1This file describes the implementation notes of the GNU C Compiler for
2the National Semiconductor 32032 chip (and 32000 family).
3
4Much of this file was obsolete. It described restrictions caused by
5bugs in early versions of of the ns32032 chip and by bugs in sequent
6assemblers and linkers of the time.
7
8Many (all?) of the chip bugs were fixed in later revisions and
9certainly fixed by later chips in the same series (ns32332 and
10ns32532).
11
12Conditional code to support sequent assembler and/or linker restrictions
13has not been removed deliberately, but has probably not been tested in
14a *very* long time.
15
16Support for one sequent assembler bug has *not* been retained.
17It was necessary to say:
18
19	addr _x,rn
20	cmpd _p,rn
21
22rather than:
23
24	cmpd _p,@_x
25
26
27This used to be forced by the use of "rmn" register constraints rather
28than "g". This is bad for other platforms which do not have this
29restraint.
30
31It is likely that there are no Balance 8000's still in operation, but
32if there are and the assembler bug was never fixed then the easiest
33way to run gcc would be to also run gas.
34
35The code required by the sequent assembler is still generated when the
36-fpic flag is in effect and this is forced by the appropriate
37definition of LEGITIMATE_PIC_OPERAND_P. If support for the old sequent
38assembler bug is required, then this could be achieved by adding the
39test from LEGITIMATE_PIC_OPERAND to the GO_IF_LEGITIMATE_ADDRESS
40definition. Of course, this should be conditional on something in the
41sequent.h config file.
42
43The original contents of this file appear below as an historical note.
44SEQUENT_ADDRESS_BUG mentioned below has been replaced by
45INDEX_RATHER_THAN_BASE. Note that merlin.h still defines
46SEQUENT_ADDRESS_BUG even though it is not used anywhere. Since it has
47been like this for a long time, presumably either the
48SEQUENT_ADDRESS_BUG is not required for the merlin, or no one is using
49gcc on the merlin anymore.
50
51HISTORICAL NOTE
52
53The 32032 machine description and configuration file for this compiler
54is, for NS32000 family machine, primarily machine independent.
55However, since this release still depends on vendor-supplied
56assemblers and linkers, the compiler must obey the existing
57conventions of the actual machine to which this compiler is targeted.
58In this case, the actual machine which this compiler was targeted to
59is a Sequent Balance 8000, running DYNIX 2.1.
60
61The assembler for DYNIX 2.1 (and DYNIX 3.0, alas) does not cope with
62the full generality of the addressing mode REGISTER RELATIVE.
63Specifically, it generates incorrect code for operands of the
64following form:
65
66	sym(rn)
67
68Where `rn' is one of the general registers.  Correct code is generated
69for operands of the form
70
71	sym(pn)
72
73where `pn' is one of the special processor registers (sb, fp, or sp).
74
75An equivalent operand can be generated by the form
76
77	sym[rn:b]
78
79although this addressing mode is about twice as slow on the 32032.
80
81The more efficient addressing mode is controlled by defining the
82constant SEQUENT_ADDRESS_BUG to 0.  It is currently defined to be 1.
83
84Another bug in the assembler makes it impossible to compute with
85explicit addresses.  In order to compute with a symbolic address, it
86is necessary to load that address into a register using the "addr"
87instruction.  For example, it is not possible to say
88
89	cmpd _p,@_x
90
91Rather one must say
92
93	addr _x,rn
94	cmpd _p,rn
95
96
97The ns32032 chip has a number of known bugs.  Any attempt to make the
98compiler unaware of these deficiencies will surely bring disaster.
99The current list of know bugs are as follows (list provided by Richard
100Stallman):
101
1021) instructions with two overlapping operands in memory
103(unlikely in C code, perhaps impossible).
104
1052) floating point conversion instructions with constant
106operands (these may never happen, but I'm not certain).
107
1083) operands crossing a page boundary.  These can be prevented
109by setting the flag in tm.h that requires strict alignment.
110
1114) Scaled indexing in an insn following an insn that has a read-write
112operand in memory.  This can be prevented by placing a no-op in
113between.  I, Michael Tiemann, do not understand what exactly is meant
114by `read-write operand in memory'.  If this is referring to the special
115TOS mode, for example "addd 5,tos" then one need not fear, since this
116will never be generated.  However, is this includes "addd 5,-4(fp)"
117then there is room for disaster.  The Sequent compiler does not insert
118a no-op for code involving the latter, and I have been informed that
119Sequent is aware of this list of bugs, so I must assume that it is not
120a problem.
121
1225) The 32032 cannot shift by 32 bits.  It shifts modulo the word size
123of the operand.  Therefore, for 32-bit operations, 32-bit shifts are
124interpreted as zero bit shifts.  32-bit shifts have been removed from
125the compiler, but future hackers must be careful not to reintroduce
126them.
127
1286) The ns32032 is a very slow chip; however, some instructions are
129still very much slower than one might expect.  For example, it is
130almost always faster to double a quantity by adding it to itself than
131by shifting it by one, even if that quantity is deep in memory.  The
132MOVM instruction has a 20-cycle setup time, after which it moves data
133at about the speed that normal moves would.  It is also faster to use
134address generation instructions than shift instructions for left
135shifts less than 4.  I do not claim that I generate optimal code for all
136given patterns, but where I did escape from National's "clean
137architecture", I did so because the timing specification from the data
138book says that I will win if I do.  I suppose this is called the
139"performance gap".
140
141
142Signed bitfield extraction has not been implemented.  It is not
143provided by the NS32032, and while it is most certainly possible to do
144better than the standard shift-left/shift-right sequence, it is also
145quite hairy.  Also, since signed bitfields do not yet exist in C, this
146omission seems relatively harmless.
147
148
149Zero extractions could be better implemented if it were possible in
150GCC to provide sized zero extractions: i.e. a byte zero extraction
151would be allowed to yield a byte result.  The current implementation
152of GCC manifests 68000-ist thinking, where bitfields are extracted
153into a register, and automatically sign/zero extended to fill the
154register.  See comments in ns32k.md around the "extzv" insn for more
155details.
156
157
158It should be noted that while the NS32000 family was designed to
159provide odd-aligned addressing capability for multi-byte data (also
160provided by the 68020, but not by the 68000 or 68010), many machines
161do not opt to take advantage of this.  For example, on the sequent,
162although there is no advantage to long-word aligning word data, shorts
163must be int-aligned in structs.  This is an example of another
164machine-specific machine dependency.
165
166
167Because the ns32032 is has a coherent byte-order/bit-order
168architecture, many instructions which would be different for
16968000-style machines, fold into the same instruction for the 32032.
170The classic case is push effective address, where it does not matter
171whether one is pushing a long, word, or byte address.  They all will
172push the same address.
173
174
175The macro FUNCTION_VALUE_REGNO_P is probably not sufficient, what is
176needed is FUNCTION_VALUE_P, which also takes a MODE parameter.  In
177this way it will be possible to determine more exactly whether a
178register is really a function value register, or just one that happens
179to look right.
180