Linux

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Introduction

This section of the sizecoding.org wiki is about creating very small (<=256byte) 32-bit X86 based Linux binaries (ELF format). For X86 related information, please check the main pages on this website, as a lot of the same tricks will also work with X86 Linux sizecoding.

A huge thanks goes out to byteobserver (Xorchitecture (2021) - https://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=88982) as well as some early work by frag/fsqrt (Lintro (2012) - https://www.pouet.net/prod.php?which=58560) for all their research and hard work in producing tiny ELF binaries for linux.

Alternative methods and expectations

As the development of actual tiny ELF assembler executables on linux is still in its early days, with about a handful of actual <256 byte tiny ELF binary productions, lets look at some of the other methods of getting tiny intros onto linux.

1) Self-compilation tricks (using gcc or python): The executable executes a gcc (or python) compilation of the embedded code and executes it. This requires GCC and/or specific version of Python and potentially dynamically linked libraries to be installed.

2) Linking a piece of compiled C code to a stripped ELF header + dev/fb0 setup: This method has been used by The Orz to create several sizecoded procedural graphics entries. For more information about this check out https://github.com/grz0zrg/tinycelfgraphics

So what can we realistically expect from a 256 intro on Linux?

Expect about ~100 byte cost for the ELF header, setting up fb0 , some form of update loop, framecounter and using either mmap setup or copying via pwrite64 to get you started. If you want audio as well, the avaialble byte-budget will shrink even more.

Additionally, since we're dealing with 32-bit code, expect some instructions (especially when dealing with direct values) to take up bit more space.

Lets hope this wiki page will inspire and help people to get started and create newer, better Linux tiny intros ;-)

Setting up

Setting up your development platform for Linux development:

  • Suggested Distributions : Any X86-based Linux distribution that allows for execution of 32-bit executables.
  • Assembler: NASM (or any other linux compatible 32-bit X86 assembler)

Furthermore, it is important that the user has access to the /dev/fb0 framebuffer. This can be achieved by launching a virtual (fullscreen) console using CTRL-F3/F4 in most distributions, logging in and making sure the user is in the video group. You can test if you are in the video group by running:

   $ cp /dev/urandom /dev/fb0

which should cause the screen to fill with white noise before printing "no space left on device". If this is not the case, you can add your user to the videogroup like so (substituting username for your username):

   $ sudo usermod -a -G video username

After doing this you will need to log out and log back in for the changes to take effect.

Note: Make sure your binary is executable for everyone using the chmod 777 command after compilation :D

System Calls

Interaction with the Linux OS is mostly done via int 0x80 system calls. This usually includes dealing with opening files/framebuffer/audio and handling timers.

A full list of system calls and their expected register arguments is available at: https://syscalls32.paolostivanin.com/


ELF Header Information

Like a 32-bit windows executable, a 32-bit binary for linux comes with a pretty hefty ELF header.

  org     0x00010000  
  ehdr:                                                 ; Elf32_Ehdr
                db      0x7F, "ELF", 1, 1, 1, 0         ;   e_ident
        times 8 db      0
                dw      2                               ;   e_type
                dw      3                               ;   e_machine
                dd      1                               ;   e_version
                dd      _start                          ;   e_entry
                dd      phdr - $$                       ;   e_phoff
                dd      0                               ;   e_shoff
                dd      0                               ;   e_flags
                dw      ehdrsize                        ;   e_ehsize
                dw      phdrsize                        ;   e_phentsize
                dw      1                               ;   e_phnum
                dw      0                               ;   e_shentsize
                dw      0                               ;   e_shnum
                dw      0                               ;   e_shstrndx
  
  
  phdr:                                                 ; Elf32_Phdr
                dd      1                               ;   p_type
                dd      0                               ;   p_offset
                dd      $$                              ;   p_vaddr
                dd      $$                              ;   p_paddr
                dd      filesize                        ;   p_filesz
                dd      filesize                        ;   p_memsz
                dd      5                               ;   p_flags
                dd      0x1000                          ;   p_align
  
  
  _start:
  
  ; your program here

Luckily some parts of the ELF header can be repurposed and used to store some data and code. There is quite an extensive journey about some header optimisations available at http://www.muppetlabs.com/~breadbox/software/tiny/teensy.html for those that are interested.

