| 1 | @c Copyright 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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| 2 | @c This is part of the GAS manual.
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| 3 | @c For copying conditions, see the file as.texinfo.
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| 4 | @c CRIS description contributed by Axis Communications.
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| 5 | @ifset GENERIC
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| 6 | @page
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| 7 | @node CRIS-Dependent
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| 8 | @chapter CRIS Dependent Features
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| 9 | @end ifset
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| 10 | @ifclear GENERIC
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| 11 | @node Machine Dependencies
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| 12 | @chapter CRIS Dependent Features
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| 13 | @end ifclear
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| 14 |
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| 15 | @cindex CRIS support
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| 16 | @menu
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| 17 | * CRIS-Opts:: Command-line Options
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| 18 | * CRIS-Expand:: Instruction expansion
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| 19 | * CRIS-Syntax:: Syntax
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| 20 | @end menu
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| 21 |
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| 22 | @node CRIS-Opts
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| 23 | @section Command-line Options
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| 24 |
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| 25 | @cindex options, CRIS
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| 26 | @cindex CRIS options
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| 27 | The CRIS version of @code{@value{AS}} has these
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| 28 | machine-dependent command-line options.
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| 29 |
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| 30 | @cindex @option{--emulation=criself} command line option, CRIS
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| 31 | @cindex @option{--emulation=crisaout} command line option, CRIS
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| 32 | @cindex CRIS @option{--emulation=criself} command line option
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| 33 | @cindex CRIS @option{--emulation=crisaout} command line option
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| 34 |
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| 35 | The format of the generated object files can be either ELF or
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| 36 | a.out, specified by the command-line options
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| 37 | @option{--emulation=crisaout} and @option{--emulation=criself}.
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| 38 | The default is ELF (criself), unless @code{@value{AS}} has been
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| 39 | configured specifically for a.out by using the configuration
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| 40 | name @code{cris-axis-aout}.
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| 41 |
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| 42 | @cindex @option{--underscore} command line option, CRIS
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| 43 | @cindex @option{--no-underscore} command line option, CRIS
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| 44 | @cindex CRIS @option{--underscore} command line option
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| 45 | @cindex CRIS @option{--no-underscore} command line option
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| 46 | There are two different link-incompatible ELF object file
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| 47 | variants for CRIS, for use in environments where symbols are
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| 48 | expected to be prefixed by a leading @samp{_} character and for
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| 49 | environments without such a symbol prefix. The variant used for
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| 50 | GNU/Linux port has no symbol prefix. Which variant to produce
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| 51 | is specified by either of the options @option{--underscore} and
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| 52 | @option{--no-underscore}. The default is @option{--underscore}.
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| 53 | Since symbols in CRIS a.out objects are expected to have a
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| 54 | @samp{_} prefix, specifying @option{--no-underscore} when
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| 55 | generating a.out objects is an error. Besides the object format
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| 56 | difference, the effect of this option is to parse register names
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| 57 | differently (@pxref{crisnous}). The @option{--no-underscore}
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| 58 | option makes a @samp{$} register prefix mandatory.
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| 59 |
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| 60 | @cindex @option{--pic} command line option, CRIS
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| 61 | @cindex CRIS @option{--pic} command line option
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| 62 | @cindex Position-independent code, CRIS
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| 63 | @cindex CRIS position-independent code
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| 64 | The option @option{--pic} must be passed to @code{@value{AS}} in
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| 65 | order to recognize the symbol syntax used for ELF (SVR4 PIC)
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| 66 | position-independent-code (@pxref{crispic}). This will also
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| 67 | affect expansion of instructions. The expansion with
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| 68 | @option{--pic} will use PC-relative rather than (slightly
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| 69 | faster) absolute addresses in those expansions.
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| 70 |
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| 71 | @cindex @option{-N} command line option, CRIS
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| 72 | @cindex CRIS @option{-N} command line option
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| 73 | When @option{-N} is specified, @code{@value{AS}} will emit a
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| 74 | warning when a 16-bit branch instruction is expanded into a
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| 75 | 32-bit multiple-instruction construct (@pxref{CRIS-Expand}).
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| 76 |
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| 77 | @node CRIS-Expand
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| 78 | @section Instruction expansion
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| 79 |
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| 80 | @cindex instruction expansion, CRIS
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| 81 | @cindex CRIS instruction expansion
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| 82 | @code{@value{AS}} will silently choose an instruction that fits
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| 83 | the operand size for @samp{[register+constant]} operands. For
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| 84 | example, the offset @code{127} in @code{move.d [r3+127],r4} fits
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| 85 | in an instruction using a signed-byte offset. Similarly,
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| 86 | @code{move.d [r2+32767],r1} will generate an instruction using a
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| 87 | 16-bit offset. For symbolic expressions and constants that do
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| 88 | not fit in 16 bits including the sign bit, a 32-bit offset is
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| 89 | generated.
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| 90 |
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| 91 | For branches, @code{@value{AS}} will expand from a 16-bit branch
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| 92 | instruction into a sequence of instructions that can reach a
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| 93 | full 32-bit address. Since this does not correspond to a single
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| 94 | instruction, such expansions can optionally be warned about.
