Fix PR gas/19217
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gas / doc / c-arm.texi
CommitLineData
b90efa5b 1@c Copyright (C) 1996-2015 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
5@ifset GENERIC
6@page
7@node ARM-Dependent
8@chapter ARM Dependent Features
9@end ifset
10
11@ifclear GENERIC
12@node Machine Dependencies
13@chapter ARM Dependent Features
14@end ifclear
15
16@cindex ARM support
17@cindex Thumb support
18@menu
19* ARM Options:: Options
20* ARM Syntax:: Syntax
21* ARM Floating Point:: Floating Point
22* ARM Directives:: ARM Machine Directives
23* ARM Opcodes:: Opcodes
6057a28f 24* ARM Mapping Symbols:: Mapping Symbols
7da4f750 25* ARM Unwinding Tutorial:: Unwinding
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26@end menu
27
28@node ARM Options
29@section Options
30@cindex ARM options (none)
31@cindex options for ARM (none)
adcf07e6 32
252b5132 33@table @code
adcf07e6 34
03b1477f 35@cindex @code{-mcpu=} command line option, ARM
92081f48 36@item -mcpu=@var{processor}[+@var{extension}@dots{}]
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37This option specifies the target processor. The assembler will issue an
38error message if an attempt is made to assemble an instruction which
03b1477f 39will not execute on the target processor. The following processor names are
34bca508 40recognized:
03b1477f
RE
41@code{arm1},
42@code{arm2},
43@code{arm250},
44@code{arm3},
45@code{arm6},
46@code{arm60},
47@code{arm600},
48@code{arm610},
49@code{arm620},
50@code{arm7},
51@code{arm7m},
52@code{arm7d},
53@code{arm7dm},
54@code{arm7di},
55@code{arm7dmi},
56@code{arm70},
57@code{arm700},
58@code{arm700i},
59@code{arm710},
60@code{arm710t},
61@code{arm720},
62@code{arm720t},
63@code{arm740t},
64@code{arm710c},
65@code{arm7100},
66@code{arm7500},
67@code{arm7500fe},
68@code{arm7t},
69@code{arm7tdmi},
1ff4677c 70@code{arm7tdmi-s},
03b1477f
RE
71@code{arm8},
72@code{arm810},
73@code{strongarm},
74@code{strongarm1},
75@code{strongarm110},
76@code{strongarm1100},
77@code{strongarm1110},
78@code{arm9},
79@code{arm920},
80@code{arm920t},
81@code{arm922t},
82@code{arm940t},
83@code{arm9tdmi},
7fac0536
NC
84@code{fa526} (Faraday FA526 processor),
85@code{fa626} (Faraday FA626 processor),
03b1477f 86@code{arm9e},
7de9afa2 87@code{arm926e},
1ff4677c 88@code{arm926ej-s},
03b1477f
RE
89@code{arm946e-r0},
90@code{arm946e},
db8ac8f9 91@code{arm946e-s},
03b1477f
RE
92@code{arm966e-r0},
93@code{arm966e},
db8ac8f9
PB
94@code{arm966e-s},
95@code{arm968e-s},
03b1477f 96@code{arm10t},
db8ac8f9 97@code{arm10tdmi},
03b1477f
RE
98@code{arm10e},
99@code{arm1020},
100@code{arm1020t},
7de9afa2 101@code{arm1020e},
db8ac8f9 102@code{arm1022e},
1ff4677c 103@code{arm1026ej-s},
4a58c4bd
NC
104@code{fa606te} (Faraday FA606TE processor),
105@code{fa616te} (Faraday FA616TE processor),
7fac0536 106@code{fa626te} (Faraday FA626TE processor),
4a58c4bd 107@code{fmp626} (Faraday FMP626 processor),
7fac0536 108@code{fa726te} (Faraday FA726TE processor),
1ff4677c
RE
109@code{arm1136j-s},
110@code{arm1136jf-s},
db8ac8f9
PB
111@code{arm1156t2-s},
112@code{arm1156t2f-s},
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NC
113@code{arm1176jz-s},
114@code{arm1176jzf-s},
115@code{mpcore},
116@code{mpcorenovfp},
b38f9f31 117@code{cortex-a5},
c90460e4 118@code{cortex-a7},
62b3e311 119@code{cortex-a8},
15290f0a 120@code{cortex-a9},
dbb1f804 121@code{cortex-a15},
4469186b
KT
122@code{cortex-a53},
123@code{cortex-a57},
124@code{cortex-a72},
62b3e311 125@code{cortex-r4},
307c948d 126@code{cortex-r4f},
70a8bc5b 127@code{cortex-r5},
128@code{cortex-r7},
a715796b 129@code{cortex-m7},
7ef07ba0 130@code{cortex-m4},
62b3e311 131@code{cortex-m3},
5b19eaba
NC
132@code{cortex-m1},
133@code{cortex-m0},
ce32bd10 134@code{cortex-m0plus},
246496bb 135@code{exynos-m1},
ea0d6bb9
PT
136@code{marvell-pj4},
137@code{marvell-whitney},
6b21c2bf 138@code{qdf24xx},
ea0d6bb9
PT
139@code{xgene1},
140@code{xgene2},
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RE
141@code{ep9312} (ARM920 with Cirrus Maverick coprocessor),
142@code{i80200} (Intel XScale processor)
e16bb312 143@code{iwmmxt} (Intel(r) XScale processor with Wireless MMX(tm) technology coprocessor)
03b1477f 144and
34bca508 145@code{xscale}.
03b1477f
RE
146The special name @code{all} may be used to allow the
147assembler to accept instructions valid for any ARM processor.
148
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149In addition to the basic instruction set, the assembler can be told to
150accept various extension mnemonics that extend the processor using the
03b1477f 151co-processor instruction space. For example, @code{-mcpu=arm920+maverick}
34bca508 152is equivalent to specifying @code{-mcpu=ep9312}.
69133863 153
34bca508 154Multiple extensions may be specified, separated by a @code{+}. The
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MGD
155extensions should be specified in ascending alphabetical order.
156
34bca508 157Some extensions may be restricted to particular architectures; this is
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MGD
158documented in the list of extensions below.
159
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L
160Extension mnemonics may also be removed from those the assembler accepts.
161This is done be prepending @code{no} to the option that adds the extension.
