I'm learning assmebler by myself at the moment and I finally managed to read input from the terminal and calculate with it.
I use sys_read for that and it works perfectly fine but when I use it the terminal acts like I pressed enter after runnning the program (one line with root@kali:~/ASM$
). This does not happen when using scanf.
Here is my code:
sys_read equ 3 sys_write equ 4 stdout equ 1 stdin equ 2 section .data prompt db "Enter two 1-digit numbers for an integer division.", 10, 0 result db 10, "%i / %i = %i.", 10, 0 section .bss a resb 4 b resb 4 c resb 4 section .text extern printf global main main: push ebp mov ebp, esp push ebx push esi push edi push prompt call printf mov eax, sys_read mov ebx, stdin mov ecx, a mov edx, 1 int 80h sub dword [a], 0x30 mov eax, sys_read mov ebx, stdin mov ecx, b mov edx, 1 int 80h mov eax, sys_read mov ebx, stdin mov ecx, b mov edx, 1 int 80h sub dword [b], 0x30 mov dx, 0 mov ax, [a] div dword [b] mov [c], ax push dword [c] push dword [b] push dword [a] push result call printf add esp, 40 pop edi pop esi pop ebx mov esp, ebp pop ebp ret
And here is the output I get:
root@kali:~/ASM$ ./div Enter two 1-digit numbers for an integer division. 1 1 1 / 1 = 1. root@kali:~/ASM$ root@kali:~/ASM$
I don't understand why this extra line appears.
1 1
but that leaves the actual new line in the buffer. You don't do anything with it in your program so it gets processed by the shell after. You could flush stdin after reading the 3 character or change the lastsys_read
to read 2 characters instead of 1. That would consume the newline.$
instead of the usual#
to indicate UID=0? Experimenting with asm development is not a smart thing to do on a privileged account.sudo
setup is a much more sane way to approach that. No wonder I've heard negative comments about Kali Linux, if that's the kind of choice they make. It stand by my comment that running buggy asm code you're working on as root is not wise.