1 /* tic80.h -- Header file for TI TMS320C80 (MV) opcode table 2 Copyright 1996, 1997, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 3 Written by Fred Fish (fnf@cygnus.com), Cygnus Support 4 5 This file is part of GDB, GAS, and the GNU binutils. 6 7 GDB, GAS, and the GNU binutils are free software; you can redistribute 8 them and/or modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public 9 License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 10 1, or (at your option) any later version. 11 12 GDB, GAS, and the GNU binutils are distributed in the hope that they 13 will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied 14 warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See 15 the GNU General Public License for more details. 16 17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 18 along with this file; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free 19 Software Foundation, 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */ 20 21 #ifndef TIC80_H 22 #define TIC80_H 23 24 /* The opcode table is an array of struct tic80_opcode. */ 25 26 struct tic80_opcode 27 { 28 /* The opcode name. */ 29 30 const char *name; 31 32 /* The opcode itself. Those bits which will be filled in with operands 33 are zeroes. */ 34 35 unsigned long opcode; 36 37 /* The opcode mask. This is used by the disassembler. This is a mask 38 containing ones indicating those bits which must match the opcode 39 field, and zeroes indicating those bits which need not match (and are 40 presumably filled in by operands). */ 41 42 unsigned long mask; 43 44 /* Special purpose flags for this opcode. */ 45 46 unsigned char flags; 47 48 /* An array of operand codes. Each code is an index into the operand 49 table. They appear in the order which the operands must appear in 50 assembly code, and are terminated by a zero. FIXME: Adjust size to 51 match actual requirements when TIc80 support is complete */ 52 53 unsigned char operands[8]; 54 }; 55 56 /* The table itself is sorted by major opcode number, and is otherwise in 57 the order in which the disassembler should consider instructions. 58 FIXME: This isn't currently true. */ 59 60 extern const struct tic80_opcode tic80_opcodes[]; 61 extern const int tic80_num_opcodes; 62 63 64 /* The operands table is an array of struct tic80_operand. */ 65 66 struct tic80_operand 67 { 68 /* The number of bits in the operand. */ 69 70 int bits; 71 72 /* How far the operand is left shifted in the instruction. */ 73 74 int shift; 75 76 /* Insertion function. This is used by the assembler. To insert an 77 operand value into an instruction, check this field. 78 79 If it is NULL, execute 80 i |= (op & ((1 << o->bits) - 1)) << o->shift; 81 (i is the instruction which we are filling in, o is a pointer to 82 this structure, and op is the opcode value; this assumes twos 83 complement arithmetic). 84 85 If this field is not NULL, then simply call it with the 86 instruction and the operand value. It will return the new value 87 of the instruction. If the ERRMSG argument is not NULL, then if 88 the operand value is illegal, *ERRMSG will be set to a warning 89 string (the operand will be inserted in any case). If the 90 operand value is legal, *ERRMSG will be unchanged (most operands 91 can accept any value). */ 92 93 unsigned long (*insert) 94 (unsigned long instruction, long op, const char **errmsg); 95 96 /* Extraction function. This is used by the disassembler. To 97 extract this operand type from an instruction, check this field. 98 99 If it is NULL, compute 100 op = ((i) >> o->shift) & ((1 << o->bits) - 1); 101 if ((o->flags & TIC80_OPERAND_SIGNED) != 0 102 && (op & (1 << (o->bits - 1))) != 0) 103 op -= 1 << o->bits; 104 (i is the instruction, o is a pointer to this structure, and op 105 is the result; this assumes twos complement arithmetic). 106 107 If this field is not NULL, then simply call it with the 108 instruction value. It will return the value of the operand. If 109 the INVALID argument is not NULL, *INVALID will be set to 110 non-zero if this operand type can not actually be extracted from 111 this operand (i.e., the instruction does not match). If the 112 operand is valid, *INVALID will not be changed. */ 113 114 long (*extract) (unsigned long instruction, int *invalid); 115 116 /* One bit syntax flags. */ 117 118 unsigned long flags; 119 }; 120 121 /* Elements in the table are retrieved by indexing with values from 122 the operands field of the tic80_opcodes table. */ 123 124 extern const struct tic80_operand tic80_operands[]; 125 126 127 /* Values defined for the flags field of a struct tic80_operand. 128 129 Note that flags for all predefined symbols, such as the general purpose 130 registers (ex: r10), control registers (ex: FPST), condition codes (ex: 131 eq0.b), bit numbers (ex: gt.b), etc are large enough that they can be 132 or'd into an int where the lower bits contain the actual numeric value 133 that correponds to this predefined symbol. This way a single int can 134 contain both the value of the symbol and it's type. 135 */ 136 137 /* This operand must be an even register number. Floating point numbers 138 for example are stored in even/odd register pairs. */ 139 140 #define TIC80_OPERAND_EVEN (1 << 0) 141 142 /* This operand must be an odd register number and must be one greater than 143 the register number of the previous operand. I.E. the second register in 144 an even/odd register pair. */ 145 146 #define TIC80_OPERAND_ODD (1 << 1) 147 148 /* This operand takes signed values. */ 149 150 #define TIC80_OPERAND_SIGNED (1 << 2) 151 152 /* This operand may be either a predefined constant name or a numeric value. 