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Alphabetical attribute sort and more additions

git-svn-id: svn://svn.cc65.org/cc65/trunk@2413 b7a2c559-68d2-44c3-8de9-860c34a00d81
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cuz 2003-08-23 21:32:23 +00:00
parent 1b311d932d
commit f0f5fb8d11

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@ -233,6 +233,13 @@ anything). Each attribute is terminated by a semicolon.
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Comments<p>
Comments start with a hash mark (<tt/#/) and extend from the position of
the mark to the end of the current line. Hash marks inside of strings will
of course <em/not/ start a comment.
<sect1>Specifying global options<p>
Global options may be specified in a group with the name <tt/GLOBAL/. The
@ -241,7 +248,6 @@ following attributes are recognized:
<descrip>
<tag><tt>COMMENTS</tt></tag>
This attribute may be used instead of the <tt><ref id="option--comments"
name="--comments"></tt> option on the command line. It takes a numerical
parameter between 0 and 4. Higher values increase the amount of information
@ -249,34 +255,29 @@ following attributes are recognized:
<tag><tt>CPU</tt></tag>
This attribute may be used instead of the <tt><ref id="option--cpu"
name="--cpu"></tt> option on the command line. It takes a string parameter.
<tag><tt>INPUTNAME</tt></tag>
The attribute is followed by a string value, which gives the name of the
input file to read. If it is present, the disassembler does not accept an
input file name on the command line.
<tag><tt>INPUTOFFS</tt></tag>
The attribute is followed by a numerical value that gives an offset into
the input file which is skipped before reading data. The attribute may be
used to skip headers or unwanted code sections in the input file.
<tag><tt>INPUTSIZE</tt></tag>
<tt/INPUTSIZE/ is followed by a numerical value that gives the amount of
data to read from the input file. Data beyond <tt/INPUTOFFS + INPUTSIZE/
is ignored.
<tag><tt>OUTPUTNAME</tt></tag>
The attribute is followed by string value, which gives the name of the
output file to write. If it is present, specification of an output file on
the command line using the <tt><ref id="option-o" name="-o"></tt> option is
@ -287,7 +288,6 @@ following attributes are recognized:
<tag><tt>PAGELENGTH</tt></tag>
This attribute may be used instead of the <tt><ref id="option--pagelength"
name="--pagelength"></tt> option on the command line. It takes a numerical
parameter. Using zero as page length (which is the default) means that no
@ -295,7 +295,6 @@ following attributes are recognized:
<tag><tt>STARTADDR</tt></tag>
This attribute may be used instead of the <tt><ref id="option--start-addr"
name="--start-addr"></tt> option on the command line. It takes a numerical
parameter. The default for the start address is $10000 minus the size of
@ -312,48 +311,45 @@ following attributes are recognized:
<descrip>
<tag><tt>START</tt></tag>
This gives the start address of the range.
<tag><tt>END</tt></tag>
This gives the end address of the range. The end address is inclusive, that
means, it is part of the range. Of course, it may not be smaller than the
start address.
<tag><tt>NAME</tt></tag>
This is a convenience attribute. It takes a string argument and will cause
the disassembler to define a label for the start of the range with the
given name. So a separate <tt><ref id="infofile-label" name="LABEL"></tt>
directive is not needed.
<tag><tt>START</tt></tag>
This gives the start address of the range.
<tag><tt>TYPE</tt></tag>
This attribute specifies the type of data within the range. The attribute
value is one of the following keywords:
<descrip>
<tag><tt>CODE</tt></tag>
The range consists of code.
<tag><tt>ADDRTABLE</tt></tag>
The range consists of data and is disassembled as a table of words
(16 bit values). The difference to the <tt/WORDTABLE/ type is that
a label is defined for each entry in the table.
<tag><tt>BYTETABLE</tt></tag>
The range consists of data and is disassembled as a byte table.
<tag><tt>CODE</tt></tag>
The range consists of code.
<tag><tt>DBYTETABLE</tt></tag>
The range consists of data and is disassembled as a table of dbytes
(double byte values, 16 bit values with the low byte containing the
most significant byte of the 16 bit value).
<tag><tt>WORDTABLE</tt></tag>
The range consists of data and is disassembled as a table of words
(16 bit values).
<tag><tt>DWORDTABLE</tt></tag>
The range consists of data and is disassembled as a table of double
words (32 bit values).
<tag><tt>ADDRTABLE</tt></tag>
The range consists of data and is disassembled as a table of words
(16 bit values). The difference to the <tt/WORDTABLE/ type is that
a label is defined for each entry in the table.
<tag><tt>RTSTABLE</tt></tag>
The range consists of data and is disassembled as a table of words (16 bit
values). The values are interpreted as words that are pushed onto the
@ -361,41 +357,40 @@ following attributes are recognized:
<tt/address-1/ of a function, for which a label will get defined by the
disassembler.
<tag><tt>TEXTTABLE</tt></tag>
The range consists of readable text.
<tag><tt>SKIP</tt></tag>
The range is simply ignored when generating the output file. Please note
that this means that reassembling the output file will <em/not/ generate
the original file, not only because the missing piece in between, but also
because the following code will located on wrong addresses. Output
because the following code will be located on wrong addresses. Output
generated with <tt/SKIP/ ranges will need manual rework.
<tag><tt>TEXTTABLE</tt></tag>
The range consists of readable text.
<tag><tt>WORDTABLE</tt></tag>
The range consists of data and is disassembled as a table of words
(16 bit values).
</descrip>
</descrip>
<sect1>Specifying Labels<p>
<sect1>Specifying Labels<label id="infofile-label"><p>
The <tt/LABEL/ directive is used to give names for labels in the disassembled
code. The following attributes are recognized:
<descrip>
<tag><tt>NAME</tt></tag>
<tag><tt>ADDR</tt></tag>
Followed by a numerical value. Specifies the value of the label.
<tag><tt>NAME</tt></tag>
The attribute is followed by a string value which gives the name of the
label.
<tag><tt>ADDR</tt></tag>
Followed by a numerical value. Specifies the value of the label.
<tag><tt>SIZE</tt></tag>
This attribute is optional and may be used to specifiy the size of the data
that follows. If a size greater than 1 is specified, the disassembler will
create labels in the form <tt/label+offs/ for all bytes within the given
@ -411,6 +406,7 @@ The following is a short example for an info file that contains most of the
directives explained above:
<tscreen><verb>
# This is a comment. It extends to the end of the line
GLOBAL {
OUTPUTNAME "kernal.s";
INPUTNAME "kernal.bin";