162Extensions that are removed should be listed after all extensions which have
163been added, again in ascending alphabetical order. For example,
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MGD
164@code{-mcpu=ep9312+nomaverick} is equivalent to specifying @code{-mcpu=arm920}.
165
166
eea54501 167The following extensions are currently supported:
ea0d6bb9 168@code{crc}
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MGD
169@code{crypto} (Cryptography Extensions for v8-A architecture, implies @code{fp+simd}),
170@code{fp} (Floating Point Extensions for v8-A architecture),
171@code{idiv} (Integer Divide Extensions for v7-A and v7-R architectures),
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MGD
172@code{iwmmxt},
173@code{iwmmxt2},
ea0d6bb9 174@code{xscale},
69133863 175@code{maverick},
ea0d6bb9
PT
176@code{mp} (Multiprocessing Extensions for v7-A and v7-R
177architectures),
b2a5fbdc 178@code{os} (Operating System for v6M architecture),
f4c65163 179@code{sec} (Security Extensions for v6K and v7-A architectures),
bca38921 180@code{simd} (Advanced SIMD Extensions for v8-A architecture, implies @code{fp}),
34bca508 181@code{virt} (Virtualization Extensions for v7-A architecture, implies
90ec0d68 182@code{idiv}),
d6b4b13e
MW
183@code{pan} (Priviliged Access Never Extensions for v8-A architecture),
184@code{rdma} (ARMv8.1 Advanced SIMD extensions for v8-A architecture, implies
185@code{simd})
03b1477f 186and
69133863 187@code{xscale}.
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RE
188
189@cindex @code{-march=} command line option, ARM
92081f48 190@item -march=@var{architecture}[+@var{extension}@dots{}]
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191This option specifies the target architecture. The assembler will issue
192an error message if an attempt is made to assemble an instruction which
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193will not execute on the target architecture. The following architecture
194names are recognized:
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RE
195@code{armv1},
196@code{armv2},
197@code{armv2a},
198@code{armv2s},
199@code{armv3},
200@code{armv3m},
201@code{armv4},
202@code{armv4xm},
203@code{armv4t},
204@code{armv4txm},
205@code{armv5},
206@code{armv5t},
207@code{armv5txm},
208@code{armv5te},
09d92015 209@code{armv5texp},
c5f98204 210@code{armv6},
1ddd7f43 211@code{armv6j},
0dd132b6
NC
212@code{armv6k},
213@code{armv6z},
f33026a9 214@code{armv6kz},
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MGD
215@code{armv6-m},
216@code{armv6s-m},
62b3e311 217@code{armv7},
c450d570 218@code{armv7-a},
c9fb6e58 219@code{armv7ve},
c450d570
PB
220@code{armv7-r},
221@code{armv7-m},
9e3c6df6 222@code{armv7e-m},
bca38921 223@code{armv8-a},
a5932920 224@code{armv8.1-a},
e16bb312 225@code{iwmmxt}
ea0d6bb9 226@code{iwmmxt2}
03b1477f
RE
227and
228@code{xscale}.
229If both @code{-mcpu} and
230@code{-march} are specified, the assembler will use
231the setting for @code{-mcpu}.
232
233The architecture option can be extended with the same instruction set
234extension options as the @code{-mcpu} option.
235
236@cindex @code{-mfpu=} command line option, ARM
237@item -mfpu=@var{floating-point-format}
238
239This option specifies the floating point format to assemble for. The
240assembler will issue an error message if an attempt is made to assemble
34bca508 241an instruction which will not execute on the target floating point unit.
03b1477f
RE
242The following format options are recognized:
243@code{softfpa},
244@code{fpe},
bc89618b
RE
245@code{fpe2},
246@code{fpe3},
03b1477f
RE
247@code{fpa},
248@code{fpa10},
249@code{fpa11},
250@code{arm7500fe},
251@code{softvfp},
252@code{softvfp+vfp},
253@code{vfp},
254@code{vfp10},
255@code{vfp10-r0},
256@code{vfp9},
257@code{vfpxd},
62f3b8c8
PB
258@code{vfpv2},
259@code{vfpv3},
260@code{vfpv3-fp16},
261@code{vfpv3-d16},
262@code{vfpv3-d16-fp16},
263@code{vfpv3xd},
264@code{vfpv3xd-d16},
265@code{vfpv4},
266@code{vfpv4-d16},
f0cd0667 267@code{fpv4-sp-d16},
a715796b
TG
268@code{fpv5-sp-d16},
269@code{fpv5-d16},
bca38921 270@code{fp-armv8},
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MM
271@code{arm1020t},
272@code{arm1020e},
b1cc4aeb 273@code{arm1136jf-s},
62f3b8c8
PB
274@code{maverick},
275@code{neon},
bca38921
MGD
276@code{neon-vfpv4},
277@code{neon-fp-armv8},
081e4c7d
MW
278@code{crypto-neon-fp-armv8},
279@code{neon-fp-armv8.1}
d6b4b13e 280and
081e4c7d 281@code{crypto-neon-fp-armv8.1}.
03b1477f
RE
282
283In addition to determining which instructions are assembled, this option
284also affects the way in which the @code{.double} assembler directive behaves
285when assembling little-endian code.
286
34bca508
L
287The default is dependent on the processor selected. For Architecture 5 or
288later, the default is to assembler for VFP instructions; for earlier
03b1477f 289architectures the default is to assemble for FPA instructions.
adcf07e6 290
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291@cindex @code{-mthumb} command line option, ARM
292@item -mthumb
03b1477f 293This option specifies that the assembler should start assembling Thumb
34bca508 294instructions; that is, it should behave as though the file starts with a
03b1477f 295@code{.code 16} directive.
adcf07e6 296
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RH
297@cindex @code{-mthumb-interwork} command line option, ARM
298@item -mthumb-interwork
299This option specifies that the output generated by the assembler should
300be marked as supporting interworking.
adcf07e6 301
52970753
NC
302@cindex @code{-mimplicit-it} command line option, ARM
303@item -mimplicit-it=never
304@itemx -mimplicit-it=always
305@itemx -mimplicit-it=arm
306@itemx -mimplicit-it=thumb
307The @code{-mimplicit-it} option controls the behavior of the assembler when
308conditional instructions are not enclosed in IT blocks.
309There are four possible behaviors.
310If @code{never} is specified, such constructs cause a warning in ARM
311code and an error in Thumb-2 code.
