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SirCmpwn's Assembler

SirCmpwn's Assembler (sass) is a multiplatform, two-pass assembler written in C#. Presently, it supports z80 out of the box, as well as any user-provided instruction sets. It runs on Windows, Linux and Mac, as well as several other platforms in the form of a library.

Using SASS

On Linux or Mac, make sure that you have Mono installed, and prepend any commands to run Organic with "mono", similar to running Java programs. Note that the default Mono on Ubuntu isn't the full install, remove it and install "mono-complete".

Command Line Usage

Usage: sass.exe [parameters] [input file] [output file]

[output file] is optional, and [input file].bin will be used if it is not specified.

Parameters

You may customize sass's usage at the command line with a number of parameters.

--encoding [name]: Sets the string encoding to use for string literals. Note that .asciiz and related directives will use the specified encoding, not ASCII. The default is "utf-8".

--help: Displays information on sass usage and basic documentation. Aliases: -h -? /? /help -help

--include [path(s)]: Modifies the include path. This should be a semicolon-delimited list of paths to look for files included with <> in. Example: --include "/foo;/bar" Aliases: --inc

--input-file [file]: An alternative way to specify the input file. Aliases: --input

--instruction-set [set]: Specifies the instruction set to use. May be a key to reference an internal set (see below), or a path to a user-specified instruction set file. Aliases: --instr

--listing [file]: Specifies a file to output a listing to. Aliases: -l

--list-encodings: Lists all available string encodings and their keys for use in --encoding. This will terminate sass without assembling any files.

--output-file [file]: An alternative way to specify the output file. Aliases: --output

--symbols [file]: Outputs all labels and their addresses to a file using .equ so that they may be included again elsewhere. Aliases: -s

--verbose: Outputs a listing to standard output after assembly completion. Aliases: -v

Supported Architectures

Out of the box, sass supports the following architectures:

  • z80 [z80]
  • GameBoy Assembly [LR35902 or gbz80] (Planned)

In [brackets], the instruction set key is shown for use whith the --instruction-set command line parameter. If not otherwise specified, the default instruction set is z80.

User-specified instruction sets may be added. TODO: Document instruction set format

Syntax

All examples are given in z80 assembly

SASS's assembly syntax attempts to be as close to other popular syntaxes as possible. Here's some example z80 code that assembles under SASS:

    ld b, 20 + 0x13
label1:
    inc c
    djnz label1

SASS is completely case-insensitive, and whitespace may be used as you please. The exception is that dropping newlines requires you to add \ in their place, like so: "ld a, 1 \ add a, b". However, any number of tabs or spaces in any location is permissible, though "AD D a, b" is invalid, as is "ADDa, b". Labels may use the "label:" form (preferred), or the ":label" form.

Additionally, SASS supports nearly every form that an instruction may be presented in. For instance, each of the following lines of code is acceptable:

cp a, (ix + 10)
cp a, (10 + ix)
cp (ix + 10)
cp (10 + ix)
cp (ix)
cp a, (ix)

Expressions

Anywhere a number is required, you may use an expression. Expressions are evaluated with respect to order of operations, using C precedence. The following operators are available:

* / % + - << >> < <= > >= == != & ^ | && ||

Boolean operators will assemble to "1" if true, or "0" if false.

Relative Addressing

You may use relative labels, spasm-style, to simplify your code. You may define any number of labels called _ and refer to them with [-+]*_ to refer to the nearest ones. Add + to get the next label, and the next, and so on, and - to refer to previous relative labels.

