Im having problems when I define global variables in a basic C program for an ARM9 processor. I'm using EABI GNU compiler and the binary generated from a 12KB elf is 4GB! I assume the issue is with my scatter file but Im having trouble getting my head around it.
I have 256KB of ROM (base address 0xFFFF0000) and 32KBs of RAM (base 0x01000000)
SECTIONS {
. = 0xFFFF0000;
.text : {
* (vectors);
* (.text);
}
.rodata : { *(.rodata) }
. = 0x01000000;
sbss = .;
.data : { *(.data) }
.bss : { *(.bss) }
ebss = .;
bssSize = ebss - sbss;
}
And my program is as follows:
int a=10;
int main() {
int b=5;
b = (a>b)? a : b;
return b;
};
If I declare a as a local variable, i.e. there is no .data section then everything works. fine. Any help greatly appreciated.
--16th March 2011--
Can anyone help with this, Im getting nowhere and have read the manuals, forums etc...
My boot, compile command and objcopy commands are pasted below
.section "vectors" reset: b start undef: b undef swi: b swi pabt: b pabt dabt: b dabt nop irq: b irq fiq: b fiq
.text
start:
ldr sp, =0x01006000
bl main
stop: b stop
arm-none-eabi-gcc -mcpu=arm926ej-s -Wall -nostartfiles -Wall main.c boot.s -o main.elf -T \ scatter_file
arm-none-eabi-objcopy ./main.elf --output-target=binary ./main.bin
arm-none-eabi-objdump ./main.elf --disassemble-all > ./main.dis
I found the problem. The objcopy command will try to create the entire address space described in the linker script, from the lowest address to the highest including everything in between. You can tell it to just generate the ROM code as follows:
objcopy ./main.elf -j ROM --output-target=binary ./main.bin
I also changed the linker script slightly
MEMORY {
ram(WXAIL) : ORIGIN = 0x01000000, LENGTH = 32K
rom(RX) : ORIGIN = 0xFFFF0000, LENGTH = 32K
}
SECTIONS {
ROM : {
*(vectors);
*(.text);
*(.rodata);
} > rom
RAM : {
*(.data);
*(.bss);
} > ram
}
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