312If @code{always} is specified, such constructs are accepted in both
313ARM and Thumb-2 code, where the IT instruction is added implicitly.
314If @code{arm} is specified, such constructs are accepted in ARM code
315and cause an error in Thumb-2 code.
316If @code{thumb} is specified, such constructs cause a warning in ARM
317code and are accepted in Thumb-2 code. If you omit this option, the
318behavior is equivalent to @code{-mimplicit-it=arm}.
e07e6e58 319
5a5829dd
NS
320@cindex @code{-mapcs-26} command line option, ARM
321@cindex @code{-mapcs-32} command line option, ARM
322@item -mapcs-26
323@itemx -mapcs-32
324These options specify that the output generated by the assembler should
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RH
325be marked as supporting the indicated version of the Arm Procedure.
326Calling Standard.
adcf07e6 327
077b8428
NC
328@cindex @code{-matpcs} command line option, ARM
329@item -matpcs
34bca508 330This option specifies that the output generated by the assembler should
077b8428
NC
331be marked as supporting the Arm/Thumb Procedure Calling Standard. If
332enabled this option will cause the assembler to create an empty
333debugging section in the object file called .arm.atpcs. Debuggers can
334use this to determine the ABI being used by.
335
adcf07e6 336@cindex @code{-mapcs-float} command line option, ARM
252b5132 337@item -mapcs-float
1be59579 338This indicates the floating point variant of the APCS should be
252b5132 339used. In this variant floating point arguments are passed in FP
550262c4 340registers rather than integer registers.
adcf07e6
NC
341
342@cindex @code{-mapcs-reentrant} command line option, ARM
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RH
343@item -mapcs-reentrant
344This indicates that the reentrant variant of the APCS should be used.
345This variant supports position independent code.
adcf07e6 346
33a392fb
PB
347@cindex @code{-mfloat-abi=} command line option, ARM
348@item -mfloat-abi=@var{abi}
349This option specifies that the output generated by the assembler should be
350marked as using specified floating point ABI.
351The following values are recognized:
352@code{soft},
353@code{softfp}
354and
355@code{hard}.
356
d507cf36
PB
357@cindex @code{-eabi=} command line option, ARM
358@item -meabi=@var{ver}
359This option specifies which EABI version the produced object files should
360conform to.
b45619c0 361The following values are recognized:
3a4a14e9
PB
362@code{gnu},
363@code{4}
d507cf36 364and
3a4a14e9 365@code{5}.
d507cf36 366
252b5132
RH
367@cindex @code{-EB} command line option, ARM
368@item -EB
369This option specifies that the output generated by the assembler should
370be marked as being encoded for a big-endian processor.
adcf07e6 371
080bb7bb
NC
372Note: If a program is being built for a system with big-endian data
373and little-endian instructions then it should be assembled with the
374@option{-EB} option, (all of it, code and data) and then linked with
375the @option{--be8} option. This will reverse the endianness of the
376instructions back to little-endian, but leave the data as big-endian.
377
252b5132
RH
378@cindex @code{-EL} command line option, ARM
379@item -EL
380This option specifies that the output generated by the assembler should
381be marked as being encoded for a little-endian processor.
adcf07e6 382
252b5132
RH
383@cindex @code{-k} command line option, ARM
384@cindex PIC code generation for ARM
385@item -k
a349d9dd
PB
386This option specifies that the output of the assembler should be marked
387as position-independent code (PIC).
adcf07e6 388
845b51d6
PB
389@cindex @code{--fix-v4bx} command line option, ARM
390@item --fix-v4bx
391Allow @code{BX} instructions in ARMv4 code. This is intended for use with
392the linker option of the same name.
393
278df34e
NS
394@cindex @code{-mwarn-deprecated} command line option, ARM
395@item -mwarn-deprecated
396@itemx -mno-warn-deprecated
397Enable or disable warnings about using deprecated options or
398features. The default is to warn.
399
2e6976a8
DG
400@cindex @code{-mccs} command line option, ARM
401@item -mccs
402Turns on CodeComposer Studio assembly syntax compatibility mode.
403
8b2d793c
NC
404@cindex @code{-mwarn-syms} command line option, ARM
405@item -mwarn-syms
406@itemx -mno-warn-syms
407Enable or disable warnings about symbols that match the names of ARM
408instructions. The default is to warn.
409
252b5132
RH
410@end table
411
412
413@node ARM Syntax
414@section Syntax
415@menu
cab7e4d9 416* ARM-Instruction-Set:: Instruction Set
252b5132
RH
417* ARM-Chars:: Special Characters
418* ARM-Regs:: Register Names
b6895b4f 419* ARM-Relocations:: Relocations
99f1a7a7 420* ARM-Neon-Alignment:: NEON Alignment Specifiers
252b5132
RH
421@end menu
422
cab7e4d9
NC
423@node ARM-Instruction-Set
424@subsection Instruction Set Syntax
425Two slightly different syntaxes are support for ARM and THUMB
426instructions. The default, @code{divided}, uses the old style where
427ARM and THUMB instructions had their own, separate syntaxes. The new,
428@code{unified} syntax, which can be selected via the @code{.syntax}
429directive, and has the following main features:
430
9e6f3811
AS
431@itemize @bullet
432@item
cab7e4d9
NC
433Immediate operands do not require a @code{#} prefix.
434
9e6f3811 435@item
cab7e4d9
NC
436The @code{IT} instruction may appear, and if it does it is validated
437against subsequent conditional affixes. In ARM mode it does not
438generate machine code, in THUMB mode it does.
439
9e6f3811 440@item
cab7e4d9
NC
441For ARM instructions the conditional affixes always appear at the end
442of the instruction. For THUMB instructions conditional affixes can be
443used, but only inside the scope of an @code{IT} instruction.
444
9e6f3811 445@item
cab7e4d9
NC
446All of the instructions new to the V6T2 architecture (and later) are
447available. (Only a few such instructions can be written in the
448@code{divided} syntax).
449
9e6f3811 450@item
cab7e4d9
NC
451The @code{.N} and @code{.W} suffixes are recognized and honored.
452
9e6f3811 453@item
cab7e4d9
NC
454All instructions set the flags if and only if they have an @code{s}
455affix.
