1@c Copyright 2002, 2003
2@c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3@c This is part of the GAS manual.
4@c For copying conditions, see the file as.texinfo.
5
6@ifset GENERIC
7@page
8@node Alpha-Dependent
9@chapter Alpha Dependent Features
10@end ifset
11
12@ifclear GENERIC
13@node Machine Dependencies
14@chapter Alpha Dependent Features
15@end ifclear
16
17@cindex Alpha support
18@menu
19* Alpha Notes::                Notes
20* Alpha Options::              Options
21* Alpha Syntax::               Syntax
22* Alpha Floating Point::       Floating Point
23* Alpha Directives::           Alpha Machine Directives
24* Alpha Opcodes::              Opcodes
25@end menu
26
27@node Alpha Notes
28@section Notes
29@cindex Alpha notes
30@cindex notes for Alpha
31
32The documentation here is primarily for the ELF object format.
33@code{@value{AS}} also supports the ECOFF and EVAX formats, but
34features specific to these formats are not yet documented.
35
36@node Alpha Options
37@section Options
38@cindex Alpha options
39@cindex options for Alpha
40
41@table @option
42@cindex @code{-m@var{cpu}} command line option, Alpha
43@item -m@var{cpu}
44This option specifies the target processor.  If an attempt is made to
45assemble an instruction which will not execute on the target processor,
46the assembler may either expand the instruction as a macro or issue an
47error message.  This option is equivalent to the @code{.arch} directive.
48
49The following processor names are recognized: 
50@code{21064},
51@code{21064a},
52@code{21066},
53@code{21068},
54@code{21164},
55@code{21164a},
56@code{21164pc},
57@code{21264},
58@code{21264a},
59@code{21264b},
60@code{ev4},
61@code{ev5},
62@code{lca45},
63@code{ev5},
64@code{ev56},
65@code{pca56},
66@code{ev6},
67@code{ev67},
68@code{ev68}.
69The special name @code{all} may be used to allow the assembler to accept
70instructions valid for any Alpha processor.
71
72In order to support existing practice in OSF/1 with respect to @code{.arch},
73and existing practice within @command{MILO} (the Linux ARC bootloader), the
74numbered processor names (e.g.@: 21064) enable the processor-specific PALcode
75instructions, while the ``electro-vlasic'' names (e.g.@: @code{ev4}) do not.
76
77@cindex @code{-mdebug} command line option, Alpha
78@cindex @code{-no-mdebug} command line option, Alpha
79@item -mdebug
80@itemx -no-mdebug
81Enables or disables the generation of @code{.mdebug} encapsulation for
82stabs directives and procedure descriptors.  The default is to automatically
83enable @code{.mdebug} when the first stabs directive is seen.
84
85@cindex @code{-relax} command line option, Alpha
86@item -relax
87This option forces all relocations to be put into the object file, instead
88of saving space and resolving some relocations at assembly time.  Note that
89this option does not propagate all symbol arithmetic into the object file,
90because not all symbol arithmetic can be represented.  However, the option
91can still be useful in specific applications.
92
93@cindex @code{-g} command line option, Alpha
94@item -g
95This option is used when the compiler generates debug information.  When
96@command{gcc} is using @command{mips-tfile} to generate debug
97information for ECOFF, local labels must be passed through to the object
98file.  Otherwise this option has no effect.
99
100@cindex @code{-G} command line option, Alpha
101@item -G@var{size}
102A local common symbol larger than @var{size} is placed in @code{.bss},
103while smaller symbols are placed in @code{.sbss}.
104
105@cindex @code{-F} command line option, Alpha
106@cindex @code{-32addr} command line option, Alpha
107@item -F
108@itemx -32addr
109These options are ignored for backward compatibility.
110@end table
111
112@cindex Alpha Syntax
113@node Alpha Syntax
114@section Syntax
115The assembler syntax closely follow the Alpha Reference Manual;
116assembler directives and general syntax closely follow the OSF/1 and
117OpenVMS syntax, with a few differences for ELF.
118
119@menu
120* Alpha-Chars::                Special Characters
121* Alpha-Regs::                 Register Names
122* Alpha-Relocs::               Relocations
123@end menu
124
125@node Alpha-Chars
126@subsection Special Characters
127
128@cindex line comment character, Alpha
129@cindex Alpha line comment character
130@samp{#} is the line comment character.
131
132@cindex line separator, Alpha
133@cindex statement separator, Alpha
134@cindex Alpha line separator
135@samp{;} can be used instead of a newline to separate statements.
