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250d07de 1@c Copyright (C) 1991-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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2@c This is part of the GAS manual.
3@c For copying conditions, see the file as.texinfo.
4@ifset GENERIC
5@page
6@node M68HC11-Dependent
7@chapter M68HC11 and M68HC12 Dependent Features
8@end ifset
9@ifclear GENERIC
10@node Machine Dependencies
11@chapter M68HC11 and M68HC12 Dependent Features
12@end ifclear
13
14@cindex M68HC11 and M68HC12 support
15@menu
16* M68HC11-Opts:: M68HC11 and M68HC12 Options
17* M68HC11-Syntax:: Syntax
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18* M68HC11-Modifiers:: Symbolic Operand Modifiers
19* M68HC11-Directives:: Assembler Directives
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20* M68HC11-Float:: Floating Point
21* M68HC11-opcodes:: Opcodes
22@end menu
23
24@node M68HC11-Opts
25@section M68HC11 and M68HC12 Options
26
27@cindex options, M68HC11
28@cindex M68HC11 options
35b55ed2 29The Motorola 68HC11 and 68HC12 version of @code{@value{AS}} have a few machine
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30dependent options.
31
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32@table @code
33
60bcf0fa 34@cindex @samp{-m68hc11}
35b55ed2 35@item -m68hc11
6927f982 36This option switches the assembler into the M68HC11 mode. In this mode,
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37the assembler only accepts 68HC11 operands and mnemonics. It produces
38code for the 68HC11.
39
40@cindex @samp{-m68hc12}
35b55ed2 41@item -m68hc12
6927f982 42This option switches the assembler into the M68HC12 mode. In this mode,
60bcf0fa 43the assembler also accepts 68HC12 operands and mnemonics. It produces
35b55ed2 44code for the 68HC12. A few 68HC11 instructions are replaced by
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45some 68HC12 instructions as recommended by Motorola specifications.
46
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47@cindex @samp{-m68hcs12}
48@item -m68hcs12
6927f982 49This option switches the assembler into the M68HCS12 mode. This mode is
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50similar to @samp{-m68hc12} but specifies to assemble for the 68HCS12
51series. The only difference is on the assembling of the @samp{movb}
52and @samp{movw} instruction when a PC-relative operand is used.
53
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54@cindex @samp{-mm9s12x}
55@item -mm9s12x
56This option switches the assembler into the M9S12X mode. This mode is
57similar to @samp{-m68hc12} but specifies to assemble for the S12X
58series which is a superset of the HCS12.
59
60@cindex @samp{-mm9s12xg}
61@item -mm9s12xg
62This option switches the assembler into the XGATE mode for the RISC
63co-processor featured on some S12X-family chips.
64
65@cindex @samp{--xgate-ramoffset}
66@item --xgate-ramoffset
67This option instructs the linker to offset RAM addresses from S12X address
68space into XGATE address space.
69
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70@cindex @samp{-mshort}
71@item -mshort
72This option controls the ABI and indicates to use a 16-bit integer ABI.
73It has no effect on the assembled instructions.
74This is the default.
75
76@cindex @samp{-mlong}
77@item -mlong
78This option controls the ABI and indicates to use a 32-bit integer ABI.
79
80@cindex @samp{-mshort-double}
81@item -mshort-double
82This option controls the ABI and indicates to use a 32-bit float ABI.
83This is the default.
84
85@cindex @samp{-mlong-double}
86@item -mlong-double
87This option controls the ABI and indicates to use a 64-bit float ABI.
88
60bcf0fa 89@cindex @samp{--strict-direct-mode}
35b55ed2 90@item --strict-direct-mode
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91You can use the @samp{--strict-direct-mode} option to disable
92the automatic translation of direct page mode addressing into
93extended mode when the instruction does not support direct mode.
94For example, the @samp{clr} instruction does not support direct page
95mode addressing. When it is used with the direct page mode,
96@code{@value{AS}} will ignore it and generate an absolute addressing.
97This option prevents @code{@value{AS}} from doing this, and the wrong
98usage of the direct page mode will raise an error.
99
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100@cindex @samp{--short-branches}
101@item --short-branches
102The @samp{--short-branches} option turns off the translation of
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103relative branches into absolute branches when the branch offset is
104out of range. By default @code{@value{AS}} transforms the relative
105branch (@samp{bsr}, @samp{bgt}, @samp{bge}, @samp{beq}, @samp{bne},
106@samp{ble}, @samp{blt}, @samp{bhi}, @samp{bcc}, @samp{bls},
107@samp{bcs}, @samp{bmi}, @samp{bvs}, @samp{bvs}, @samp{bra}) into
108an absolute branch when the offset is out of the -128 .. 127 range.
