From 2682bc5d1d864341aaeb42a449db73c3ecd16d70 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Juan J. Martinez" Date: Wed, 30 Dec 2020 19:07:31 +0000 Subject: Initial import --- tools/hex2bin-2.0/doc/intelhex.spc | 409 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 409 insertions(+) create mode 100644 tools/hex2bin-2.0/doc/intelhex.spc (limited to 'tools/hex2bin-2.0/doc/intelhex.spc') diff --git a/tools/hex2bin-2.0/doc/intelhex.spc b/tools/hex2bin-2.0/doc/intelhex.spc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..946d586 --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/hex2bin-2.0/doc/intelhex.spc @@ -0,0 +1,409 @@ + +====================================================================== + +Intel +Hexadecimal Object File +Format Specification +Revision A, 1/6/88 + + + +DISCLAIMER + +Intel makes no representation or warranties with respect to the contents +hereof and specifically disclaims any implied warranties of +merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose. Further, Intel +reserves the right to revise this publication from time to time in the +content hereof without obligation of Intel to notify any person of such +revision or changes. The publication of this specification should not +be construed as a commitment on Intel's part to implement any product. + + +1. Introduction +This document describes the hexadecimal object file format for the Intel +8- bit, 16-bit, and 32-bit microprocessors. The hexadecimal format is +suitable as input to PROM programmers or hardware emulators. +Hexadecimal object file format is a way of representing an absolute +binary object file in ASCII. Because the file is in ASCII instead of +binary, it is possible to store the file is non-binary medium such as +paper-tape, punch cards, etc.; and the file can also be displayed on CRT +terminals, line printers, etc.. The 8-bit hexadecimal object file +format allows for the placement of code and data within the 16-bit +linear address space of the Intel 8-bit processors. The 16-bit +hexadecimal format allows for the 20-bit segmented address space of the +Intel 16-bit processors. And the 32-bit format allows for the 32-bit +linear address space of the Intel 32-bit processors. +The hexadecimal representation of binary is coded in ASCII alphanumeric +characters. For example, the 8-bit binary value 0011-1111 is 3F in +hexadecimal. To code this in ASCII, one 8-bit byte containing the ASCII +code for the character '3' (0011-0011 or 033H) and one 8-bit byte +containing the ASCII code for the character 'F' (0100-0110 or 046H) are +required. For each byte value, the high-order hexadecimal digit is +always the first digit of the pair of hexadecimal digits. This +representation (ASCII hexadecimal) requires twice as ma ny bytes as the +binary representation. +A hexadecimal object file is blocked into records, each of which +contains the record type, length, memory load address and checksum in +addition to the data. There are currently six (6) different types of +records that are defined, not all combinations of these records are +meaningful, however. The records are: + +Data Record (8-, 16-, or 32-bit formats) +End of File Record (8-, 16-, or 32-bit formats) +Extended Segment Address Record (16- or 32-bit formats) +Start Segment Address Record (16- or 32-bit formats) +Extended Linear Address Record (32-bit format only) +Start Linear Address Record (32-bit format only) + + +2. General Record Format +| RECORD | LOAD | | | INFO | | +| MARK | RECLEN | OFFSET | RECTYP | or | CHKSUM | +| ':' | | | | DATA | | + 1-byte 1-byte 2-bytes 1-byte n-bytes 1-byte + +Each record begins with a RECORD MARK field containing 03AH, the ASCII +code for the colon (':') character. +Each record has a RECLEN field which specifies the number of bytes of +information or data which follows the RECTYP field of the record. Note +that one data byte is represented by two ASCII characters. The maximum +value of the RECLEN field is hexadecimal 'FF' or 255. +Each record has a LOAD OFFSET field which specifies the 16-bit starting +load offset of the data bytes, therefore this field is only used for +Data Records. In other records where this field is not used, it should +be coded as four ASCII zero characters ('0000' or 030303030H). +Each record has a RECTYP field which specifies the record type of this +record. The RECTYP field is used to interpret the remaining information +within the record. The encoding for all the current record types are: + +'00' Data Record +'01' End of File Record +'02' Extended Segment Address Record +'03' Start Segment Address Record +'04' Extended Linear Address Record +'05' Start Linear Address Record + +Each record has a variable length INFO/DATA field, it consists of zero +or more bytes encoded as pairs of hexadecimal digits. The +interpretation of this field depends on the RECTYP field. +Each record ends with a CHKSUM field that contains the ASCII hexadecimal +representation of the two's complement of the 8-bit bytes that result +from converting each pair of ASCII hexadecimal digits to one byte of +binary, from and including the RECLEN field to and including the last +byte of the INFO/DATA field. Therefore, the sum of all the ASCII pairs +in a record after converting to binary, from the RECLEN field to and +including the CHKSUM field, is zero. + + +3. Extended Linear Address Record (32-bit format only) +| RECORD | LOAD | | | | | +| MARK | RECLEN | OFFSET | RECTYP | ULBA | CHKSUM | +| ':' | '02' | '0000' | '04' | | | + 1-byte 1-byte 2-bytes 1-byte 2-bytes 1-byte + +The 32-bit Extended Linear Address Record is used to specify bits 16-31 +of the Linear Base Address (LBA), where bits 0-15 of the LBA are zero. +Bits 