412 lines
13 KiB
Text
412 lines
13 KiB
Text
.so mnx.mac
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.TH AS 1x
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.\" unchecked (kjb)
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.CD "as \(en assembler"
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.SE "AS\(emASSEMBLER [IBM]"
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.SP 1
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.PP
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This document describes the language accepted by the 80386 assembler
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that is part of the Amsterdam Compiler Kit. Note that only the syntax is
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described, only a few 386 instructions are shown as examples.
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.SS "Tokens, Numbers, Character Constants, and Strings"
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.PP
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The syntax of numbers is the same as in C.
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The constants 32, 040, and 0x20 all represent the same number, but are
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written in decimal, octal, and hex, respectively.
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The rules for character constants and strings are also the same as in C.
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For example, \(fma\(fm is a character constant.
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A typical string is "string".
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Expressions may be formed with C operators, but must use [ and ] for
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parentheses. (Normal parentheses are claimed by the operand syntax.)
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.SS "Symbols"
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.PP
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Symbols contain letters and digits, as well as three special characters:
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dot, tilde, and underscore.
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The first character may not be a digit or tilde.
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.PP
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The names of the 80386 registers are reserved. These are:
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.HS
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~~~al, bl, cl, dl
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.br
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~~~ah, bh, ch, dh
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.br
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~~~ax, bx, cx, dx, eax, ebx, ecx, edx
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.br
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~~~si, di, bp, sp, esi, edi, ebp, esp
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.br
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~~~cs, ds, ss, es, fs, gs
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.HS
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The xx and exx variants of the eight general registers are treated as
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synonyms by the assembler. Normally "ax" is the 16-bit low half of the
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32-bit "eax" register. The assembler determines if a 16 or 32 bit
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operation is meant solely by looking at the instruction or the
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instruction prefixes. It is however best to use the proper registers
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when writing assembly to not confuse those who read the code.
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.HS
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The last group of 6 segment registers are used for selector + offset mode
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addressing, in which the effective address is at a given offset in one of
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the 6 segments.
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.PP
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Names of instructions and pseudo-ops are not reserved.
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Alphabetic characters in opcodes and pseudo-ops must be in lower case.
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.SS "Separators"
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.PP
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Commas, blanks, and tabs are separators and can be interspersed freely
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between tokens, but not within tokens.
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Commas are only legal between operands.
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.SS "Comments"
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.PP
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The comment character is \*(OQ!\*(CQ.
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The rest of the line is ignored.
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.SS "Opcodes"
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.PP
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The opcodes are listed below.
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Notes: (1) Different names for the same instruction are separated by \*(OQ/\*(CQ.
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(2) Square brackets ([]) indicate that 0 or 1 of the enclosed characters
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can be included.
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(3) Curly brackets ({}) work similarly, except that one of the
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enclosed characters \fImust\fR be included.
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Thus square brackets indicate an option, whereas curly brackets indicate
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that a choice must be made.
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.sp
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.if t .ta 0.25i 1.2i 3i
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.if n .ta 2 10 24
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.nf
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.B "Data Transfer"
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.HS
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mov[b] dest, source ! Move word/byte from source to dest
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pop dest ! Pop stack
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push source ! Push stack
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xchg[b] op1, op2 ! Exchange word/byte
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xlat ! Translate
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o16 ! Operate on a 16 bit object instead of 32 bit
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.B "Input/Output"
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.HS
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in[b] source ! Input from source I/O port
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in[b] ! Input from DX I/O port
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out[b] dest ! Output to dest I/O port
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out[b] ! Output to DX I/O port
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.B "Address Object"
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.HS
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lds reg,source ! Load reg and DS from source
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les reg,source ! Load reg and ES from source
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lea reg,source ! Load effect address of source to reg and DS
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{cdsefg}seg ! Specify seg register for next instruction
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a16 ! Use 16 bit addressing mode instead of 32 bit
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.B "Flag Transfer"
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.HS
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lahf ! Load AH from flag register
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popf ! Pop flags
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pushf ! Push flags
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sahf ! Store AH in flag register
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.B "Addition"
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.HS
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aaa ! Adjust result of BCD addition
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add[b] dest,source ! Add
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adc[b] dest,source ! Add with carry
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daa ! Decimal Adjust after addition
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inc[b] dest ! Increment by 1
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.B "Subtraction"
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.HS
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aas ! Adjust result of BCD subtraction
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sub[b] dest,source ! Subtract
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sbb[b] dest,source ! Subtract with borrow from dest
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das ! Decimal adjust after subtraction