After merging the ehdr and phdr parts and changing your entry point, we can get the header down to about the 48 bytes range with a nifty /dev/fb0 string inserted which we'll be able to use later for setting up the framebuffer.

org $00010000
    db $7F,"ELF"    ; e_ident
    dd 1            ; p_type
    dd 0            ; p_offset
    dd $$           ; p_vaddr
    dw 2            ; e_type, p_paddr
    dw 3            ; e_machine
    dd entry        ; e_version, p_filesz
    dd entry        ; e_entry, p_memsz
    dd 4            ; e_phoff, p_flags
fname:
    db "/dev/fb0",0 ; e_shoff, p_align, e_flags, e_ehsize
entry:
    ; this next instruction overlaps with a critical part of the elf header
    ; it needs to look like XX YY YY YY YY where YYYYYYYY=fname
    ; so you can change the register to something else or use push
    ; but the four byte pointer to fname cannot be changed.
    mov ebx,fname   ; e_phentsize, e_phnum

    ; e_shentsize, e_shnum, e_shstrndx are below but we can put whatever code/bytes we want there
    mov cl,1 ; set read/write mode (1 or inc ecx is sufficient for pcopy method, read/write (2) is needed for mmap)
    mov al,5 ; 5 = open syscall
    int 0x80 ; open /dev/fb0 = 3

Displaying Graphics

Graphics can be produced by using and accessing the linux /dev/fb0 framebuffer. First the framebuffer has to be opened at the intro initialisation, and can then be used to either copy a piece of memory over using the pwrite64 syscall (0xb5) or using map a piece of memory directly to the framebuffer using syscall mmap.

Setting up the framebuffer

The dev/fb0 framebuffer can best be accessed from a virtual console (ctrl-f3/f4 in most distributions).

To make sure your dev/fb0 framebuffer is set up properly, you can apt get the fbset tool and display and/or alter the framebuffer resolution as most intros will make an assumption about the resolution of your framebuffer.

To test access to dev/fb0 framebuffer, you can use the following cat command:

cat /dev/urandom > /dev/fb0

which should produce random noise to the screen (ignorning the out of memory error that is expected from cat)

Alternatively, if you don't like to use the virtual console during the development of your intro, or the framebuffer setup is somehow giving you problems, there is a smalle fbe.c / fbe binary supplied with the xorchitecture intro by byteobserver that has a SDL windows mmap'ed to tmp/fb0 which you can launch alongside your intro (don't forget to redirect the dev/fb0 pointer in your intro to tmp/fb0).

Getting something on screen

First we need to fill up our local memorybuffer with pixeldata, so lets start doing that using the old XOR pattern:

    mov ecx,width*height
setpixels:
    mov ebx,width
    mov eax,ecx
    cdq
    div ebx               ; edx = x-coord , eax=y coord
    and eax,edx           ; xor pattern

    mov [esp+ecx*4+0],al ; b
    mov [esp+ecx*4+1],al ; g
    mov [esp+ecx*4+2],al ; r
    loop setpixels

Once your buffer (in this case marked by the esp stackpointer) is all filled up with pixeldata, you can copy it to the /dev/fb0 using the pwrite64 syscall like so:

   ; copy memorybuffer to screen (/dev/fb0) using the pwrite64 syscall
   mov ecx,esp  ; buffer ptr
   mov edx,ebp  ; screen size
   xor esi,esi  ; seek to beginning of screen
   xor edi,edi  
   mov ebx,3    ; fd of framebuffer
   mov eax,0xb5 ; pwrite64
   int 0x80     ; pwrite64 to framebuffer

As an alternative to using pwrite64 you can also mmap )check out intros by The Orz for an example with mmap) to map a piece of memory to dev/fb0. However using mmap because you can get tearing, and you can't realistically do feedback effects without implementing a second buffer, as reading from the mmaped memory is VERY slow.