9e6f3811 456@end itemize
cab7e4d9 457
252b5132
RH
458@node ARM-Chars
459@subsection Special Characters
460
461@cindex line comment character, ARM
462@cindex ARM line comment character
7c31ae13
NC
463The presence of a @samp{@@} anywhere on a line indicates the start of
464a comment that extends to the end of that line.
465
466If a @samp{#} appears as the first character of a line then the whole
467line is treated as a comment, but in this case the line could also be
468a logical line number directive (@pxref{Comments}) or a preprocessor
469control command (@pxref{Preprocessing}).
550262c4
NC
470
471@cindex line separator, ARM
472@cindex statement separator, ARM
473@cindex ARM line separator
a349d9dd
PB
474The @samp{;} character can be used instead of a newline to separate
475statements.
550262c4
NC
476
477@cindex immediate character, ARM
478@cindex ARM immediate character
479Either @samp{#} or @samp{$} can be used to indicate immediate operands.
252b5132
RH
480
481@cindex identifiers, ARM
482@cindex ARM identifiers
483*TODO* Explain about /data modifier on symbols.
484
485@node ARM-Regs
486@subsection Register Names
487
488@cindex ARM register names
489@cindex register names, ARM
490*TODO* Explain about ARM register naming, and the predefined names.
491
b6895b4f
PB
492@node ARM-Relocations
493@subsection ARM relocation generation
494
495@cindex data relocations, ARM
496@cindex ARM data relocations
497Specific data relocations can be generated by putting the relocation name
498in parentheses after the symbol name. For example:
499
500@smallexample
501 .word foo(TARGET1)
502@end smallexample
503
504This will generate an @samp{R_ARM_TARGET1} relocation against the symbol
505@var{foo}.
506The following relocations are supported:
507@code{GOT},
508@code{GOTOFF},
509@code{TARGET1},
510@code{TARGET2},
511@code{SBREL},
512@code{TLSGD},
513@code{TLSLDM},
514@code{TLSLDO},
0855e32b
NS
515@code{TLSDESC},
516@code{TLSCALL},
b43420e6
NC
517@code{GOTTPOFF},
518@code{GOT_PREL}
b6895b4f
PB
519and
520@code{TPOFF}.
521
522For compatibility with older toolchains the assembler also accepts
3da1d841
NC
523@code{(PLT)} after branch targets. On legacy targets this will
524generate the deprecated @samp{R_ARM_PLT32} relocation. On EABI
525targets it will encode either the @samp{R_ARM_CALL} or
526@samp{R_ARM_JUMP24} relocation, as appropriate.
b6895b4f
PB
527
528@cindex MOVW and MOVT relocations, ARM
529Relocations for @samp{MOVW} and @samp{MOVT} instructions can be generated
530by prefixing the value with @samp{#:lower16:} and @samp{#:upper16}
b45619c0 531respectively. For example to load the 32-bit address of foo into r0:
252b5132 532
b6895b4f
PB
533@smallexample
534 MOVW r0, #:lower16:foo
535 MOVT r0, #:upper16:foo
536@end smallexample
252b5132 537
ba724cfc
NC
538@node ARM-Neon-Alignment
539@subsection NEON Alignment Specifiers
540
541@cindex alignment for NEON instructions
542Some NEON load/store instructions allow an optional address
543alignment qualifier.
544The ARM documentation specifies that this is indicated by
545@samp{@@ @var{align}}. However GAS already interprets
546the @samp{@@} character as a "line comment" start,
547so @samp{: @var{align}} is used instead. For example:
548
549@smallexample
550 vld1.8 @{q0@}, [r0, :128]
551@end smallexample
552
553@node ARM Floating Point
554@section Floating Point
555
556@cindex floating point, ARM (@sc{ieee})
557@cindex ARM floating point (@sc{ieee})
558The ARM family uses @sc{ieee} floating-point numbers.
559
252b5132
RH
560@node ARM Directives
561@section ARM Machine Directives
562
563@cindex machine directives, ARM
564@cindex ARM machine directives
565@table @code
566
4a6bc624
NS
567@c AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
568
569@cindex @code{.2byte} directive, ARM
570@cindex @code{.4byte} directive, ARM
571@cindex @code{.8byte} directive, ARM
572@item .2byte @var{expression} [, @var{expression}]*
573@itemx .4byte @var{expression} [, @var{expression}]*
574@itemx .8byte @var{expression} [, @var{expression}]*
575These directives write 2, 4 or 8 byte values to the output section.
576
577@cindex @code{.align} directive, ARM
adcf07e6
NC
578@item .align @var{expression} [, @var{expression}]
579This is the generic @var{.align} directive. For the ARM however if the
580first argument is zero (ie no alignment is needed) the assembler will
581behave as if the argument had been 2 (ie pad to the next four byte
062b7c0c 582boundary). This is for compatibility with ARM's own assembler.
adcf07e6 583
4a6bc624
NS
584@cindex @code{.arch} directive, ARM
585@item .arch @var{name}
586Select the target architecture. Valid values for @var{name} are the same as
587for the @option{-march} commandline option.
252b5132 588
34bca508 589Specifying @code{.arch} clears any previously selected architecture
69133863
MGD
590extensions.
591
592@cindex @code{.arch_extension} directive, ARM
593@item .arch_extension @var{name}
34bca508
L
594Add or remove an architecture extension to the target architecture. Valid
595values for @var{name} are the same as those accepted as architectural
69133863
MGD
596extensions by the @option{-mcpu} commandline option.
597
598@code{.arch_extension} may be used multiple times to add or remove extensions
599incrementally to the architecture being compiled for.
600
4a6bc624
NS
601@cindex @code{.arm} directive, ARM
602@item .arm
603This performs the same action as @var{.code 32}.
252b5132 604
4a6bc624 605@c BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB
0bbf2aa4 606
4a6bc624
NS
607@cindex @code{.bss} directive, ARM
608@item .bss
609This directive switches to the @code{.bss} section.
0bbf2aa4 610
4a6bc624
NS
611@c CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC
612
613@cindex @code{.cantunwind} directive, ARM
614@item .cantunwind
615Prevents unwinding through the current function. No personality routine
616or exception table data is required or permitted.
617
618@cindex @code{.code} directive, ARM
619@item .code @code{[16|32]}
620This directive selects the instruction set being generated. The value 16
621selects Thumb, with the value 32 selecting ARM.
