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RGBLINK(1) General Commands Manual RGBLINK(1) NAME rgblink -- Game Boy linker SYNOPSIS rgblink [-dhMtVvwx] [-B param] [--color when] [-l linker_script] [-m map_file] [-n sym_file] [-O overlay_file] [-o out_file] [-p pad_value] [-S spec] [-W warning] file ... DESCRIPTION The rgblink program links RGB object files, typically created by rgbasm(1), into a single Game Boy ROM file. The object file format is documented in rgbds(5). ROM0 sections are placed in the first 16 KiB of the output ROM, and ROMX sections are placed in any 16 KiB "bank" except the first. If your ROM will only be 32 KiB, you can use the -t option to change this. Similarly, WRAM0 sections are placed in the first 4 KiB of WRAM ("bank 0"), and WRAMX sections are placed in any bank of the last 4 KiB. If your ROM doesn't use banked WRAM, you can use the -w option to change this. Also, if your ROM is designed for a monochrome Game Boy, you can make sure that you don't use any incompatible section by using the -d op- tion, which implies -w but also prohibits the use of banked VRAM. ARGUMENTS rgblink accepts the usual short and long options, such as -V and --version. Options later in the command line override those set ear- lier, except for when duplicate options are considered an error. Op- tions can be abbreviated as long as the abbreviation is unambiguous: --verb is --verbose, but --ver is invalid because it could also be --version. Unless otherwise noted, passing `-' (a single dash) as a file name makes rgblink use standard input (for input files) or standard output (for output files). To suppress this behavior, and open a file in the current directory actually called `-', pass `./-' instead. Using stan- dard input or output for more than one file in a single command may produce unexpected results. rgblink accepts decimal, hexadecimal, octal, and binary for numeric op- tion arguments. Decimal numbers are written as usual; hexadecimal num- bers must be prefixed with either `$' or `0x'; octal numbers must be prefixed with either `&' or `0o'; and binary numbers must be prefixed with either `%' or `0b'. (The prefixes `$' and `&' will likely need escaping or quoting to avoid being interpreted by the shell.) Leading zeros (after the base prefix, if any) are accepted, and letters are not case-sensitive. For example, all of these are equivalent: `42', `042', `0x2A', `0X2A', `0x2a', `&52', `0o52', `0O052', `0b00101010', `0B101010'. The following options are accepted: -B param, --backtrace param Configures how location backtraces are printed if warnings or errors occur. This flag may be specified multiple times with different parameters that combine meaningfully. If param is a positive number, it specifies the maximum backtrace depth, ab- breviating deeper ones. Other valid parameter values are the following: 0 Do not limit the maximum backtrace depth; this is the default. all Force all locations to be printed, even "quiet" ones (see "Excluding locations from backtraces" in rgbasm(5) for details). no-all Do not print "quieted" locations in backtraces; this is the default. collapse Print all locations on one line. no-collapse Print one location per line; this is the default. --color when Specify when to highlight warning and error messages with color: `always', `never', or `auto'. `auto' determines whether to use colors based on the `NO_COLOR: https://no-color.org/' or `FORCE_COLOR: https://force-color.org/' environment variables, or whether the output is to a TTY. -d, --dmg Enable DMG mode. Prohibit the use of sections that doesn't ex- ist on a DMG, such as VRAM bank 1. This option automatically enables -w. -h, --help Print help text for the program and exit. -l linker_script, --linkerscript linker_script Specify a linker script file that tells the linker how sections must be placed in the ROM. The attributes assigned in the linker script must be consistent with any assigned in the code. See rgblink(5) for more information about the linker script format. -M, --no-sym-in-map If specified, the map file will not list symbols, only sec- tions. -m map_file, --map map_file Write a map file to the given filename, listing how sections and symbols were assigned. -n sym_file, --sym sym_file Write a symbol file to the given filename, listing all visible labels and exported numeric constants. Labels output their bank and address, numeric constants output their value, follow- ing this specification: https://rgbds.gbdev.io/sym/. Several external programs can use this information, for example to help debugging ROMs. -O overlay_file, --overlay overlay_file If specified, sections will be overlaid "on top" of the ROM im- age overlay_file: empty space between sections will be filled by the corresponding bytes from overlay_file. This is useful to patch an existing ROM. Note that all sections must be fixed (forced bank and address)! -o out_file, --output out_file Write the ROM image to the given file. -p pad_value, --pad pad_value When inserting padding between sections, pad with this value. The default is 0. -S spec, --scramble spec Enables a different "scrambling" algorithm for placing sec- tions. See "Scrambling algorithm" below for an explanation and a description of spec. -t, --tiny Expand the ROM0 section size from 16 KiB to the full 32 KiB as- signed to ROM. ROMX sections that are fixed to a bank other than 1 become errors, other ROMX sections are treated as ROM0. Useful for ROMs that fit in 32 KiB. -V, --version Print the version of the program and exit. -v, --verbose Be verbose. The verbosity level is increased by one each time the flag is specified, with each level including the previous: 1. Print the rgblink configuration before taking actions. 2. Print a notice before significant actions. 3. Print some of the actions' intermediate results. 4. Print some internal debug information. 