Netwide Assembler (An x86 Assembler)
NASM is a prototype general-purpose x86 assembler. It can currently
output several binary formats, including ELF, a.out, Win32, and OS/2.
Read the licence agreement in /usr/share/doc/packages/nasm/Licence.
- Developed at devel:tools:compiler
- Sources inherited from project openSUSE:Factory
-
6
derived packages
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Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
nasm-2.16.01.tar.xz | 0001017732 994 KB | |
nasm.changes | 0000042388 41.4 KB | |
nasm.spec | 0000001499 1.46 KB | |
reproducible.patch | 0000001675 1.64 KB |
Revision 44 (latest revision is 46)
Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar_suse)
accepted
request 1044181
from
Michael Vetter (jubalh)
(revision 44)
- Update to 2.16.01: * Fix the creation of the table of contents in the HTML version of the documentation. - Update to 2.16: * Support for the rdf format has been discontinued and all the RDOFF utilities has been removed. * The --reproducible option now leaves the filename field in the COFF object format blank. This was always rather useless since it is only 18 characters long; as such debug formats have to carry their own filename information anyway. * Fix handling of MASM-syntax reserved memory (e.g. dw ?) when used in structure definitions. * The preprocessor now supports functions, which can be less verbose and more convenient than the equivalent code implemented using directives. See ppfunc. * Fix the handling of %00 in the preprocessor. * Fix incorrect handling of path names affecting error messages, dependency generation, and debug format output. * Support for the RDOFF output format and the RDOFF tools have been removed. The RDOFF tools had already been broken since at least NASM 2.14. For flat code the ELF output format recommended; for segmented code the obj (OMF) output format. * New facility: preprocessor functions. Preprocessor functions, which are expanded similarly to single-line macros, can greatly simplify code that in the past would have required a lengthy list of directives and intermediate macros. See ppfunc. * Single-line macros can now declare parameters (using a && prefix) that creates a quoted string, but does not requote an already quoted string. See define.
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