fbe(1)
NAME
fbe − assembler
SYNOPSIS
fbe [ −b ] [ −K PIC ] [ −L ] [ −m ] [ −n ] [ −o outfile ] [ −P [ [ −Dname ] [ −Dname=def ]
[ −Ipath ] [ −Uname ]]...] [ −q ] [ −Q{y|n} ] [ −s ] [ −S[a|C] ] [ −T ] [ −V ] [ −xF ]
filename...
DESCRIPTION
The fbe command creates object files from assembly language source files. and there are no unresolved external references.
OPTIONS
The following flags may be specified in any order:
−b Enable Sun SourceBrowser.
−Dname
−Dname=def When the −P option is in effect, these options are passed to the cpp(1) preprocessor without interpretation by the as command; otherwise, they are ignored.
−Ipath When the −P option is in effect, this option is passed to the cpp(1) preprocessor without interpretation by the as command; otherwise, it is ignored.
−K PIC Generate position-independent code.
−L Save all symbols, including temporary labels that are normally discarded to save space, in the ELF symbol table.
−m Run the m4(1) macro processor on the input to the assembler.
-n Suppress all the warnings while assembling.
−o outfile Put the output of the assembly in outfile. By default, the output file name is formed by removing the .s suffix, if there is one, from the input file name and appending a .o suffix.
−P Run cpp(1), the C preprocessor, on the files being assembled. The preprocessor is run separately on each input file, not on their concatenation. The preprocessor output is passed to the assembler.
−q Perform a quick assembly. When the −q option is used, the assembler’s internal node list is not built and the assembler simply emits instructions as they are read.
Note: This option disables many error checks. It is recommended that you do not use this option to assemble handwritten assembly language.
−Q{y|n} Produce the "assembler version" information in the comment section of the output object file if the y option is specified; if the n option is specified, the information is suppressed.
−s Place all stabs in the .stabs section. By default, stabs ares placed in stabs.excl sections, which are stripped out by the static linker, ld(1), during final execution. When the −s option is used, stabs remain in the final executable because .stab sections are not stripped by the static linker.
−S[a|C] Produce a disassembly of the emitted code to the standard output.
• Adding the character a to the option appends a comment line to each assembly code which indicates its relative address in its own section.
• Adding the character C to the option prevents comment lines from appearing in the output.
−T This is a migration option for 4.1 assembly files to be assembled on 5.0 systems. With this option, the symbol names in 4.1 assembly files will be interpreted as 5.0 symbol names.
−Uname When the −P option is in effect, this option is passed to the cpp(1) preprocessor without interpretation by the as command; otherwise, it is ignored.
−V Write the version number of the assembler being run on the standard error output.
−xF Generates additional information for performance analysis of the executable using SPARCworks analyzer. If the input file does not contain any stabs (debugging directives), then the assembler will generate some default stabs which are needed by the SPARCworks analyzer. Also see manual page analyzer(1), dbx(1), and collector(1).
ENVIRONMENT
TMPDIRas
Normally creates temporary files in the directory /tmp. You may specify another directory by setting the environment variable TMPDIR to your chosen directory. (If TMPDIR isn’t a valid directory, then as will use /tmp).
FILES
By default, as creates its temporary files in /tmp.
NOTES
fbe is the same as the as command under SunOS 5.3. Please refer to the SunOS 5.3 Assembly Language Reference Manual for more information about the assembler syntax and usage.
SEE ALSO
cc(1B), cpp(1), ld(1), m4(1), nm(1), strip(1), tmpnam(3S), a.out(4)
NOTES
If the −m (invoke the m4(1) macro processor) option is used, keywords for m4(1) cannot be used as symbols (variables, functions, labels) in the input file since m4(1) cannot determine which keywords are assembler symbols and which keywords are real m4(1) macros.
Whenever possible, you should access the assembler through a compilation system interface program such as cc(1B).
All undefined symbols are treated as global.
SunOS 3.0.1 — Last change: 3rd August 1993