153 An example would be a condition code like "eq0.b" which has the numeric 154 value 0x2. */ 155 156 #define TIC80_OPERAND_NUM (1 << 3) 157 158 /* This operand should be wrapped in parentheses rather than separated 159 from the previous one by a comma. This is used for various 160 instructions, like the load and store instructions, which want 161 their operands to look like "displacement(reg)" */ 162 163 #define TIC80_OPERAND_PARENS (1 << 4) 164 165 /* This operand is a PC relative branch offset. The disassembler prints 166 these symbolically if possible. Note that the offsets are taken as word 167 offsets. */ 168 169 #define TIC80_OPERAND_PCREL (1 << 5) 170 171 /* This flag is a hint to the disassembler for using hex as the prefered 172 printing format, even for small positive or negative immediate values. 173 Normally values in the range -999 to 999 are printed as signed decimal 174 values and other values are printed in hex. */ 175 176 #define TIC80_OPERAND_BITFIELD (1 << 6) 177 178 /* This operand may have a ":m" modifier specified by bit 17 in a short 179 immediate form instruction. */ 180 181 #define TIC80_OPERAND_M_SI (1 << 7) 182 183 /* This operand may have a ":m" modifier specified by bit 15 in a long 184 immediate or register form instruction. */ 185 186 #define TIC80_OPERAND_M_LI (1 << 8) 187 188 /* This operand may have a ":s" modifier specified in bit 11 in a long 189 immediate or register form instruction. */ 190 191 #define TIC80_OPERAND_SCALED (1 << 9) 192 193 /* This operand is a floating point value */ 194 195 #define TIC80_OPERAND_FLOAT (1 << 10) 196 197 /* This operand is an byte offset from a base relocation. The lower 198 two bits of the final relocated address are ignored when the value is 199 written to the program counter. */ 200 201 #define TIC80_OPERAND_BASEREL (1 << 11) 202 203 /* This operand is an "endmask" field for a shift instruction. 204 It is treated special in that it can have values of 0-32, 205 where 0 and 32 result in the same instruction. The assembler 206 must be able to accept both endmask values. This disassembler 207 has no way of knowing from the instruction which value was 208 given at assembly time, so it just uses '0'. */ 209 210 #define TIC80_OPERAND_ENDMASK (1 << 12) 211 212 /* This operand is one of the 32 general purpose registers. 213 The disassembler prints these with a leading 'r'. */ 214 215 #define TIC80_OPERAND_GPR (1 << 27) 216 217 /* This operand is a floating point accumulator register. 218 The disassembler prints these with a leading 'a'. */ 219 220 #define TIC80_OPERAND_FPA ( 1 << 28) 221 222 /* This operand is a control register number, either numeric or 223 symbolic (like "EIF", "EPC", etc). 224 The disassembler prints these symbolically. */ 225 226 #define TIC80_OPERAND_CR (1 << 29) 227 228 /* This operand is a condition code, either numeric or 229 symbolic (like "eq0.b", "ne0.w", etc). 230 The disassembler prints these symbolically. */ 231 232 #define TIC80_OPERAND_CC (1 << 30) 233 234 /* This operand is a bit number, either numeric or 235 symbolic (like "eq.b", "or.f", etc). 236 The disassembler prints these symbolically. 237 Note that they appear in the instruction in 1's complement relative 238 to the values given in the manual. */ 239 240 #define TIC80_OPERAND_BITNUM (1 << 31) 241 242 /* This mask is used to strip operand bits from an int that contains 243 both operand bits and a numeric value in the lsbs. */ 244 245 #define TIC80_OPERAND_MASK (TIC80_OPERAND_GPR | TIC80_OPERAND_FPA | TIC80_OPERAND_CR | TIC80_OPERAND_CC | TIC80_OPERAND_BITNUM) 246 247 248 /* Flag bits for the struct tic80_opcode flags field. */ 249 250 #define TIC80_VECTOR 01 /* Is a vector instruction */ 251 #define TIC80_NO_R0_DEST 02 /* Register r0 cannot be a destination register */ 252 253 254 /* The opcodes library contains a table that allows translation from predefined 255 symbol names to numeric values, and vice versa. */ 256 257 /* Structure to hold information about predefined symbols. */ 258 259 struct predefined_symbol 260 { 261 char *name; /* name to recognize */ 262 int value; 263 }; 264 265 #define PDS_NAME(pdsp) ((pdsp) -> name) 266 #define PDS_VALUE(pdsp) ((pdsp) -> value) 267 268 /* Translation array. */ 269 extern const struct predefined_symbol tic80_predefined_symbols[]; 270 /* How many members in the array. */ 271 extern const int tic80_num_predefined_symbols; 272 273 /* Translate value to symbolic name. */ 274 const char *tic80_value_to_symbol (int val, int class); 275 276 /* Translate symbolic name to value. */ 277 int tic80_symbol_to_value (char *name, int class); 278 279 const struct predefined_symbol *tic80_next_predefined_symbol 280 (const struct predefined_symbol *); 281 282 #endif /* TIC80_H */ 283