tree: 3e5b9c61a17da2dbfe211497a2474350f59cad6a [path history] [tgz]
  1. asm/
  2. common/
  3. config/
  4. contrib/
  5. disasm/
  6. doc/
  7. headers/
  8. include/
  9. macros/
  10. misc/
  11. Mkfiles/
  12. nasmlib/
  13. nsis/
  14. output/
  15. perllib/
  16. rdoff/
  17. stdlib/
  18. tools/
  19. travis/
  20. x86/
  21. .travis.yml
  22. aclocal.m4
  23. AUTHORS
  24. autogen.sh
  25. BUILD.gn
  26. ChangeLog
  27. CHANGES
  28. codereview.settings
  29. configure.ac
  30. find_patches.py
  31. generate_nasm_sources.py
  32. INSTALL
  33. install-sh
  34. LICENSE
  35. Makefile.in
  36. nasm.spec.in
  37. nasm.spec.sed
  38. nasm.txt
  39. nasm_assemble.gni
  40. nasm_sources.gni
  41. ndisasm.txt
  42. OWNERS
  43. PRESUBMIT.py
  44. README.chromium
  45. README.md
  46. README.patches
  47. SubmittingPatches
  48. TODO
  49. version
  50. version.h
  51. version.pl
qt-everywhere-src-5.15.1/qtwebengine/src/3rdparty/chromium/third_party/nasm/README.md

NASM, the Netwide Assembler

master

Many many developers all over the net respect NASM for what it is: a widespread (thus netwide), portable (thus netwide!), very flexible and mature assembler tool with support for many output formats (thus netwide!!).

Now we have good news for you: NASM is licensed under the “simplified” (2-clause) BSD license. This means its development is open to even wider society of programmers wishing to improve their lovely assembler.

Visit our nasm.us website for more details. We are gradually moving services away from Sourceforge. For our remaining Sourceforge services see here.

With best regards, the NASM crew.