1@c Copyright 1997, 2002, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
2@c This is part of the GAS manual.
3@c For copying conditions, see the file as.texinfo.
4
5@node V850-Dependent
6@chapter v850 Dependent Features
7
8@cindex V850 support
9@menu
10* V850 Options::              Options
11* V850 Syntax::               Syntax
12* V850 Floating Point::       Floating Point
13* V850 Directives::           V850 Machine Directives
14* V850 Opcodes::              Opcodes
15@end menu
16
17@node V850 Options
18@section Options
19@cindex V850 options (none)
20@cindex options for V850 (none)
21@code{@value{AS}} supports the following additional command-line options
22for the V850 processor family:
23
24@cindex command line options, V850
25@cindex V850 command line options
26@table @code
27
28@cindex @code{-wsigned_overflow} command line option, V850
29@item -wsigned_overflow
30Causes warnings to be produced when signed immediate values overflow the
31space available for then within their opcodes.  By default this option
32is disabled as it is possible to receive spurious warnings due to using
33exact bit patterns as immediate constants.
34
35@cindex @code{-wunsigned_overflow} command line option, V850
36@item -wunsigned_overflow
37Causes warnings to be produced when unsigned immediate values overflow
38the space available for then within their opcodes.  By default this
39option is disabled as it is possible to receive spurious warnings due to
40using exact bit patterns as immediate constants.
41
42@cindex @code{-mv850} command line option, V850
43@item -mv850
44Specifies that the assembled code should be marked as being targeted at
45the V850 processor.  This allows the linker to detect attempts to link
46such code with code assembled for other processors.
47
48@cindex @code{-mv850e} command line option, V850
49@item -mv850e
50Specifies that the assembled code should be marked as being targeted at
51the V850E processor.  This allows the linker to detect attempts to link
52such code with code assembled for other processors.
53
54@cindex @code{-mv850e1} command line option, V850
55@item -mv850e1
56Specifies that the assembled code should be marked as being targeted at
57the V850E1 processor.  This allows the linker to detect attempts to link
58such code with code assembled for other processors.
59
60@cindex @code{-mv850any} command line option, V850
61@item -mv850any
62Specifies that the assembled code should be marked as being targeted at
63the V850 processor but support instructions that are specific to the
64extended variants of the process.  This allows the production of
65binaries that contain target specific code, but which are also intended
66to be used in a generic fashion.  For example libgcc.a contains generic
67routines used by the code produced by GCC for all versions of the v850
68architecture, together with support routines only used by the V850E
69architecture.
70
71@cindex @code{-mrelax} command line option, V850
72@item -mrelax
73Enables relaxation.  This allows the .longcall and .longjump pseudo
74ops to be used in the assembler source code.  These ops label sections
75of code which are either a long function call or a long branch.  The
76assembler will then flag these sections of code and the linker will
77attempt to relax them.
78
79@end table
80
81
82@node V850 Syntax
83@section Syntax
84@menu
85* V850-Chars::                Special Characters
86* V850-Regs::                 Register Names
87@end menu
88
89@node V850-Chars
90@subsection Special Characters
91
92@cindex line comment character, V850
93@cindex V850 line comment character
94@samp{#} is the line comment character.