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dec[b] dest ! Decrement by one
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neg[b] dest ! Negate
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cmp[b] dest,source ! Compare
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.B "Multiplication"
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.HS
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aam ! Adjust result of BCD multiply
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imul[b] source ! Signed multiply
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mul[b] source ! Unsigned multiply
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.B "Division"
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.HS
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aad ! Adjust AX for BCD division
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o16 cbw ! Sign extend AL into AH
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o16 cwd ! Sign extend AX into DX
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cwde ! Sign extend AX into EAX
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cdq ! Sign extend EAX into EDX
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idiv[b] source ! Signed divide
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div[b] source ! Unsigned divide
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.B "Logical"
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.HS
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and[b] dest,source ! Logical and
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not[b] dest ! Logical not
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or[b] dest,source ! Logical inclusive or
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test[b] dest,source ! Logical test
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xor[b] dest,source ! Logical exclusive or
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.B "Shift"
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.HS
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sal[b]/shl[b] dest,CL ! Shift logical left
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sar[b] dest,CL ! Shift arithmetic right
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shr[b] dest,CL ! Shift logical right
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.B "Rotate"
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.HS
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rcl[b] dest,CL ! Rotate left, with carry
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rcr[b] dest,CL ! Rotate right, with carry
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rol[b] dest,CL ! Rotate left
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ror[b] dest,CL ! Rotate right
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.B "String Manipulation"
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.HS
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cmps[b] ! Compare string element ds:esi with es:edi
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lods[b] ! Load from ds:esi into AL, AX, or EAX
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movs[b] ! Move from ds:esi to es:edi
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rep ! Repeat next instruction until ECX=0
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repe/repz ! Repeat next instruction until ECX=0 and ZF=1
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repne/repnz ! Repeat next instruction until ECX!=0 and ZF=0
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scas[b] ! Compare ds:esi with AL/AX/EAX
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stos[b] ! Store AL/AX/EAX in es:edi
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.fi
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.B "Control Transfer"
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.PP
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\fIAs\fR accepts a number of special jump opcodes that can assemble to
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instructions with either a byte displacement, which can only reach to targets
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within \(mi126 to +129 bytes of the branch, or an instruction with a 32-bit
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displacement. The assembler automatically chooses a byte or word displacement
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instruction.
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.PP
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The English translation of the opcodes should be obvious, with
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\*(OQl(ess)\*(CQ and \*(OQg(reater)\*(CQ for signed comparisions, and
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\*(OQb(elow)\*(CQ and \*(OQa(bove)*(CQ for unsigned comparisions. There are
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lots of synonyms to allow you to write "jump if not that" instead of "jump
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if this".
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.PP
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The \*(OQcall\*(CQ, \*(OQjmp\*(CQ, and \*(OQret\*(CQ instructions can be
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either intrasegment or
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intersegment. The intersegment versions are indicated with
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the suffix \*(OQf\*(CQ.
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.if t .ta 0.25i 1.2i 3i
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.if n .ta 2 10 24
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.nf
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.B Unconditional
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.HS
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jmp[f] dest ! jump to dest (8 or 32-bit displacement)
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call[f] dest ! call procedure
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ret[f] ! return from procedure
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.B "Conditional"
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.HS
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ja/jnbe ! if above/not below or equal (unsigned)
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jae/jnb/jnc ! if above or equal/not below/not carry (uns.)
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jb/jnae/jc ! if not above nor equal/below/carry (unsigned)
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jbe/jna ! if below or equal/not above (unsigned)
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jg/jnle ! if greater/not less nor equal (signed)
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jge/jnl ! if greater or equal/not less (signed)
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jl/jnqe ! if less/not greater nor equal (signed)
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jle/jgl ! if less or equal/not greater (signed)
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je/jz ! if equal/zero
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jne/jnz ! if not equal/not zero
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jno ! if overflow not set
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jo ! if overflow set
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jnp/jpo ! if parity not set/parity odd
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jp/jpe ! if parity set/parity even
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jns ! if sign not set
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js ! if sign set
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.B "Iteration Control"
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.HS
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jcxz dest ! jump if ECX = 0
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loop dest ! Decrement ECX and jump if CX != 0
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loope/loopz dest ! Decrement ECX and jump if ECX = 0 and ZF = 1
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loopne/loopnz dest ! Decrement ECX and jump if ECX != 0 and ZF = 0
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.B "Interrupt"
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.HS
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int n ! Software interrupt n
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into ! Interrupt if overflow set
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iretd ! Return from interrupt
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.B "Flag Operations"
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.HS
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clc ! Clear carry flag
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cld ! Clear direction flag
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cli ! Clear interrupt enable flag
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cmc ! Complement carry flag
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stc ! Set carry flag
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std ! Set direction flag
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sti ! Set interrupt enable flag
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.fi
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.SS "Location Counter"
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.PP
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The special symbol \*(OQ.\*(CQ is the location counter and its value
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is the address of the first byte of the instruction in which the symbol
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appears and can be used in expressions.
