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- @c Copyright (C) 1996-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
- @c This is part of the GAS manual.
- @c For copying conditions, see the file as.texinfo.
- @ifset GENERIC
- @page
- @node D10V-Dependent
- @chapter D10V Dependent Features
- @end ifset
- @ifclear GENERIC
- @node Machine Dependencies
- @chapter D10V Dependent Features
- @end ifclear
- @cindex D10V support
- @menu
- * D10V-Opts:: D10V Options
- * D10V-Syntax:: Syntax
- * D10V-Float:: Floating Point
- * D10V-Opcodes:: Opcodes
- @end menu
- @node D10V-Opts
- @section D10V Options
- @cindex options, D10V
- @cindex D10V options
- The Mitsubishi D10V version of @code{@value{AS}} has a few machine
- dependent options.
- @table @samp
- @item -O
- The D10V can often execute two sub-instructions in parallel. When this option
- is used, @code{@value{AS}} will attempt to optimize its output by detecting when
- instructions can be executed in parallel.
- @item --nowarnswap
- To optimize execution performance, @code{@value{AS}} will sometimes swap the
- order of instructions. Normally this generates a warning. When this option
- is used, no warning will be generated when instructions are swapped.
- @item --gstabs-packing
- @itemx --no-gstabs-packing
- @code{@value{AS}} packs adjacent short instructions into a single packed
- instruction. @samp{--no-gstabs-packing} turns instruction packing off if
- @samp{--gstabs} is specified as well; @samp{--gstabs-packing} (the
- default) turns instruction packing on even when @samp{--gstabs} is
- specified.
- @end table
- @node D10V-Syntax
- @section Syntax
- @cindex D10V syntax
- @cindex syntax, D10V
- The D10V syntax is based on the syntax in Mitsubishi's D10V architecture manual.
- The differences are detailed below.
- @menu
- * D10V-Size:: Size Modifiers
- * D10V-Subs:: Sub-Instructions
- * D10V-Chars:: Special Characters
- * D10V-Regs:: Register Names
- * D10V-Addressing:: Addressing Modes
- * D10V-Word:: @@WORD Modifier
- @end menu
- @node D10V-Size
- @subsection Size Modifiers
- @cindex D10V size modifiers
- @cindex size modifiers, D10V
- The D10V version of @code{@value{AS}} uses the instruction names in the D10V
- Architecture Manual. However, the names in the manual are sometimes ambiguous.
- There are instruction names that can assemble to a short or long form opcode.
- How does the assembler pick the correct form? @code{@value{AS}} will always pick the
- smallest form if it can. When dealing with a symbol that is not defined yet when a
- line is being assembled, it will always use the long form. If you need to force the
- assembler to use either the short or long form of the instruction, you can append
- either @samp{.s} (short) or @samp{.l} (long) to it. For example, if you are writing
- an assembly program and you want to do a branch to a symbol that is defined later
- in your program, you can write @samp{bra.s foo}.
- Objdump and GDB will always append @samp{.s} or @samp{.l} to instructions which
- have both short and long forms.
- @node D10V-Subs
- @subsection Sub-Instructions
- @cindex D10V sub-instructions
- @cindex sub-instructions, D10V
- The D10V assembler takes as input a series of instructions, either one-per-line,
- or in the special two-per-line format described in the next section. Some of these
- instructions will be short-form or sub-instructions. These sub-instructions can be packed
- into a single instruction. The assembler will do this automatically. It will also detect
- when it should not pack instructions. For example, when a label is defined, the next
- instruction will never be packaged with the previous one. Whenever a branch and link
- instruction is called, it will not be packaged with the next instruction so the return
- address will be valid. Nops are automatically inserted when necessary.
- If you do not want the assembler automatically making these decisions, you can control
- the packaging and execution type (parallel or sequential) with the special execution
- symbols described in the next section.
- @node D10V-Chars
- @subsection Special Characters
- @cindex line comment character, D10V
- @cindex D10V line comment character
- A semicolon (@samp{;}) can be used anywhere on a line to start a
- comment that extends to the end of the line.
- If a @samp{#} appears as the first character of a line, the whole line
- is treated as a comment, but in this case the line could also be a
- logical line number directive (@pxref{Comments}) or a preprocessor
- control command (@pxref{Preprocessing}).
- @cindex sub-instruction ordering, D10V
- @cindex D10V sub-instruction ordering
- Sub-instructions may be executed in order, in reverse-order, or in parallel.
- Instructions listed in the standard one-per-line format will be executed sequentially.
- To specify the executing order, use the following symbols:
- @table @samp
- @item ->
- Sequential with instruction on the left first.