16-31 of the LBA are referred to as the Upper Linear Base Address +(ULBA). The absolute memory address of a content byte in a subsequent +Data Record is obtained by adding the LBA to an offset calculated by +adding the LOAD OFFSET field of the containing Data Record to the index +of the byte in the Data Record (0, 1, 2, ... n). This offset addition +is done modulo 4G (i.e., 32-bits), ignoring any carry, so that offset +wrap-around loading (from OFFFFFFFFH to OOOOOOOOOH) results in wrapping +around from the end to the beginning of the 4G linear address defined by +the LBA. The linear address at which a particular byte is loaded is +calculated as: +(LBA + DRLO + DRI) MOD 4G +where: +DRLO is the LOAD OFFSET field of a Data Record. +DRI is the data byte index within the Data Record. + +When an Extended Linear Address Record defines the value of LBA, it may +appear anywhere within a 32-bit hexadecimal object file. This value +remains in effect until another Extended Linear Address Record is +encountered. The LBA defaults to zero until an Extended Linear Address +Record is encountered. +The contents of the individual fields within the record are: + +RECORD MARK +This field contains 03AH, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII colon +(':') character. + +RECLEN +The field contains 03032H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +characters '02', which is the length, in bytes, of the ULBA data +information within this record. + +LOAD OFFSET +This field contains 030303030H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +characters '0000', since this field is not used for this record. + +RECTYP +This field contains 03034H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +character '04', which specifies the record type to be an Extended Linear +Address Record. + +ULBA +This field contains four ASCII hexadecimal digits that specify the +16-bit Upper Linear Base Address value. The high-order byte is the +10th/llth character pair of the record. The low-order byte is the +12th/13th character pair of the record. + +CHKSUM +This field contains the check sum on the RECLEN, LOAD OFFSET, RECTYP, +and ULBA fields. + + +4. Extended Segment Address Record (16- or 32-bit formats) +| RECORD | LOAD | | | | | +| MARK | RECLEN | OFFSET | RECTYP | USBA | CHKSUM | +| ':' | '02' | '0000' | '02' | | | + 1-byte 1-byte 2-bytes 1-byte 2-bytes 1-byte + +The 16-bit Extended Segment Address Record is used to specify bits 4-19 +of the Segment Base Address (SBA), where bits 0-3 of the SBA are zero. +Bits 4-19 of the SBA are referred to as the Upper Segment Base Address +(USBA). The absolute memory address of a content byte in a subsequent +Data Record is obtained by adding the SBA to an offset calculated by +adding the LOAD OFFSET field of the containing Data Record to the index +of the byte in the Data Record (0, 1, 2, ... n). This offset addition +is done modulo 64K (i.e., 16-bits), ignoring any carry, so that offset +wraparound loading (from OFFFFH to OOOOOH) results in wrapping around +from the end to the beginning of the 64K segment defined by the SBA. +The address at which a particular byte is loaded is calculated as: + + SBA + ([DRLO + DRI] MOD 64K) + +where: + DRLO is the LOAD OFFSET field of a Data Record. + DRI is the data byte index within the Data Record. + +When an Extended Segment Address Record defines the value of SBA, it +may appear anywhere within a 16-bit hexadecimal object file. This +value remains in effect until another Extended Segment Address +Record is encountered. The SBA defaults to zero until an Extended +Segment Address Record is encountered. + +The contents of the individual fields within the record are: + +RECORD MARK +This field contains 03AH, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +colon (':') character. + +RECLEN +The field contains 03032H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +characters '02', which is the length, in bytes, of the USBA data +information within this record. + +LOAD OFFSET +This field contains 030303030H, the hexadecimal encoding of the +ASCII characters '0000', since this field is not used for this +record. + +RECTYP +This field contains 03032H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +character '02', which specifies the record type to be an Extended +Segment Address Record. + +USBA +This field contains four ASCII hexadecimal digits that specify the +16-bit Upper Segment Base Address value. The high-order byte is the +10th/1lth character pair of the record. The low-order byte is the +12th/13th character pair of the record. + +CHKSUM +This field contains the check sum on the RECLEN, LOAD OFFSET, +RECTYP, and USBA fields. + +5. Data Record (8-, 16-, or 32-bit formats) + +| RECORD | LOAD | | | | | +| MARK | RECLEN | OFFSET | RECTYP | DATA | CHKSUM | +| ':' | | | '00' | | | + 1-byte 1-byte 2-bytes 1-byte n-bytes 1-byte + + +The Data Record provides a set of hexadecimal digits that represent +the ASCII code for data bytes that make up a portion of a memory +image. The method for calculating the absolute address (linear in +the 8-bit and 32-bit case and segmented in the 16-bit case) for each +byte of data is described in the discussions of the Extended Linear +Address Record and the Extended Segment Address Record. + +The contents of the individual fields within the record are: + +RECORD MARK +This field contains 03AH, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +colon (':') character. + +RECLEN +The field contains two ASCII hexadecimal digits that specify the +number of data bytes in the record. The maximum value is 'FF' or +04646H (255 decimal). + +LOAD OFFSET +This field contains four ASCII hexadecimal digits representing the +offset from the LBA (see Extended Linear Address Record) or SBA (see +Extended Segment Address Record) defining the address which the +first byte of the data is to be placed. + +RECTYP +This field contains 03030H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +character '00', which specifies the record type to be a Data Record. + +DATA +This field contains pairs of ASCII hexadecimal digits, one pair for +each data byte. + +CHKSUM +This field contains the check sum on the RECLEN, LOAD OFFSET, +RECTYP, and DATA fields. + + +6. Start Linear Address Record (32-bit format only) + +| RECORD | LOAD | | | | | +| MARK | RECLEN | OFFSET | RECTYP | EIP | CHKSUM | +| ':' | '04' | '0000' | '05' | | | + 1-byte 1-byte 2-bytes 1-byte 4-bytes 1-byte + + +The Start Linear Address Record is used to specify the execution +start address for the object file. The value given is the 32-bit +linear address for the EIP register. Note that this record only +specifies the code address within the 32-bit linear address space of +the 80386. If the code is to start execution in the real mode of +the 80386, then the Start Segment Address Record should be used +instead, since that record specifies both the CS and IP register +contents necessary for real mode. + +The Start Linear Address Record can appear anywhere in a 32-bit +hexadecimal object file. If such a record is not present in a +hexadecimal object file, a loader is free to assign a default start +address. + +The contents of the individual fields within the record are: + +RECORD MARK +This field contains 03AH, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +colon (':') character. + +RECLEN +The field contains 03034H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +characters '04', which is the length, in bytes, of the EIP register +content within this record. + +LOAD OFFSET +This field contains 030303030H, the hexadecimal encoding of the +ASCII characters '0000', since this field is not used for this +record. + +RECTYP +This field contains 03035H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +character '05', which specifies the record type to be a Start Linear +Address Record. + +EIP +This field contains eight ASCII hexadecimal digits that specify the +32-bit EIP register contents. The high-order byte is the 10th/1lth +character pair. + +CHKSUM +This field contains the check sum on the RECLEN, LOAD OFFSET, +RECTYP, and EIP fields. + + +7. Start Segment Address Record (16- or 32-bit formats) + +| RECORD | LOAD | | | | | +| MARK | RECLEN | OFFSET | RECTYP | CS/IP | CHKSUM | +| ':' | '04' | '0000' | '03' | | | + 1-byte 1-byte 2-bytes 1-byte 4-bytes 1-byte + + +The Start Segment Address Record is used to specify the execution +start address for the object file. The value given is the 20-bit +segment address for the CS and IP registers. Note that this record +only specifies the code address within the 20-bit segmented address +space of the 8086/80186. + +The Start Segment Address Record can appear anywhere in a 16-bit +hexadecimal object file. If such a record is not present in a +hexadecimal object file, a loader is free to assign a default start +address. + +The contents of the individual fields within the record are: + +RECORD MARK +This field contains 03AH, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +colon (':') character. + +RECLEN +The field contains 03034H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +characters '04', which is the length, in bytes, of the CS/IP +register contents within this record. + +LOAD OFFSET +This field contains 030303030H, the hexadecimal encoding of the +ASCII characters '0000', since this field is not used for this +record. + +RECTYP +This field contains 03033H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +character '03', which specifies the record type to be a Start +Segment Address Record. + +CS/IP +This field contains eight ASCII hexadecimal digits that specify the +16-bit CS register and 16-bit IP register contents. The high-order +byte of the CS register content is the 10th/llth character pair, the +low-order byte is the 12th/13th character pair of the record. The +high-order byte of the IP register content is the 14th/15th +character pair, the low-order byte is the 16th/17th character pair +of the record. + +CHKSUM +This field contains the check sum on the RECLEN, LOAD OFFSET, +RECTYP, and CS/IP fields. + + + +8. End of File Record (8-, 16-, or 32-bit formats) + +| RECORD | LOAD | | | | +| MARK | RECLEN | OFFSET | RECTYP | CHKSUM | +| ':' | '00' | '0000' | '01' | | + 1-byte 1-byte 2-bytes 1-byte 1-byte + +The End of File Record specifies the end of the hexadecimal object +file. + +The contents of the individual fields within the record are: + +RECORD MARK +This field contains 03AH, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +colon (':') character. + +RECLEN +The field contains 03030H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +characters '00'. Since this record does not contain any INFO/DATA +bytes, the length is zero. + +LOAD OFFSET +This field contains 030303030H, the hexadecimal encoding of the +ASCII characters '0000', since this field is not used for this +record. + +RECTYP +This field contains 03031H, the hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII +character '01', which specifies the record type to be an End of File +Record. + +CHKSUM +This field contains the check sum an the RECLEN, LOAD OFFSET, and +RECTYP fields. Since all the fields are static, the check sum can +also be calculated statically, and the value is 04646H, the +hexadecimal encoding of the ASCII characters 'FF'. + +======================================================================== +END -- cgit v1.2.3