622
623@cindex @code{.cpu} directive, ARM
624@item .cpu @var{name}
625Select the target processor. Valid values for @var{name} are the same as
626for the @option{-mcpu} commandline option.
627
34bca508 628Specifying @code{.cpu} clears any previously selected architecture
69133863
MGD
629extensions.
630
4a6bc624
NS
631@c DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
632
633@cindex @code{.dn} and @code{.qn} directives, ARM
f467aa98 634@item @var{name} .dn @var{register name} [@var{.type}] [[@var{index}]]
1f9bb1ca 635@itemx @var{name} .qn @var{register name} [@var{.type}] [[@var{index}]]
23753660
JB
636
637The @code{dn} and @code{qn} directives are used to create typed
638and/or indexed register aliases for use in Advanced SIMD Extension
639(Neon) instructions. The former should be used to create aliases
640of double-precision registers, and the latter to create aliases of
641quad-precision registers.
642
643If these directives are used to create typed aliases, those aliases can
644be used in Neon instructions instead of writing types after the mnemonic
645or after each operand. For example:
646
647@smallexample
648 x .dn d2.f32
649 y .dn d3.f32
650 z .dn d4.f32[1]
651 vmul x,y,z
652@end smallexample
653
654This is equivalent to writing the following:
655
656@smallexample
657 vmul.f32 d2,d3,d4[1]
658@end smallexample
659
660Aliases created using @code{dn} or @code{qn} can be destroyed using
661@code{unreq}.
662
4a6bc624 663@c EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
252b5132 664
4a6bc624
NS
665@cindex @code{.eabi_attribute} directive, ARM
666@item .eabi_attribute @var{tag}, @var{value}
667Set the EABI object attribute @var{tag} to @var{value}.
252b5132 668
4a6bc624
NS
669The @var{tag} is either an attribute number, or one of the following:
670@code{Tag_CPU_raw_name}, @code{Tag_CPU_name}, @code{Tag_CPU_arch},
671@code{Tag_CPU_arch_profile}, @code{Tag_ARM_ISA_use},
75375b3e 672@code{Tag_THUMB_ISA_use}, @code{Tag_FP_arch}, @code{Tag_WMMX_arch},
4a6bc624
NS
673@code{Tag_Advanced_SIMD_arch}, @code{Tag_PCS_config},
674@code{Tag_ABI_PCS_R9_use}, @code{Tag_ABI_PCS_RW_data},
675@code{Tag_ABI_PCS_RO_data}, @code{Tag_ABI_PCS_GOT_use},
676@code{Tag_ABI_PCS_wchar_t}, @code{Tag_ABI_FP_rounding},
677@code{Tag_ABI_FP_denormal}, @code{Tag_ABI_FP_exceptions},
678@code{Tag_ABI_FP_user_exceptions}, @code{Tag_ABI_FP_number_model},
75375b3e 679@code{Tag_ABI_align_needed}, @code{Tag_ABI_align_preserved},
4a6bc624
NS
680@code{Tag_ABI_enum_size}, @code{Tag_ABI_HardFP_use},
681@code{Tag_ABI_VFP_args}, @code{Tag_ABI_WMMX_args},
682@code{Tag_ABI_optimization_goals}, @code{Tag_ABI_FP_optimization_goals},
683@code{Tag_compatibility}, @code{Tag_CPU_unaligned_access},
75375b3e 684@code{Tag_FP_HP_extension}, @code{Tag_ABI_FP_16bit_format},
cd21e546 685@code{Tag_MPextension_use}, @code{Tag_DIV_use},
4a6bc624
NS
686@code{Tag_nodefaults}, @code{Tag_also_compatible_with},
687@code{Tag_conformance}, @code{Tag_T2EE_use},
cd21e546 688@code{Tag_Virtualization_use}
4a6bc624
NS
689
690The @var{value} is either a @code{number}, @code{"string"}, or
691@code{number, "string"} depending on the tag.
692
75375b3e 693Note - the following legacy values are also accepted by @var{tag}:
34bca508 694@code{Tag_VFP_arch}, @code{Tag_ABI_align8_needed},
75375b3e
MGD
695@code{Tag_ABI_align8_preserved}, @code{Tag_VFP_HP_extension},
696
4a6bc624
NS
697@cindex @code{.even} directive, ARM
698@item .even
699This directive aligns to an even-numbered address.
700
701@cindex @code{.extend} directive, ARM
702@cindex @code{.ldouble} directive, ARM
703@item .extend @var{expression} [, @var{expression}]*
704@itemx .ldouble @var{expression} [, @var{expression}]*
705These directives write 12byte long double floating-point values to the
706output section. These are not compatible with current ARM processors
707or ABIs.
708
709@c FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
710
711@anchor{arm_fnend}
712@cindex @code{.fnend} directive, ARM
713@item .fnend
714Marks the end of a function with an unwind table entry. The unwind index
715table entry is created when this directive is processed.
252b5132 716
4a6bc624
NS
717If no personality routine has been specified then standard personality
718routine 0 or 1 will be used, depending on the number of unwind opcodes
719required.
720
721@anchor{arm_fnstart}
722@cindex @code{.fnstart} directive, ARM
723@item .fnstart
724Marks the start of a function with an unwind table entry.
725
726@cindex @code{.force_thumb} directive, ARM
252b5132
RH
727@item .force_thumb
728This directive forces the selection of Thumb instructions, even if the
729target processor does not support those instructions
730
4a6bc624
NS
731@cindex @code{.fpu} directive, ARM
732@item .fpu @var{name}
733Select the floating-point unit to assemble for. Valid values for @var{name}
734are the same as for the @option{-mfpu} commandline option.
252b5132 735
4a6bc624
NS
736@c GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
737@c HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
e1da3f5b 738
4a6bc624
NS
739@cindex @code{.handlerdata} directive, ARM
740@item .handlerdata
741Marks the end of the current function, and the start of the exception table
742entry for that function. Anything between this directive and the
743@code{.fnend} directive will be added to the exception table entry.
744
745Must be preceded by a @code{.personality} or @code{.personalityindex}
746directive.
747
748@c IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
c921be7d
NC
749
750@cindex @code{.inst} directive, ARM
751@item .inst @var{opcode} [ , @dots{} ]
1f9bb1ca
AS
752@itemx .inst.n @var{opcode} [ , @dots{} ]
753@itemx .inst.w @var{opcode} [ , @dots{} ]
c921be7d
NC
754Generates the instruction corresponding to the numerical value @var{opcode}.
