My 4th semester involves ARM programming. And proprietary tooling (Keil C). But we don't do that here. ### Building Assembling and linking ARM binaries on non-ARM architecture devices is fairly trivial. I went along with the GNU cross bare metal toolchain binutils, which provides `arm-as` and `arm-ld` (among a bunch of other utils that I don't care about for now). Assemble `.s` files with: ```shell arm-none-eabi-as main.s -g -march=armv8.1-a -o main.out ``` The `-g` flag generates extra debugging information that `gdb` picks up. The `-march` option establishes target architecture. Link `.o` files with: ```shell arm-none-eabi-ld main.out -o main ``` ### Running (and Debugging) Things get interesting here. `gdb` on your x86 machine cannot read nor execute binaries compiled for ARM. So, we simulate an ARM processor using `qemu`. Now qemu allows you to run `gdbserver` on startup. Connecting our local `gdb` instance to `gdbserver` gives us a view into the program's execution. Easy! Run `qemu`, with `gdbserver` on port `1234`, with our ARM binary, `main`: ```shell qemu-arm -singlestep -g 1234 main ``` Start up `gdb` on your machine, and connect to `qemu`'s `gdbserver`: ``` (gdb) set architecture armv8-a (gdb) target remote localhost:1234 (gdb) file main Reading symbols from main... # yay! ``` ### GDB Enhanced `gdb` is cool, but it's not nearly as comfortable as well fleshed out emulators/IDEs like Keil. Watching registers, CPSR and memory chunks update *is* pretty fun. I came across `gdb`'s TUI mode (hit `C-x C-a` or type `tui enable` at the prompt). TUI mode is a godsend. It highlights the current line of execution, shows you disassembly outputs, updated registers, active breakpoints and more. *But*, it is an absolute eyesore. Say hello to [GEF](https://github.com/hugsy/gef)! "GDB Enhanced Features" teaches our old dog some cool new tricks. Here are some additions that made my ARM debugging experience loads better: - Memory watches - Register watches, with up to 7 levels of deref (overkill, I agree) - Stack tracing And it's pretty! See for yourself: [![](https://u.peppe.rs/wq.png)](https://u.peppe.rs/wq.png) ### Editing Vim, with `syntax off` because it dosen't handle GNU ARM syntax too well.