 ;mmap(NULL, buflen, PROT_WRITE, MAP_SHARED, fd, 0);
 push edx	      ;edx = 0
 push eax	      ;fd
 push byte 1	      ;MAP_SHARED
 mov al, 90
 push eax	      ;we need to set second bit for PROT_WRITE, 90 = 01011010 and setting PROT_WRITE automatically set PROT_READ
 push width*height*4  ;buffer size
 push edx	      ;NULL
 mov ebx, esp	  ;args pointer
 int 80h		      ;eax <- buffer pointer

Example Framework

Munching squares

So when we put all the above together, we can get a minimal kind of framework running that will look something like this munching square example provided to us by byteobserver:

; byte.observer's munching square linux example
; assembles with nasm -fbin munch.asm -o munch
width equ 1024
height equ 768

bits 32
org $00010000
    db $7F,"ELF" ; e_ident
    dd 1         ; p_type
    dd 0         ; p_offset
    dd $$        ; p_vaddr
    dw 2         ; e_type, p_paddr
    dw 3         ; e_machine
    dd entry     ; e_version, p_filesz
    dd entry     ; e_entry, p_memsz
    dd 4         ; e_phoff, p_flags
fname:
    db "/dev/fb0",0 ; e_shoff, p_align, e_flags, e_ehsize
entry:
    mov ebx,fname     ; e_phentsize, e_phnum
    inc ecx           ; = 1 = O_WRONLY
    mov al,5          ; 5 = open syscall
    int 0x80          ; open /dev/fb0 = 3

    mov ebp,width*height*4  ; ebp = screen size
    sub esp,ebp             ; make room on the stack for the video memory

mainloop:
    mov ecx,ebp    ; init pixel index
    shr ecx,2      ; divide by bits per pixel
    inc edi        ; frame counter

setpixels:
    mov ebx,width
    mov eax,ecx
    cdq
    div ebx               ; edx = x-coord , eax=y coord
    xor eax,edx           ; xor pattern
    add eax,edi           ; make it munch
    mov [esp+ecx*4+0],al ; b
    mov [esp+ecx*4+1],al ; g
    mov [esp+ecx*4+2],al ; r
    mov [esp+ecx*4+3],al ; a
    loop setpixels

    ; dump the whole thing to the screen using pwrite64 syscall
    mov ecx,esp  ; buffer ptr
    mov edx,ebp  ; screen size
    push edi     ; save frame counter
    xor esi,esi  ; seek to beginning of screen
    xor edi,edi  
    mov ebx,3    ; fd of framebuffer
    mov eax,0xb5 ; pwrite64
    int 0x80     ; pwrite64 to framebuffer
    pop edi

    jmp mainloop

Adding Sound

It is possible to output digital audio by binding the aplay command into your intro. aplay is available on almost all Linux setups. You can test it by running the following, which should produce some white noise:

   $ aplay /dev/urandom

By default, aplay will play 8-bit mono audio at 8000Hz, but the format can be changed easily by specifying arguments. If no filename is passed to aplay, it will read audio data from standard input, which we will use to our advantage.

To use aplay in the context of an intro, there is a bit of setup work involved. The simplest method (method 1) is to write audio data to standard output and pipe it to aplay on the command line. A more clean and self-contained method (method 2) uses 4 syscalls to start aplay as a child process, so that audio data can then be simply written to the appropriate file descriptor to send it to the speakers. Method 3, which saves some bytes over method 2 (especially when combined with visuals), is to use a shell based loader script.

Method 1: pipe to aplay on the command line

The first method is the simplest, but will not be usable in all circumstances. With this method, instead of running your intro with ./intro, you have to do ./intro | aplay 2>/dev/null, which may not be allowed in some compos. However, with this method you can produce some extremely small generative music intros, including some that are only 45 bytes---where the entire intro fits inside of the ELF header!