109In that case, the @samp{bsr} instruction is translated into a
110@samp{jsr}, the @samp{bra} instruction is translated into a
1370e33d 111@samp{jmp} and the conditional branches instructions are inverted and
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112followed by a @samp{jmp}. This option disables these translations
113and @code{@value{AS}} will generate an error if a relative branch
114is out of range. This option does not affect the optimization
115associated to the @samp{jbra}, @samp{jbsr} and @samp{jbXX} pseudo opcodes.
116
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117@cindex @samp{--force-long-branches}
118@item --force-long-branches
119The @samp{--force-long-branches} option forces the translation of
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120relative branches into absolute branches. This option does not affect
121the optimization associated to the @samp{jbra}, @samp{jbsr} and
34bca508 122@samp{jbXX} pseudo opcodes.
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123
124@cindex @samp{--print-insn-syntax}
35b55ed2 125@item --print-insn-syntax
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126You can use the @samp{--print-insn-syntax} option to obtain the
127syntax description of the instruction when an error is detected.
128
129@cindex @samp{--print-opcodes}
35b55ed2 130@item --print-opcodes
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131The @samp{--print-opcodes} option prints the list of all the
132instructions with their syntax. The first item of each line
133represents the instruction name and the rest of the line indicates
134the possible operands for that instruction. The list is printed
135in alphabetical order. Once the list is printed @code{@value{AS}}
136exits.
137
138@cindex @samp{--generate-example}
35b55ed2 139@item --generate-example
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140The @samp{--generate-example} option is similar to @samp{--print-opcodes}
141but it generates an example for each instruction instead.
35b55ed2 142@end table
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143
144@node M68HC11-Syntax
145@section Syntax
146
147@cindex M68HC11 syntax
148@cindex syntax, M68HC11
149
150In the M68HC11 syntax, the instruction name comes first and it may
151be followed by one or several operands (up to three). Operands are
152separated by comma (@samp{,}). In the normal mode,
153@code{@value{AS}} will complain if too many operands are specified for
154a given instruction. In the MRI mode (turned on with @samp{-M} option),
155it will treat them as comments. Example:
156
157@smallexample
158inx
159lda #23
160bset 2,x #4
161brclr *bot #8 foo
162@end smallexample
163
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164@cindex line comment character, M68HC11
165@cindex M68HC11 line comment character
166The presence of a @samp{;} character or a @samp{!} character anywhere
167on a line indicates the start of a comment that extends to the end of
168that line.
169
170A @samp{*} or a @samp{#} character at the start of a line also
171introduces a line comment, but these characters do not work elsewhere
172on the line. If the first character of the line is a @samp{#} then as
173well as starting a comment, the line could also be logical line number
174directive (@pxref{Comments}) or a preprocessor control command
175(@pxref{Preprocessing}).
176
177@cindex line separator, M68HC11
178@cindex statement separator, M68HC11
179@cindex M68HC11 line separator
180The M68HC11 assembler does not currently support a line separator
181character.
182
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183@cindex M68HC11 addressing modes
184@cindex addressing modes, M68HC11
35b55ed2 185The following addressing modes are understood for 68HC11 and 68HC12:
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186@table @dfn
187@item Immediate
188@samp{#@var{number}}
189
190@item Address Register
191@samp{@var{number},X}, @samp{@var{number},Y}
192
193The @var{number} may be omitted in which case 0 is assumed.
194
195@item Direct Addressing mode
196@samp{*@var{symbol}}, or @samp{*@var{digits}}
197
198@item Absolute
199@samp{@var{symbol}}, or @samp{@var{digits}}
200@end table
201
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202The M68HC12 has other more complex addressing modes. All of them
203are supported and they are represented below:
204
205@table @dfn
206@item Constant Offset Indexed Addressing Mode
207@samp{@var{number},@var{reg}}
208
209The @var{number} may be omitted in which case 0 is assumed.
210The register can be either @samp{X}, @samp{Y}, @samp{SP} or
211@samp{PC}. The assembler will use the smaller post-byte definition
212according to the constant value (5-bit constant offset, 9-bit constant
213offset or 16-bit constant offset). If the constant is not known by
214the assembler it will use the 16-bit constant offset post-byte and the value
215will be resolved at link time.