136
137@node Alpha-Regs
138@subsection Register Names
139@cindex Alpha registers
140@cindex register names, Alpha
141
142The 32 integer registers are referred to as @samp{$@var{n}} or
143@samp{$r@var{n}}.  In addition, registers 15, 28, 29, and 30 may
144be referred to by the symbols @samp{$fp}, @samp{$at}, @samp{$gp},
145and @samp{$sp} respectively.
146
147The 32 floating-point registers are referred to as @samp{$f@var{n}}.
148
149@node Alpha-Relocs
150@subsection Relocations
151@cindex Alpha relocations
152@cindex relocations, Alpha
153
154Some of these relocations are available for ECOFF, but mostly
155only for ELF.  They are modeled after the relocation format 
156introduced in Digital Unix 4.0, but there are additions.
157
158The format is @samp{!@var{tag}} or @samp{!@var{tag}!@var{number}}
159where @var{tag} is the name of the relocation.  In some cases
160@var{number} is used to relate specific instructions.
161
162The relocation is placed at the end of the instruction like so:
163
164@example
165ldah  $0,a($29)    !gprelhigh
166lda   $0,a($0)     !gprellow
167ldq   $1,b($29)    !literal!100
168ldl   $2,0($1)     !lituse_base!100
169@end example
170
171@table @code
172@item !literal
173@itemx !literal!@var{N}
174Used with an @code{ldq} instruction to load the address of a symbol
175from the GOT.
176
177A sequence number @var{N} is optional, and if present is used to pair
178@code{lituse} relocations with this @code{literal} relocation.  The
179@code{lituse} relocations are used by the linker to optimize the code
180based on the final location of the symbol.
181
182Note that these optimizations are dependent on the data flow of the
183program.  Therefore, if @emph{any} @code{lituse} is paired with a
184@code{literal} relocation, then @emph{all} uses of the register set by
185the @code{literal} instruction must also be marked with @code{lituse}
186relocations.  This is because the original @code{literal} instruction
187may be deleted or transformed into another instruction.
188
189Also note that there may be a one-to-many relationship between
190@code{literal} and @code{lituse}, but not a many-to-one.  That is, if
191there are two code paths that load up the same address and feed the
192value to a single use, then the use may not use a @code{lituse}
193relocation.
194
195@item !lituse_base!@var{N}
196Used with any memory format instruction (e.g.@: @code{ldl}) to indicate
197that the literal is used for an address load.  The offset field of the
198instruction must be zero.  During relaxation, the code may be altered
199to use a gp-relative load.
200
201@item !lituse_jsr!@var{N}
202Used with a register branch format instruction (e.g.@: @code{jsr}) to
203indicate that the literal is used for a call.  During relaxation, the
204code may be altered to use a direct branch (e.g.@: @code{bsr}).
205
206@item !lituse_jsrdirect!@var{N}
207Similar to @code{lituse_jsr}, but also that this call cannot be vectored
208through a PLT entry.  This is useful for functions with special calling
209conventions which do not allow the normal call-clobbered registers to be
210clobbered.
211
212@item !lituse_bytoff!@var{N}
213Used with a byte mask instruction (e.g.@: @code{extbl}) to indicate
214that only the low 3 bits of the address are relevant.  During relaxation,
215the code may be altered to use an immediate instead of a register shift.
216
217@item !lituse_addr!@var{N}
218Used with any other instruction to indicate that the original address
219is in fact used, and the original @code{ldq} instruction may not be
220altered or deleted.  This is useful in conjunction with @code{lituse_jsr}
221to test whether a weak symbol is defined.
222
223@example
224ldq  $27,foo($29)   !literal!1
225beq  $27,is_undef   !lituse_addr!1
226jsr  $26,($27),foo  !lituse_jsr!1
227@end example
228
229@item !lituse_tlsgd!@var{N}
230Used with a register branch format instruction to indicate that the
231literal is the call to @code{__tls_get_addr} used to compute the 
232address of the thread-local storage variable whose descriptor was
233loaded with @code{!tlsgd!@var{N}}.
234
235@item !lituse_tlsldm!@var{N}
236Used with a register branch format instruction to indicate that the
237literal is the call to @code{__tls_get_addr} used to compute the 
238address of the base of the thread-local storage block for the current
239module.  The descriptor for the module must have been loaded with
240@code{!tlsldm!@var{N}}.
