Difference between revisions of "Assembler:Commands:JMP"

From Cheat Engine
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with ''''command''' jmp ''mnemonic'' ''operand'' Jumps to the given operand (address). === Command Parameters === {|width="85%" cellpadding="10%" cellpadding="5%" cellspacing="0" bor…')
 
(Examples)
 
(14 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''command''' jmp ''mnemonic'' ''operand''
+
[[Category:Assembler]]
 +
'''command''' jmp ''size'' ''operand''
  
 
Jumps to the given operand (address).
 
Jumps to the given operand (address).
 +
 +
 +
<div style="padding:2px;border:1px dashed #2f6fab;background-color:#f4f4f4;">
 +
Transfers program control to a different point in the instruction stream without recording return information.
 +
The destination (target) operand specifies the address of the instruction being jumped to.
 +
This operand can be an immediate value, a general-purpose register, or a memory location.
 +
 +
This instruction can be used to execute four different types of jumps:
 +
; Near jump
 +
: A jump to an instruction within the current code segment (the segment currently pointed to by the CS register), sometimes referred to as an intrasegment jump.
 +
; Short jump
 +
: A near jump where the jump range is limited to -128 to +127 from the current EIP value.
 +
; Far jump
 +
: A jump to an instruction located in a different segment than the current code segment but at the same privilege level, sometimes referred to as an intersegment jump.
 +
; Task switch
 +
: A jump to an instruction located in a different task.
 +
 +
[http://c9x.me/x86/html/file_module_x86_id_147.html c9x.me/x86/html/file_module_x86_id_147.html]
 +
</div>
 +
  
 
=== Command Parameters ===
 
=== Command Parameters ===
Line 8: Line 29:
 
!style="width: 80%;background-color:white;" align="left"|Description
 
!style="width: 80%;background-color:white;" align="left"|Description
 
|-
 
|-
|mnemonic '''OPTIONAL'''
+
|size '''OPTIONAL'''
 
|The preferred size of the assembled address
 
|The preferred size of the assembled address
 
|-
 
|-
Line 35: Line 56:
 
  jmp long someLabel  // Jump to label with full address.
 
  jmp long someLabel  // Jump to label with full address.
  
jmp @b  // Jump back to closest anonymous label (''@@:'').
 
  
  jmp @f  // Jump forward to closest anonymous label (''@@:'').
+
 
 +
Running this script in 32 bit mode:
 +
globalAlloc(memTest, 0x200)
 +
  memTest:
 +
                          add [eax],al // db 00 00
 +
                          add [eax],al
 +
jmp short -4
 +
jmp short +2
 +
                          add [eax],al
 +
testLbl:
 +
                          add [eax],al
 +
jmp 02EA0002
 +
                          add [eax],al
 +
jmp eax
 +
                          add [eax],al
 +
jmp memTest
 +
                          add [eax],al
 +
jmp testLbl
 +
                          add [eax],al
 +
jmp short testLbl
 +
                          add [eax],al
 +
jmp long testLbl
 +
                          add [eax],al
 +
db 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90
 +
 
 +
[[File:Assembler.JMP.02.png]]
  
  
 
Running this script in 64 bit mode:
 
Running this script in 64 bit mode:
 
  globalAlloc(memTest, 0x200)
 
  globalAlloc(memTest, 0x200)
label(testLbl)
 
 
  memTest:
 
  memTest:
 
                           add [rax],al // db 00 00
 
                           add [rax],al // db 00 00
@@:
 
                          add [rax],al
 
jmp short @b
 
jmp short @f
 
                          add [rax],al
 
@@:
 
 
                           add [rax],al
 
                           add [rax],al
 
                           add [rax],al
 
                           add [rax],al
Line 74: Line 112:
 
[[File:Assembler.JMP.01.png]]
 
[[File:Assembler.JMP.01.png]]
  
== See also ==
 
* [[Assembler]]
 
* [[Cheat_Engine:Auto Assembler|Auto Assembler]]
 
* [[Assembler:Commands|Assembler Commands]]
 
  
== External links ==
+
{{AssemblerCommandSeeAlso}}
* [https://wikipedia.org/wiki/X86_instruction_listings wikipedia.org/wiki/X86_instruction_listings]
+
 
* [http://www.asmpedia.org/index.php?title=Main_Page asmpedia.org]
+
{{Template:AssemblerCommandExternalLinks}}

Latest revision as of 19:22, 1 September 2019

command jmp size operand

Jumps to the given operand (address).


Transfers program control to a different point in the instruction stream without recording return information. The destination (target) operand specifies the address of the instruction being jumped to. This operand can be an immediate value, a general-purpose register, or a memory location.

This instruction can be used to execute four different types of jumps:

Near jump
A jump to an instruction within the current code segment (the segment currently pointed to by the CS register), sometimes referred to as an intrasegment jump.
Short jump
A near jump where the jump range is limited to -128 to +127 from the current EIP value.
Far jump
A jump to an instruction located in a different segment than the current code segment but at the same privilege level, sometimes referred to as an intersegment jump.
Task switch
A jump to an instruction located in a different task.

c9x.me/x86/html/file_module_x86_id_147.html


Command Parameters[edit]

Parameter Description
size OPTIONAL The preferred size of the assembled address
operand The address or symbol to jump to


Examples[edit]

jmp +1A   // Jump from end of command to +1A (hex).
jmp 00123ABC   // Jump to address.
jmp 0000123456ABCDEF   // Jump to address.
jmp eax   // Jump to value of eax.
jmp rax   // Jump to value of rax.
jmp someSymbol   // Jump to user defined symbol.
jmp someLabel   // Jump to label.
jmp short someLabel   // Jump to label with short byte code.
jmp long someLabel   // Jump to label with full address.


Running this script in 32 bit mode:

globalAlloc(memTest, 0x200)
memTest:
                          add [eax],al // db 00 00
                          add [eax],al
jmp short -4
jmp short +2
                          add [eax],al
testLbl:
                          add [eax],al
jmp 02EA0002
                          add [eax],al
jmp eax
                          add [eax],al
jmp memTest
                          add [eax],al
jmp testLbl
                          add [eax],al
jmp short testLbl
                          add [eax],al
jmp long testLbl
                          add [eax],al
db 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90

Assembler.JMP.02.png


Running this script in 64 bit mode:

globalAlloc(memTest, 0x200)
memTest:
                          add [rax],al // db 00 00
                          add [rax],al
                          add [rax],al
jmp short -4
jmp short +2
                          add [rax],al
testLbl:
                          add [rax],al
jmp 01160002
                          add [rax],al
jmp rax
                          add [rax],al
jmp memTest
                          add [rax],al
jmp testLbl
                          add [rax],al
jmp short testLbl
                          add [rax],al
jmp long testLbl
                          add [rax],al
db 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 90

Assembler.JMP.01.png


See also[edit]

External links[edit]