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Assembling for a mips ecoff target supports some additional sections
besides the usual .text
, .data
and .bss
. The
additional sections are .rdata
, used for read-only data,
.sdata
, used for small data, and .sbss
, used for small
common objects.
When assembling for ecoff, the assembler uses the $gp
($28
)
register to form the address of a “small object”. Any object in the
.sdata
or .sbss
sections is considered “small” in this sense.
For external objects, or for objects in the .bss
section, you can use
the gcc
`-G' option to control the size of objects addressed via
$gp
; the default value is 8, meaning that a reference to any object
eight bytes or smaller uses $gp
. Passing `-G 0' to
as
prevents it from using the $gp
register on the basis
of object size (but the assembler uses $gp
for objects in .sdata
or sbss
in any case). The size of an object in the .bss
section
is set by the .comm
or .lcomm
directive that defines it. The
size of an external object may be set with the .extern
directive. For
example, `.extern sym,4' declares that the object at sym
is 4 bytes
in length, whie leaving sym
otherwise undefined.
Using small ecoff objects requires linker support, and assumes that the
$gp
register is correctly initialized (normally done automatically by
the startup code). mips ecoff assembly code must not modify the
$gp
register.