Difference between revisions of "CSC231 Bash Tutorial 6"
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from __future__ import print_function | from __future__ import print_function | ||
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print( "Hello world of Python!" ) | print( "Hello world of Python!" ) |
Revision as of 22:53, 21 March 2017
--D. Thiebaut (talk) 22:18, 21 March 2017 (EDT)
Script File
Let's create a simple batch file that will allow you to automatically assemble, link, and run an assembly program. Furthermore, we'll link it with the 231Lib library, just to be safe. If it doesn't use it, it should be fine.
The commands you normally use to go through this process are the following:
nasm -f elf progName.asm ld -melf_i386 progName.o 231Lib.o -o progName ./progName
Let's create a script file called nald (for nasm ld) that will run these 3 commands automatically. For now, just copy the code without worrying too much about what happens. We'll explain what's going on later.
- emacs a new file called nald
- Store the following lines in it:
#! /bin/bash nasm -f elf $1.asm nasm -f elf 231Lib.asm ld -melf_i386 $1.o 231Lib.o -o $1 ./$1
- Make sure that the #-sign is the first character on the first line of the script.
- Make the script executable:
chmod +x nald
- chmod is a command that changes the permissions of a file. "+x" means that everybody including you, everybody in the 231 class, and everybody who has an account on Aurora can execute your script.
- now run the script and pass it the name of one of your assembly files. Let's assume that you have a file called helloWorld.asm in your directory:
./nald helloWorld
- You should see the output of your program printed on the screen.
- Using emacs, make a slight modification to your helloWorld.asm program. Maybe, make it print something different.
- reassemble and run it in one command:
./nald helloWorld
- You now have a nice script that will save you several keystrokes when you create your next assembly programs!
Explanations
Shebang
- #! /bin/bash
- the first line of the script starts with the pair "#!" which is referred to as "shebang" in the Linux world. It indicates that the command in the script should be executed by the bash shell. If we had Python program that we would want to run automatically, we would use a shebang with Python. Let's try that.
- Create a new file with emacs called hello.py
#! /usr/bin/python from __future__ import print_function def main(): print( "Hello world of Python!" ) main()
- Save the file, and make it executable
chmod +x hello.py
- run the program from the command line:
./hello.py Hello world of Python!
- Notice that you didn't write "python hello.py" to run your program. Just "./hello.py." That's a nice trick.