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DASM Macro Assembler
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$Id: README 105 2008-04-07 06:00:07Z phf $ =================== DASM 2.20.11 README =================== Welcome to DASM, a versatile macro assembler with support for several 8-bit microprocessors including MOS 6502 & 6507; Motorola 6803, 68705, and 68HC11; Hitachi HD6303 (extended Motorola 6801); and Fairchild F8. This file describes the DASM distribution, how to compile and install DASM, and where to get more information about DASM. DASM's homepage is http://dasm-dillon.sourceforge.net/ since release 2.20.11. ---------------- The Distribution ---------------- The DASM distribution contains the following important files and directories of interest to all users: bin/ Executables for DASM and related tools (only if you downloaded a binary distribution) doc/ Documentation and manuals machines/ Support files for various 8-bit machines AUTHORS List of contributors to DASM COPYING GNU General Public License FUTURE Plans for the next releases of DASM NEWS Recent changes to DASM README The file you are reading right now :-) In addition, developers are going to be interested in the following files and directories: src/ Source code for DASM and related tools test/ Test cases for DASM and related tools (as of release 2.20.11 the test framework is incomplete) ChangeLog Source level changes to DASM Makefile Makefile to build DASM executables, run tests, and create distributions Even more files for developers are available from the DASM Subversion repository, see http://dasm-dillon.sf.net/ for details. ------------------------ Compiling and Installing ------------------------ If you are using DASM on a Unix system, you should be able to simply give the command make in the root directory of the DASM distribution and DASM should build. A bin/ directory containing DASM executables will be created as part of this process. You can also give the command make test to run all the test cases that come with the distribution. Note that as of release 2.20.11 the test framework is incomplete and probably only remotely comprehensible for developers. :-/ The often-used make install does not work as of release 2.20.11 either, mostly because DASM does not yet use GNU autotools. You have to install DASM by hand, either by adding the bin/ directory to your path, or by copying executables to another directory in your path. For include files in the machines/ directory you currently have to use DASM's -I command line option. NOTE: Several compiler warnings will be displayed during the build process. We are confident that you can ignore these warnings. They will be dealt with in a future release. (And if you know how to fix them reliably, we welcome your contributions!) DASM has been built and tested successfully on the following machines and operating systems: - SunOS 5.10 Generic_118822-11 sun4u sparc - Linux 2.6.23.15-80.fc7 i386 GNU/Linux - Darwin 8.11.0 powerpc - NetBSD 3.0 qube mips - Linux 2.6.24-1-686 i686 GNU/Linux - Linux-based cross-compile for Windows/Wine If you have successfully built and tested DASM on a different machine or operating system, we would love to hear about it. ---------- Using DASM ---------- The simplest way to get a brief introduction to DASM is to run the bin/dasm executable without options, which will print a short help message summarizing all available options. The DASM distribution includes documentation in the doc/ directory. However, the documentation is incomplete as of release 2.20.11. We are urgently looking for volunteers to bring it up to date. Documentation for using DASM to produce code for the F8 processor is currently in the directory machines/channel-f/ but will be integrated into the main documentation in the future. The sourceforge.net project page provides access to two mailing lists, one for announcements from the developers and one for DASM users to discuss problems, help each other, and communicate with the developers. See http://sourceforge.net/projects/dasm-dillon/ for details. There is also a vibrant community of developers writing games and demos for the Atari 2600 VCS using DASM. The mailing lists for the Stella emulator are a particularly useful resource for DASM users, not only those intent on programming for the VCS. -------- Legalese -------- the DASM macro assembler (aka small systems cross assembler) Copyright (c) 1988-2002 by Matthew Dillon. Copyright (c) 1995 by Olaf "Rhialto" Seibert. Copyright (c) 2003-2008 by Andrew Davie. Copyright (c) 2008 by Peter H. Froehlich. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
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