95@node V850-Regs
96@subsection Register Names
97
98@cindex V850 register names
99@cindex register names, V850
100@code{@value{AS}} supports the following names for registers:
101@table @code
102@cindex @code{zero} register, V850
103@item general register 0
104r0, zero
105@item general register 1
106r1
107@item general register 2
108r2, hp
109@cindex @code{sp} register, V850
110@item general register 3
111r3, sp
112@cindex @code{gp} register, V850
113@item general register 4
114r4, gp
115@cindex @code{tp} register, V850
116@item general register 5
117r5, tp
118@item general register 6
119r6
120@item general register 7
121r7
122@item general register 8
123r8
124@item general register 9
125r9
126@item general register 10
127r10
128@item general register 11
129r11
130@item general register 12
131r12
132@item general register 13
133r13
134@item general register 14
135r14
136@item general register 15
137r15
138@item general register 16
139r16
140@item general register 17
141r17
142@item general register 18
143r18
144@item general register 19
145r19
146@item general register 20
147r20
148@item general register 21
149r21
150@item general register 22
151r22
152@item general register 23
153r23
154@item general register 24
155r24
156@item general register 25
157r25
158@item general register 26
159r26
160@item general register 27
161r27
162@item general register 28
163r28
164@item general register 29
165r29
166@cindex @code{ep} register, V850
167@item general register 30
168r30, ep
169@cindex @code{lp} register, V850
170@item general register 31
171r31, lp
172@cindex @code{eipc} register, V850
173@item system register 0
174eipc
175@cindex @code{eipsw} register, V850
176@item system register 1
177eipsw
178@cindex @code{fepc} register, V850
179@item system register 2
180fepc
181@cindex @code{fepsw} register, V850
182@item system register 3
183fepsw
184@cindex @code{ecr} register, V850
185@item system register 4
186ecr
187@cindex @code{psw} register, V850
188@item system register 5
189psw
190@cindex @code{ctpc} register, V850
191@item system register 16
192ctpc
193@cindex @code{ctpsw} register, V850
194@item system register 17
195ctpsw
196@cindex @code{dbpc} register, V850
197@item system register 18
198dbpc
199@cindex @code{dbpsw} register, V850
200@item system register 19
201dbpsw
202@cindex @code{ctbp} register, V850
203@item system register 20
204ctbp
205@end table
206
207@node V850 Floating Point
208@section Floating Point
209
210@cindex floating point, V850 (@sc{ieee})
211@cindex V850 floating point (@sc{ieee})
212The V850 family uses @sc{ieee} floating-point numbers.
213
214@node V850 Directives
215@section V850 Machine Directives
216
217@cindex machine directives, V850
218@cindex V850 machine directives
219@table @code
220@cindex @code{offset} directive, V850
221@item .offset @var{<expression>}
222Moves the offset into the current section to the specified amount.
223
224@cindex @code{section} directive, V850
225@item .section "name", <type>
226This is an extension to the standard .section directive.  It sets the
227current section to be <type> and creates an alias for this section
228called "name".
229
230@cindex @code{.v850} directive, V850
231@item .v850
232Specifies that the assembled code should be marked as being targeted at
233the V850 processor.  This allows the linker to detect attempts to link
234such code with code assembled for other processors.
235
236@cindex @code{.v850e} directive, V850
237@item .v850e
238Specifies that the assembled code should be marked as being targeted at
239the V850E processor.  This allows the linker to detect attempts to link
240such code with code assembled for other processors.
241
242@cindex @code{.v850e1} directive, V850
243@item .v850e1
244Specifies that the assembled code should be marked as being targeted at
245the V850E1 processor.  This allows the linker to detect attempts to link
246such code with code assembled for other processors.
247
248@end table
249
250@node V850 Opcodes
251@section Opcodes
252
253@cindex V850 opcodes
254@cindex opcodes for V850
255@code{@value{AS}} implements all the standard V850 opcodes.
256
257@code{@value{AS}} also implements the following pseudo ops:
258
259@table @code
260
261@cindex @code{hi0} pseudo-op, V850
262@item hi0()
263Computes the higher 16 bits of the given expression and stores it into
264the immediate operand field of the given instruction.  For example:
265
266    @samp{mulhi hi0(here - there), r5, r6}
267
268computes the difference between the address of labels 'here' and
269'there', takes the upper 16 bits of this difference, shifts it down 16
270bits and then mutliplies it by the lower 16 bits in register 5, putting
271the result into register 6.
272
273@cindex @code{lo} pseudo-op, V850
274@item lo()
275Computes the lower 16 bits of the given expression and stores it into
276the immediate operand field of the given instruction.  For example:
277
278    @samp{addi lo(here - there), r5, r6}
279
280computes the difference between the address of labels 'here' and
281'there', takes the lower 16 bits of this difference and adds it to
282register 5, putting the result into register 6.
283
284@cindex @code{hi} pseudo-op, V850
285@item hi()
286Computes the higher 16 bits of the given expression and then adds the
287value of the most significant bit of the lower 16 bits of the expression
288and stores the result into the immediate operand field of the given
289instruction.  For example the following code can be used to compute the
290address of the label 'here' and store it into register 6:
291
292    @samp{movhi hi(here), r0, r6}
293    @samp{movea lo(here), r6, r6}
294
295The reason for this special behaviour is that movea performs a sign
296extension on its immediate operand.  So for example if the address of
297'here' was 0xFFFFFFFF then without the special behaviour of the hi()
298pseudo-op the movhi instruction would put 0xFFFF0000 into r6, then the
299movea instruction would takes its immediate operand, 0xFFFF, sign extend
300it to 32 bits, 0xFFFFFFFF, and then add it into r6 giving 0xFFFEFFFF
301which is wrong (the fifth nibble is E).  With the hi() pseudo op adding
302in the top bit of the lo() pseudo op, the movhi instruction actually
303stores 0 into r6 (0xFFFF + 1 = 0x0000), so that the movea instruction
304stores 0xFFFFFFFF into r6 - the right value.