755@code{.inst.n} and @code{.inst.w} allow the Thumb instruction size to be
756specified explicitly, overriding the normal encoding rules.
757
4a6bc624
NS
758@c JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ
759@c KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK
760@c LLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL
761
762@item .ldouble @var{expression} [, @var{expression}]*
763See @code{.extend}.
5395a469 764
252b5132
RH
765@cindex @code{.ltorg} directive, ARM
766@item .ltorg
767This directive causes the current contents of the literal pool to be
768dumped into the current section (which is assumed to be the .text
769section) at the current location (aligned to a word boundary).
3d0c9500
NC
770@code{GAS} maintains a separate literal pool for each section and each
771sub-section. The @code{.ltorg} directive will only affect the literal
772pool of the current section and sub-section. At the end of assembly
773all remaining, un-empty literal pools will automatically be dumped.
774
775Note - older versions of @code{GAS} would dump the current literal
776pool any time a section change occurred. This is no longer done, since
777it prevents accurate control of the placement of literal pools.
252b5132 778
4a6bc624 779@c MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM
252b5132 780
4a6bc624
NS
781@cindex @code{.movsp} directive, ARM
782@item .movsp @var{reg} [, #@var{offset}]
783Tell the unwinder that @var{reg} contains an offset from the current
784stack pointer. If @var{offset} is not specified then it is assumed to be
785zero.
7ed4c4c5 786
4a6bc624
NS
787@c NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN
788@c OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
7ed4c4c5 789
4a6bc624
NS
790@cindex @code{.object_arch} directive, ARM
791@item .object_arch @var{name}
792Override the architecture recorded in the EABI object attribute section.
793Valid values for @var{name} are the same as for the @code{.arch} directive.
794Typically this is useful when code uses runtime detection of CPU features.
7ed4c4c5 795
4a6bc624
NS
796@c PPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP
797
798@cindex @code{.packed} directive, ARM
799@item .packed @var{expression} [, @var{expression}]*
800This directive writes 12-byte packed floating-point values to the
801output section. These are not compatible with current ARM processors
802or ABIs.
803
ea4cff4f 804@anchor{arm_pad}
4a6bc624
NS
805@cindex @code{.pad} directive, ARM
806@item .pad #@var{count}
807Generate unwinder annotations for a stack adjustment of @var{count} bytes.
808A positive value indicates the function prologue allocated stack space by
809decrementing the stack pointer.
7ed4c4c5
NC
810
811@cindex @code{.personality} directive, ARM
812@item .personality @var{name}
813Sets the personality routine for the current function to @var{name}.
814
815@cindex @code{.personalityindex} directive, ARM
816@item .personalityindex @var{index}
817Sets the personality routine for the current function to the EABI standard
818routine number @var{index}
819
4a6bc624
NS
820@cindex @code{.pool} directive, ARM
821@item .pool
822This is a synonym for .ltorg.
7ed4c4c5 823
4a6bc624
NS
824@c QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
825@c RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
826
827@cindex @code{.req} directive, ARM
828@item @var{name} .req @var{register name}
829This creates an alias for @var{register name} called @var{name}. For
830example:
831
832@smallexample
833 foo .req r0
834@end smallexample
835
836@c SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
7ed4c4c5 837
7da4f750 838@anchor{arm_save}
7ed4c4c5
NC
839@cindex @code{.save} directive, ARM
840@item .save @var{reglist}
841Generate unwinder annotations to restore the registers in @var{reglist}.
842The format of @var{reglist} is the same as the corresponding store-multiple
843instruction.
844
845@smallexample
846@exdent @emph{core registers}
847 .save @{r4, r5, r6, lr@}
848 stmfd sp!, @{r4, r5, r6, lr@}
849@exdent @emph{FPA registers}
850 .save f4, 2
851 sfmfd f4, 2, [sp]!
852@exdent @emph{VFP registers}
853 .save @{d8, d9, d10@}
fa073d69 854 fstmdx sp!, @{d8, d9, d10@}
7ed4c4c5
NC
855@exdent @emph{iWMMXt registers}
856 .save @{wr10, wr11@}
857 wstrd wr11, [sp, #-8]!
858 wstrd wr10, [sp, #-8]!
859or
860 .save wr11
861 wstrd wr11, [sp, #-8]!
862 .save wr10
863 wstrd wr10, [sp, #-8]!
864@end smallexample
865
7da4f750 866@anchor{arm_setfp}
7ed4c4c5
NC
867@cindex @code{.setfp} directive, ARM
868@item .setfp @var{fpreg}, @var{spreg} [, #@var{offset}]
4a6bc624 869Make all unwinder annotations relative to a frame pointer. Without this
7ed4c4c5
NC
870the unwinder will use offsets from the stack pointer.
871
a5b82cbe 872The syntax of this directive is the same as the @code{add} or @code{mov}
7ed4c4c5
NC
873instruction used to set the frame pointer. @var{spreg} must be either
874@code{sp} or mentioned in a previous @code{.movsp} directive.
875
876@smallexample
877.movsp ip
878mov ip, sp
879@dots{}
880.setfp fp, ip, #4
a5b82cbe 881add fp, ip, #4
7ed4c4c5
NC
882@end smallexample
883
4a6bc624
NS
884@cindex @code{.secrel32} directive, ARM
885@item .secrel32 @var{expression} [, @var{expression}]*
886This directive emits relocations that evaluate to the section-relative
887offset of each expression's symbol. This directive is only supported
888for PE targets.
889
cab7e4d9
NC
890@cindex @code{.syntax} directive, ARM
891@item .syntax [@code{unified} | @code{divided}]
892This directive sets the Instruction Set Syntax as described in the
893@ref{ARM-Instruction-Set} section.
894
4a6bc624
NS
895@c TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
896
897@cindex @code{.thumb} directive, ARM
898@item .thumb
899This performs the same action as @var{.code 16}.
900
901@cindex @code{.thumb_func} directive, ARM
902@item .thumb_func
903This directive specifies that the following symbol is the name of a
904Thumb encoded function. This information is necessary in order to allow
905the assembler and linker to generate correct code for interworking
906between Arm and Thumb instructions and should be used even if
907interworking is not going to be performed. The presence of this
908directive also implies @code{.thumb}
909
910This directive is not neccessary when generating EABI objects. On these
911targets the encoding is implicit when generating Thumb code.
