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Are there any command line interpreters around for x86 linux inorder to run MIPS assembly programs?

I'd like to be able to write simple MIPS assembly programs and run them from the console on my local machine.

I know of SPIM but it requires X Windows and I'm curious if there are better options out there.

Edit: Turns out it doesn't require X Windows. I still have issues with SPIM. Not the best in my humble opinion. Qemu / Cross compiled toolchain is a little more work but I have less quirks.

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You will need either a cross compilation toolchain, or to build your own cross binutils. For a prebuilt toolchain, you can visit code sourcery. If you just want to compile assembly, then all you need is binutils. There are some guidelines on the Linux Mips wiki

For the emulation part, QEmu would be my choice.

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Qemu + CodeSourcery fits all needs! – Nils Pipenbrinck Jan 27 at 19:10
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MARS made my assembly programming for MIPS architecture so much easier. If you would like a GUI/IDE, I would recommend MARS for sure.

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You could use gxemul, which emulates a MIPS machine (among others, including Dreamcast), and is able to run many Operating systems (included linux, netbsd and some more).

gxemul-wikipedia

gxemul-home page

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I was in the same situation yesterday. I also didn't like SPIM, so this is what I did:

  • installed gxemul and gxemul-doc (those are the package names on debian)
  • installed netbsd on an emulated MIPS machine following the detailed instructions in the documentation
  • since netbsd already includes the standard gcc toolchain and vi, you're good to go.

    Setting up networking is pretty easy and well documented, too. This has the advantage of not needing to fiddle with cross compilation.

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    If you ever find yourself without those, I found MARS to be much supieror to SPIM. It is a Java .jar file so it works across linux/windows. The reason I like it is it has a built in debugger and I can step through my code or codebreak, and see the value of all registers. Helps a ton in debugging. – Simucal Mar 17 at 19:19
    Thanks, that's actually what our university uses. But I wanted to be able to call c functions from assembly code and I don't think MARS supports this. ;) Also, it's nice to be able to examine the output of "gcc -S somecprog.c". – Kim Mar 18 at 4:40
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    Incidentally, Spim does not require X Windows. It has a console interface as well. Run either spim or xspim.

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    QEmu has a good MIPS emulator. Combine that with a cross-compiled GCC/binutils (technically you only need binutils to get GAS, the GNU assembler) and you're good to go.

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    Oh, and hi again. Apparently we're both emulator dorks on a similar sleep schedule ;) – Cody Brocious Jan 21 '09 at 7:24
    @Cody Brocious, Hi, lol. Have you written your own disassembler or assembler? Is it worth writing either as a learning exercise? I have so many questions I want to throw your way, lol. – Simucal Jan 21 '09 at 7:37
    I've done both on various occasions (written quite a few disasms while doing decompiler dev). Feel free to AIM me at bloomfilter to ask any questions you have. – Cody Brocious Jan 21 '09 at 7:38
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    Maybe you can take a look at these emulators? I'm not an expert but the list seems good.

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    This focuses on system emulation, not userland emulation. That is, that reference is good if you want to emulate a complete MIPS box, not just a given MIPS app. – Cody Brocious Jan 21 '09 at 7:28

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