Firstly, if you are looking to interface with other languages or libraries on your platform, be sure to read the defined interface for that platform. There are a variety of calling mechanisms that might be used.
In your case, the call
instruction is pushing the return address onto the stack. You can access your parameter by using some arithmetic and esp
. I will assume 32 bit code (and a 32 bit stack width) since you are using eax
. I'm using intel syntax since I can write that without looking anything up:
my_function:
mov eax, [esp+4] ; Move the contents of ESP+4 into EAX
; ESP should be pointing at the 32 bit RIP.
; ESP+4 should be the pushed parameter.
...
ret
main:
push 0x08
call my_function
In your comments you ask, regarding this answer, if this represents a memory leak. The answer is "No." The reason is that the caller is responsible to clean up anything that it adds to the stack. A more complete example based on the other comments that have been written might look like this:
my_function:
push ebp ; Store the current stack frame
mov ebp, esp ; Preserve ESP into EBP for argument references
and esp, 0xfffffff0; Align the stack to allow library calls
mov eax, [ebp+8] ; Move the contents of EBP+8 into EAX
; [EBP] should be the saved 32 bit EBP.
; [EBP+4] should be the 32 bit EIP (return address).
; [EBP+8] should be the pushed parameter.
... ; Do lots of cool stuff
mov esp, ebp ; Restore the stack and ebp
pop ebp
ret
main:
push 0x08
call my_function
pop ebx ; Clean up the stack
Notice that when we align the stack (if you're not sure why this is happening, you will quickly find it when you research the calling standard for your platform) to a 16 byte boundary, we don't even try to figure out how much esp
has changed. Since ebp
will act as a "bookmark" for us, we can let esp
move for alignment or perhaps local variable allocation without another thought.
In the function epilogue we move ebp
back into esp
, which restores esp
to its original value when the function was called, thus cleaning up any local allocations and alignment operations that have happened. Finally, we pop ebp
off of the stack, leaving the return address pointer as the final value on the stack within the function. We now return.
After returning we clean up with a pop.
Alternatively, it is possible to clean up the stack with a return specifying the number of bytes to free on the stack (eg ret 4
). It all depends on whether your calling standard specifies caller cleanup or callee cleanup.
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