912
913@cindex @code{.thumb_set} directive, ARM
914@item .thumb_set
915This performs the equivalent of a @code{.set} directive in that it
916creates a symbol which is an alias for another symbol (possibly not yet
917defined). This directive also has the added property in that it marks
918the aliased symbol as being a thumb function entry point, in the same
919way that the @code{.thumb_func} directive does.
920
0855e32b
NS
921@cindex @code{.tlsdescseq} directive, ARM
922@item .tlsdescseq @var{tls-variable}
923This directive is used to annotate parts of an inlined TLS descriptor
924trampoline. Normally the trampoline is provided by the linker, and
925this directive is not needed.
926
4a6bc624
NS
927@c UUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU
928
929@cindex @code{.unreq} directive, ARM
930@item .unreq @var{alias-name}
931This undefines a register alias which was previously defined using the
932@code{req}, @code{dn} or @code{qn} directives. For example:
933
934@smallexample
935 foo .req r0
936 .unreq foo
937@end smallexample
938
939An error occurs if the name is undefined. Note - this pseudo op can
940be used to delete builtin in register name aliases (eg 'r0'). This
941should only be done if it is really necessary.
942
7ed4c4c5 943@cindex @code{.unwind_raw} directive, ARM
4a6bc624 944@item .unwind_raw @var{offset}, @var{byte1}, @dots{}
7ed4c4c5
NC
945Insert one of more arbitary unwind opcode bytes, which are known to adjust
946the stack pointer by @var{offset} bytes.
947
948For example @code{.unwind_raw 4, 0xb1, 0x01} is equivalent to
949@code{.save @{r0@}}
950
4a6bc624 951@c VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV
ee065d83 952
4a6bc624
NS
953@cindex @code{.vsave} directive, ARM
954@item .vsave @var{vfp-reglist}
955Generate unwinder annotations to restore the VFP registers in @var{vfp-reglist}
956using FLDMD. Also works for VFPv3 registers
957that are to be restored using VLDM.
958The format of @var{vfp-reglist} is the same as the corresponding store-multiple
959instruction.
ee065d83 960
4a6bc624
NS
961@smallexample
962@exdent @emph{VFP registers}
963 .vsave @{d8, d9, d10@}
964 fstmdd sp!, @{d8, d9, d10@}
965@exdent @emph{VFPv3 registers}
966 .vsave @{d15, d16, d17@}
967 vstm sp!, @{d15, d16, d17@}
968@end smallexample
e04befd0 969
4a6bc624
NS
970Since FLDMX and FSTMX are now deprecated, this directive should be
971used in favour of @code{.save} for saving VFP registers for ARMv6 and above.
e04befd0 972
4a6bc624
NS
973@c WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW
974@c XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
975@c YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY
976@c ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
ee065d83 977
252b5132
RH
978@end table
979
980@node ARM Opcodes
981@section Opcodes
982
983@cindex ARM opcodes
984@cindex opcodes for ARM
49a5575c
NC
985@code{@value{AS}} implements all the standard ARM opcodes. It also
986implements several pseudo opcodes, including several synthetic load
34bca508 987instructions.
252b5132 988
49a5575c
NC
989@table @code
990
991@cindex @code{NOP} pseudo op, ARM
992@item NOP
993@smallexample
994 nop
995@end smallexample
252b5132 996
49a5575c
NC
997This pseudo op will always evaluate to a legal ARM instruction that does
998nothing. Currently it will evaluate to MOV r0, r0.
252b5132 999
49a5575c 1000@cindex @code{LDR reg,=<label>} pseudo op, ARM
34bca508 1001@item LDR
252b5132
RH
1002@smallexample
1003 ldr <register> , = <expression>
1004@end smallexample
1005
1006If expression evaluates to a numeric constant then a MOV or MVN
1007instruction will be used in place of the LDR instruction, if the
1008constant can be generated by either of these instructions. Otherwise
1009the constant will be placed into the nearest literal pool (if it not
1010already there) and a PC relative LDR instruction will be generated.
1011
49a5575c
NC
1012@cindex @code{ADR reg,<label>} pseudo op, ARM
1013@item ADR
1014@smallexample
1015 adr <register> <label>
1016@end smallexample
1017
1018This instruction will load the address of @var{label} into the indicated
1019register. The instruction will evaluate to a PC relative ADD or SUB
1020instruction depending upon where the label is located. If the label is
1021out of range, or if it is not defined in the same file (and section) as
1022the ADR instruction, then an error will be generated. This instruction
1023will not make use of the literal pool.
1024
1025@cindex @code{ADRL reg,<label>} pseudo op, ARM
34bca508 1026@item ADRL
49a5575c
NC
1027@smallexample
1028 adrl <register> <label>
1029@end smallexample
1030
1031This instruction will load the address of @var{label} into the indicated
a349d9dd 1032register. The instruction will evaluate to one or two PC relative ADD
49a5575c
NC
1033or SUB instructions depending upon where the label is located. If a
1034second instruction is not needed a NOP instruction will be generated in
1035its place, so that this instruction is always 8 bytes long.
1036
1037If the label is out of range, or if it is not defined in the same file
1038(and section) as the ADRL instruction, then an error will be generated.
1039This instruction will not make use of the literal pool.
1040
1041@end table
1042
252b5132
RH
1043For information on the ARM or Thumb instruction sets, see @cite{ARM
1044Software Development Toolkit Reference Manual}, Advanced RISC Machines
1045Ltd.
1046
6057a28f
NC
1047@node ARM Mapping Symbols
1048@section Mapping Symbols
1049
1050The ARM ELF specification requires that special symbols be inserted
1051into object files to mark certain features:
1052
1053@table @code
1054
1055@cindex @code{$a}
1056@item $a
1057At the start of a region of code containing ARM instructions.
1058
1059@cindex @code{$t}
1060@item $t
1061At the start of a region of code containing THUMB instructions.
1062
1063@cindex @code{$d}
1064@item $d
1065At the start of a region of data.
1066
1067@end table
1068
1069The assembler will automatically insert these symbols for you - there
1070is no need to code them yourself. Support for tagging symbols ($b,
1071$f, $p and $m) which is also mentioned in the current ARM ELF
1072specification is not implemented. This is because they have been
1073dropped from the new EABI and so tools cannot rely upon their
1074presence.