241
242@item !gpdisp!@var{N}
243Used with @code{ldah} and @code{lda} to load the GP from the current
244address, a-la the @code{ldgp} macro.  The source register for the
245@code{ldah} instruction must contain the address of the @code{ldah}
246instruction.  There must be exactly one @code{lda} instruction paired
247with the @code{ldah} instruction, though it may appear anywhere in 
248the instruction stream.  The immediate operands must be zero.
249
250@example
251bsr  $26,foo
252ldah $29,0($26)     !gpdisp!1
253lda  $29,0($29)     !gpdisp!1
254@end example
255
256@item !gprelhigh
257Used with an @code{ldah} instruction to add the high 16 bits of a
25832-bit displacement from the GP.
259
260@item !gprellow
261Used with any memory format instruction to add the low 16 bits of a
26232-bit displacement from the GP.
263
264@item !gprel
265Used with any memory format instruction to add a 16-bit displacement
266from the GP.
267
268@item !samegp
269Used with any branch format instruction to skip the GP load at the
270target address.  The referenced symbol must have the same GP as the
271source object file, and it must be declared to either not use @code{$27}
272or perform a standard GP load in the first two instructions via the
273@code{.prologue} directive.
274
275@item !tlsgd
276@itemx !tlsgd!@var{N}
277Used with an @code{lda} instruction to load the address of a TLS
278descriptor for a symbol in the GOT.
279
280The sequence number @var{N} is optional, and if present it used to
281pair the descriptor load with both the @code{literal} loading the
282address of the @code{__tls_get_addr} function and the @code{lituse_tlsgd}
283marking the call to that function.
284
285For proper relaxation, both the @code{tlsgd}, @code{literal} and
286@code{lituse} relocations must be in the same extended basic block.
287That is, the relocation with the lowest address must be executed
288first at runtime.
289
290@item !tlsldm
291@itemx !tlsldm!@var{N}
292Used with an @code{lda} instruction to load the address of a TLS
293descriptor for the current module in the GOT.
294
295Similar in other respects to @code{tlsgd}.
296
297@item !gotdtprel
298Used with an @code{ldq} instruction to load the offset of the TLS
299symbol within its module's thread-local storage block.  Also known
300as the dynamic thread pointer offset or dtp-relative offset.
301
302@item !dtprelhi
303@itemx !dtprello
304@itemx !dtprel
305Like @code{gprel} relocations except they compute dtp-relative offsets.
306
307@item !gottprel
308Used with an @code{ldq} instruction to load the offset of the TLS
309symbol from the thread pointer.  Also known as the tp-relative offset.
310
311@item !tprelhi
312@itemx !tprello
313@itemx !tprel
314Like @code{gprel} relocations except they compute tp-relative offsets.
315@end table
316
317@node Alpha Floating Point
318@section Floating Point
319@cindex floating point, Alpha (@sc{ieee})
320@cindex Alpha floating point (@sc{ieee})
321The Alpha family uses both @sc{ieee} and VAX floating-point numbers.
322
323@node Alpha Directives
324@section Alpha Assembler Directives
325
326@command{@value{AS}} for the Alpha supports many additional directives for
327compatibility with the native assembler.  This section describes them only
328briefly.
329
330@cindex Alpha-only directives
331These are the additional directives in @code{@value{AS}} for the Alpha:
332
333@table @code
334@item .arch @var{cpu}
335Specifies the target processor.  This is equivalent to the
336@option{-m@var{cpu}} command-line option.  @xref{Alpha Options, Options},
337for a list of values for @var{cpu}.
338
339@item .ent @var{function}[, @var{n}]
340Mark the beginning of @var{function}.  An optional number may follow for
341compatibility with the OSF/1 assembler, but is ignored.  When generating
342@code{.mdebug} information, this will create a procedure descriptor for
343the function.  In ELF, it will mark the symbol as a function a-la the
344generic @code{.type} directive.
345
346@item .end @var{function}
347Mark the end of @var{function}.  In ELF, it will set the size of the symbol
348a-la the generic @code{.size} directive.
349
350@item .mask @var{mask}, @var{offset}
351Indicate which of the integer registers are saved in the current
352function's stack frame.  @var{mask} is interpreted a bit mask in which
353bit @var{n} set indicates that register @var{n} is saved.  The registers
354are saved in a block located @var{offset} bytes from the @dfn{canonical
355frame address} (CFA) which is the value of the stack pointer on entry to
356the function.  The registers are saved sequentially, except that the
357return address register (normally @code{$26}) is saved first.