216
217@item Offset Indexed Indirect
218@samp{[@var{number},@var{reg}]}
219
220The register can be either @samp{X}, @samp{Y}, @samp{SP} or @samp{PC}.
221
222@item Auto Pre-Increment/Pre-Decrement/Post-Increment/Post-Decrement
223@samp{@var{number},-@var{reg}}
224@samp{@var{number},+@var{reg}}
225@samp{@var{number},@var{reg}-}
226@samp{@var{number},@var{reg}+}
227
228The number must be in the range @samp{-8}..@samp{+8} and must not be 0.
229The register can be either @samp{X}, @samp{Y}, @samp{SP} or @samp{PC}.
230
231@item Accumulator Offset
232@samp{@var{acc},@var{reg}}
233
234The accumulator register can be either @samp{A}, @samp{B} or @samp{D}.
235The register can be either @samp{X}, @samp{Y}, @samp{SP} or @samp{PC}.
236
237@item Accumulator D offset indexed-indirect
238@samp{[D,@var{reg}]}
239
240The register can be either @samp{X}, @samp{Y}, @samp{SP} or @samp{PC}.
241
242@end table
243
244For example:
245
246@smallexample
247ldab 1024,sp
248ldd [10,x]
249orab 3,+x
250stab -2,y-
251ldx a,pc
252sty [d,sp]
253@end smallexample
254
255
256@node M68HC11-Modifiers
257@section Symbolic Operand Modifiers
258
259@cindex M68HC11 modifiers
260@cindex syntax, M68HC11
261
262The assembler supports several modifiers when using symbol addresses
263in 68HC11 and 68HC12 instruction operands. The general syntax is
264the following:
265
266@smallexample
267%modifier(symbol)
268@end smallexample
269
270@table @code
271@cindex symbol modifiers
272@item %addr
273This modifier indicates to the assembler and linker to use
274the 16-bit physical address corresponding to the symbol. This is intended
275to be used on memory window systems to map a symbol in the memory bank window.
276If the symbol is in a memory expansion part, the physical address
277corresponds to the symbol address within the memory bank window.
278If the symbol is not in a memory expansion part, this is the symbol address
279(using or not using the %addr modifier has no effect in that case).
280
281@item %page
282This modifier indicates to use the memory page number corresponding
283to the symbol. If the symbol is in a memory expansion part, its page
284number is computed by the linker as a number used to map the page containing
285the symbol in the memory bank window. If the symbol is not in a memory
286expansion part, the page number is 0.
287
288@item %hi
289This modifier indicates to use the 8-bit high part of the physical
290address of the symbol.
291
292@item %lo
293This modifier indicates to use the 8-bit low part of the physical
294address of the symbol.
295
296@end table
297
298For example a 68HC12 call to a function @samp{foo_example} stored in memory
299expansion part could be written as follows:
300
301@smallexample
302call %addr(foo_example),%page(foo_example)
303@end smallexample
304
305and this is equivalent to
306
307@smallexample
308call foo_example
309@end smallexample
310
311And for 68HC11 it could be written as follows:
312
313@smallexample
314ldab #%page(foo_example)
315stab _page_switch
316jsr %addr(foo_example)
317@end smallexample
318
319@node M68HC11-Directives
320@section Assembler Directives
321
322@cindex assembler directives, M68HC11
323@cindex assembler directives, M68HC12
324@cindex M68HC11 assembler directives
325@cindex M68HC12 assembler directives
326
327The 68HC11 and 68HC12 version of @code{@value{AS}} have the following
328specific assembler directives:
329
330@table @code
331@item .relax
332@cindex assembler directive .relax, M68HC11
333@cindex M68HC11 assembler directive .relax
334The relax directive is used by the @samp{GNU Compiler} to emit a specific
335relocation to mark a group of instructions for linker relaxation.
336The sequence of instructions within the group must be known to the linker
337so that relaxation can be performed.
338
339@item .mode [mshort|mlong|mshort-double|mlong-double]
340@cindex assembler directive .mode, M68HC11
341@cindex M68HC11 assembler directive .mode
342This directive specifies the ABI. It overrides the @samp{-mshort},
343@samp{-mlong}, @samp{-mshort-double} and @samp{-mlong-double} options.
344
345@item .far @var{symbol}
346@cindex assembler directive .far, M68HC11
347@cindex M68HC11 assembler directive .far
348This directive marks the symbol as a @samp{far} symbol meaning that it
349uses a @samp{call/rtc} calling convention as opposed to @samp{jsr/rts}.
