DOKK / manpages / debian 11 / hatari / gst2ascii.1.en
GST2ASCII(1) Hatari utilities GST2ASCII(1)

gst2ascii - Filter and output Atari program symbol table as ASCII

gst2ascii [options] <program>

gst2ascii reads (GNU-style a.out or traditional DRI/GST) symbol table from given Atari program and outputs it in the ASCII format understood by Hatari debugger and its profiler data post-processor (latter doesn't accept any other format).

All symbol addresses output by the tool are TEXT relative, so when loading them in Hatari debugger, one needs to give just TEXT as offset for the 'symbols' command.

There are some options for filtering the symbol table content, and the resulting ASCII output is easy to edit also by hand, in case other symbols (e.g. loop labels) need to be removed from it, or missing function symbols need to be added to it.

Filter absolute (= value, not address) symbols out from the output.
Filter BSS symbols out from the output.
Filter DATA symbols out from the output.
Filter TEXT symbols out from the output.
Filter local (.L*) symbols out. Usually they're useless because they don't have names, just numbers.
Filter symbols for object files (*.o) out.
Sort symbol output by symbol name, not by their addresses.

If you have problems, try with 'nm -n <program>' instead (Atari or cross-compiler version). If nm works, but gst2ascii doesn't, please report a bug on it.

Save 'program.prg' symbol table in ASCII format with local symbols filtered out:
gst2ascii -l program.prg > program.sym

Load generated ASCII symbols file in Hatari debugger:
symbols program.sym TEXT DATA BSS

hatari(1), hatari_profile(1)

Written by Eero Tamminen <oak at helsinkinet fi>.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

2017-11-11 Hatari