vAVRdisasm is an 8-bit Atmel AVR firmware disassembler. This single-pass disassembler can read Atmel Generic, Intel HEX8, and Motorola S-Record formatted files containing valid AVR program binaries.
It supports all 142 8-bit AVR instructions as defined by the Atmel AVR Instruction Set revision 0856I-AVR-07/10.
vAVRdisasm features a handful of formatting options, including:
- Printing the instruction address alongside disassembly, enabled by default
- Printing the destination address of relative branch/jump/call instructions as comments alongside disassembly, enabled by default
- Printing the original opcode data alongside disassembly, enabled by default
- Ghetto Address Labels (see “Ghetto Address Labels” section)
- Formatting data constants in different bases (hexadecimal, binary, decimal)
- .DW data word directive for data not recognized as an instruction during disassembly
- Piped input and output
vAVRdisasm should work on most *nix platforms, including a Cygwin or MinGW environment. vAVRdisasm was written by Vanya A. Sergeev, and tested with the GNU C Compiler on Linux. Feel free to send any ideas or suggestions to vsergeev at gmail dot com.
Visual Studio 2008 build support added by Hermann Seib.
vAVRdisasm is released under the GNU General Public License Version 3.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; see the file "COPYING". If not, see
<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
Simply running,
$ make
in the vAVRdisasm project directory should compile vAVRdisasm on most *nix systems, including a Cygwin or MinGW environment. The Makefile is configured to use GCC to compile vAVRdisasm.
vAVRdisasm should have no problem being compiled with "gmake".
Usage: vavrdisasm [options] <file>
Disassembles AVR program file <file>. Use - for standard input.
vAVRdisasm version 3.1 - 09/18/2014.
Vanya A. Sergeev - <vsergeev@gmail.com>.
https://github.com/vsergeev/vavrdisasm
Options:
-o, --out-file <file> Write to file instead of standard output.
-t, --file-type <type> Specify file type of the program file.
-l, --address-label <prefix> Create ghetto address labels with
the specified label prefix.
--data-base-hex Represent data constants in hexadecimal
(default).
--data-base-bin Represent data constants in binary.
--data-base-dec Represent data constants in decimal.
--no-addresses Do not display address alongside disassembly.
--no-opcodes Do not display original opcode alongside
disassembly.
--no-destination-comments Do not display destination address comments
of relative branch/jump/call instructions.
--objdump Create avr-objdump compatible output.
Affects address display.
-h, --help Display this usage/help.
-v, --version Display the program's version.
Supported file types:
Atmel Generic generic
Intel HEX8 ihex
Motorola S-Record srec
Raw Binary binary
For most purposes:
$ vavrdisasm <AVR program file>
Example:
$ vavrdisasm sampleprogram.hex
Use -
for standard input.
vAVRdisasm will auto-recognize Atmel Generic, Intel HEX8, and Motorola S-Record files. However, the -t
or --file-type
option can be used to explicitly select the file format, and to specify a raw binary input file.
Example:
$ vavrdisasm -t binary sampleprogram
The file type argument for this option can be "generic", "ihex", "srecord", or "binary", for Atmel Generic, Intel HEX8, Motorola S-Record, and raw binary files, respectively.
Specify an output file for writing instead of the standard output. The output file -
is also synonymous for standard output.
vAVRdisasm will default to formatting data constants in hexadecimal. However, data constants can be represented in a different base with one of the following options: --data-base-hex
, --data-base-bin
, and --data-base-dec
.
By default, vAVRdisasm will print the instruction addresses alongside disassembly, the original opcodes alongside disassembly,and destination comments for relative branch, jump, and call instructions. These formatting options can be disabled with the --no-addresses
, --no-opcodes
, and --no-destination-comments
options.
See the Ghetto Address Labels section.
The -h
or --help
option will print a brief usage summary, including program options and supported file types.
The -v
or --version
option will print the program's version.
If you encounter any bugs or problems, please submit an issue on GitHub or notify the author by email, vsergeev at gmail dot com.
vAVRdisasm supports a unique formatting feature: Ghetto Address Labels, which few, if not any, single-pass disassemblers implement.
With the -l
or --address-label
option and a supplied prefix, vAVRdisasm will print a label containing the non-numerical supplied prefix and the address of the disassembled instruction at every instruction. Also, all relative branch, jump, and call instructions will be formatted to jump to their designated address label.
This feature enables direct re-assembly of the vAVRdisasm's disassembly. This can be especially useful for quick modification to the AVR program assembly code without having to manually format the disassembly or adjust the relative branch, jump, and call distances with every modification to the disassembly.
The -l
or --address-label
option overrides the default printing of the addresses alongside disassembly.
Example:
$ vavrdisasm -l “A_” sampleprogram.hex
vAVRdisasm's disassembly will include address labels that will look like this: A_0000:
For sample disassembly outputs by vAVRdisasm, see the Sample Disassembly Outputs section.
- vAVRdisasm does not display alternate versions of the same encoded instruction. This means that the "cbr" instruction will never be displayed in the disassembly, because the "andi" instruction precedes it in priority.
These features do not affect the accuracy of the disassembler's output, and may be supported in future versions of vAVRdisasm.
vAVRdisasm uses libGIS, a free Atmel Generic, Intel HEX, and Motorola S-Record Parser library to parse formatted files containing AVR program binaries. libGIS is available for free under both MIT and Public Domain licenses here. libGIS is compiled into vAVRdisasm---it does not need to be obtained separately.
These output samples, produced by vAVRdisasm, are a disassembly of the program from the "Notice's Guide to AVR Development" article in the Atmel Applications Journal.
$ vavrdisasm sampleprogram.hex
0: c0 00 rjmp .+0 ; 0x2
2: ef 0f ser R16
4: bb 07 out $17, R16
6: bb 08 out $18, R16
8: 95 0a dec R16
a: cf fd rjmp .-6 ; 0x6
$ vavrdisasm --no-opcodes sampleprogram.hex
0: rjmp .+0 ; 0x2
2: ser R16
4: out $17, R16
6: out $18, R16
8: dec R16
a: rjmp .-6 ; 0x6
$ vavrdisasm --no-destination-comments sampleprogram.hex
0: c0 00 rjmp .+0
2: ef 0f ser R16
4: bb 07 out $17, R16
6: bb 08 out $18, R16
8: 95 0a dec R16
a: cf fd rjmp .-6
$ vavrdisasm --no-addresses sampleprogram.hex
c0 00 rjmp .+0 ; 0x2
ef 0f ser R16
bb 07 out $17, R16
bb 08 out $18, R16
95 0a dec R16
cf fd rjmp .-6 ; 0x6
$ vavrdisasm -l "A_" sampleprogram.hex
.org 0x0000
A_0000: rjmp A_0002 ; 0x2
A_0002: ser R16
A_0004: out $17, R16
A_0006: out $18, R16
A_0008: dec R16
A_000a: rjmp A_0006 ; 0x6
The above program sample was modified slightly to illustrate vAVRdisasm’s ability to represent data constants in different bases:
$ vavrdisasm --data-base-bin sampleprogram2.hex
0: c0 00 rjmp .+0 ; 0x2
2: ef 0f ser R16
4: bb 07 out $17, R16
6: ea 0f ldi R16, 0b10101111
8: bb 08 out $18, R16
a: 95 0a dec R16
c: cf fd rjmp .-6 ; 0x8