376 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			14 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Text
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			376 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			14 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Text
		
	
	
	
	
	
| .SN 8
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| .VS 1 0
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| .BP
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| .S1 "ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS"
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| EM programs can interact with their environment in three ways.
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| Two, starting/stopping and monitor calls, are dealt with in this chapter.
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| The remaining way to interact, interrupts, will be treated
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| together with traps in chapter 9.
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| .S2 "Program starting and stopping"
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| EM user programs start with a call to a procedure called
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| m_a_i_n.
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| The assembler and backends look for the definition of a procedure
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| with this name in their input.
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| The call passes three parameters to the procedure.
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| The parameters are similar to the parameters supplied by the
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| UNIX
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| .FS
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| UNIX is a Trademark of Bell Laboratories.
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| .FE
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| operating system to C programs.
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| These parameters are often called
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| .BW argc ,
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| .B argv
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| and
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| .BW envp .
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| Argc is the parameter nearest to LB and is a wordsized integer.
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| The other two are pointers to the first element of an array of
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| string pointers.
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| .N
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| The
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| .B argv
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| array contains
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| .B argc
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| strings, the first of which contains the program call name.
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| The other strings in the
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| .B argv
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| array are the program parameters.
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| .P
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| The
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| .B envp
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| array contains strings in the form "name=string", where 'name'
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| is the name of an environment variable and string its value.
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| The
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| .B envp
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| is terminated by a zero pointer.
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| .P
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| An EM user program stops if the program returns from the first
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| invocation of m_a_i_n.
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| The contents of the function return area are used to procure a
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| wordsized program return code.
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| EM programs also stop when traps and interrupts occur that are
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| not caught and when the exit monitor call is executed.
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| .S2 "Input/Output and other monitor calls"
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| EM differs from most conventional machines in that it has high level i/o
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| instructions.
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| Typical instructions are OPEN FILE and READ FROM FILE instead
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| of low level instructions such as setting and clearing
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| bits in device registers.
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| By providing such high level i/o primitives, the task of implementing
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| EM on various non EM machines is made considerably easier.
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| .P
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| I/O is initiated by the MON instruction, which expects an iocode on top
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| of the stack.
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| Often there are also parameters which are pushed on the
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| stack in reverse order, that is: last
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| parameter first.
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| Some i/o functions also provide results, which are returned on the stack.
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| In the list of monitor calls we use several types of parameters and results,
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| these types consist of integers and unsigneds of varying sizes, but never
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| smaller than the wordsize, and the two pointer types.
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| .N 1
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| The names of the types used are:
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| .IS 4
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| .PS - 10
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| .PT int
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| an integer of wordsize
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| .PT int2
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| an integer whose size is the maximum of the wordsize and 2
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| bytes
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| .PT int4
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| an integer whose size is the maximum of the wordsize and 4
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| bytes
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| .PT intp
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| an integer with the size of a pointer
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| .PT uns2
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| an unsigned integer whose size is the maximum of the wordsize and 2
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| .PT unsp
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| an unsigned integer with the size of a pointer
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| .PT ptr
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| a pointer into data space
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| .PE 1
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| .IE 0
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| The table below lists the i/o codes with their results and
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| parameters.
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| This list is similar to the system calls of the UNIX Version 7
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| operating system.
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| .BP
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| .A
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| To execute a monitor call, proceed as follows:
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| .IS 2
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| .N 1
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| .PS a 4 "" )
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| .PT
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| Stack the parameters, in reverse order, last parameter first.
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| .PT
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| Push the monitor call number (iocode) onto the stack.
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| .PT
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| Execute the MON instruction.
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| .PE 1
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| .IE
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| An error code is present on the top of the stack after
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| execution of most monitor calls.
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| If this error code is zero, the call performed the action
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| requested and the results are available on top of the stack.
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| Non-zero error codes indicate a failure, in this case no
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| results are available and the error code has been pushed twice.
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| This construction enables programs to test for failure with a
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| single instruction (~TEQ or TNE~) and still find out the cause of
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| the failure.
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| The result name 'e' is reserved for the error code.
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| .N 1
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| List of monitor calls.
