The dasm macro assembler (for JavaScript)
This is an emscripten-compiled version of the dasm macro assembler.
The dasm macro assembler transforms assembly code into 6502-compatible executable binary code. Since this is a JavaScript port of dasm, it allows that compilation process from JavaScript programs; more especifically, it can be used to create Atari VCS 2600 and Fairchild Channel F ROMs from a string containing dasm-compatible assembly source code.
In other words, it turns something like this:
; Pick the correct processor type
processor 6502
; Basic includes
include "vcs.h"
include "macro.h"
; Start address
org $f000
; Actual instructions
start SEI
CLD
LDX #$FF
TXS
LDA #$00
...
...into its equivalent byte code:
f000 78
f001 d8
f002 a2 ff
f004 9a
f005 a9 00
...
Among other features, dasm sports:
- fast assembly
- several binary output formats available
- expressions using [] for parenthesis
- complex pseudo ops, repeat loops, macros, etc
This port of dasm was created so I could have dasm compiling working in a vscode-dasm, my Visual Studio Code extension that aims to allow Atari development and debugging from within Visual Studio Code.
Technical information
This package uses version 2.20.11 of dasm. It supports the following processor architectures:
- 6502 (and 6507)
- 68705
- 6803
- HD6303 (extension of 6803)
- 68HC11
This specific port was built on Linux (err, Windows 10 bash) from the dasm source using emscripten 1.37.0. Check the dasm folder for the script that was used to compile dasm.js
, including its pre/post-JS includes to wrap the code in a module function and return its results in a more usable way.
Usage
Install:
npm install dasm --save
Import as a module:
import dasm from "dasm";
var dasm = require("dasm").default;
Finally, convert code to a binary data ROM. Instead of forcing developers to use a command line-like interface, the function that wraps the emscripten module provides a modern interface to dasm:
const src = "...";
const result = dasm(src);
const ROM = result.data;
Advanced usage
Advanced options can be passed to the dasm
call via an options parameter. For example:
dasm(src, { format: 3 });
dasm(src, { quick: true });
dasm(src, { format: 3, quick: true, machine: "atari2600" });
dasm(src, { parameters: "-f3 -p2 -v4 -DVER=5" });
These are all the options currently parsed:
format
: binary output format. Dictates the size and arrangement of the generated ROM.
1
(default): output includes a 2-byte origin header.2
: random access segment format. Output is made of chuncks that include a 4-byte origin and length header.3
: raw format. Just the data, no headers.
quick
: boolean. If set to true
, don't export any symbol and pass list as part of its returned data. Defaults to false.parameters
: string. List of switches passed to dasm as if it was being called from the command line.include
: key-value object. This is a list of files that should be made available for the source code to include
. The key contains the filename, and the value, its content.machine
: target machine. Similarly to dasm's -I
switch, this picks a list of (embedded) files to make available to the include
command.
"atari2600"
: includes dasm's own atari2600/macro.h
and atari2600/vcs.h
files."channel-f"
: includes dasm's own channel-f/macro.h
and channel-f/ves.h
files.
Check the dasm documentation for a list of all command-line switches available, for more information on binary formats, and for a list of all macros available.
Returned object
The object returned by the dasm
function has more than just a binary ROM. This is what's available:
data
: Uint8Array
. The exported ROM, as a list of integers.output
: string[]
. All data written by dasm to stdout
.list
: IList[]
. A list of all lines available in the source code, and their parsed info (address, bytecode, comments, command, etc).listRaw
: string
. The raw output of the list file (equivalent to the -L
switch).symbols
: ISymbol[]
. A parsed list of all symbols (labels and constants) defined by the source code.symbolsRaw
: string
. The raw output of the symbols file (equivalent to the -s
switch).
More information
TypeScript definitions are included with this distribution, so TypeScript projects can use the module and get type checking and completion for all dasm
calls. Non-TypeScript JavaScript developers using Visual Studio Code will also benefit from auto-completion without any change thanks to VSC's Automatic Type Acquisition.
Todo
- More examples, including on how to include files
- Get exitcode from executable in case of errors?
- Fix: hanging when files are not found?
- More tests: all options
- Run as a worker?
- Command-line package? (
dasm-cli
)
Contributions are welcome.
Changelog
Check the release list for a list of what has changed in every new version.
Acknowledgements
The dasm macro assembler was created by by Matthew Dillon. It was further augmented by Olaf "Rhialto" Seibert, Andrew Davie, and Peter H. Froehlich.
License
This follows dasm itself and uses the GNU Public License v2.0.