Question

I'm trying to use a function in assembly, invoked from a C project. This function is supposed to call a libc function let's say printf(), but I keep getting a segmentation fault.

In the .c file I have the declaration of the function let's say

int do_shit_in_asm()

In the .asm file I have

.extern printf
.section .data
         printtext:
              .ascii "test"
.section .text
.global do_shit_in_asm
.type do_shit_in_asm, @function

do_shit_in_asm:
    pushl %ebp
    movl %esp, %ebp
    push printtext
    call printf
    movl %ebp, %esp
    pop %ebp
ret

Any pointers comments would be appreciated.

as func.asm -o func.o

gcc prog.c func.o -o prog
Was it helpful?

Solution

Change push printtext to push $printtext.

As it is, you're loading a value from the address printtext and pushing that, rather than pushing the address. Thus, you're passing 'test' as a 32-bit number, rather than a pointer, and printf is trying to interpret that as an address and crashing.

OTHER TIPS

One of the best ways to get started with assembly language functions is to write a similar function in C, and then build it with the compiler switch that generates an assembly listing (-S on gcc). Then you can study the output of what the compiler did, and modify as needed.

This is particularly useful if you're calling functions such as printf which use a different calling convention (because of the variable number of arguments). Calling those functions may be quite different from calling non-varargs functions.

the issue was that i was using

pushl printtext

rather that

pushl $printtext

Thanks everybody for your help and sorry for wasting your time :P

After this:

push printtext
call printf

You want:

addl $4, %esp

Further explanation:

Because you're using x86 Linux I assume the calling convention requires the callee to cleanup the parameters. Because you pushed a pointer before calling printf, your stack is off by 4 after that function's ret instruction happened.

Update:

Yeah, OK, I was used to Intel syntax so I was getting the order of the arguments backward in my head. Actually the lack of the addl back to esp doesn't matter, because you're restoring esp correctly near your ret. My next guess is that the string you're passing to printf is lacking a null terminator... Let me see what gas does...

Update 2:

OK, gas null terminates strings for you, so I guess my second hunch was wrong. It looks like you found the issue so the point is moot.

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