305
306@cindex @code{hilo} pseudo-op, V850
307@item hilo()
308Computes the 32 bit value of the given expression and stores it into
309the immediate operand field of the given instruction (which must be a
310mov instruction).  For example:
311
312    @samp{mov hilo(here), r6}
313
314computes the absolute address of label 'here' and puts the result into
315register 6.
316
317@cindex @code{sdaoff} pseudo-op, V850
318@item sdaoff()
319Computes the offset of the named variable from the start of the Small
320Data Area (whoes address is held in register 4, the GP register) and
321stores the result as a 16 bit signed value in the immediate operand
322field of the given instruction.  For example:
323
324      @samp{ld.w sdaoff(_a_variable)[gp],r6}
325
326loads the contents of the location pointed to by the label '_a_variable'
327into register 6, provided that the label is located somewhere within +/-
32832K of the address held in the GP register.  [Note the linker assumes
329that the GP register contains a fixed address set to the address of the
330label called '__gp'.  This can either be set up automatically by the
331linker, or specifically set by using the @samp{--defsym __gp=<value>}
332command line option].
333
334@cindex @code{tdaoff} pseudo-op, V850
335@item tdaoff()
336Computes the offset of the named variable from the start of the Tiny
337Data Area (whoes address is held in register 30, the EP register) and
338stores the result as a 4,5, 7 or 8 bit unsigned value in the immediate
339operand field of the given instruction.  For example:
340
341      @samp{sld.w tdaoff(_a_variable)[ep],r6}
342
343loads the contents of the location pointed to by the label '_a_variable'
344into register 6, provided that the label is located somewhere within +256
345bytes of the address held in the EP register.  [Note the linker assumes
346that the EP register contains a fixed address set to the address of the
347label called '__ep'.  This can either be set up automatically by the
348linker, or specifically set by using the @samp{--defsym __ep=<value>}
349command line option].
350
351@cindex @code{zdaoff} pseudo-op, V850
352@item zdaoff()
353Computes the offset of the named variable from address 0 and stores the
354result as a 16 bit signed value in the immediate operand field of the
355given instruction.  For example:
356
357      @samp{movea zdaoff(_a_variable),zero,r6}
358
359puts the address of the label '_a_variable' into register 6, assuming
360that the label is somewhere within the first 32K of memory.  (Strictly
361speaking it also possible to access the last 32K of memory as well, as
362the offsets are signed).
363
364@cindex @code{ctoff} pseudo-op, V850
365@item ctoff()
366Computes the offset of the named variable from the start of the Call
367Table Area (whoes address is helg in system register 20, the CTBP
368register) and stores the result a 6 or 16 bit unsigned value in the
369immediate field of then given instruction or piece of data.  For
370example:
371
372     @samp{callt ctoff(table_func1)}
373
374will put the call the function whoes address is held in the call table
375at the location labeled 'table_func1'.
376
377@cindex @code{longcall} pseudo-op, V850
378@item .longcall @code{name}
379Indicates that the following sequence of instructions is a long call
380to function @code{name}.  The linker will attempt to shorten this call
381sequence if @code{name} is within a 22bit offset of the call.  Only
382valid if the @code{-mrelax} command line switch has been enabled.
383
384@cindex @code{longjump} pseudo-op, V850
385@item .longjump @code{name}
386Indicates that the following sequence of instructions is a long jump
387to label @code{name}.  The linker will attempt to shorten this code
388sequence if @code{name} is within a 22bit offset of the jump.  Only
389valid if the @code{-mrelax} command line switch has been enabled.
390
391@end table
392
393
394For information on the V850 instruction set, see @cite{V850
395Family 32-/16-Bit single-Chip Microcontroller Architecture Manual} from NEC.
396Ltd.
397