a.out is a file format used in older versions of Unix-like computer operating systems for executables, object code, and, in later systems, shared libraries. This is an abbreviated form of "assembler output", the filename of the output of Ken Thompson's PDP-7 assembler.[1] The term was subsequently applied to the format of the resulting file to contrast with other formats for object code.
"a.out" remains the default output file name for executables created by certain compilers and linkers when no output name is specified, even though the created files actually are not in the a.out format, but often in ELF.[2]
Support for the a.out format was deprecated in Linux kernel version 5.1, and support for the format was removed across the 5.18 and 5.19 kernel releases.[3][4][5]
An a.out format for the PDP-7, similar to the a.out format used on the PDP-11, appeared in the first edition of UNIX.[6]
It was superseded by the COFF format in AT&T Unix System V, which was in turn superseded by the ELF format in System V Release 4. a.out files are identified by the magic numbers with octal codes 0407, 0410 or 0413.[7]
MINIX 3 switched to ELF in the 3.2.0 release of February 2012.
Linux also used a.out only until kernel 1.2 (Mar. 1995), when it was superseded by ELF for that platform as well.[8] ELF support was added in the experimental 1.1.52 kernel. Linux's transition to ELF was more or less forced due to the complex nature of building a.out shared libraries on that platform, which included the need to register the virtual address space at which the library was located with a central authority, as the a.out ld.so in Linux was unable to relocate shared libraries.[9]
Because modern compiler toolchains did not produce a.out files, and facilities for the format were suffering from bit rot, the a.out file format on Linux was deprecated with the release of the kernel version 5.1. Support for the format was removed from the DEC Alpha and Motorola 68000 architectures, which were the last architectures that used it, in version 5.18. Support for a.out in the x86 architecture was removed completely in version 5.19.[3][10][4][11][5][12]
Though Berkeley Unix continued using the a.out format for some time, modern BSD systems have since switched to ELF. NetBSD/i386 switched formally from a.out to ELF in its 1.5 release in December 2000. FreeBSD/i386 switched to ELF as a standard format during the 2.2 to 3.0 transition in 1998, however support for a.out remained in the system.[13] The various BSD flavors were able to continue using a.out binaries long after Linux was forced to switch to ELF, due to the somewhat more flexible nature of the BSD a.out format compared to that of Linux.[14][15]
Debugging
The a.out support for debug information is done through the use of special entries in the symbol table called stabs. The stabs format has also been used in many COFF and ELF variations.
↑(Ritchie 1993): "Thompson's PDP-7 assembler outdid even DEC's in simplicity; it evaluated expressions and emitted the corresponding bits. There were no libraries, no loader or link editor: the entire source of a program was presented to the assembler, and the output file—with a fixed name—that emerged was directly executable. (This name, a.out, explains a bit of Unix etymology; it is the output of the assembler. Even after the system gained a linker and a means of specifying another name explicitly, it was retained as the default executable result of a compilation.)"
↑Wood, Rupert (8 April 2002). "What to do with a.out". gcc-help (Mailing list). Retrieved 2007-04-28.
↑Drepper, Ulrich (20 August 2006). How To Write Shared Libraries(PDF) (Technical report). 4.0. Section 1.1 (A Little Bit of History). Archived(PDF) from the original on 16 June 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-20. When introducing shared libraries certain design decisions had to be made to work in the limitations of a.out. (...) For all these reasons and more, Linux converted early on to using ELF (Executable Linkage Format) as the binary format.
↑Youngdale, Eric (1 April 1995). "The ELF Object File Format: Introduction". http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/1059. "(...) it is not impossible to design shared library implementations that work with a.out. The current Linux shared libraries are certainly one example; another example is SunOS-style shared libraries which are currently used by BSD-du-jour. SunOS-style shared libraries contain a lot of the same concepts as ELF shared libraries (...)"