_: ; A
    jp _ ; Refers to B
    jp -_ ; Refers to A
    jp ++_ ; Refers to C
_: ; B
    ld a, b
_: ; C

Local Labels

sass allows you to define local labels, which allows you to reuse common label names, such as "loop". You may preface any label name with "." to declare it as local, and it will be local within the prior global label. Example:

global1:
    ld a, b
.local:
    call .local
global2:
    ld b, a
.local:
    call .local ; Does not cause a Duplicate Name error

Macros

Macros are defined through .macro and may be used in most conditions. To define a macro, use something like this:

.macro example
    ld a, b
.endmacro

This defines a parameterless macro called "example". You needn't indent the contents of the macro; it's done here for clarity. You may also define parameters:

.macro example(foo, bar)
    ld a, foo
    ld b, bar
.endmacro

This is a simple substitution macro. When called (like example(a, b)), 'foo' and 'bar' will be replaced with 'a' and 'b' respectively. Here's a more in-depth example:

.macro example(foo, bar)
    ld a, foo
    ld b, bar
.endmacro
.macro add(a, b)
    a+b
.endmacro
example(1, 2) ; Becomes ld a, 1 \ ld b, 2
ld a, add(2, 3) ; Becomes ld a, 2+3

Pre-Processor Directives

Directives are indicated by a '.' or '#' as the first character, as in "#include <foo.h>".

ascii "[text]": Converts "text" to the global string encoding (not ASCII) and inserts it into the output.

asciiz "[text]": Converts "text" to the global string encoding (not ASCII) and inserts it into the output, postfixed with a zero.

asciip "[text]": Converts "text" to the global string encoding (not ASCII) and inserts it into the output, prefixed with its 8-bit length.

block [size]: Sets aside size bytes, all set to 0. See fill if you require a value other than 0.

db [value], [value], ...: Inserts any number of 8-bit values into the output.

dw [value], [value], ...: Inserts any number of n-bit values into the output, where n is the number of bits to a word in the target architecture.

define [key] [value]: Creates a one-line macro, whose name is "key" and whose replacement text is "value".

echo [message], [message], ...: Echos any number of messages to the console at assembly time. If message is not a string, it will be treated as an expression and echoed as a number.

else: If the matching if, ifdef, or ifndef directive evalulates to false, the code between this and the matching endif directive will be inserted instead.

endif: Closes a corresponding if, ifdef, or ifndef directive.

equ [key] [value]: Creates a symbol whose name is "key", with "value" as the value. "value" must be a valid expression.

fill [size], (value): Inserts size number of values into the output. Default value is 0.

if [expression]: If "expression" evalutates to zero, all the code until the matching endif directive will be omitted from the output.

ifdef [symbol]: If "symbol" is not defined as a symbol or macro, all the code until the matching endif directive will be omitted from the output.

include [path]: Inserts the specified file's contents into the assembly. [path] may be "localfile" or <includedfile>, where the former expects the file to be in the current working directory, and the latter looks for any files within the include path specified at the command line.

list: Resumes listing.

nolist: Stops listing. This stops the assembler from evaluating any code until the corresponding list directive.

org [value]: Sets the internal program counter to value. This does not add to the output, but will affect labels defined later on.

What's the difference between define and equ? Define creates a macro. These have more overheard and take longer to evaluate during assembly, and should be used sparingly. Equ "equates" a name with a value, and creates a symbol, which has far less overhead. Use this one if you can. One example of where you need to use define is to define a string constant. Here's some example uses of each:

.define text "Hello, world"
.equ otherText "Hello, world" ; Doesn't work
.equ value 0x1234 - 28

.asciiz text
ld hl, value

.define function(arg1, arg2) ld a, arg1 \ ld b, arg2

function(10, 20) ; Becomes ld a, 10 \ ld b, 20

.define add(arg1, arg2) arg1 + arg2

ld a, add(10, value) ; Can use symbols in macro invocation

.define foo ; Adds a symbol where "foo" equals 1 (special case, doesn't create a macro)

Compiling from Source

Windows: "msbuild" from the root directory of the project.

Linux/Mac: "xbuild" from the root directory of the project.

Help, Bugs, Feedback

If you need help with KnightOS, want to keep up with progress, chat with developers, or ask any other questions about KnightOS, you can hang out in the IRC channel: #knightos on irc.freenode.net.

To report bugs, please create a GitHub issue or contact us on IRC.

If you'd like to contribute to the project, please see the contribution guidelines.