pascal calling convertion, the procedure issues a "ret 8" for example).

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