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| .DS B
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| number name    parameters      results           function
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| 
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|    1   Exit    status:int                        Terminate this process
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|    2   Fork                    e,flag,pid:int    Spawn new process
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|    3   Read    fildes:int;buf:ptr;nbytes:unsp
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|                                e:int;rbytes:unsp Read from file
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|    4   Write   fildes:int;buf:ptr;nbytes:unsp
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|                                e:int;wbytes:unsp Write on a file
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|    5   Open    string:ptr;flag:int
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|                                e,fildes:int      Open file for read and/or write
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|    6   Close   fildes:int      e:int             Close a file
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|    7   Wait                    e:int;status,pid:int2
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|                                                  Wait for child
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|    8   Creat   string:ptr;mode:int
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|                                e,fildes:int      Create a new file
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|    9   Link    string1,string2:ptr
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|                                e:int             Link to a file
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|   10   Unlink  string:ptr      e:int             Remove directory entry
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|   12   Chdir   string:ptr      e:int             Change default directory
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|   14   Mknod   string:ptr;mode,addr:int2
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|                                e:int             Make a special file
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|   15   Chmod   string:ptr;mode:int2
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|                                e:int             Change mode of file
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|   16   Chown   string:ptr;owner,group:int2
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|                                e:int             Change owner/group of a file
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|   18   Stat    string,statbuf:ptr
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|                                e:int             Get file status
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|   19   Lseek   fildes:int;off:int4;whence:int
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|                                e:int;oldoff:int4 Move read/write pointer
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|   20   Getpid                  pid:int2          Get process identification
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|   21   Mount   special,string:ptr;rwflag:int
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|                                e:int             Mount file system
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|   22   Umount  special:ptr     e:int             Unmount file system
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|   23   Setuid  userid:int2     e:int             Set user ID
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|   24   Getuid                  e_uid,r_uid:int2  Get user ID
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|   25   Stime   time:int4       e:int             Set time and date
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|   26   Ptrace  request:int;pid:int2;addr:ptr;data:int
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|                                e,value:int       Process trace
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|   27   Alarm   seconds:uns2    previous:uns2     Schedule signal
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|   28   Fstat   fildes:int;statbuf:ptr
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|                                e:int             Get file status
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|   29   Pause                                     Stop until signal
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|   30   Utime   string,timep:ptr
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|                                e:int             Set file times
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|   33   Access  string,mode:int e:int             Determine file accessibility
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|   34   Nice    incr:int                          Set program priority
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|   35   Ftime   bufp:ptr        e:int             Get date and time
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|   36   Sync                                      Update filesystem
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|   37   Kill    pid:int2;sig:int
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|                                e:int             Send signal to a process
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|   41   Dup     fildes,newfildes:int
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|                                e,fildes:int      Duplicate a file descriptor
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|   42   Pipe                    e,w_des,r_des:int Create a pipe
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|   43   Times   buffer:ptr                        Get process times
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|   44   Profil  buff:ptr;bufsiz,offset,scale:intp Execution time profile
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|   46   Setgid  gid:int2        e:int             Set group ID
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|   47   Getgid                  e_gid,r_gid:int   Get group ID
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|   48   Sigtrp  trapno,signo:int
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|                                e,prevtrap:int    See below
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|   51   Acct    file:ptr        e:int             Turn accounting on or off
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|   53   Lock    flag:int        e:int             Lock a process
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|   54   Ioctl   fildes,request:int;argp:ptr
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|                                e:int             Control device
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|   56   Mpxcall cmd:int;vec:ptr e:int             Multiplexed file handling
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|   59   Exece   name,argv,envp:ptr
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|                                e:int             Execute a file
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|   60   Umask   complmode:int2  oldmask:int2      Set file creation mode mask
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|   61   Chroot  string:ptr      e:int             Change root directory
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| .DE 1
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| Codes 0, 11, 13, 17, 31, 32, 38, 39, 40, 45, 49, 50, 52,
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| 55, 57, 58, 62, and 63 are
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| not used.
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| .P
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| All monitor calls, except fork and sigtrp
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| are the same as the UNIX version 7 system calls.
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| .P
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| The sigtrp entry maps UNIX signals onto EM interrupts.
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| Normally, trapno is in the range 0 to 252.
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| In that case it requests that signal signo
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| will cause trap trapno to occur.
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| When given trap number -2, default signal handling is reset, and when given
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| trap number -3, the signal is ignored.
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| .P
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| The flag returned by fork is 1 in the child process and 0 in
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| the parent.
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| The pid returned is the process-id of the other process.
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| .BP
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| .S1 "TRAPS AND INTERRUPTS"
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| EM provides a means for the user program to catch all traps
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| generated by the program itself, the hardware, or external conditions.
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| This mechanism uses five instructions: LIM, SIM, SIG, TRP and RTT.
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| This section of the manual may be omitted on the first reading since it
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| presupposes knowledge of the EM instruction set.
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| .P
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| The action taken when a trap occures is determined by the value
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| of an internal EM trap register.
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| This register contains a pointer to a procedure.
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| Initially the pointer used is zero and all traps halt the
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| program with, hopefully, a useful message to the outside world.
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| The SIG instruction can be used to alter the trap register,
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| it pops a procedure pointer from the
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| stack into the trap register.
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| When a trap occurs after storing a nonzero value in the trap
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| register, the procedure pointed to by the trap register
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| is called with the trap number
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| as the only parameter (see below).
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| SIG returns the previous value of the trap register on the
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| stack.
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| Two consecutive SIGs are a no-op.
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| When a trap occurs, the trap register is reset to its initial
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| condition, to prevent recursive traps from hanging the machine up,
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| e.g. stack overflow in the stack overflow handling procedure.
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| .P
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| The runtime systems for some languages need to ignore some EM
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| traps.
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| EM offers a feature called the ignore mask.
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| It contains one bit for each of the lowest 16 trap numbers.
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| The bits are numbered 0 to 15, with the least significant bit
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| having number 0.
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| If a certain bit is 1 the corresponding trap never
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| occurs and processing simply continues.
