| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The teensy/ examples have outlived their usefulness, I think.
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Second attempt at commit 4291. We'll now not copy the headers into
memory, but we'll still allocate space for them. Still some security
benefits, and I'm gaining confidence that I understand the ELF format.
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I'm getting sick of hitting the <Tab> key.
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Learning to use the data segment.
Currently, subx can only run the teensy files generated from flat
assembler:
test4
test5
test7
This is not a priority to fix. These files are just useful references to
have around.
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Simplify a couple of test programs.
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Undo 4291; turns out the generated ELF binary was no longer running
natively on 32-bit Linux. Even with p_align set to 0.
Agh, not worth my time.
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No need for it once the program's loaded. And we keep programs from
running the header as code.
This also simplifies the header computation in the translator.
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I don't know how to tell nasm to generate an imm32. It's a minor stepping-stone
anyway; just emit the machine code directly.
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Here's a few test binaries generated on 32-bit Linux.
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