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| 95 | @xref{CRIS-Opts}.
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| 96 |
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| 97 | @node CRIS-Syntax
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| 98 | @section Syntax
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| 99 |
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| 100 | There are different aspects of the CRIS assembly syntax.
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| 101 |
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| 102 | @menu
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| 103 | * CRIS-Chars:: Special Characters
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| 104 | * CRIS-Pic:: Position-Independent Code Symbols
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| 105 | * CRIS-Regs:: Register Names
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| 106 | * CRIS-Pseudos:: Assembler Directives
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| 107 | @end menu
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| 108 |
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| 109 | @node CRIS-Chars
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| 110 | @subsection Special Characters
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| 111 | @cindex line comment characters, CRIS
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| 112 | @cindex CRIS line comment characters
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| 113 |
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| 114 | The character @samp{#} is a line comment character. It starts a
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| 115 | comment if and only if it is placed at the beginning of a line.
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| 116 |
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| 117 | A @samp{;} character starts a comment anywhere on the line,
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| 118 | causing all characters up to the end of the line to be ignored.
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| 119 |
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| 120 | A @samp{@@} character is handled as a line separator equivalent
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| 121 | to a logical new-line character (except in a comment), so
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| 122 | separate instructions can be specified on a single line.
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| 123 |
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| 124 | @node CRIS-Pic
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| 125 | @subsection Symbols in position-independent code
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| 126 | @cindex Symbols in position-independent code, CRIS
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| 127 | @cindex CRIS symbols in position-independent code
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| 128 | @cindex Position-independent code, symbols in, CRIS
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| 129 |
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| 130 | When generating @anchor{crispic}position-independent code (SVR4
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| 131 | PIC) for use in cris-axis-linux-gnu shared libraries, symbol
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| 132 | suffixes are used to specify what kind of run-time symbol lookup
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| 133 | will be used, expressed in the object as different
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| 134 | @emph{relocation types}. Usually, all absolute symbol values
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| 135 | must be located in a table, the @emph{global offset table},
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| 136 | leaving the code position-independent; independent of values of
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| 137 | global symbols and independent of the address of the code. The
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| 138 | suffix modifies the value of the symbol, into for example an
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| 139 | index into the global offset table where the real symbol value
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| 140 | is entered, or a PC-relative value, or a value relative to the
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| 141 | start of the global offset table. All symbol suffixes start
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| 142 | with the character @samp{:} (omitted in the list below). Every
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| 143 | symbol use in code or a read-only section must therefore have a
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| 144 | PIC suffix to enable a useful shared library to be created.
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| 145 | Usually, these constructs must not be used with an additive
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| 146 | constant offset as is usually allowed, i.e.@: no 4 as in
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| 147 | @code{symbol + 4} is allowed. This restriction is checked at
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| 148 | link-time, not at assembly-time.
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| 149 |
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| 150 | @table @code
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| 151 | @item GOT
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| 152 |
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| 153 | Attaching this suffix to a symbol in an instruction causes the
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| 154 | symbol to be entered into the global offset table. The value is
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| 155 | a 32-bit index for that symbol into the global offset table.
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| 156 | The name of the corresponding relocation is
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| 157 | @samp{R_CRIS_32_GOT}. Example: @code{move.d
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| 158 | [$r0+extsym:GOT],$r9}
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| 159 |
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| 160 | @item GOT16
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| 161 |
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| 162 | Same as for @samp{GOT}, but the value is a 16-bit index into the
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| 163 | global offset table. The corresponding relocation is
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| 164 | @samp{R_CRIS_16_GOT}. Example: @code{move.d
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| 165 | [$r0+asymbol:GOT16],$r10}
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| 166 |
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| 167 | @item PLT
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| 168 |
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| 169 | This suffix is used for function symbols. It causes a
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| 170 | @emph{procedure linkage table}, an array of code stubs, to be
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| 171 | created at the time the shared object is created or linked
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| 172 | against, together with a global offset table entry. The value
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| 173 | is a pc-relative offset to the corresponding stub code in the
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| 174 | procedure linkage table. This arrangement causes the run-time
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| 175 | symbol resolver to be called to look up and set the value of the
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| 176 | symbol the first time the function is called (at latest;
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| 177 | depending environment variables). It is only safe to leave the
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| 178 | symbol unresolved this way if all references are function calls.
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| 179 | The name of the relocation is @samp{R_CRIS_32_PLT_PCREL}.
