ID: Q82290
5.10 5.10a | 5.10 5.10a
MS-DOS | OS/2
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The information in this article applies to:
In the Microsoft Macro Assembler (MASM) versions 5.1 and 5.1a or QuickAssembler versions 2.01 and 2.51, using an absolute external symbol as a software interrupt number fails to generate the correct number at link time. The module accessing this PUBLIC symbol does not generate the proper number; instead, it gets set to 0. This is a problem only when the symbol is used with the INT instruction. In MASM version 5.1, using an absolute external symbol causes the linker to generate:
error L2029: Unresolved externals.
You can work around this problem by using an equate declared in an include file rather than relying on an absolute external. The include file that contains this equate can be included in all the source files that need to access the equate. This allows the assembler to determine the value of the symbol, instead of relying on the linker to provide the value.
Microsoft has confirmed this to be a problem in MASM versions 5.1 and 5.1a and QuickAssembler versions 2.01 and 2.51 (buglist2.01 and buglist2.51). This problem was corrected in MASM version 6.0.
The following code demonstrates the incorrect result. To reproduce this error, assemble both HELLO.ASM and DISPLAY.ASM with MASM 5.1a, then link together using LINK version 5.01.20.
; HELLO.ASM ; Assemble options needed: none
.MODEL small, c DOSSEG
PUBLIC mydata mydata EQU 21h
.STACK 256
.CODE EXTRN display:proc start:
call display
mov ax, 04C00h
int 21h
END start
; DISPLAY.ASM ; Assemble options needed: none
.MODEL small, c DOSSEG
EXTRN mydata:ABS
.CODE display PROC
mov ah,mydata ; Gets set to 21h by the linker
int mydata ; Doesn't get set to 21h by the linker
; Results in Divide overflow
; Results in Illegal Instruction under CodeView
ret
display endp
END
Additional reference words: 5.10 5.10a extern extrn buglist5.10 buglist5.10a fixlist6.00 KBCategory: kbtool kbfixlist kbbuglist KBSubCategory: MLIss Solution Type : kbfix
Last Reviewed: September 16, 1997