358
359This and the other directives that describe the stack frame are
360currently only used when generating @code{.mdebug} information.  They
361may in the future be used to generate DWARF2 @code{.debug_frame} unwind
362information for hand written assembly.
363
364@item .fmask @var{mask}, @var{offset}
365Indicate which of the floating-point registers are saved in the current
366stack frame.  The @var{mask} and @var{offset} parameters are interpreted
367as with @code{.mask}.
368
369@item .frame @var{framereg}, @var{frameoffset}, @var{retreg}[, @var{argoffset}]
370Describes the shape of the stack frame.  The frame pointer in use is
371@var{framereg}; normally this is either @code{$fp} or @code{$sp}.  The
372frame pointer is @var{frameoffset} bytes below the CFA.  The return
373address is initially located in @var{retreg} until it is saved as
374indicated in @code{.mask}.  For compatibility with OSF/1 an optional
375@var{argoffset} parameter is accepted and ignored.  It is believed to
376indicate the offset from the CFA to the saved argument registers.
377
378@item .prologue @var{n}
379Indicate that the stack frame is set up and all registers have been
380spilled.  The argument @var{n} indicates whether and how the function
381uses the incoming @dfn{procedure vector} (the address of the called
382function) in @code{$27}.  0 indicates that @code{$27} is not used; 1
383indicates that the first two instructions of the function use @code{$27}
384to perform a load of the GP register; 2 indicates that @code{$27} is
385used in some non-standard way and so the linker cannot elide the load of
386the procedure vector during relaxation.
387
388@item .usepv @var{function}, @var{which}
389Used to indicate the use of the @code{$27} register, similar to 
390@code{.prologue}, but without the other semantics of needing to 
391be inside an open @code{.ent}/@code{.end} block.
392
393The @var{which} argument should be either @code{no}, indicating that
394@code{$27} is not used, or @code{std}, indicating that the first two
395instructions of the function perform a GP load.
396
397One might use this directive instead of @code{.prologue} if you are
398also using dwarf2 CFI directives.
399
400@item .gprel32 @var{expression}
401Computes the difference between the address in @var{expression} and the
402GP for the current object file, and stores it in 4 bytes.  In addition
403to being smaller than a full 8 byte address, this also does not require
404a dynamic relocation when used in a shared library.
405
406@item .t_floating @var{expression}
407Stores @var{expression} as an @sc{ieee} double precision value.
408
409@item .s_floating @var{expression}
410Stores @var{expression} as an @sc{ieee} single precision value.
411
412@item .f_floating @var{expression}
413Stores @var{expression} as a VAX F format value.
414
415@item .g_floating @var{expression}
416Stores @var{expression} as a VAX G format value.
417
418@item .d_floating @var{expression}
419Stores @var{expression} as a VAX D format value.
420
421@item .set @var{feature}
422Enables or disables various assembler features.  Using the positive
423name of the feature enables while using @samp{no@var{feature}} disables.
424
425@table @code
426@item at
427Indicates that macro expansions may clobber the @dfn{assembler
428temporary} (@code{$at} or @code{$28}) register.  Some macros may not be
429expanded without this and will generate an error message if @code{noat}
430is in effect.  When @code{at} is in effect, a warning will be generated
431if @code{$at} is used by the programmer.
432
433@item macro
434Enables the expansion of macro instructions.  Note that variants of real
435instructions, such as @code{br label} vs @code{br $31,label} are
436considered alternate forms and not macros.
437
438@item move
439@itemx reorder
440@itemx volatile
441These control whether and how the assembler may re-order instructions.
442Accepted for compatibility with the OSF/1 assembler, but @command{@value{AS}}
443does not do instruction scheduling, so these features are ignored.
444@end table
445@end table
446
447The following directives are recognized for compatibility with the OSF/1
448assembler but are ignored.
449
450@example
451.proc           .aproc
452.reguse         .livereg
453.option         .aent
454.ugen           .eflag
455.alias          .noalias
456@end example
457
458@node Alpha Opcodes
459@section Opcodes
460For detailed information on the Alpha machine instruction set, see the
461@c Attempt to work around a very overfull hbox.
462@iftex
463Alpha Architecture Handbook located at
464@smallfonts
465@example
466ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/Digital/info/semiconductor/literature/alphaahb.pdf
467@end example
468@textfonts
469@end iftex
470@ifnottex
471@uref{ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/Digital/info/semiconductor/literature/alphaahb.pdf,Alpha Architecture Handbook}.
472@end ifnottex
473