kmips is a MIPS assembler that is invoked directly from Kotlin code. It implements MIPS II instruction set, including FPU (coprocessor 1) instructions. The main purpose of kmips is to provide simple way of writing code patches for compiled executables. It was successfully used in few fan translations and game modding projects.
kmips is available from the Maven Central repository:
implementation "com.kotcrab.kmips:kmips:1.7"
Assemble some instruction to fill 32 bytes of memory at address 0x08804100 with incrementing value
import kmips.Label
import kmips.Reg.*
import kmips.assemble
assemble(startPc = 0x8804000) {
val loop = Label()
val target = 0x08804100
val bytes = 32
la(s0, target) // write target address
li(t1, 0) // loop counter
li(t2, bytes) // how many bytes to write
label(loop) // 'loop' label will be placed here
sb(t1, 0, s0) // store byte in memory at register s0 with offset 0
addiu(t1, t1, 1) // increment loop counter
addiu(s0, s0, 1) // increment memory address pointer
bne(t1, t2, loop) // jump to `loop` branch if not equal
nop() // ignoring branch delay slot for example simplicity
}
Result of running the assembled code:
0x08804100: 00 01 02 03 | 04 05 06 07 | 08 09 0A 0B | 0C 0D 0E 0F
0x08804110: 10 11 12 13 | 14 15 16 17 | 18 19 1A 1B | 1C 1D 1E 1F
Specifying startPc
(initial program counter) is necessary for calculating address of branch and jump instructions.
Alternatively to assemble
which returns a List<Int>
you can also use assembleAsHexString
or
assembleAsByteArray
. In any case, the result is ready to be written into the target executable. If you're executable is
relocatable you might also need to manually update relocation table.