From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Ken Raeburn To: baford@cs.utah.edu Cc: gas2@cygnus.com Subject: Re: .align behavior in gas Date: Wed, 26 Apr 1995 07:01:00 -0000 Message-id: <9504261401.AA06654@cujo.cygnus.com> References: <199504252316.RAA09079@schirf.cs.utah.edu> X-SW-Source: 1995/msg00075.html Date: Tue, 25 Apr 95 17:16:18 MDT From: Bryan Ford In recent gas snapshots, it seems that for some i386 targets (e.g. i386-mach, i386-gnu), gas interprets the .align directive as a number of bytes; whereas for other targets (e.g. i386-linux) it is interpreted as log2(nbytes). Has this always been the case? Yup. Are there any other directives that perform the same function but have a consistent behavior? (I looked at gas/read.c, but couldn't Not yet... find anything.) If not, it would be very useful to have a new directive called, say, '.balign' that always takes a number of bytes, and/or a new directive called something like '.p2align' that always takes a power of two. (I don't care what it is, as long as it's consistent!) This should be trivial to do; just a matter of adding a new line or two to read.c, right? Plus the update to the documentation...