5. Print detailed internal information. The verbosity level does not go past 6. Note that verbose output is only intended to be consumed by hu- mans, and may change without notice between RGBDS releases; re- lying on those for scripts is not advised. -W warning, --warning warning Set warning flag warning. A warning message will be printed if warning is an unknown warning flag. See the "DIAGNOSTICS" sec- tion for a list of warnings. -w, --wramx Expand the WRAM0 section size from 4 KiB to the full 8 KiB as- signed to WRAM. WRAMX sections that are fixed to a bank other than 1 become errors, other WRAMX sections are treated as WRAM0. -x, --nopad Disables padding the end of the final file. This option auto- matically enables -t. You can use this to make binary files that are not a ROM. When making a ROM, note that not using this is not a replacement for rgbfix(1)'s -p option! @at_file Read more options and arguments from a file, as if its contents were given on the command line. Arguments are separated by whitespace or newlines. Lines starting with a hash sign (`#') are considered comments and ignored. No shell processing is performed, such as wildcard or variable expansion. There is no support for escaping or quoting white- space to be included in arguments. The standard `--' to stop option processing also disables at-file processing. Note that while `--' can be used inside an at-file, it only disables op- tion processing within that at-file, and processing continues in the parent scope. Scrambling algorithm The default section placement algorithm tries to place sections into as few banks as possible. (It turns out that section placement is an NP- complete problem known as "bin packing", so rgblink does not attempt to find the optimal solution, but instead uses a "first-fit" heuristic to find a good one in a reasonable amount of time. There are no guaran- tees about where this algorithm will place sections, apart from the bank, address, and alignment constraints manually specified for the sections.) "Scrambling" instead places sections into a given pool of banks, trying to minimize the number of sections sharing a given bank. This is use- ful to catch broken bank assumptions, such as expecting two different sections to land in the same bank (that is not guaranteed unless both are manually assigned the same bank number). A scrambling spec is a comma-separated list of region specs. A trail- ing comma is allowed, as well as whitespace between all specs and their components. Each region spec has the following form: region[=size] region must be one of the following (case-insensitive), while size must be a positive decimal integer between 1 and the corresponding maximum. Certain regions allow omitting the size, in which case it defaults to its max value. Region name Ta Max size Ta Size optional romx 65535 No sram 255 No wramx 7 Yes A size of 0 disables scrambling for that region. For example, `romx=64,wramx=4' will scramble ROMX sections among ROM banks 1 to 64, WRAMX sections among RAM banks 1 to 4, and will not scramble SRAM sections. Later region specs override earlier ones; for example, `romx=42, Romx=0' disables scrambling for romx. wramx scrambling is silently ignored if -w is passed (including if im- plied by -d), as WRAMX sections will be treated as WRAM0. DIAGNOSTICS Warnings are diagnostic messages that indicate possibly erroneous be- havior that does not necessarily compromise the linking process. The following options alter the way warnings are processed. -Werror Make all warnings into errors. This can be negated as -Wno-error to prevent turning all warnings into errors. -Werror= Make the specified warning or meta warning into an error. A warning's name is appended (example: -Werror=obsolete), and this warning is implicitly enabled and turned into an error. This can be negated as -Wno-error= to prevent turning a speci- fied warning into an error, even if -Werror is in effect. The following warnings are "meta" warnings, that enable a collection of other warnings. If a specific warning is toggled via a meta flag and a specific one, the more specific one takes priority. The position on the command-line acts as a tie breaker, the last one taking effect. -Wall This enables warnings that are likely to indicate an error or undesired behavior, and that can easily be fixed. -Weverything Enables literally every warning. The following warnings are actual warning flags; with each description, the corresponding warning flag is included. Note that each of these flags also has a negation (for example, -Wobsolete enables the warning that -Wno-obsolete disables; and -Wall enables every warning that -Wno-all disables). Only the non-default flag is listed here. Ignor- ing the "no-" prefix, entries are listed alphabetically. -Wno-assert Warn when WARN-type assertions fail. (See "Aborting the assembly process" in rgbasm(5) for ASSERT). -Wdiv Warn when dividing the smallest negative integer (-2**31) by -1, which yields itself due to integer overflow. This warning is enabled by -Wall. -Wno-obsolete Warn when obsolete features are encountered, which have been deprecated and may later be removed. -Wshift Warn when shifting right a negative value. Use a division by 2**N instead. This warning is enabled by -Wall. -Wshift-amount Warn when a shift's operand is negative or greater than 32. This warning is enabled by -Wall. -Wtruncation= Warn when an implicit truncation (for example, db to an 8-bit value) loses some bits. -Wtruncation=0 or -Wno-truncation dis- ables this warning. -Wtruncation=1 or just -Wtruncation warns when an N-bit value is 2**N or greater, or less than -2**N. -Wtruncation=2 also warns when an N-bit value is less than -2**(N-1), which will not fit in two's complement encoding. EXAMPLES All you need for a basic ROM is an object file, which can be made into a ROM image like so: $ rgblink -o bar.gb foo.o The resulting bar.gb will not have correct checksums (unless you put them in the assembly source). You should use rgbfix(1) to fix these so that the program will actually run in a Game Boy: $ rgbfix -v bar.gb Here is a more complete example: $ rgblink -o bin/game.gb -n bin/game.sym -p 0xFF obj/title.o obj/engine.o BUGS Please report bugs or mistakes in this documentation on GitHub: https://github.com/gbdev/rgbds/issues. SEE ALSO rgbasm(1), rgblink(5), rgbfix(1), rgbgfx(1), gbz80(7), rgbds(5), rgbds(7) HISTORY rgblink was originally written by Carsten Sorensen as part of the ASMo- tor package, and was later repackaged in RGBDS by Justin Lloyd. It is now maintained by a number of contributors at https://github.com/gbdev/rgbds. FreeBSD ports 15.0 October 31, 2025 RGBLINK(1)
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | ARGUMENTS | DIAGNOSTICS | EXAMPLES | BUGS | SEE ALSO | HISTORY
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