MetallicPriest
MetallicPriest

Reputation: 30815

How can I compile to assembly with gcc

How do I compile to assembly instead of an executable with gcc. I know there is an -S flag, but where do I use it in the makefile. For example, if I use flags -O3 -o exe_name, where should I put the -S flag?

Upvotes: 47

Views: 68181

Answers (3)

I suggest also using -fverbose-asm because then the generated assembler has some generated comments which "explains" the code. For example:

gcc -S -fverbose-asm -O2 foo.c

would generate in foo.s (with some comments) the assembler code produced by compiling foo.c

And to understand what the GCC optimizations are doing one could even try -fdump-tree-all (but this produces hundreds of files!).

Upvotes: 64

Macmade
Macmade

Reputation: 54039

You can ask GCC to produce the assembly file, instead of an object file (or an executable).

For instance:

gcc -Wall -c test.c

Will produce an object file from test.c (test.o).

gcc -Wall -o test test.c

Will produce an executable file named 'test' from test.c

gcc -Wall -S test.c

Will produce an assembly file from test.c (test.s)

Upvotes: 32

Mat
Mat

Reputation: 206861

Put it pretty much anywhere.

gcc -O3 -S -o output.asm ...

will store the generated assemby in output.asm.

Upvotes: 14

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