Some basic code to produce a bytebeat sound is below. It simply consists of a loop which repeatedly writes a single 8-bit audio sample to standard output using the write syscall (0x4).

audio:
    ; some bytebeat
    inc esi
    mov eax,esi
    pop ebx ; grab previous sample from stack
    add ebx,eax
    shr eax,5
    or ebx,eax
    shr eax,5
    and ebx,eax
    push ebx ; push next sample to stack

    mov ecx,esp ; pointer to audio data (the top of the stack)
    xor eax,eax
    mov al,4 ; write syscall
    xor ebx,ebx
    inc ebx ; write to stdout (1)
    mov edx,ebx ; write 1 byte
    int 0x80

    jmp audio

Case study: 45-byte generative music intro

Below is the complete 45-byte generative music intro. Try saving it in a file called daemon45.asm and running it with:

   $ nasm daemon45.asm
   $ chmod +x daemon45
   $ ./daemon45 0>&1 | aplay -fS32_LE -r16000 -c2
; daemon 45 by byteobserver
bits 32
org $25500000
    db $7F,"ELF" ; e_ident
    dd 1 ; p_type
    dd 0 ; p_offset
    dd $$ ; p_vaddr
    dw 2 ; e_type, p_paddr
    dw 3 ; e_machine
    dd entry ; e_version, p_filesz
    dw $001a ; e_entry, p_memsz
entry:
    push eax
    and eax,strict dword 4; e_phoff, p_flags
    mov ecx,esp ; e_shoff, p_align
    int $80
    rdtsc ; e_flags
    and edx,eax
    loop entry ; e_ehsize
    dw $20 ; e_phentsize
    db 1 ; e_phnum
    ; e_shentsize
    ; e_shnum
    ; e_shstrndx

Let's pull this apart and see how it works...

The first thing to notice that that the origin is 0x25500000, unlike the origin of 0x00010000 that we used before. This is intentional. 0x50 is the encoding of the push eax instruction, which appears after entry:, and 0x25 is the first byte of the and eax,strict dword 4 instruction. These instructions actually overlap with the e_entry field of the header, so the high two bytes of the entry point (and origin) must match these instructions. The word 0x001a that appears immediately before entry: forms the low two bytes of the entry point, i.e., 0x001a == (entry-$$)&0xffff.

The instruction and eax,strict dword 4 may seem odd, since this instruction is encoded as 2504000000, which seems wasteful. However, doing and eax,4 (which only takes 3 bytes) would not work here, because the dword 4 needs to be stored here so that e_phoff (the program header offset) is correct.

The rest of the code also overlaps the header, of course, but the fields that it overlaps are effectively ignored when the program is loaded, so we don't need to worry about setting them to the correct values.

Now, lets strip away the header and see why this code actually produces the sound it does:

entry:
    push eax
    and eax,strict dword 4
    mov ecx,esp
    int $80
    rdtsc
    and edx,eax
    loop entry

Clearly, this code is calling some syscall (because of the int $80), but which one is it calling? The syscall number is stored in eax, and because of the instruction and eax,strict dword 4 we know that eax must either be 4 or 0. Syscall 4 is the write syscall, which is what we want. But what is syscall 0? The docs say that syscall 0 is restart_syscall, which is used to "restart a system call after interruption by a stop signal." The man page says "This system call is designed only for internal use by the kernel." And, luckily for us, when called from user space when the only other syscall we are using is write, this has absolutely no effect, and will probably always return -1 (EINTR). So, depending on eax&4, this code will either invoke the write syscall, or do nothing at all. Which one is it? Well, the rdtsc instruction loads the low 32 bits of the CPU's cycle counter into eax, and the high 32 bits into edx. So, whether we do a write or not is effectively random depending on the current cycle count. Note that on oldskool platforms, this may be quite deterministic, but on Linux the code is interrupted many times a second, which causes effectively random fluctuations in the cycle count that the program reads.

The write syscall takes three arguments: the file to write to (in ebx), a pointer to the data to write (in ecx), and the amount of data to write (in edx).

