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8cb6e17571
Looking at the ARM disassembler output, every comment seems to start with a ';' character, so I assumed this was the correct character to start an assembler comment. I then spotted a couple of places where there was no ';', but instead, just a '@' character. I thought that this was a case of a missing ';', and proposed a patch to add the missing ';' characters. Turns out I was wrong, '@' is actually the ARM assembler comment character, while ';' is the statement separator. Thus this: nop ;@ comment is two statements, the first is the 'nop' instruction, while the second contains no instructions, just the '@ comment' comment text. This: nop @ comment is a single 'nop' instruction followed by a comment. And finally, this: nop ; comment is two statements, the first contains the 'nop' instruction, while the second contains the instruction 'comment', which obviously isn't actually an instruction at all. Why this matters is that, in the next commit, I would like to add libopcodes syntax styling support for ARM. The question then is how should the disassembler style the three cases above? As '@' is the actual comment start character then clearly the '@' and anything after it can be styled as a comment. But what about ';' in the second example? Style as text? Style as a comment? And the third example is even harder, what about the 'comment' text? Style as an instruction mnemonic? Style as text? Style as a comment? I think the only sensible answer is to move the disassembler to use '@' consistently as its comment character, and remove all the uses of ';'. Then, in the next commit, it's obvious what to do. There's obviously a *lot* of tests that get updated by this commit, the only actual code changes are in opcodes/arm-dis.c.
14 lines
249 B
Makefile
14 lines
249 B
Makefile
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.*: file format.*
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Disassembly of section .text:
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00008000 <[^>]*>:
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8000: e3080013 movw r0, #32787 @ 0x8013
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8004: e3400000 movt r0, #0
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00008008 <[^>]*>:
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8008: f248 0013 movw r0, #32787 @ 0x8013
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800c: f2c0 0000 movt r0, #0
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