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| 180 | Example: @code{add.d fnname:PLT,$pc}
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| 181 |
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| 182 | @item PLTG
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| 183 |
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| 184 | Like PLT, but the value is relative to the beginning of the
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| 185 | global offset table. The relocation is
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| 186 | @samp{R_CRIS_32_PLT_GOTREL}. Example: @code{move.d
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| 187 | fnname:PLTG,$r3}
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| 188 |
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| 189 | @item GOTPLT
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| 190 |
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| 191 | Similar to @samp{PLT}, but the value of the symbol is a 32-bit
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| 192 | index into the global offset table. This is somewhat of a mix
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| 193 | between the effect of the @samp{GOT} and the @samp{PLT} suffix;
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| 194 | the difference to @samp{GOT} is that there will be a procedure
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| 195 | linkage table entry created, and that the symbol is assumed to
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| 196 | be a function entry and will be resolved by the run-time
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| 197 | resolver as with @samp{PLT}. The relocation is
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| 198 | @samp{R_CRIS_32_GOTPLT}. Example: @code{jsr
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| 199 | [$r0+fnname:GOTPLT]}
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| 200 |
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| 201 | @item GOTPLT16
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| 202 |
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| 203 | A variant of @samp{GOTPLT} giving a 16-bit value. Its
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| 204 | relocation name is @samp{R_CRIS_16_GOTPLT}. Example: @code{jsr
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| 205 | [$r0+fnname:GOTPLT16]}
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| 206 |
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| 207 | @item GOTOFF
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| 208 |
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| 209 | This suffix must only be attached to a local symbol, but may be
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| 210 | used in an expression adding an offset. The value is the
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| 211 | address of the symbol relative to the start of the global offset
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| 212 | table. The relocation name is @samp{R_CRIS_32_GOTREL}.
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| 213 | Example: @code{move.d [$r0+localsym:GOTOFF],r3}
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| 214 | @end table
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| 215 |
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| 216 | @node CRIS-Regs
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| 217 | @subsection Register names
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| 218 | @cindex register names, CRIS
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| 219 | @cindex CRIS register names
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| 220 |
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| 221 | A @samp{$} character may always prefix a general or special
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| 222 | register name in an instruction operand but is mandatory when
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| 223 | the option @option{--no-underscore} is specified or when the
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| 224 | @code{.syntax register_prefix} directive is in effect
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| 225 | (@pxref{crisnous}). Register names are case-insensitive.
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| 226 |
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| 227 | @node CRIS-Pseudos
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| 228 | @subsection Assembler Directives
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| 229 | @cindex assembler directives, CRIS
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| 230 | @cindex pseudo-ops, CRIS
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| 231 | @cindex CRIS assembler directives
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| 232 | @cindex CRIS pseudo-ops
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| 233 |
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| 234 | There are a few CRIS-specific pseudo-directives in addition to
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| 235 | the generic ones. @xref{Pseudo Ops}. Constants emitted by
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| 236 | pseudo-directives are in little-endian order for CRIS. There is
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| 237 | no support for floating-point-specific directives for CRIS.
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| 238 |
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| 239 | @table @code
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| 240 | @item .dword EXPRESSIONS
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| 241 | @cindex assembler directive .dword, CRIS
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| 242 | @cindex pseudo-op .dword, CRIS
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| 243 | @cindex CRIS assembler directive .dword
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| 244 | @cindex CRIS pseudo-op .dword
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| 245 |
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| 246 | The @code{.dword} directive is a synonym for @code{.int},
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| 247 | expecting zero or more EXPRESSIONS, separated by commas. For
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| 248 | each expression, a 32-bit little-endian constant is emitted.
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| 249 |
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| 250 | @item .syntax ARGUMENT
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| 251 | @cindex assembler directive .syntax, CRIS
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| 252 | @cindex pseudo-op .syntax, CRIS
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| 253 | @cindex CRIS assembler directive .syntax
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| 254 | @cindex CRIS pseudo-op .syntax
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| 255 | The @code{.syntax} directive takes as ARGUMENT one of the
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| 256 | following case-sensitive choices.
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| 257 |
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| 258 | @table @code
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| 259 | @item no_register_prefix
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| 260 |
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| 261 | The @code{.syntax no_register_prefix} @anchor{crisnous}directive
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| 262 | makes a @samp{$} character prefix on all registers optional. It
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| 263 | overrides a previous setting, including the corresponding effect
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| 264 | of the option @option{--no-underscore}. If this directive is
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| 265 | used when ordinary symbols do not have a @samp{_} character
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| 266 | prefix, care must be taken to avoid ambiguities whether an
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| 267 | operand is a register or a symbol; using symbols with names the
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| 268 | same as general or special registers then invoke undefined
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| 269 | behavior.
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| 270 |
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| 271 | @item register_prefix
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| 272 |
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| 273 | This directive makes a @samp{$} character prefix on all
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| 274 | registers mandatory. It overrides a previous setting, including
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| 275 | the corresponding effect of the option @option{--underscore}.
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| 276 |
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| 277 | @item leading_underscore
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| 278 |
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| 279 | This is an assertion directive, emitting an error if the
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| 280 | @option{--no-underscore} option is in effect.
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| 281 |
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| 282 | @item no_leading_underscore
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| 283 |
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| 284 | This is the opposite of the @code{.syntax leading_underscore}
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| 285 | directive and emits an error if the option @option{--underscore}
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| 286 | is in effect.
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| 287 | @end table
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| 288 |
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| 289 | @c If you compare with md_pseudo_table, you see that we don't
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| 290 | @c document ".file" and ".loc" here. This is because we're just
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| 291 | @c wrapping the corresponding ELF function and emitting an error for
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| 292 | @c a.out.
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| 293 | @end table
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