The code doesn't even mention ebx at all, and it is zeroed at program start. So this program writes to file descriptor 0, which is standard input. Now, that sounds weird. It writes to standard input? It turns out this is a perfectly fine thing to do, and we can redirect standard input to standard output by using ./daemon45 0>&1 on the command line.

ecx is clearly set to equal esp, so the write syscall will be getting its data from the stack.

edx, the amount of data to write, is a bit more tricky. It is set to the bitwise and of the low 32 and high 32 bits of the CPU's cycle counter (rdtsc). This may seem problematic, because this number might be larger than the size of the stack. However, the write syscall will stop either after writing edx bytes, or when it encounters a memory access violation. So, it doesn't matter if edx is huge, because then it will just write the entire contents of the stack.

You may have noticed that the code has a push instruction but no corresponding pop. Won't it overflow the stack? Yes, eventually. But this takes quite a while.

So, overall what the program is does is it pushes the low 32 bits of the CPU's cycle counter to the stack, then randomly plays a variable length chunk of the stack as audio, or does nothing. This repeats until the stack overflows, which on my machine takes at least half an hour (note: you can change the stack size by running ulimit -s unlimited beforehand, so that it will run until your RAM fills up completely). The output is quite variable depending on the cycle counter, which is only reset when your computer powers on. So, try running it after different amounts of time since power-on, and you may be surprised how different it can sound!

Method 2: pipe,fork,dup2,execve

This approach is as follows. First, we create a pipe using the pipe syscall (0x2a). This syscall takes a pointer to an array of 2 ints, which it fills with the file descriptors of the two ends of the pipe. In the following, we simply overwrite the top of the stack with the file descriptors. The first file descriptor is the read only/output side and the second is the write only/input side.

    mov ebx,esp
    xor eax,eax
    mov al,0x2a ; pipe
    int 0x80

Next, we fork the process (syscall 0x2). The child process will be used to exec aplay. If you do this right after creating the pipe, you don't need to zero eax before setting it to 2, because eax should already be zero (indicating that the pipe was created successfully).

    mov al,2 ; fork
    int 0x80 ; returns eax=0 in child process and eax=1 in parent process
    dec eax
    js child
    
parent:
    ; code for the rest of your intro goes here

Now, we bind the standard input of the child (which aplay receives audio data from) to the output of the pipe, using the dup2 syscall (0x3f).

child:
    xor eax,eax
    mov al,0x3f ; dup2
    pop ebx ; get file descriptor of output side of pipe
    xor ecx,ecx ; stdin is file descriptor 0
    int 0x80

The following is optional. aplay will usually print a message saying some parameters of the stream that it is playing. If this interferes with your intro, you can close stderr to stop it from printing, with the close syscall (0x6).

    xor eax,eax
    mov al,6 ; close
    mov bl,2 ; stderr
    int 0x80

Finally, we just have to execute aplay with the execve syscall (0xb). Constructing the arguments to this syscall takes a bit of work. Here we are doing it in a simple way which is a bit wasteful. You can save some bytes by constructing the arguments array on the stack.

    xor eax,eax ; shouldn't be necessary given the above
    mov al,0xb ; execve
    mov ebx,aplay ; pointer to aplay filename
    mov ecx,args ; pointer to null terminated array of arguments
    lea edx,[esp+8] ; get pointer to environ. this assumes only one dword has been popped so far,
                    ; and that there are no args passed to your program.
                    ; see here: http://www.mindfruit.co.uk/2012/01/initial-stack-reading-process-arguments.html
                    ; (we are trying to get the beginning of "Environment pointers")
    int 0x80 ; nothing after this point will be executed

args:
    dd aplay+5
    dd 0
aplay:
    db "/bin/aplay", 0

Now everything should be set up, and we can start writing audio data with the write syscall (0x4). The following will produce a buzzing sound.

parent:

audioloop:
    xor eax,eax
    mov al,4 ; write
    mov ebx,[esp+4] ; input side of pipe created earlier
    mov ecx,esp ; pointer to audio data
    mov edx,1 ; length of audio data (in bytes)
    int 0x80
    inc byte [esp] ; increment the sample
    jmp audioloop

