We are now ready for our first program, the mandatory Hello, World!
1: %include 'system.inc' 2: 3: section .data 4: hello db 'Hello, World!', 0Ah 5: hbytes equ $-hello 6: 7: section .text 8: global _start 9: _start: 10: push dword hbytes 11: push dword hello 12: push dword stdout 13: sys.write 14: 15: push dword 0 16: sys.exit
Here is what it does: Line 1 includes the defines, the macros,
and the code from system.inc
.
Lines 3-5 are the data: Line 3 starts the data section/segment.
Line 4 contains the string "Hello, World!" followed by a new
line (0Ah
). Line 5 creates a constant that contains
the length of the string from line 4 in bytes.
Lines 7-16 contain the code. Note that FreeBSD uses the elf
file format for its executables, which requires every
program to start at the point labeled _start
(or, more
precisely, the linker expects that). This label has to be
global.
Lines 10-13 ask the system to write hbytes
bytes
of the hello
string to stdout
.
Lines 15-16 ask the system to end the program with the return
value of 0
. The SYS_exit
syscall never
returns, so the code ends there.
If you have come to UNIX® from MS-DOS®
assembly language background, you may be used to writing directly
to the video hardware. You will never have to worry about
this in FreeBSD, or any other flavor of UNIX®. As far as
you are concerned, you are writing to a file known as
stdout
. This can be the video screen, or
a telnet terminal, or an actual file,
or even the input of another program. Which one it is,
is for the system to figure out.
Type the code (except the line numbers) in an editor, and save
it in a file named hello.asm
. You need
nasm to assemble it.
If you do not have nasm, type:
%
su
Password:
your root password
#
cd /usr/ports/devel/nasm
#
make install
#
exit
%
You may type make install clean
instead of just
make install
if you do not want to keep
nasm source code.
Either way, FreeBSD will automatically download nasm from the Internet, compile it, and install it on your system.
If your system is not FreeBSD, you need to get nasm from its home page. You can still use it to assemble FreeBSD code.
Now you can assemble, link, and run the code:
%
nasm -f elf hello.asm
%
ld -s -o hello hello.o
%
./hello
Hello, World!%
All FreeBSD documents are available for download at http://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/doc/
Questions that are not answered by the
documentation may be
sent to <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.org>.
Send questions about this document to <freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.org>.