Difference between revisions of "REL (File Format)"
Line 144: | Line 144: | ||
| 0x3.6 | | 0x3.6 | ||
| 1 bit | | 1 bit | ||
− | | | + | | 1 means the file contains debug info |
|- | |- | ||
| 0x3.7 | | 0x3.7 |
Revision as of 21:27, 16 January 2019
REL files are relocatable object files used by Nintendo. Mario Kart Wii features one such file: StaticR.rel. In general these files allow extra code to be loaded as needed by games, especially when the memory footprint becomes a concern. In Mario Kart, the REL code contains much of the Mario Kart specific logic, such as gameplay, and, once loaded during the health and safety screen, remains loaded for the entire run of the application. Information about specific alteration that can be made to the Mario Kart Wii file can be found here.
File Format
Like many object formats, the file is divided into sections, grouped by like access. For example, all executable code is placed in one section, read only data in another, etc. The file begins with a header, followed by the section info table, followed by the section data, followed by the relocation information.
File Header
The file begins with a header of up to 0x4C bytes:
Offset | Size | Field Name | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0x00 | 4 | id
|
Arbitrary identification number. Must be unique amongst all RELs used by a game. Must not be 0. |
0x04 | 4 | Next module | Pointer to next module, filled at runtime. |
0x08 | 4 | Previous module | Pointer to previous module, filled at runtime. |
0x0c | 4 | numSections
|
Number of sections in the file. |
0x10 | 4 | sectionInfoOffset
|
Offset to the start of the section table. |
0x14 | 4 | nameOffset
|
Offset to ASCII string containing name of module. May be NULL. Relative to start of REL file. |
0x18 | 4 | nameSize
|
Size of the module name in bytes. |
0x1c | 4 | version
|
Version number of the REL file format. |
0x20 | 4 | bssSize
|
Size of the '.bss ' section.
|
0x24 | 4 | relOffset
|
Offset to the relocation table. |
0x28 | 4 | impOffset
|
Offset to imp table. |
0x2c | 4 | impSize
|
Size of imp table in bytes. |
0x30 | 1 | prologSection
|
Index into section table which prolog is relative to. Skip if this field is 0.
|
0x31 | 1 | epilogSection
|
Index into section table which epilog is relative to. Skip if this field is 0.
|
0x32 | 1 | unresolvedSection
|
Index into section table which unresolved is relative to. Skip if this field is 0.
|
0x33 | 1 | bssSection
|
Index into section table which bss is relative to. Filled at runtime!
|
0x34 | 4 | prolog
|
Offset into specified section of the _prolog function.
|
0x38 | 4 | epilog
|
Offset into specified section of the _epilog function.
|
0x3c | 4 | unresolved
|
Offset into specified section of the _unresolved function.
|
0x40 | 4 | align
|
Version ≥ 2 only. Alignment constraint on all sections, expressed as power of 2. |
0x44 | 4 | bssAlign
|
Version ≥ 2 only. Alignment constraint on all '.bss ' section, expressed as power of 2.
|
0x48 | 4 | fixSize
|
Version ≥ 3 only. If REL is linked with OSLinkFixed (instead of OSLink), the space after this address can be used for other purposes (like BSS). |
0x4c or 0x48 or 0x40 | End of header |
Section Info Table
The section info table comprises of numSections entries each 0x8 bytes long, of the following form:
Offset | Size | Description |
---|---|---|
0x0 | 30 bits | Offset from the beginning of the REL to the section. If this is zero, the section is an uninitialized section (i.e. .bss ).
|
0x3.6 | 1 bit | 1 means the file contains debug info |
0x3.7 | 1 bit | Executable flag; if this is 1 the section is executable. |
0x4 | 4 | Length in bytes of the section. If this is zero, this entry is skipped. |
0x8 | Next entry |
imp
The imp acts as a directory for the relocation information. It controls which entries in the relocation table refer to. Each entry has the form:
Offset | Size | Description |
---|---|---|
0x0 | 4 | Module number (id ) that these relocations refer to. 0 means these refer to main.dol instead.
|
0x4 | 4 | Offset from the beginning of the REL to the relocation data. |
0x8 | Next entry |
Relocation Data
The relocation data seems to be heavily based on the ELF relocation format. It is one or more lists of 0x8 byte structures, and must be parsed in order. The imp table gives the start of each list. The end of each list is marked by the special type code 203. Each entry has the form:
Offset | Size | Description |
---|---|---|
0x0 | 2 | Offset in bytes from the previous relocation to this one. If this is the first relocation in the section, this is relative to the section start. |
0x2 | 1 | The relocation type. Described below. |
0x3 | 1 | The section of the symbol to relocate against. For the special relocation type 202, this is instead the number of the section in this file which the following relocation entries apply to. |
0x4 | 4 | Offset in bytes of the symbol to relocate against, relative to the start of its section. This is an absolute address instead for relocations against main.dol. |
0x8 | Next entry |
The following relocation types are known[1]:
Type | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
0 | R_PPC_NONE | Do nothing. Skip this entry. |
1 | R_PPC_ADDR32 | Write the 32 bit address of the symbol. |
2 | R_PPC_ADDR24 | Write the 24 bit address of the symbol divided by four shifted up 2 bits to the 32 bit value (for relocating branch instructions). Fail if address won't fit. |
3 | R_PPC_ADDR16 | Write the 16 bit address of the symbol. Fail if address more than 16 bits. |
4 | R_PPC_ADDR16_LO | Write the low 16 bits of the address of the symbol. |
5 | R_PPC_ADDR16_HI | Write the high 16 bits of the address of the symbol. |
6 | R_PPC_ADDR16_HA | Write the high 16 bits of the address of the symbol plus 0x8000. |
7 - 9 | R_PPC_ADDR14 | Write the 14 bits of the address of the symbol divided by four shifted up 2 bits to the 32 bit value (for relocating conditional branch instructions). Fail if address won't fit. |
10 | R_PPC_REL24 | Write the 24 bit address of the symbol minus the address of the relocation divided by four shifted up 2 bits to the 32 bit value (for relocating relative branch instructions). Fail if address won't fit. |
11 - 13 | R_PPC_REL14 | Write the 14 bit address of the symbol minus the address of the relocation divided by four shifted up 2 bits to the 32 bit value (for relocating conditional relative branch instructions). Fail if address won't fit. |
14 | Unknown | Undefined, handled like 203 R_RVL_STOP by newer Nintendo SDKs. Unsupported by Mario Kart Wii. |
201 | R_RVL_NONE R_DOLPHIN_NOP |
Do nothing. Skip this entry. Carry the address of the symbol to the next entry. |
202 | R_RVL_SECT R_DOLPHIN_SECTION |
Change which section relocations are being applied to. Set the offset into the section to 0. |
203 | R_RVL_STOP R_DOLPHIN_END |
Stop parsing the relocation table. |
204 | R_DOLPHIN_MRKREF | Unknown. Unsupported by Mario Kart Wii. |
The loader walks this table obeying each command until it encounters R_RVL_STOP. When relocation against a REL file (including against this file itself), the symbol address is calculated by taking the load address of the section section and adding the offset address. For relocation again main.dol, the symbol address is just address with no adjustment.
Tools
The following tools can handle REL files:
- BrawlBox, by Kryal & BlackJax
- wstrt (see Wiimms SZS Tools) is able to patch data in the Mario Kart Wii file StaticR.rel.
- StaticR.rel Tool, by Atlas, can edit the region number, plus HUD, region line, Mii suit and layout button colors from the same file.