Putting it all together

Combining the above snippets and optimizing a bit, we can arrive at the following 118 byte program which plays a familiar bytebeat track.

bits 32
org $00010000
    db $7F,"ELF" ; e_ident
    dd 1 ; p_type
    dd 0 ; p_offset
    dd $$ ; p_vaddr
    dw 2 ; e_type, p_paddr
    dw 3 ; e_machine
    dd entry ; e_version, p_filesz
    dd entry ; e_entry, p_memsz
    dd 4
entry:
    mov al,0x2a ; pipe
    mov ebx,esp ; store output of pipe on stack
    int 0x80
    lea edx,[ebx+12] ; environ pointer, to be used later
    mov ebp, entry ; e_phentsize, this must be here for the ELF header
    mov al,2 ; fork
    int 0x80 ; returns eax=0 in child process and eax=childpid in parent process
    dec eax
    js child

audioloop:
    pusha
    xor eax,eax
    mov al,4 ; write
    mov ebx,eax ; input side of pipe created earlier
    lea ecx,[edx-12] ; pointer to audio data
    xor edx,edx
    inc edx ; set size to one byte
    int 0x80
    popa

    ; some bytebeat
    inc esi
    mov eax,esi
    pop ebx
    add ebx,eax
    shr eax,5
    or ebx,eax
    shr eax,5
    and ebx,eax
    push ebx

    jmp audioloop

child:
    inc eax
    mov al,0x3f ; dup2
    pop ebx ; get file descriptor of output side of pipe
    ; ecx is already zero
    int 0x80

    mov al,0xb ; execve
    lea ebx,[ebp+((aplay+5-entry)&0xff)] ; pointer to "aplay"
    push 0 ; null terminator for args list
    push ebx ; pointer to "aplay" aka argv[0]
    ; if you want to add more args to aplay, you can push pointers to them here
    mov ecx,esp ; pointer to null terminated array of arguments
    mov bl,(aplay-$$)&0xff ; pointer to "/bin/aplay"
    ; edx is already set up as the environ pointer
    int 0x80 ; nothing after this point will be executed

aplay:
    db "/bin/aplay"
    ; no null terminator is necessary because memory past the end of the file is always zero

Can you make this smaller? Feel free to edit it!

Method 3: shell loader

Everything we've seen so far has been focused on producing a "pure" ELF binary, to avoid the compatibility issues that plagued early Linux sizecoding techniques involving self compilation or binary patching. However, there is a way to embed the ELF binary in a shell script to save some bytes without sacrificing compatibility.

In method 1, we effectively moved the audio device handling out of the intro and put the responsibility of connecting the intro to the audio device in the hands of the user. This is obviously not ideal, and in method 2 we fixed this by opening the audio device using syscalls. Here, we will use a hybrid approach. Our intro will appear to the operating system as a shell script, which when executed will unpack the intro to /tmp and then execute it, piping the output to aplay.

The following example of this approach assembles to a 101-byte file.

bits 32
db "cp $0 /tmp;sed -i 1d $_/$0;$_|aplay",10
org $00010000-($-$$)
top:
    db $7F,"ELF" ; e_ident
    dd 1 ; p_type
    dd 0 ; p_offset
    dd top ; p_vaddr
    dw 2 ; e_type, p_paddr
    dw 3 ; e_machine
    dd entry ; e_version, p_filesz
    dd entry ; e_entry, p_memsz
    dd 4
entry:
    inc ebx ; we will write to stdout (1)
main:
    mov edx,esi ; copy time into edx
    pop ecx ; grab previous sample from stack
    ; bytebeat formula
    and ecx,edx
    shr edx,5
    mov ebp,entry ; useless, skips part of ELF header
    xor ecx,edx
    shr edx,5
    or ecx,edx
    push ecx ; write next sample

    mov ecx,esp ; pointer to audio data (the top byte of the stack)
    mov al,4 ; write syscall
    mov edx,ebx ; write 1 byte
    int 0x80

    inc esi ; increment time

    jmp main

Note that this code will leave a file in /tmp after it exits, and will also write a bunch of garbage (the binary) to the screen when it exits. Not only is this not very clean, but you may not be allowed to leave files around after your intro exits in some compos. To fix this, we can use the following (slightly longer) shell loader:

    db "cp $0 /tmp;sed -i 1d $_/$0;$_|aplay;rm $_;exit",10

Let's pick apart the shell loader. Remember that in bash, $_ is the last argument passed to the previous command, and $0 is the filename of the current executable.