350During a final link, the linker will identify references to the @samp{far}
351symbol and will verify the proper calling convention.
352
353@item .interrupt @var{symbol}
354@cindex assembler directive .interrupt, M68HC11
355@cindex M68HC11 assembler directive .interrupt
356This directive marks the symbol as an interrupt entry point.
357This information is then used by the debugger to correctly unwind the
358frame across interrupts.
359
360@item .xrefb @var{symbol}
361@cindex assembler directive .xrefb, M68HC11
362@cindex M68HC11 assembler directive .xrefb
363This directive is defined for compatibility with the
364@samp{Specification for Motorola 8 and 16-Bit Assembly Language Input
365Standard} and is ignored.
366
367@end table
368
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369@node M68HC11-Float
370@section Floating Point
371
372@cindex floating point, M68HC11
373@cindex M68HC11 floating point
374Packed decimal (P) format floating literals are not supported.
375Feel free to add the code!
376
377The floating point formats generated by directives are these.
378
379@table @code
380@cindex @code{float} directive, M68HC11
381@item .float
382@code{Single} precision floating point constants.
383
384@cindex @code{double} directive, M68HC11
385@item .double
386@code{Double} precision floating point constants.
387
388@cindex @code{extend} directive M68HC11
389@cindex @code{ldouble} directive M68HC11
390@item .extend
391@itemx .ldouble
392@code{Extended} precision (@code{long double}) floating point constants.
393@end table
394
395@need 2000
396@node M68HC11-opcodes
397@section Opcodes
398
399@cindex M68HC11 opcodes
400@cindex opcodes, M68HC11
401@cindex instruction set, M68HC11
402
403@menu
404* M68HC11-Branch:: Branch Improvement
405@end menu
406
407@node M68HC11-Branch
408@subsection Branch Improvement
409
410@cindex pseudo-opcodes, M68HC11
411@cindex M68HC11 pseudo-opcodes
412@cindex branch improvement, M68HC11
413@cindex M68HC11 branch improvement
414
415Certain pseudo opcodes are permitted for branch instructions.
416They expand to the shortest branch instruction that reach the
417target. Generally these mnemonics are made by prepending @samp{j} to
418the start of Motorola mnemonic. These pseudo opcodes are not affected
1370e33d 419by the @samp{--short-branches} or @samp{--force-long-branches} options.
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420
421The following table summarizes the pseudo-operations.
422
423@smallexample
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424 Displacement Width
425 +-------------------------------------------------------------+
426 | Options |
1370e33d 427 | --short-branches --force-long-branches |
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428 +--------------------------+----------------------------------+
429 Op |BYTE WORD | BYTE WORD |
430 +--------------------------+----------------------------------+
431 bsr | bsr <pc-rel> <error> | jsr <abs> |
432 bra | bra <pc-rel> <error> | jmp <abs> |
433jbsr | bsr <pc-rel> jsr <abs> | bsr <pc-rel> jsr <abs> |
434jbra | bra <pc-rel> jmp <abs> | bra <pc-rel> jmp <abs> |
34bca508 435 bXX | bXX <pc-rel> <error> | bNX +3; jmp <abs> |
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436jbXX | bXX <pc-rel> bNX +3; | bXX <pc-rel> bNX +3; jmp <abs> |
437 | jmp <abs> | |
438 +--------------------------+----------------------------------+
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439XX: condition
440NX: negative of condition XX
441
442@end smallexample
443
444@table @code
445@item jbsr
446@itemx jbra
447These are the simplest jump pseudo-operations; they always map to one
448particular machine instruction, depending on the displacement to the
449branch target.
450
451@item jb@var{XX}
452Here, @samp{jb@var{XX}} stands for an entire family of pseudo-operations,
453where @var{XX} is a conditional branch or condition-code test. The full
454list of pseudo-ops in this family is:
455@smallexample
456 jbcc jbeq jbge jbgt jbhi jbvs jbpl jblo
457 jbcs jbne jblt jble jbls jbvc jbmi
458@end smallexample
459
460For the cases of non-PC relative displacements and long displacements,
461@code{@value{AS}} issues a longer code fragment in terms of
462@var{NX}, the opposite condition to @var{XX}. For example, for the
463non-PC relative case:
464@smallexample
465 jb@var{XX} foo
466@end smallexample
467gives
468@smallexample
469 b@var{NX}s oof
470 jmp foo
471 oof:
472@end smallexample
473
474@end table
475
476