CODE Module Definition Statement (OS/2)

Syntax: Parameters:
CODEattributes CONFORMING|NONCONFORMING
EXECUTEONLY|EXECUTEREAD
IOPL|NOIOPL

Use the CODE statement to define default attributes for code segments within the executable you are creating. You can override the default attributes with the SEGMENTS statement, or the /SECTION option, which define attributes for specific segments.

Attribute Rules

Parameters

CONFORMING|NONCONFORMING
The default is NONCONFORMING.
Specify whether a code segment is a 286- conforming segment. These attributes are relevant for device drivers, or system-level code, and apply to code segments only.

CONFORMING uses a range of instructions that can be executed by a 286 (16-bit) processor. A CONFORMING segment can be called from either Ring 2 or Ring 3, and executes at the privilege level of the caller.

NONCONFORMING uses instructions that require a 386 processor or higher. The segment is not guaranteed to be executable by a 286 processor.

EXECUTEONLY|EXECUTEREAD
The default is EXECUTEREAD.
 
Specify whether a code segment can be read as well as executed. These attributes apply to code segments only.

EXECUTEONLY specifies that the segment can only be executed.
EXECUTEREAD specifies that the segment can be both executed and read.

IOPL|NOIOPL
The default is NOIOPL.
Use these attributes to determine whether a segment has I/O privilege , that is, whether it can access the hardware directly.

IOPL specifies that the segment has I/O privilege.
NOIOPL specifies that the segment does not have I/O privilege.

Note: 32-bit segments must be NOIOPL. You cannot specify a 32-bit segment as IOPL.


Summary of Module Definition Statements