cp $0 /tmp # copy the intro to /tmp
sed -i 1d $_/$0 # remove the first line from the copy with sed (aka remove the loader)
$_|aplay # execute the intro
rm $_ # remove the copy
exit # (so that the binary data which follows doesn't get executed)

Combining audio and video

Although this method is already saving a lot of bytes, we haven't even gotten to the best part yet. We can use the shell loader to also set up the framebuffer for us and make it very convenient to use, by using only 10 extra bytes! To do this, just modify the loader as follows:

    db "cp $0 /tmp;sed -i 1d $_/$0;$_<>/dev/fb0|aplay",10

With this loader, you can use pwrite64 or mmap directly on file descriptor 0 (stdin) to write to the screen, and write to file descriptor 1 (stdout) to play audio. Just be careful to get the timing right if you're doing both audio and video, as the audio writes are blocking.

Playing MIDI

Coming soon...

Syncing audio with visuals

Syncing audio with visuals is unfortunately not as easy as one would hope. Unlike many oldskool platforms, you can't just write audio and video data in your main loop and have everything work out nicely. The reason for this is that the audio is buffered with a relatively large buffer size, which is not easy to change. The effect of this is that audio writes will succeed instantly without blocking until about 1 second of audio has been written, and then the next write will block for about 1 second. This process then repeats. As you can imagine this means the visuals will run at about 1 FPS.

Even if you know the exact audio buffer size, it doesn't really help to synchronize things because the synchronization will be dependent on the CPU speed (as well as how much CPU time background processes are taking, etc). In order to synchronize things properly you will need to use a timer. See the Limiting FPS section below for how to do this. You are looking at a cost of about 22 bytes for this timer at the very least.

After you have a timer set up, you just need to decide on a target FPS and calculate how much audio you should write per frame. The general formula that you should write rate * channels * sample width in bytes / FPS bytes per frame. For example, if your intro runs at 50 FPS and your audio uses 16bit samples in stereo at 8000Hz, then you should write 8000*2*2/50 = 640 bytes of audio for every frame.

Miscellaneous Techniques

Limiting FPS

The framebuffer device /dev/fb0 will allow you to write to it as quickly as your CPU can manage, so your intro can run at different speeds depending on the CPU speed. To correct this, you can use a timer to limit FPS. Beyond limiting the frame rate, using a timer is seemingly necessary if you want to have synchronized sound and graphics (but more research is needed).

We will describe two approaches to setting up a timer. The first method uses the sys_timerfd_* syscalls, which creates a file descriptor where reads block until the timer expires. The second uses the sys_timer_* syscalls, which send signals that can be caught by installing a signal handler. The first method is usually smaller.

Method 1: timerfd

    ; assume this is placed at the beginning of the program (all registers zeroed)
timer:
    ; NEW: smaller 18-byte setup!
    add ax,0x142
    push ecx
    mov edx,esp
    int 0x80
    push 1000000000/50 ; 50 fps
    add ebx,eax
    jns timer


main:
    xor eax,eax
    mov al,3 ; read syscall
    mov ebx,eax ; file descriptor of timer
    mov dl,8 ; num bytes to read, edx can be any value >= 8
    mov ecx,esp ; write timer expiration info to the stack
    int 0x80 ; blocks until the next frame


    jmp main

Method 2: signal handler

    ; assuming this is at the beginning of the program (all registers zeroed)
    call callback ; set up signal handler initially