1075
7da4f750
MM
1076@node ARM Unwinding Tutorial
1077@section Unwinding
1078
1079The ABI for the ARM Architecture specifies a standard format for
1080exception unwind information. This information is used when an
1081exception is thrown to determine where control should be transferred.
1082In particular, the unwind information is used to determine which
1083function called the function that threw the exception, and which
1084function called that one, and so forth. This information is also used
1085to restore the values of callee-saved registers in the function
1086catching the exception.
1087
1088If you are writing functions in assembly code, and those functions
1089call other functions that throw exceptions, you must use assembly
1090pseudo ops to ensure that appropriate exception unwind information is
1091generated. Otherwise, if one of the functions called by your assembly
1092code throws an exception, the run-time library will be unable to
1093unwind the stack through your assembly code and your program will not
1094behave correctly.
1095
1096To illustrate the use of these pseudo ops, we will examine the code
1097that G++ generates for the following C++ input:
1098
1099@verbatim
1100void callee (int *);
1101
34bca508
L
1102int
1103caller ()
7da4f750
MM
1104{
1105 int i;
1106 callee (&i);
34bca508 1107 return i;
7da4f750
MM
1108}
1109@end verbatim
1110
1111This example does not show how to throw or catch an exception from
1112assembly code. That is a much more complex operation and should
1113always be done in a high-level language, such as C++, that directly
1114supports exceptions.
1115
1116The code generated by one particular version of G++ when compiling the
1117example above is:
1118
1119@verbatim
1120_Z6callerv:
1121 .fnstart
1122.LFB2:
1123 @ Function supports interworking.
1124 @ args = 0, pretend = 0, frame = 8
1125 @ frame_needed = 1, uses_anonymous_args = 0
1126 stmfd sp!, {fp, lr}
1127 .save {fp, lr}
1128.LCFI0:
1129 .setfp fp, sp, #4
1130 add fp, sp, #4
1131.LCFI1:
1132 .pad #8
1133 sub sp, sp, #8
1134.LCFI2:
1135 sub r3, fp, #8
1136 mov r0, r3
1137 bl _Z6calleePi
1138 ldr r3, [fp, #-8]
1139 mov r0, r3
1140 sub sp, fp, #4
1141 ldmfd sp!, {fp, lr}
1142 bx lr
1143.LFE2:
1144 .fnend
1145@end verbatim
1146
1147Of course, the sequence of instructions varies based on the options
1148you pass to GCC and on the version of GCC in use. The exact
1149instructions are not important since we are focusing on the pseudo ops
1150that are used to generate unwind information.
1151
1152An important assumption made by the unwinder is that the stack frame
1153does not change during the body of the function. In particular, since
1154we assume that the assembly code does not itself throw an exception,
1155the only point where an exception can be thrown is from a call, such
1156as the @code{bl} instruction above. At each call site, the same saved
1157registers (including @code{lr}, which indicates the return address)
1158must be located in the same locations relative to the frame pointer.
1159
1160The @code{.fnstart} (@pxref{arm_fnstart,,.fnstart pseudo op}) pseudo
1161op appears immediately before the first instruction of the function
1162while the @code{.fnend} (@pxref{arm_fnend,,.fnend pseudo op}) pseudo
1163op appears immediately after the last instruction of the function.
34bca508 1164These pseudo ops specify the range of the function.
7da4f750
MM
1165
1166Only the order of the other pseudos ops (e.g., @code{.setfp} or
1167@code{.pad}) matters; their exact locations are irrelevant. In the
1168example above, the compiler emits the pseudo ops with particular
1169instructions. That makes it easier to understand the code, but it is
1170not required for correctness. It would work just as well to emit all
1171of the pseudo ops other than @code{.fnend} in the same order, but
1172immediately after @code{.fnstart}.
1173
1174The @code{.save} (@pxref{arm_save,,.save pseudo op}) pseudo op
1175indicates registers that have been saved to the stack so that they can
1176be restored before the function returns. The argument to the
1177@code{.save} pseudo op is a list of registers to save. If a register
1178is ``callee-saved'' (as specified by the ABI) and is modified by the
1179function you are writing, then your code must save the value before it
1180is modified and restore the original value before the function
1181returns. If an exception is thrown, the run-time library restores the
1182values of these registers from their locations on the stack before
1183returning control to the exception handler. (Of course, if an
1184exception is not thrown, the function that contains the @code{.save}
1185pseudo op restores these registers in the function epilogue, as is
1186done with the @code{ldmfd} instruction above.)
1187
1188You do not have to save callee-saved registers at the very beginning
1189of the function and you do not need to use the @code{.save} pseudo op
1190immediately following the point at which the registers are saved.
1191However, if you modify a callee-saved register, you must save it on
1192the stack before modifying it and before calling any functions which
1193might throw an exception. And, you must use the @code{.save} pseudo
1194op to indicate that you have done so.
1195
1196The @code{.pad} (@pxref{arm_pad,,.pad}) pseudo op indicates a
1197modification of the stack pointer that does not save any registers.
1198The argument is the number of bytes (in decimal) that are subtracted
1199from the stack pointer. (On ARM CPUs, the stack grows downwards, so
1200subtracting from the stack pointer increases the size of the stack.)
1201
1202The @code{.setfp} (@pxref{arm_setfp,,.setfp pseudo op}) pseudo op
1203indicates the register that contains the frame pointer. The first
1204argument is the register that is set, which is typically @code{fp}.
1205The second argument indicates the register from which the frame
1206pointer takes its value. The third argument, if present, is the value
1207(in decimal) added to the register specified by the second argument to
1208compute the value of the frame pointer. You should not modify the
1209frame pointer in the body of the function.
1210
1211If you do not use a frame pointer, then you should not use the
1212@code{.setfp} pseudo op. If you do not use a frame pointer, then you
1213should avoid modifying the stack pointer outside of the function
1214prologue. Otherwise, the run-time library will be unable to find
1215saved registers when it is unwinding the stack.
1216
1217The pseudo ops described above are sufficient for writing assembly
1218code that calls functions which may throw exceptions. If you need to
1219know more about the object-file format used to represent unwind
1220information, you may consult the @cite{Exception Handling ABI for the
1221ARM Architecture} available from @uref{http://infocenter.arm.com}.
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