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| The actions performed by the offending instruction are
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| described by the Pascal program in appendix A.
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| .N
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| If the bit is 0, traps are not ignored.
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| The instructions LIM and SIM allow copying and replacement of
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| the ignore mask.~
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| .P
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| The TRP instruction generates a trap, the trap number being found on the
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| stack.
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| This is, among other things,
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| useful for library procedures and runtime systems.
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| It can also be used by a low level trap procedure to pass the trap to a
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| higher level one (see example below).
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| .P
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| The RTT instruction returns from the trap procedure and continues after the
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| trap.
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| In the list below all traps marked with an asterisk ('*') are
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| considered to be fatal and it is explicitly undefined what happens if
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| you try to restart after the trap.
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| .P
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| The way a trap procedure is called is completely compatible
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| with normal calling conventions. The only way a trap procedure
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| differs from normal procedures is the return. It has to use RTT instead
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| of RET. This is necessary because the complete runtime status is saved on the
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| stack before calling the procedure and all this status has to be reloaded.
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| Error numbers are in the range 0 to 252.
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| The trap numbers are divided into three categories:
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| .IS 4
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| .N 1
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| .PS - 10
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| .PT ~~0-~63
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| EM machine errors, e.g. illegal instruction.
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| .PS - 8
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| .PT ~0-15
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| maskable
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| .PT 16-63
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| not maskable
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| .PE
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| .PT ~64-127
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| Reserved for use by compilers, run time systems, etc.
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| .PT 128-252
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| Available for user programs.
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| .PE 1
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| .IE
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| EM machine errors are numbered as follows:
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| .DS I 5
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| .TS
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| tab(@);
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| n l l.
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| 0@EARRAY@Array bound error
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| 1@ERANGE@Range bound error
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| 2@ESET@Set bound error
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| 3@EIOVFL@Integer overflow
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| 4@EFOVFL@Floating overflow
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| 5@EFUNFL@Floating underflow
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| 6@EIDIVZ@Divide by 0
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| 7@EFDIVZ@Divide by 0.0
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| 8@EIUND@Undefined integer
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| 9@EFUND@Undefined float
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| 10@ECONV@Conversion error
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| 16*@ESTACK@Stack overflow
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| 17*@EHEAP@Heap overflow
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| 18*@EILLINS@Illegal instruction
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| 19*@EODDZ@Illegal size argument
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| 20*@ECASE@Case error
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| 21*@EMEMFLT@Addressing non existent memory
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| 22*@EBADPTR@Bad pointer used
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| 23*@EBADPC@Program counter out of range
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| 24@EBADLAE@Bad argument of LAE
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| 25@EBADMON@Bad monitor call
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| 26@EBADLIN@Argument of LIN too high
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| 27@EBADGTO@GTO descriptor error
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| .TE
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| .DE 0
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| .P
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| As an example,
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| suppose a subprocedure has to be written to do a numeric
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| calculation.
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| When an overflow occurs the computation has to be stopped and
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| the higher level procedure must be resumed.
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| This can be programmed as follows using the mechanism described above:
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| .DS B
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|  mes 2,2,2              ; set sizes
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| ersave
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|  bss 2,0,0              ; Room to save previous value of trap procedure
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| msave
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|  bss 2,0,0              ; Room to save previous value of trap mask
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| 
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|  pro calcule,0          ; entry point
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|  lxl 0                  ; fill in non-local goto descriptor with LB
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|  ste jmpbuf+4
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|  lor 1                  ; and SP
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|  ste jmpbuf+2
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|  lim                    ; get current ignore mask
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|  ste msave              ; save it
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|  lim
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|  loc 4                  ; bit for EFOVFL
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|  ior 2                  ; set in mask
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|  sim                    ; ignore EFOVFL from now on
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|  lpi $catch             ; load procedure identifier
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|  sig                    ; catch wil get all traps now
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|  ste ersave             ; save previous trap procedure identifier
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| ; perform calculation now, possibly generating overflow
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| 1                       ; label jumped to by catch procedure
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|  loe ersave             ; get old trap procedure
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|  sig                    ; refer all following trap to old procedure
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|  asp 2                  ; remove result of sig
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|  loe msave              ; restore previous mask
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|  sim                    ; done now
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| ; load result of calculation
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|  ret 2                  ; return result
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| jmpbuf
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|  con *1,0,0
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|  end
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| .DE 0
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| .VS 1 1
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| .DS
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| Example of catch procedure
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|  pro catch,0            ; Local procedure that must catch the overflow trap
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|  lol 2                  ; Load trap number
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|  loc 4                  ; check for overflow
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|  bne *1                 ; if other trap, call higher trap procedure
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|  gto jmpbuf             ; return to procedure calcule
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| 1                       ; other trap has occurred
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|  loe ersave             ; previous trap procedure
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|  sig                    ; other procedure will get the traps now
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|  asp 2                  ; remove the result of sig
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|  lol 2                  ; stack trap number
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|  trp                    ; call other trap procedure
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|  rtt                    ; if other procedure returns, do the same
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|  end
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| .DE
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