ld86 - Linker for
as86(1)
ld86 [
-03MNdimrstyz[-]] [
-llib_extension]
[
-o outfile] [
-Ccrtfile] [
-Llibdir]
[
-Olibfile] [
-Ttextaddr] [
-Hheapsize] [
-Ddataaddr]
infile...
This linker understands only the object files produced by the as86 assembler, it
can link them into either an impure or a separate I&D executable.
The linking defaults are everything off or none except for
-0 and the
output file is
a.out. There is
not a standard library location
defined in the linker.
- -0
- produce header with 16-bit magic
- -3
- produce header with 32-bit magic
- -d
- delete the header from the output file, used for MSDOS COM
files. As a side effect this also includes -s as there's nowhere to put a
symbol table.
- -Cx
- add file libdir-from-search/crtx.o to list of files
linked
- -D
- data base address follows (in format suitable for
strtoul)
- -H
- the top of heap (initial stack) address (in format suitable
for strtoul)
- -Lx
- add dir name x to the head of the list of library dirs
searched
- -M
- print symbols linked on stdout
- -N
- Create a native Linux OMAGIC output file. If the contents
are i386 code the binary can be either linked by GCC or executed by linux.
If the -z option is also included the linker can generate a QMAGIC
executable.
- -Ox
- add library or object file libdir-from-search/x to list of
files linked
- -T
- text base address follows (in format suitable for
strtoul)
- -i
- separate I&D output
- -lx
- add library libdir-from-search/libx.a to list of files
linked
- -m
- print modules linked on stdout
- -o
- output file name follows
- -s
- strip symbols
- -r
- Generate a relocatable object from one source object, if
the linker is given the -N option also the output format will be the hosts
native format if possible.
- -t
- trace modules being looked at on stdout
- -y
- Alter the symbol tables to add label 'extensions' so that
labels with more than 8 characters can be stored in elks executables.
- -z
- produce "unmapped zero page" or
"QMAGIC" executables
All the options not taking an argument may be turned off by following the option
letter by a '-', as for cc1.
The linker predefines several labels that can be imported into user programs.
- __etext
- Standard C variable for the end of the text segment.
- __edata
- Standard C variable for the end of the initialized
data.
- __end
- Standard C variable for the end of the bss area.
- __segoff
- The offset within the executable file between the start of
the text segment and the start of the data segment in 16 byte
'paragraphs'. Note this is zero for impure (tiny model) executables
and is adjusted for executables that don't start at offset 0 within the
segment.
- __segXDL
- The lowest address with data in segment 'X'. (eg __seg0DL
is for segment zero or the text segment, __seg3DL is for the data segment)
The value 'X' is a hex digit.
- __segXDH
- The top of segment 'X's data area.
- __segXCL
- The bottom of segment 'X's 'common data' or uninitialized
data area. Each segment has both an initialized and uninitialized data
area.
- __segXCH
- The top of segment 'X's common area.
- __segXSO
- This is the adjusted offset from segment 0 of the start of
segment 'X' in 'paragraphs'.
The 6809 version does not support -i.
The previous versions of the linker could produce an 8086 executable with
segments of a size >64k, now only i386 executables may have segments this
large.
The linker cannot deal with reverse seeks caused by
org instructions in
the object file. Unlike previous versions the current one traps the error
rather than trying to fill up the hard disk.
The linker produces a broken a.out object file if given one input and the
-r option this is so it is compatible with pre-dev86 versions.