    ; assume eax < 65536, ebx = 1
    mov ax,0x103 ; timer_create
    dec ebx
    push ebx
    push 1 ; SIGHUP
    push ebx
    mov ecx,esp
    mov edx,esp
    int 0x80

    mov ax,0x104 ; timer_settime
    push 1000000000/50 ; 50 fps
    push ebx
    mov edx,esp
    int 0x80

    jmp $ ; loop forever

callback:
    ; assume eax < 256, ebx = 0
    mov al,0x30 ; signal
    inc ebx
    mov ecx,callback
    int 0x80 ; (re)install signal handler
    ret

Allocating memory

On many Linux distros, the stack size is limited to 8MB by default. If this is not enough for your intro, it is possible to increase this stack limit or to allocate memory in the data segment.

To allocate space in the data segment, you can use the brk system call (0x2d). This call takes in a memory address and attempts to set the value of the current program break to that address, then returns the new address. The program break is the smallest memory address that is beyond the data segment. By default, the data segment is zero bytes long. Unfortunately, on modern systems, the default value of the program break is randomized, so you can't just simply call brk with the amount of memory you want. Instead, you have to call brk with an address of zero to get the current program break, then add the amount of memory you want and call brk with the new address. The following code does this in 15 bytes.

    ; assuming all registers are zeroed, e.g., this is at the beginning of the program
    mov al,0x2d
    int 0x80
    xchg eax,ebx
    add ebx,0x1000000 ; allocate 16MB
    mov al,0x2d
    int 0x80
    ; eax now contains the address of the program break, i.e.,
    ; you can use memory from eax-0x1000000 to eax-1 (inclusive)

To increase the stack size limit, you can use the setrlimit (0x4b) system call. The following 11-byte snippet will remove the stack size limit completely. Note that in some cases the user will not have permission to do this.

    ; assuming all registers are zeroed, e.g., this is at the beginning of the program
    dec ecx ; ecx = -1 aka set size to 'unlimited'
    push ecx
    push ecx
    mov bl,3 ; RLIMIT_STACK
    mov ecx,esp ; pointer to data for call
    mov al,0x4b ; setrlimit
    int 0x80

Self modifying code

With the tiny ELF header we've been using, the code segment is not writable, and unfortunately we need to sacrifice some bytes to make it so. So, in many cases it's better to avoid using self modifying code. But, if you want to try it out, there are two ways to go about it. In the ELF header, the p_flags field stores the access permissions of the code memory (1=execute, 2=write, 4=read). In the tiny header, p_flags overlaps with e_phoff, and e_phoff (the offset of the program header from the beginning of the file) needs to be 4. So, the only option for p_flags is read-only (turns out that the execute bit doesn't matter, and it will be executable anyways). To make the code writable, we have to change p_flags to 7 (6 and 3 also accomplish the same thing because some are implied by others). To do this we can either use a less overlapped header, or we can use the mprotect syscall to change the permissions.

See here for examples of some headers that allow you to change p_flags: http://www.muppetlabs.com/~breadbox/software/tiny/teensy.html

The mprotect method is as follows:

    mov eax,0x7d ; mprotect
    mov ebx,$$ ; start address to change permissions for
    mov ecx,0x1000 ; number of bytes to change
    mov edx,7 ; new permissions
    int 0x80

Getting the screen size

A lot of Linux intros have the screen resolution hard-coded, and some include many executables in the release, each for a different screen resolution. If you have enough space, you can easily get the screen resolution using the ioctl syscall.

    xor eax,eax
    mov al,0x36 ; ioctl
    mov ebx,0   ; ***PUT THE FILE DESCRIPTOR FOR /dev/fb0 HERE***
    xor ecx,ecx
    mov ch,0x46 ; FBIOGET_VSCREENINFO
    mov edx,esp
    int 0x80
    pop eax ; eax = horizontal resolution in pixels
    pop ebx ; ebx = vertical resolution in pixels

For more information about what you can do with ioctl on the framebuffer, see here: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/fb/api.html

Additional Resources

Larger productions (1k and 4k intros)

Creating 1k and 4k intros on linux usually requires a different setup, for more information on this check out the following links: