MIPS: Add CRC ASE support
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gas / doc / c-mips.texi
CommitLineData
219d1afa 1@c Copyright (C) 1991-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
252b5132
RH
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 MIPS-Dependent
7@chapter MIPS Dependent Features
8@end ifset
9@ifclear GENERIC
10@node Machine Dependencies
11@chapter MIPS Dependent Features
12@end ifclear
13
14@cindex MIPS processor
98508b2a
RS
15@sc{gnu} @code{@value{AS}} for MIPS architectures supports several
16different MIPS processors, and MIPS ISA levels I through V, MIPS32,
17and MIPS64. For information about the MIPS instruction set, see
584da044 18@cite{MIPS RISC Architecture}, by Kane and Heindrich (Prentice-Hall).
98508b2a 19For an overview of MIPS assembly conventions, see ``Appendix D:
584da044 20Assembly Language Programming'' in the same work.
252b5132
RH
21
22@menu
98508b2a 23* MIPS Options:: Assembler options
fc16f8cc 24* MIPS Macros:: High-level assembly macros
5a7560b5 25* MIPS Symbol Sizes:: Directives to override the size of symbols
fc16f8cc 26* MIPS Small Data:: Controlling the use of small data accesses
252b5132 27* MIPS ISA:: Directives to override the ISA level
833794fc 28* MIPS assembly options:: Directives to control code generation
252b5132
RH
29* MIPS autoextend:: Directives for extending MIPS 16 bit instructions
30* MIPS insn:: Directive to mark data as an instruction
351cdf24 31* MIPS FP ABIs:: Marking which FP ABI is in use
ba92f887 32* MIPS NaN Encodings:: Directives to record which NaN encoding is being used
98508b2a
RS
33* MIPS Option Stack:: Directives to save and restore options
34* MIPS ASE Instruction Generation Overrides:: Directives to control
0eb7102d 35 generation of MIPS ASE instructions
98508b2a 36* MIPS Floating-Point:: Directives to override floating-point options
7c31ae13 37* MIPS Syntax:: MIPS specific syntactical considerations
252b5132
RH
38@end menu
39
98508b2a 40@node MIPS Options
252b5132
RH
41@section Assembler options
42
98508b2a 43The MIPS configurations of @sc{gnu} @code{@value{AS}} support these
252b5132
RH
44special options:
45
46@table @code
47@cindex @code{-G} option (MIPS)
48@item -G @var{num}
fc16f8cc
RS
49Set the ``small data'' limit to @var{n} bytes. The default limit is 8 bytes.
50@xref{MIPS Small Data,, Controlling the use of small data accesses}.
252b5132
RH
51
52@cindex @code{-EB} option (MIPS)
53@cindex @code{-EL} option (MIPS)
54@cindex MIPS big-endian output
55@cindex MIPS little-endian output
56@cindex big-endian output, MIPS
57@cindex little-endian output, MIPS
58@item -EB
59@itemx -EL
98508b2a 60Any MIPS configuration of @code{@value{AS}} can select big-endian or
252b5132
RH
61little-endian output at run time (unlike the other @sc{gnu} development
62tools, which must be configured for one or the other). Use @samp{-EB}
63to select big-endian output, and @samp{-EL} for little-endian.
64
0c000745
RS
65@item -KPIC
66@cindex PIC selection, MIPS
67@cindex @option{-KPIC} option, MIPS
68Generate SVR4-style PIC. This option tells the assembler to generate
69SVR4-style position-independent macro expansions. It also tells the
70assembler to mark the output file as PIC.
71
72@item -mvxworks-pic
73@cindex @option{-mvxworks-pic} option, MIPS
74Generate VxWorks PIC. This option tells the assembler to generate
75VxWorks-style position-independent macro expansions.
76
252b5132
RH
77@cindex MIPS architecture options
78@item -mips1
79@itemx -mips2
80@itemx -mips3
81@itemx -mips4
b1929900 82@itemx -mips5
e7af610e 83@itemx -mips32
af7ee8bf 84@itemx -mips32r2
ae52f483
AB
85@itemx -mips32r3
86@itemx -mips32r5
7361da2c 87@itemx -mips32r6
84ea6cf2 88@itemx -mips64
5f74bc13 89@itemx -mips64r2
ae52f483
AB
90@itemx -mips64r3
91@itemx -mips64r5
7361da2c 92@itemx -mips64r6
252b5132 93Generate code for a particular MIPS Instruction Set Architecture level.
98508b2a
RS
94@samp{-mips1} corresponds to the R2000 and R3000 processors,
95@samp{-mips2} to the R6000 processor, @samp{-mips3} to the
81566a9b 96R4000 processor, and @samp{-mips4} to the R8000 and R10000 processors.
7361da2c
AB
97@samp{-mips5}, @samp{-mips32}, @samp{-mips32r2}, @samp{-mips32r3},
98@samp{-mips32r5}, @samp{-mips32r6}, @samp{-mips64}, @samp{-mips64r2},
99@samp{-mips64r3}, @samp{-mips64r5}, and @samp{-mips64r6} correspond to
100generic MIPS V, MIPS32, MIPS32 Release 2, MIPS32 Release 3, MIPS32
101Release 5, MIPS32 Release 6, MIPS64, and MIPS64 Release 2, MIPS64
102Release 3, MIPS64 Release 5, and MIPS64 Release 6 ISA processors,
103respectively. You can also switch instruction sets during the assembly;
104see @ref{MIPS ISA, Directives to override the ISA level}.
252b5132 105
6349b5f4 106@item -mgp32
ca4e0257
RS
107@itemx -mfp32
108Some macros have different expansions for 32-bit and 64-bit registers.
109The register sizes are normally inferred from the ISA and ABI, but these
110flags force a certain group of registers to be treated as 32 bits wide at
111all times. @samp{-mgp32} controls the size of general-purpose registers
112and @samp{-mfp32} controls the size of floating-point registers.
113
ad3fea08
TS
114The @code{.set gp=32} and @code{.set fp=32} directives allow the size
115of registers to be changed for parts of an object. The default value is
116restored by @code{.set gp=default} and @code{.set fp=default}.
117
ca4e0257
RS
118On some MIPS variants there is a 32-bit mode flag; when this flag is
119set, 64-bit instructions generate a trap. Also, some 32-bit OSes only
120save the 32-bit registers on a context switch, so it is essential never
121to use the 64-bit registers.
6349b5f4
AH
122
123@item -mgp64
ad3fea08
TS
124@itemx -mfp64
125Assume that 64-bit registers are available. This is provided in the
126interests of symmetry with @samp{-mgp32} and @samp{-mfp32}.
127
128The @code{.set gp=64} and @code{.set fp=64} directives allow the size
129of registers to be changed for parts of an object. The default value is
130restored by @code{.set gp=default} and @code{.set fp=default}.
6349b5f4 131
351cdf24
MF
132@item -mfpxx
133Make no assumptions about whether 32-bit or 64-bit floating-point
134registers are available. This is provided to support having modules
135compatible with either @samp{-mfp32} or @samp{-mfp64}. This option can
136only be used with MIPS II and above.
137
138The @code{.set fp=xx} directive allows a part of an object to be marked
139as not making assumptions about 32-bit or 64-bit FP registers. The
140default value is restored by @code{.set fp=default}.
141
142@item -modd-spreg
143@itemx -mno-odd-spreg
144Enable use of floating-point operations on odd-numbered single-precision
145registers when supported by the ISA. @samp{-mfpxx} implies
146@samp{-mno-odd-spreg}, otherwise the default is @samp{-modd-spreg}
147
252b5132
RH
148@item -mips16
149@itemx -no-mips16
150Generate code for the MIPS 16 processor. This is equivalent to putting
32035f51 151@code{.module mips16} at the start of the assembly file. @samp{-no-mips16}
252b5132
RH
152turns off this option.
153
25499ac7
MR
154@item -mmips16e2
155@itemx -mno-mips16e2
156Enable the use of MIPS16e2 instructions in MIPS16 mode. This is equivalent
157to putting @code{.module mips16e2} at the start of the assembly file.
158@samp{-mno-mips16e2} turns off this option.
159
df58fc94
RS
160@item -mmicromips
161@itemx -mno-micromips
162Generate code for the microMIPS processor. This is equivalent to putting
32035f51
MR
163@code{.module micromips} at the start of the assembly file.
164@samp{-mno-micromips} turns off this option. This is equivalent to putting
165@code{.module nomicromips} at the start of the assembly file.
df58fc94 166
e16bfa71
TS
167@item -msmartmips
168@itemx -mno-smartmips
169Enables the SmartMIPS extensions to the MIPS32 instruction set, which
170provides a number of new instructions which target smartcard and
171cryptographic applications. This is equivalent to putting
32035f51 172@code{.module smartmips} at the start of the assembly file.
e16bfa71
TS
173@samp{-mno-smartmips} turns off this option.
174
1f25f5d3
CD
175@item -mips3d
176@itemx -no-mips3d
177Generate code for the MIPS-3D Application Specific Extension.
178This tells the assembler to accept MIPS-3D instructions.
179@samp{-no-mips3d} turns off this option.
180
deec1734
CD
181@item -mdmx
182@itemx -no-mdmx
183Generate code for the MDMX Application Specific Extension.
184This tells the assembler to accept MDMX instructions.
185@samp{-no-mdmx} turns off this option.
186
2ef2b9ae
CF
187@item -mdsp
188@itemx -mno-dsp
8b082fb1
TS
189Generate code for the DSP Release 1 Application Specific Extension.
190This tells the assembler to accept DSP Release 1 instructions.
2ef2b9ae
CF
191@samp{-mno-dsp} turns off this option.
192
8b082fb1
TS
193@item -mdspr2
194@itemx -mno-dspr2
195Generate code for the DSP Release 2 Application Specific Extension.
8f4f9071 196This option implies @samp{-mdsp}.
8b082fb1
TS
197This tells the assembler to accept DSP Release 2 instructions.
198@samp{-mno-dspr2} turns off this option.
199
8f4f9071
MF
200@item -mdspr3
201@itemx -mno-dspr3
202Generate code for the DSP Release 3 Application Specific Extension.
203This option implies @samp{-mdsp} and @samp{-mdspr2}.
204This tells the assembler to accept DSP Release 3 instructions.
205@samp{-mno-dspr3} turns off this option.
206
ef2e4d86
CF
207@item -mmt
208@itemx -mno-mt
209Generate code for the MT Application Specific Extension.
210This tells the assembler to accept MT instructions.
211@samp{-mno-mt} turns off this option.
212
dec0624d
MR
213@item -mmcu
214@itemx -mno-mcu
215Generate code for the MCU Application Specific Extension.
216This tells the assembler to accept MCU instructions.
217@samp{-mno-mcu} turns off this option.
218
56d438b1
CF
219@item -mmsa
220@itemx -mno-msa
221Generate code for the MIPS SIMD Architecture Extension.
222This tells the assembler to accept MSA instructions.
223@samp{-mno-msa} turns off this option.
224
7d64c587
AB
225@item -mxpa
226@itemx -mno-xpa
227Generate code for the MIPS eXtended Physical Address (XPA) Extension.
228This tells the assembler to accept XPA instructions.
229@samp{-mno-xpa} turns off this option.
230
b015e599
AP
231@item -mvirt
232@itemx -mno-virt
233Generate code for the Virtualization Application Specific Extension.
234This tells the assembler to accept Virtualization instructions.
235@samp{-mno-virt} turns off this option.
236
730c3174
SE
237@item -mcrc
238@itemx -mno-crc
239Generate code for the cyclic redundancy check (CRC) Application Specific
240Extension. This tells the assembler to accept CRC instructions.
241@samp{-mno-crc} turns off this option.
242
833794fc
MR
243@item -minsn32
244@itemx -mno-insn32
245Only use 32-bit instruction encodings when generating code for the
246microMIPS processor. This option inhibits the use of any 16-bit
247instructions. This is equivalent to putting @code{.set insn32} at
248the start of the assembly file. @samp{-mno-insn32} turns off this
249option. This is equivalent to putting @code{.set noinsn32} at the
250start of the assembly file. By default @samp{-mno-insn32} is
251selected, allowing all instructions to be used.
252
6b76fefe 253@item -mfix7000
9ee72ff1 254@itemx -mno-fix7000
6b76fefe
CM
255Cause nops to be inserted if the read of the destination register
256of an mfhi or mflo instruction occurs in the following two instructions.
257
a8d14a88
CM
258@item -mfix-rm7000
259@itemx -mno-fix-rm7000
260Cause nops to be inserted if a dmult or dmultu instruction is
261followed by a load instruction.
262
c67a084a
NC
263@item -mfix-loongson2f-jump
264@itemx -mno-fix-loongson2f-jump
265Eliminate instruction fetch from outside 256M region to work around the
266Loongson2F @samp{jump} instructions. Without it, under extreme cases,
267the kernel may crash. The issue has been solved in latest processor
268batches, but this fix has no side effect to them.
269
270@item -mfix-loongson2f-nop
271@itemx -mno-fix-loongson2f-nop
272Replace nops by @code{or at,at,zero} to work around the Loongson2F
98508b2a
RS
273@samp{nop} errata. Without it, under extreme cases, the CPU might
274deadlock. The issue has been solved in later Loongson2F batches, but
c67a084a
NC
275this fix has no side effect to them.
276
d766e8ec 277@item -mfix-vr4120
2babba43 278@itemx -mno-fix-vr4120
d766e8ec
RS
279Insert nops to work around certain VR4120 errata. This option is
280intended to be used on GCC-generated code: it is not designed to catch
281all problems in hand-written assembler code.
60b63b72 282
11db99f8 283@item -mfix-vr4130
2babba43 284@itemx -mno-fix-vr4130
11db99f8
RS
285Insert nops to work around the VR4130 @samp{mflo}/@samp{mfhi} errata.
286
6a32d874 287@item -mfix-24k
45e279f5 288@itemx -mno-fix-24k
6a32d874
CM
289Insert nops to work around the 24K @samp{eret}/@samp{deret} errata.
290
d954098f
DD
291@item -mfix-cn63xxp1
292@itemx -mno-fix-cn63xxp1
293Replace @code{pref} hints 0 - 4 and 6 - 24 with hint 28 to work around
294certain CN63XXP1 errata.
295
252b5132
RH
296@item -m4010
297@itemx -no-m4010
98508b2a
RS
298Generate code for the LSI R4010 chip. This tells the assembler to
299accept the R4010-specific instructions (@samp{addciu}, @samp{ffc},
252b5132
RH
300etc.), and to not schedule @samp{nop} instructions around accesses to
301the @samp{HI} and @samp{LO} registers. @samp{-no-m4010} turns off this
302option.
303
304@item -m4650
305@itemx -no-m4650
98508b2a 306Generate code for the MIPS R4650 chip. This tells the assembler to accept
252b5132
RH
307the @samp{mad} and @samp{madu} instruction, and to not schedule @samp{nop}
308instructions around accesses to the @samp{HI} and @samp{LO} registers.
309@samp{-no-m4650} turns off this option.
310
a4ac1c42 311@item -m3900
252b5132
RH
312@itemx -no-m3900
313@itemx -m4100
314@itemx -no-m4100
315For each option @samp{-m@var{nnnn}}, generate code for the MIPS
98508b2a 316R@var{nnnn} chip. This tells the assembler to accept instructions
252b5132
RH
317specific to that chip, and to schedule for that chip's hazards.
318
ec68c924 319@item -march=@var{cpu}
98508b2a 320Generate code for a particular MIPS CPU. It is exactly equivalent to
252b5132
RH
321@samp{-m@var{cpu}}, except that there are more value of @var{cpu}
322understood. Valid @var{cpu} value are:
323
324@quotation
3252000,
3263000,
3273900,
3284000,
3294010,
3304100,
3314111,
60b63b72
RS
332vr4120,
333vr4130,
334vr4181,
252b5132
RH
3354300,
3364400,
3374600,
3384650,
3395000,
b946ec34
NC
340rm5200,
341rm5230,
342rm5231,
343rm5261,
344rm5721,
60b63b72
RS
345vr5400,
346vr5500,
252b5132 3476000,
b946ec34 348rm7000,
252b5132 3498000,
963ac363 350rm9000,
e7af610e 35110000,
18ae5d72 35212000,
3aa3176b
TS
35314000,
35416000,
ad3fea08
TS
3554kc,
3564km,
3574kp,
3584ksc,
3594kec,
3604kem,
3614kep,
3624ksd,
363m4k,
364m4kp,
b5503c7b
MR
365m14k,
366m14kc,
7a795ef4
MR
367m14ke,
368m14kec,
ad3fea08 36924kc,
0fdf1951 37024kf2_1,
ad3fea08 37124kf,
0fdf1951 37224kf1_1,
ad3fea08 37324kec,
0fdf1951 37424kef2_1,
ad3fea08 37524kef,
0fdf1951 37624kef1_1,
ad3fea08 37734kc,
0fdf1951 37834kf2_1,
ad3fea08 37934kf,
0fdf1951 38034kf1_1,
711eefe4 38134kn,
f281862d 38274kc,
0fdf1951 38374kf2_1,
f281862d 38474kf,
0fdf1951
RS
38574kf1_1,
38674kf3_2,
30f8113a
SL
3871004kc,
3881004kf2_1,
3891004kf,
3901004kf1_1,
77403ce9 391interaptiv,
38bf472a 392interaptiv-mr2,
c6e5c03a
RS
393m5100,
394m5101,
bbaa46c0 395p5600,
ad3fea08
TS
3965kc,
3975kf,
39820kc,
39925kf,
82100185 400sb1,
350cc38d 401sb1a,
7ef0d297 402i6400,
a4968f42 403p6600,
350cc38d 404loongson2e,
037b32b9 405loongson2f,
fd503541 406loongson3a,
52b6b6b9 407octeon,
dd6a37e7 408octeon+,
432233b3 409octeon2,
2c629856 410octeon3,
55a36193
MK
411xlr,
412xlp
252b5132
RH
413@end quotation
414
0fdf1951
RS
415For compatibility reasons, @samp{@var{n}x} and @samp{@var{b}fx} are
416accepted as synonyms for @samp{@var{n}f1_1}. These values are
417deprecated.
418
ec68c924 419@item -mtune=@var{cpu}
98508b2a 420Schedule and tune for a particular MIPS CPU. Valid @var{cpu} values are
ec68c924
EC
421identical to @samp{-march=@var{cpu}}.
422
316f5878
RS
423@item -mabi=@var{abi}
424Record which ABI the source code uses. The recognized arguments
425are: @samp{32}, @samp{n32}, @samp{o64}, @samp{64} and @samp{eabi}.
252b5132 426
aed1a261
RS
427@item -msym32
428@itemx -mno-sym32
429@cindex -msym32
430@cindex -mno-sym32
431Equivalent to adding @code{.set sym32} or @code{.set nosym32} to
5a7560b5 432the beginning of the assembler input. @xref{MIPS Symbol Sizes}.
aed1a261 433
252b5132
RH
434@cindex @code{-nocpp} ignored (MIPS)
435@item -nocpp
436This option is ignored. It is accepted for command-line compatibility with
437other assemblers, which use it to turn off C style preprocessing. With
438@sc{gnu} @code{@value{AS}}, there is no need for @samp{-nocpp}, because the
439@sc{gnu} assembler itself never runs the C preprocessor.
440
037b32b9
AN
441@item -msoft-float
442@itemx -mhard-float
443Disable or enable floating-point instructions. Note that by default
444floating-point instructions are always allowed even with CPU targets
445that don't have support for these instructions.
446
447@item -msingle-float
448@itemx -mdouble-float
449Disable or enable double-precision floating-point operations. Note
450that by default double-precision floating-point operations are always
451allowed even with CPU targets that don't have support for these
452operations.
453
119d663a
NC
454@item --construct-floats
455@itemx --no-construct-floats
119d663a
NC
456The @code{--no-construct-floats} option disables the construction of
457double width floating point constants by loading the two halves of the
458value into the two single width floating point registers that make up
459the double width register. This feature is useful if the processor
460support the FR bit in its status register, and this bit is known (by
461the programmer) to be set. This bit prevents the aliasing of the double
462width register by the single width registers.
463
63bf5651 464By default @code{--construct-floats} is selected, allowing construction
119d663a
NC
465of these floating point constants.
466
3bf0dbfb
MR
467@item --relax-branch
468@itemx --no-relax-branch
469The @samp{--relax-branch} option enables the relaxation of out-of-range
470branches. Any branches whose target cannot be reached directly are
471converted to a small instruction sequence including an inverse-condition
472branch to the physically next instruction, and a jump to the original
473target is inserted between the two instructions. In PIC code the jump
474will involve further instructions for address calculation.
475
476The @code{BC1ANY2F}, @code{BC1ANY2T}, @code{BC1ANY4F}, @code{BC1ANY4T},
477@code{BPOSGE32} and @code{BPOSGE64} instructions are excluded from
478relaxation, because they have no complementing counterparts. They could
479be relaxed with the use of a longer sequence involving another branch,
480however this has not been implemented and if their target turns out of
481reach, they produce an error even if branch relaxation is enabled.
482
81566a9b 483Also no MIPS16 branches are ever relaxed.
3bf0dbfb
MR
484
485By default @samp{--no-relax-branch} is selected, causing any out-of-range
486branches to produce an error.
487
8b10b0b3
MR
488@item -mignore-branch-isa
489@itemx -mno-ignore-branch-isa
490Ignore branch checks for invalid transitions between ISA modes.
491
492The semantics of branches does not provide for an ISA mode switch, so in
493most cases the ISA mode a branch has been encoded for has to be the same
494as the ISA mode of the branch's target label. If the ISA modes do not
495match, then such a branch, if taken, will cause the ISA mode to remain
496unchanged and instructions that follow will be executed in the wrong ISA
497mode causing the program to misbehave or crash.
498
499In the case of the @code{BAL} instruction it may be possible to relax
500it to an equivalent @code{JALX} instruction so that the ISA mode is
501switched at the run time as required. For other branches no relaxation
502is possible and therefore GAS has checks implemented that verify in
503branch assembly that the two ISA modes match, and report an error
504otherwise so that the problem with code can be diagnosed at the assembly
505time rather than at the run time.
506
507However some assembly code, including generated code produced by some
508versions of GCC, may incorrectly include branches to data labels, which
509appear to require a mode switch but are either dead or immediately
510followed by valid instructions encoded for the same ISA the branch has
511been encoded for. While not strictly correct at the source level such
512code will execute as intended, so to help with these cases
513@samp{-mignore-branch-isa} is supported which disables ISA mode checks
514for branches.
515
516By default @samp{-mno-ignore-branch-isa} is selected, causing any invalid
517branch requiring a transition between ISA modes to produce an error.
518
ba92f887
MR
519@cindex @option{-mnan=} command line option, MIPS
520@item -mnan=@var{encoding}
521This option indicates whether the source code uses the IEEE 2008
522NaN encoding (@option{-mnan=2008}) or the original MIPS encoding
523(@option{-mnan=legacy}). It is equivalent to adding a @code{.nan}
524directive to the beginning of the source file. @xref{MIPS NaN Encodings}.
525
526@option{-mnan=legacy} is the default if no @option{-mnan} option or
527@code{.nan} directive is used.
528
252b5132
RH
529@item --trap
530@itemx --no-break
531@c FIXME! (1) reflect these options (next item too) in option summaries;
532@c (2) stop teasing, say _which_ instructions expanded _how_.
533@code{@value{AS}} automatically macro expands certain division and
534multiplication instructions to check for overflow and division by zero. This
535option causes @code{@value{AS}} to generate code to take a trap exception
536rather than a break exception when an error is detected. The trap instructions
537are only supported at Instruction Set Architecture level 2 and higher.
538
539@item --break
540@itemx --no-trap
541Generate code to take a break exception rather than a trap exception when an
542error is detected. This is the default.
63486801 543
dcd410fe
RO
544@item -mpdr
545@itemx -mno-pdr
546Control generation of @code{.pdr} sections. Off by default on IRIX, on
547elsewhere.
aa6975fb
ILT
548
549@item -mshared
550@itemx -mno-shared
551When generating code using the Unix calling conventions (selected by
552@samp{-KPIC} or @samp{-mcall_shared}), gas will normally generate code
553which can go into a shared library. The @samp{-mno-shared} option
554tells gas to generate code which uses the calling convention, but can
555not go into a shared library. The resulting code is slightly more
556efficient. This option only affects the handling of the
557@samp{.cpload} and @samp{.cpsetup} pseudo-ops.
252b5132
RH
558@end table
559
fc16f8cc
RS
560@node MIPS Macros
561@section High-level assembly macros
562
563MIPS assemblers have traditionally provided a wider range of
564instructions than the MIPS architecture itself. These extra
565instructions are usually referred to as ``macro'' instructions
566@footnote{The term ``macro'' is somewhat overloaded here, since
567these macros have no relation to those defined by @code{.macro},
568@pxref{Macro,, @code{.macro}}.}.
569
570Some MIPS macro instructions extend an underlying architectural instruction
571while others are entirely new. An example of the former type is @code{and},
572which allows the third operand to be either a register or an arbitrary
573immediate value. Examples of the latter type include @code{bgt}, which
574branches to the third operand when the first operand is greater than
575the second operand, and @code{ulh}, which implements an unaligned
5762-byte load.
577
578One of the most common extensions provided by macros is to expand
579memory offsets to the full address range (32 or 64 bits) and to allow
580symbolic offsets such as @samp{my_data + 4} to be used in place of
581integer constants. For example, the architectural instruction
582@code{lbu} allows only a signed 16-bit offset, whereas the macro
583@code{lbu} allows code such as @samp{lbu $4,array+32769($5)}.
584The implementation of these symbolic offsets depends on several factors,
98508b2a
RS
585such as whether the assembler is generating SVR4-style PIC (selected by
586@option{-KPIC}, @pxref{MIPS Options,, Assembler options}), the size of symbols
fc16f8cc
RS
587(@pxref{MIPS Symbol Sizes,, Directives to override the size of symbols}),
588and the small data limit (@pxref{MIPS Small Data,, Controlling the use
589of small data accesses}).
590
591@kindex @code{.set macro}
592@kindex @code{.set nomacro}
593Sometimes it is undesirable to have one assembly instruction expand
594to several machine instructions. The directive @code{.set nomacro}
595tells the assembler to warn when this happens. @code{.set macro}
596restores the default behavior.
597
598@cindex @code{at} register, MIPS
599@kindex @code{.set at=@var{reg}}
600Some macro instructions need a temporary register to store intermediate
601results. This register is usually @code{$1}, also known as @code{$at},
602but it can be changed to any core register @var{reg} using
603@code{.set at=@var{reg}}. Note that @code{$at} always refers
604to @code{$1} regardless of which register is being used as the
605temporary register.
606
607@kindex @code{.set at}
608@kindex @code{.set noat}
609Implicit uses of the temporary register in macros could interfere with
610explicit uses in the assembly code. The assembler therefore warns
611whenever it sees an explicit use of the temporary register. The directive
612@code{.set noat} silences this warning while @code{.set at} restores
613the default behavior. It is safe to use @code{.set noat} while
614@code{.set nomacro} is in effect since single-instruction macros
615never need a temporary register.
616
617Note that while the @sc{gnu} assembler provides these macros for compatibility,
618it does not make any attempt to optimize them with the surrounding code.
619
5a7560b5 620@node MIPS Symbol Sizes
aed1a261
RS
621@section Directives to override the size of symbols
622
5a7560b5
RS
623@kindex @code{.set sym32}
624@kindex @code{.set nosym32}
aed1a261
RS
625The n64 ABI allows symbols to have any 64-bit value. Although this
626provides a great deal of flexibility, it means that some macros have
627much longer expansions than their 32-bit counterparts. For example,
628the non-PIC expansion of @samp{dla $4,sym} is usually:
629
630@smallexample
631lui $4,%highest(sym)
632lui $1,%hi(sym)
633daddiu $4,$4,%higher(sym)
634daddiu $1,$1,%lo(sym)
635dsll32 $4,$4,0
636daddu $4,$4,$1
637@end smallexample
638
639whereas the 32-bit expansion is simply:
640
641@smallexample
642lui $4,%hi(sym)
643daddiu $4,$4,%lo(sym)
644@end smallexample
645
646n64 code is sometimes constructed in such a way that all symbolic
647constants are known to have 32-bit values, and in such cases, it's
648preferable to use the 32-bit expansion instead of the 64-bit
649expansion.
650
651You can use the @code{.set sym32} directive to tell the assembler
652that, from this point on, all expressions of the form
653@samp{@var{symbol}} or @samp{@var{symbol} + @var{offset}}
654have 32-bit values. For example:
655
656@smallexample
657.set sym32
658dla $4,sym
659lw $4,sym+16
660sw $4,sym+0x8000($4)
661@end smallexample
662
663will cause the assembler to treat @samp{sym}, @code{sym+16} and
664@code{sym+0x8000} as 32-bit values. The handling of non-symbolic
665addresses is not affected.
666
667The directive @code{.set nosym32} ends a @code{.set sym32} block and
668reverts to the normal behavior. It is also possible to change the
669symbol size using the command-line options @option{-msym32} and
670@option{-mno-sym32}.
671
672These options and directives are always accepted, but at present,
673they have no effect for anything other than n64.
674
fc16f8cc
RS
675@node MIPS Small Data
676@section Controlling the use of small data accesses
5a7560b5 677
fc16f8cc
RS
678@c This section deliberately glosses over the possibility of using -G
679@c in SVR4-style PIC, as could be done on IRIX. We don't support that.
680@cindex small data, MIPS
5a7560b5 681@cindex @code{gp} register, MIPS
fc16f8cc
RS
682It often takes several instructions to load the address of a symbol.
683For example, when @samp{addr} is a 32-bit symbol, the non-PIC expansion
684of @samp{dla $4,addr} is usually:
685
686@smallexample
687lui $4,%hi(addr)
688daddiu $4,$4,%lo(addr)
689@end smallexample
690
691The sequence is much longer when @samp{addr} is a 64-bit symbol.
692@xref{MIPS Symbol Sizes,, Directives to override the size of symbols}.
693
694In order to cut down on this overhead, most embedded MIPS systems
695set aside a 64-kilobyte ``small data'' area and guarantee that all
696data of size @var{n} and smaller will be placed in that area.
697The limit @var{n} is passed to both the assembler and the linker
98508b2a 698using the command-line option @option{-G @var{n}}, @pxref{MIPS Options,,
fc16f8cc
RS
699Assembler options}. Note that the same value of @var{n} must be used
700when linking and when assembling all input files to the link; any
701inconsistency could cause a relocation overflow error.
702
703The size of an object in the @code{.bss} section is set by the
704@code{.comm} or @code{.lcomm} directive that defines it. The size of
705an external object may be set with the @code{.extern} directive. For
706example, @samp{.extern sym,4} declares that the object at @code{sym}
707is 4 bytes in length, while leaving @code{sym} otherwise undefined.
708
709When no @option{-G} option is given, the default limit is 8 bytes.
710The option @option{-G 0} prevents any data from being automatically
711classified as small.
712
713It is also possible to mark specific objects as small by putting them
714in the special sections @code{.sdata} and @code{.sbss}, which are
715``small'' counterparts of @code{.data} and @code{.bss} respectively.
716The toolchain will treat such data as small regardless of the
717@option{-G} setting.
718
719On startup, systems that support a small data area are expected to
720initialize register @code{$28}, also known as @code{$gp}, in such a
721way that small data can be accessed using a 16-bit offset from that
722register. For example, when @samp{addr} is small data,
723the @samp{dla $4,addr} instruction above is equivalent to:
724
725@smallexample
726daddiu $4,$28,%gp_rel(addr)
727@end smallexample
728
729Small data is not supported for SVR4-style PIC.
5a7560b5 730
252b5132
RH
731@node MIPS ISA
732@section Directives to override the ISA level
733
734@cindex MIPS ISA override
735@kindex @code{.set mips@var{n}}
736@sc{gnu} @code{@value{AS}} supports an additional directive to change
98508b2a 737the MIPS Instruction Set Architecture level on the fly: @code{.set
ae52f483 738mips@var{n}}. @var{n} should be a number from 0 to 5, or 32, 32r2, 32r3,
7361da2c 73932r5, 32r6, 64, 64r2, 64r3, 64r5 or 64r6.
071742cf 740The values other than 0 make the assembler accept instructions
e335d9cb 741for the corresponding ISA level, from that point on in the
584da044
NC
742assembly. @code{.set mips@var{n}} affects not only which instructions
743are permitted, but also how certain macros are expanded. @code{.set
e335d9cb 744mips0} restores the ISA level to its original level: either the
584da044 745level you selected with command line options, or the default for your
81566a9b 746configuration. You can use this feature to permit specific MIPS III
584da044 747instructions while assembling in 32 bit mode. Use this directive with
ec68c924 748care!
252b5132 749
ad3fea08
TS
750@cindex MIPS CPU override
751@kindex @code{.set arch=@var{cpu}}
752The @code{.set arch=@var{cpu}} directive provides even finer control.
753It changes the effective CPU target and allows the assembler to use
754instructions specific to a particular CPU. All CPUs supported by the
755@samp{-march} command line option are also selectable by this directive.
756The original value is restored by @code{.set arch=default}.
252b5132 757
ad3fea08
TS
758The directive @code{.set mips16} puts the assembler into MIPS 16 mode,
759in which it will assemble instructions for the MIPS 16 processor. Use
760@code{.set nomips16} to return to normal 32 bit mode.
e16bfa71 761
98508b2a 762Traditional MIPS assemblers do not support this directive.
252b5132 763
df58fc94
RS
764The directive @code{.set micromips} puts the assembler into microMIPS mode,
765in which it will assemble instructions for the microMIPS processor. Use
766@code{.set nomicromips} to return to normal 32 bit mode.
767
98508b2a 768Traditional MIPS assemblers do not support this directive.
df58fc94 769
833794fc
MR
770@node MIPS assembly options
771@section Directives to control code generation
772
919731af 773@cindex MIPS directives to override command line options
774@kindex @code{.module}
775The @code{.module} directive allows command line options to be set directly
776from assembly. The format of the directive matches the @code{.set}
777directive but only those options which are relevant to a whole module are
778supported. The effect of a @code{.module} directive is the same as the
779corresponding command line option. Where @code{.set} directives support
780returning to a default then the @code{.module} directives do not as they
781define the defaults.
782
783These module-level directives must appear first in assembly.
784
785Traditional MIPS assemblers do not support this directive.
786
833794fc
MR
787@cindex MIPS 32-bit microMIPS instruction generation override
788@kindex @code{.set insn32}
789@kindex @code{.set noinsn32}
790The directive @code{.set insn32} makes the assembler only use 32-bit
791instruction encodings when generating code for the microMIPS processor.
792This directive inhibits the use of any 16-bit instructions from that
793point on in the assembly. The @code{.set noinsn32} directive allows
79416-bit instructions to be accepted.
795
796Traditional MIPS assemblers do not support this directive.
797
252b5132
RH
798@node MIPS autoextend
799@section Directives for extending MIPS 16 bit instructions
800
801@kindex @code{.set autoextend}
802@kindex @code{.set noautoextend}
803By default, MIPS 16 instructions are automatically extended to 32 bits
ad3fea08
TS
804when necessary. The directive @code{.set noautoextend} will turn this
805off. When @code{.set noautoextend} is in effect, any 32 bit instruction
806must be explicitly extended with the @code{.e} modifier (e.g.,
807@code{li.e $4,1000}). The directive @code{.set autoextend} may be used
252b5132
RH
808to once again automatically extend instructions when necessary.
809
810This directive is only meaningful when in MIPS 16 mode. Traditional
98508b2a 811MIPS assemblers do not support this directive.
252b5132
RH
812
813@node MIPS insn
814@section Directive to mark data as an instruction
815
816@kindex @code{.insn}
817The @code{.insn} directive tells @code{@value{AS}} that the following
df58fc94
RS
818data is actually instructions. This makes a difference in MIPS 16 and
819microMIPS modes: when loading the address of a label which precedes
820instructions, @code{@value{AS}} automatically adds 1 to the value, so
821that jumping to the loaded address will do the right thing.
252b5132 822
a946d7e3
NC
823@kindex @code{.global}
824The @code{.global} and @code{.globl} directives supported by
825@code{@value{AS}} will by default mark the symbol as pointing to a
826region of data not code. This means that, for example, any
827instructions following such a symbol will not be disassembled by
f746e6b9 828@code{objdump} as it will regard them as data. To change this
f179c512 829behavior an optional section name can be placed after the symbol name
a946d7e3 830in the @code{.global} directive. If this section exists and is known
f179c512 831to be a code section, then the symbol will be marked as pointing at
a946d7e3
NC
832code not data. Ie the syntax for the directive is:
833
834 @code{.global @var{symbol}[ @var{section}][, @var{symbol}[ @var{section}]] ...},
835
836Here is a short example:
837
838@example
839 .global foo .text, bar, baz .data
840foo:
841 nop
842bar:
843 .word 0x0
844baz:
845 .word 0x1
34bca508 846
a946d7e3
NC
847@end example
848
351cdf24
MF
849@node MIPS FP ABIs
850@section Directives to control the FP ABI
851@menu
852* MIPS FP ABI History:: History of FP ABIs
853* MIPS FP ABI Variants:: Supported FP ABIs
854* MIPS FP ABI Selection:: Automatic selection of FP ABI
855* MIPS FP ABI Compatibility:: Linking different FP ABI variants
856@end menu
857
858@node MIPS FP ABI History
859@subsection History of FP ABIs
860@cindex @code{.gnu_attribute 4, @var{n}} directive, MIPS
861@cindex @code{.gnu_attribute Tag_GNU_MIPS_ABI_FP, @var{n}} directive, MIPS
862The MIPS ABIs support a variety of different floating-point extensions
863where calling-convention and register sizes vary for floating-point data.
864The extensions exist to support a wide variety of optional architecture
865features. The resulting ABI variants are generally incompatible with each
866other and must be tracked carefully.
867
868Traditionally the use of an explicit @code{.gnu_attribute 4, @var{n}}
869directive is used to indicate which ABI is in use by a specific module.
870It was then left to the user to ensure that command line options and the
871selected ABI were compatible with some potential for inconsistencies.
872
873@node MIPS FP ABI Variants
874@subsection Supported FP ABIs
875The supported floating-point ABI variants are:
876
877@table @code
878@item 0 - No floating-point
879This variant is used to indicate that floating-point is not used within
880the module at all and therefore has no impact on the ABI. This is the
881default.
882
883@item 1 - Double-precision
884This variant indicates that double-precision support is used. For 64-bit
885ABIs this means that 64-bit wide floating-point registers are required.
886For 32-bit ABIs this means that 32-bit wide floating-point registers are
887required and double-precision operations use pairs of registers.
888
889@item 2 - Single-precision
890This variant indicates that single-precision support is used. Double
891precision operations will be supported via soft-float routines.
892
893@item 3 - Soft-float
894This variant indicates that although floating-point support is used all
895operations are emulated in software. This means the ABI is modified to
896pass all floating-point data in general-purpose registers.
897
898@item 4 - Deprecated
899This variant existed as an initial attempt at supporting 64-bit wide
f179c512
MF
900floating-point registers for O32 ABI on a MIPS32r2 CPU. This has been
901superseded by 5, 6 and 7.
351cdf24
MF
902
903@item 5 - Double-precision 32-bit CPU, 32-bit or 64-bit FPU
904This variant is used by 32-bit ABIs to indicate that the floating-point
905code in the module has been designed to operate correctly with either
90632-bit wide or 64-bit wide floating-point registers. Double-precision
907support is used. Only O32 currently supports this variant and requires
908a minimum architecture of MIPS II.
909
910@item 6 - Double-precision 32-bit FPU, 64-bit FPU
911This variant is used by 32-bit ABIs to indicate that the floating-point
912code in the module requires 64-bit wide floating-point registers.
913Double-precision support is used. Only O32 currently supports this
914variant and requires a minimum architecture of MIPS32r2.
915
916@item 7 - Double-precision compat 32-bit FPU, 64-bit FPU
917This variant is used by 32-bit ABIs to indicate that the floating-point
918code in the module requires 64-bit wide floating-point registers.
919Double-precision support is used. This differs from the previous ABI
920as it restricts use of odd-numbered single-precision registers. Only
921O32 currently supports this variant and requires a minimum architecture
922of MIPS32r2.
923@end table
924
925@node MIPS FP ABI Selection
926@subsection Automatic selection of FP ABI
927@cindex @code{.module fp=@var{nn}} directive, MIPS
928In order to simplify and add safety to the process of selecting the
929correct floating-point ABI, the assembler will automatically infer the
930correct @code{.gnu_attribute 4, @var{n}} directive based on command line
931options and @code{.module} overrides. Where an explicit
932@code{.gnu_attribute 4, @var{n}} directive has been seen then a warning
933will be raised if it does not match an inferred setting.
934
935The floating-point ABI is inferred as follows. If @samp{-msoft-float}
936has been used the module will be marked as soft-float. If
937@samp{-msingle-float} has been used then the module will be marked as
938single-precision. The remaining ABIs are then selected based
939on the FP register width. Double-precision is selected if the width
940of GP and FP registers match and the special double-precision variants
941for 32-bit ABIs are then selected depending on @samp{-mfpxx},
942@samp{-mfp64} and @samp{-mno-odd-spreg}.
943
944@node MIPS FP ABI Compatibility
945@subsection Linking different FP ABI variants
946Modules using the default FP ABI (no floating-point) can be linked with
947any other (singular) FP ABI variant.
948
949Special compatibility support exists for O32 with the four
950double-precision FP ABI variants. The @samp{-mfpxx} FP ABI is specifically
951designed to be compatible with the standard double-precision ABI and the
952@samp{-mfp64} FP ABIs. This makes it desirable for O32 modules to be
953built as @samp{-mfpxx} to ensure the maximum compatibility with other
954modules produced for more specific needs. The only FP ABIs which cannot
955be linked together are the standard double-precision ABI and the full
956@samp{-mfp64} ABI with @samp{-modd-spreg}.
957
ba92f887
MR
958@node MIPS NaN Encodings
959@section Directives to record which NaN encoding is being used
960
961@cindex MIPS IEEE 754 NaN data encoding selection
962@cindex @code{.nan} directive, MIPS
963The IEEE 754 floating-point standard defines two types of not-a-number
964(NaN) data: ``signalling'' NaNs and ``quiet'' NaNs. The original version
965of the standard did not specify how these two types should be
966distinguished. Most implementations followed the i387 model, in which
967the first bit of the significand is set for quiet NaNs and clear for
968signalling NaNs. However, the original MIPS implementation assigned the
969opposite meaning to the bit, so that it was set for signalling NaNs and
970clear for quiet NaNs.
971
972The 2008 revision of the standard formally suggested the i387 choice
973and as from Sep 2012 the current release of the MIPS architecture
974therefore optionally supports that form. Code that uses one NaN encoding
975would usually be incompatible with code that uses the other NaN encoding,
976so MIPS ELF objects have a flag (@code{EF_MIPS_NAN2008}) to record which
977encoding is being used.
978
979Assembly files can use the @code{.nan} directive to select between the
980two encodings. @samp{.nan 2008} says that the assembly file uses the
981IEEE 754-2008 encoding while @samp{.nan legacy} says that the file uses
982the original MIPS encoding. If several @code{.nan} directives are given,
983the final setting is the one that is used.
984
985The command-line options @option{-mnan=legacy} and @option{-mnan=2008}
986can be used instead of @samp{.nan legacy} and @samp{.nan 2008}
987respectively. However, any @code{.nan} directive overrides the
988command-line setting.
989
990@samp{.nan legacy} is the default if no @code{.nan} directive or
991@option{-mnan} option is given.
992
993Note that @sc{gnu} @code{@value{AS}} does not produce NaNs itself and
994therefore these directives do not affect code generation. They simply
995control the setting of the @code{EF_MIPS_NAN2008} flag.
996
997Traditional MIPS assemblers do not support these directives.
998
98508b2a 999@node MIPS Option Stack
252b5132
RH
1000@section Directives to save and restore options
1001
1002@cindex MIPS option stack
1003@kindex @code{.set push}
1004@kindex @code{.set pop}
1005The directives @code{.set push} and @code{.set pop} may be used to save
1006and restore the current settings for all the options which are
1007controlled by @code{.set}. The @code{.set push} directive saves the
1008current settings on a stack. The @code{.set pop} directive pops the
1009stack and restores the settings.
1010
1011These directives can be useful inside an macro which must change an
1012option such as the ISA level or instruction reordering but does not want
1013to change the state of the code which invoked the macro.
1014
98508b2a 1015Traditional MIPS assemblers do not support these directives.
1f25f5d3 1016
98508b2a 1017@node MIPS ASE Instruction Generation Overrides
1f25f5d3
CD
1018@section Directives to control generation of MIPS ASE instructions
1019
1020@cindex MIPS MIPS-3D instruction generation override
1021@kindex @code{.set mips3d}
1022@kindex @code{.set nomips3d}
1023The directive @code{.set mips3d} makes the assembler accept instructions
1024from the MIPS-3D Application Specific Extension from that point on
1025in the assembly. The @code{.set nomips3d} directive prevents MIPS-3D
1026instructions from being accepted.
1027
ad3fea08
TS
1028@cindex SmartMIPS instruction generation override
1029@kindex @code{.set smartmips}
1030@kindex @code{.set nosmartmips}
1031The directive @code{.set smartmips} makes the assembler accept
1032instructions from the SmartMIPS Application Specific Extension to the
e335d9cb 1033MIPS32 ISA from that point on in the assembly. The
ad3fea08
TS
1034@code{.set nosmartmips} directive prevents SmartMIPS instructions from
1035being accepted.
1036
deec1734
CD
1037@cindex MIPS MDMX instruction generation override
1038@kindex @code{.set mdmx}
1039@kindex @code{.set nomdmx}
1040The directive @code{.set mdmx} makes the assembler accept instructions
1041from the MDMX Application Specific Extension from that point on
1042in the assembly. The @code{.set nomdmx} directive prevents MDMX
1043instructions from being accepted.
1044
8b082fb1 1045@cindex MIPS DSP Release 1 instruction generation override
2ef2b9ae
CF
1046@kindex @code{.set dsp}
1047@kindex @code{.set nodsp}
1048The directive @code{.set dsp} makes the assembler accept instructions
8b082fb1
TS
1049from the DSP Release 1 Application Specific Extension from that point
1050on in the assembly. The @code{.set nodsp} directive prevents DSP
1051Release 1 instructions from being accepted.
1052
1053@cindex MIPS DSP Release 2 instruction generation override
1054@kindex @code{.set dspr2}
1055@kindex @code{.set nodspr2}
1056The directive @code{.set dspr2} makes the assembler accept instructions
1057from the DSP Release 2 Application Specific Extension from that point
f179c512 1058on in the assembly. This directive implies @code{.set dsp}. The
8b082fb1
TS
1059@code{.set nodspr2} directive prevents DSP Release 2 instructions from
1060being accepted.
2ef2b9ae 1061
8f4f9071
MF
1062@cindex MIPS DSP Release 3 instruction generation override
1063@kindex @code{.set dspr3}
1064@kindex @code{.set nodspr3}
1065The directive @code{.set dspr3} makes the assembler accept instructions
1066from the DSP Release 3 Application Specific Extension from that point
1067on in the assembly. This directive implies @code{.set dsp} and
1068@code{.set dspr2}. The @code{.set nodspr3} directive prevents DSP
1069Release 3 instructions from being accepted.
1070
ef2e4d86
CF
1071@cindex MIPS MT instruction generation override
1072@kindex @code{.set mt}
1073@kindex @code{.set nomt}
1074The directive @code{.set mt} makes the assembler accept instructions
1075from the MT Application Specific Extension from that point on
1076in the assembly. The @code{.set nomt} directive prevents MT
1077instructions from being accepted.
1078
dec0624d
MR
1079@cindex MIPS MCU instruction generation override
1080@kindex @code{.set mcu}
1081@kindex @code{.set nomcu}
1082The directive @code{.set mcu} makes the assembler accept instructions
1083from the MCU Application Specific Extension from that point on
1084in the assembly. The @code{.set nomcu} directive prevents MCU
1085instructions from being accepted.
1086
56d438b1
CF
1087@cindex MIPS SIMD Architecture instruction generation override
1088@kindex @code{.set msa}
1089@kindex @code{.set nomsa}
1090The directive @code{.set msa} makes the assembler accept instructions
1091from the MIPS SIMD Architecture Extension from that point on
1092in the assembly. The @code{.set nomsa} directive prevents MSA
1093instructions from being accepted.
1094
b015e599
AP
1095@cindex Virtualization instruction generation override
1096@kindex @code{.set virt}
1097@kindex @code{.set novirt}
1098The directive @code{.set virt} makes the assembler accept instructions
1099from the Virtualization Application Specific Extension from that point
1100on in the assembly. The @code{.set novirt} directive prevents Virtualization
1101instructions from being accepted.
1102
7d64c587
AB
1103@cindex MIPS eXtended Physical Address (XPA) instruction generation override
1104@kindex @code{.set xpa}
1105@kindex @code{.set noxpa}
1106The directive @code{.set xpa} makes the assembler accept instructions
1107from the XPA Extension from that point on in the assembly. The
1108@code{.set noxpa} directive prevents XPA instructions from being accepted.
1109
25499ac7
MR
1110@cindex MIPS16e2 instruction generation override
1111@kindex @code{.set mips16e2}
1112@kindex @code{.set nomips16e2}
1113The directive @code{.set mips16e2} makes the assembler accept instructions
1114from the MIPS16e2 Application Specific Extension from that point on in the
75c80ee1
MR
1115assembly, whenever in MIPS16 mode. The @code{.set nomips16e2} directive
1116prevents MIPS16e2 instructions from being accepted, in MIPS16 mode. Neither
25499ac7
MR
1117directive affects the state of MIPS16 mode being active itself which has
1118separate controls.
1119
730c3174
SE
1120@cindex MIPS cyclic redundancy check (CRC) instruction generation override
1121@kindex @code{.set crc}
1122@kindex @code{.set nocrc}
1123The directive @code{.set crc} makes the assembler accept instructions
1124from the CRC Extension from that point on in the assembly. The
1125@code{.set nocrc} directive prevents CRC instructions from being accepted.
1126
98508b2a 1127Traditional MIPS assemblers do not support these directives.
037b32b9 1128
98508b2a 1129@node MIPS Floating-Point
037b32b9
AN
1130@section Directives to override floating-point options
1131
1132@cindex Disable floating-point instructions
1133@kindex @code{.set softfloat}
1134@kindex @code{.set hardfloat}
1135The directives @code{.set softfloat} and @code{.set hardfloat} provide
1136finer control of disabling and enabling float-point instructions.
1137These directives always override the default (that hard-float
1138instructions are accepted) or the command-line options
1139(@samp{-msoft-float} and @samp{-mhard-float}).
1140
1141@cindex Disable single-precision floating-point operations
605b1dd4
NH
1142@kindex @code{.set singlefloat}
1143@kindex @code{.set doublefloat}
037b32b9
AN
1144The directives @code{.set singlefloat} and @code{.set doublefloat}
1145provide finer control of disabling and enabling double-precision
1146float-point operations. These directives always override the default
1147(that double-precision operations are accepted) or the command-line
1148options (@samp{-msingle-float} and @samp{-mdouble-float}).
1149
98508b2a 1150Traditional MIPS assemblers do not support these directives.
7c31ae13
NC
1151
1152@node MIPS Syntax
1153@section Syntactical considerations for the MIPS assembler
1154@menu
1155* MIPS-Chars:: Special Characters
1156@end menu
1157
1158@node MIPS-Chars
1159@subsection Special Characters
1160
1161@cindex line comment character, MIPS
1162@cindex MIPS line comment character
1163The presence of a @samp{#} on a line indicates the start of a comment
1164that extends to the end of the current line.
1165
1166If a @samp{#} appears as the first character of a line, the whole line
1167is treated as a comment, but in this case the line can also be a
1168logical line number directive (@pxref{Comments}) or a
1169preprocessor control command (@pxref{Preprocessing}).
1170
1171@cindex line separator, MIPS
1172@cindex statement separator, MIPS
1173@cindex MIPS line separator
1174The @samp{;} character can be used to separate statements on the same
1175line.
This page took 0.900164 seconds and 4 git commands to generate.