- @item <-
- Sequential with instruction on the right first.
- @item ||
- Parallel
- @end table
- The D10V syntax allows either one instruction per line, one instruction per line with
- the execution symbol, or two instructions per line. For example
- @table @code
- @item abs a1 -> abs r0
- Execute these sequentially. The instruction on the right is in the right
- container and is executed second.
- @item abs r0 <- abs a1
- Execute these reverse-sequentially. The instruction on the right is in the right
- container, and is executed first.
- @item ld2w r2,@@r8+ || mac a0,r0,r7
- Execute these in parallel.
- @item ld2w r2,@@r8+ ||
- @itemx mac a0,r0,r7
- Two-line format. Execute these in parallel.
- @item ld2w r2,@@r8+
- @itemx mac a0,r0,r7
- Two-line format. Execute these sequentially. Assembler will
- put them in the proper containers.
- @item ld2w r2,@@r8+ ->
- @itemx mac a0,r0,r7
- Two-line format. Execute these sequentially. Same as above but
- second instruction will always go into right container.
- @end table
- @cindex symbol names, @samp{$} in
- @cindex @code{$} in symbol names
- Since @samp{$} has no special meaning, you may use it in symbol names.
- @node D10V-Regs
- @subsection Register Names
- @cindex D10V registers
- @cindex registers, D10V
- You can use the predefined symbols @samp{r0} through @samp{r15} to refer to the D10V
- registers. You can also use @samp{sp} as an alias for @samp{r15}. The accumulators
- are @samp{a0} and @samp{a1}. There are special register-pair names that may
- optionally be used in opcodes that require even-numbered registers. Register names are
- not case sensitive.
- Register Pairs
- @table @code
- @item r0-r1
- @item r2-r3
- @item r4-r5
- @item r6-r7
- @item r8-r9
- @item r10-r11
- @item r12-r13
- @item r14-r15
- @end table
- The D10V also has predefined symbols for these control registers and status bits:
- @table @code
- @item psw
- Processor Status Word
- @item bpsw
- Backup Processor Status Word
- @item pc
- Program Counter
- @item bpc
- Backup Program Counter
- @item rpt_c
- Repeat Count
- @item rpt_s
- Repeat Start address
- @item rpt_e
- Repeat End address
- @item mod_s
- Modulo Start address
- @item mod_e
- Modulo End address
- @item iba
- Instruction Break Address
- @item f0
- Flag 0
- @item f1
- Flag 1
- @item c
- Carry flag
- @end table
- @node D10V-Addressing
- @subsection Addressing Modes
- @cindex addressing modes, D10V
- @cindex D10V addressing modes
- @code{@value{AS}} understands the following addressing modes for the D10V.
- @code{R@var{n}} in the following refers to any of the numbered
- registers, but @emph{not} the control registers.
- @table @code
- @item R@var{n}
- Register direct
- @item @@R@var{n}
- Register indirect
- @item @@R@var{n}+
- Register indirect with post-increment
- @item @@R@var{n}-
- Register indirect with post-decrement
- @item @@-SP
- Register indirect with pre-decrement
- @item @@(@var{disp}, R@var{n})
- Register indirect with displacement
- @item @var{addr}
- PC relative address (for branch or rep).
- @item #@var{imm}
- Immediate data (the @samp{#} is optional and ignored)
- @end table
- @node D10V-Word
- @subsection @@WORD Modifier
- @cindex D10V @@word modifier
- @cindex @@word modifier, D10V
- Any symbol followed by @code{@@word} will be replaced by the symbol's value
- shifted right by 2. This is used in situations such as loading a register
- with the address of a function (or any other code fragment). For example, if
- you want to load a register with the location of the function @code{main} then
- jump to that function, you could do it as follows:
- @smallexample
- @group
- ldi r2, main@@word
- jmp r2
- @end group
- @end smallexample
- @node D10V-Float
- @section Floating Point
- @cindex floating point, D10V
- @cindex D10V floating point
- The D10V has no hardware floating point, but the @code{.float} and @code{.double}
- directives generates @sc{ieee} floating-point numbers for compatibility
- with other development tools.
- @node D10V-Opcodes
- @section Opcodes
- @cindex D10V opcode summary
- @cindex opcode summary, D10V
- @cindex mnemonics, D10V
- @cindex instruction summary, D10V
- For detailed information on the D10V machine instruction set, see
- @cite{D10V Architecture: A VLIW Microprocessor for Multimedia Applications}
- (Mitsubishi Electric Corp.).
- @code{@value{AS}} implements all the standard D10V opcodes. The only changes are those
- described in the section on size modifiers
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