;; This is an includes file. It doesn't have its own compilation ;; capabilities. There is no namespacing in assembly language; ;; try not to use these names in your own code. ;; sys/unistd_32.h %define SYS_write 4 %define SYS_exit 1 ;; unistd.h %define STDOUT 1 ;; strlen() function. Takes eax as an argument - the pointer to ;; the initial string. Returns eax as the result - the length of ;; the string. strlen: push ebx ; We'll be borrowing this register, so we put its ; current value on the stack. mov ebx, eax ;; Note that even though these have underscores to indicate that ;; outside users should not use them, they're still globally ;; accesible in this program's namespace. A user could ;; theoretically call _strlen_done from anywhere. Assembly gives ;; you ALL the opportunities to shoot yourself in the foot! _strlen_next: cmp byte [eax], 0 jz _strlen_done inc eax jmp _strlen_next _strlen_done: sub eax, ebx pop ebx ; Restore the register ret ;; Puts() function - puts a string to the console. Takes EAX as ;; its only argument - the pointer to the beginning of the string. puts: push edx push ecx push ebx push eax call strlen ; Uses EAX as the pointer to the beginning of the string. ; Returns EAX as the length of the string mov edx, eax ; Move the length of the string into EDX, where WRITE expects pop eax ; Restore EAX from the stack push eax ; Put the value BACK on the stack. mov ecx, eax ; Put the pointer to the message into ECX, where WRITE expects mov ebx, STDOUT mov eax, SYS_write int 80h pop eax ; Restore registers in reverse order. pop ebx pop ecx pop edx ret ;; exit(). Straight from the original. exit_program: mov ebx, 0 mov eax, SYS_exit int 80h