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.SS "Segments"
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.PP
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There are four different assembly segments: text, rom, data and bss.
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Segments are declared and selected by the \fI.sect\fR pseudo-op. It is
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customary to declare all segments at the top of an assembly file like
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this:
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.HS
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~~~.sect .text; .sect .rom; .sect .data; .sect .bss
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.HS
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The assembler accepts up to 16 different segments, but
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.MX
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expects only four to be used. Anything can in principle be assembled
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into any segment, but the
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.MX
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bss segment may only contain uninitialized data.
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Note that the \*(OQ.\*(CQ symbol refers to the location in the current
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segment.
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.SS "Labels"
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.PP
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There are two types: name and numeric. Name labels consist of a name
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followed by a colon (:).
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.PP
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The numeric labels are single digits. The nearest 0: label may be
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referenced as 0f in the forward direction, or 0b backwards.
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.SS "Statement Syntax"
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.PP
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Each line consists of a single statement.
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Blank or comment lines are allowed.
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.SS "Instruction Statements"
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.PP
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The most general form of an instruction is
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.HS
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~~~label: opcode operand1, operand2 ! comment
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.HS
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.SS "Expression Semantics"
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.PP
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.tr ~~
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The following operators can be used:
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+ \(mi * / & | ^ ~ << (shift left) >> (shift right) \(mi (unary minus).
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.tr ~
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32-bit integer arithmetic is used.
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Division produces a truncated quotient.
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.SS "Addressing Modes"
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.PP
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Below is a list of the addressing modes supported.
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Each one is followed by an example.
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.HS
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.ta 0.25i 3i
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.nf
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constant mov eax, 123456
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direct access mov eax, (counter)
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register mov eax, esi
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indirect mov eax, (esi)
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base + disp. mov eax, 6(ebp)
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scaled index mov eax, (4*esi)
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base + index mov eax, (ebp)(2*esi)
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base + index + disp. mov eax, 10(edi)(1*esi)
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.HS
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.fi
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Any of the constants or symbols may be replacement by expressions. Direct
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access, constants and displacements may be any type of expression. A scaled
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index with scale 1 may be written without the \*(OQ1*\*(CQ.
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.SS "Call and Jmp"
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.PP
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The \*(OQcall\*(CQ and \*(OQjmp\*(CQ instructions can be interpreted
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as a load into the instruction pointer.
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.HS
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.ta 0.25i 3i
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.nf
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call _routine ! Direct, intrasegment
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call (subloc) ! Indirect, intrasegment
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call 6(ebp) ! Indirect, intrasegment
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call ebx ! Direct, intrasegment
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call (ebx) ! Indirect, intrasegment
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callf (subloc) ! Indirect, intersegment
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callf seg:offs ! Direct, intersegment
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.HS
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.fi
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.SP 1
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.SS "Symbol Assigment"
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.SP 1
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.PP
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Symbols can acquire values in one of two ways.
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Using a symbol as a label sets it to \*(OQ.\*(CQ for the current
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segment with type relocatable.
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Alternative, a symbol may be given a name via an assignment of the form
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.HS
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~~~symbol = expression
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.HS
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in which the symbol is assigned the value and type of its arguments.
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.SP 1
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.SS "Storage Allocation"
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.SP 1
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.PP
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Space can be reserved for bytes, words, and longs using pseudo-ops.
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They take one or more operands, and for each generate a value
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whose size is a byte, word (2 bytes) or long (4 bytes). For example:
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.HS
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.if t .ta 0.25i 3i
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.if n .ta 2 24
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.data1 2, 6 ! allocate 2 bytes initialized to 2 and 6
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.br
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.data2 3, 0x10 ! allocate 2 words initialized to 3 and 16
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.br
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.data4 010 ! allocate a longword initialized to 8
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.br
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.space 40 ! allocates 40 bytes of zeros
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.HS
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allocates 50 (decimal) bytes of storage, initializing the first two
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bytes to 2 and 6, the next two words to 3 and 16, then one longword with
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value 8 (010 octal), last 40 bytes of zeros.
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.SS "String Allocation"
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.PP
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The pseudo-ops \fI.ascii\fR and \fI.asciz\fR
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take one string argument and generate the ASCII character
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codes for the letters in the string.
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The latter automatically terminates the string with a null (0) byte.
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For example,
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.HS
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~~~.ascii "hello"
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.br
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~~~.asciz "world\en"
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.HS
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.SS "Alignment"
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.PP
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Sometimes it is necessary to force the next item to begin at a word, longword
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or even a 16 byte address boundary.
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The \fI.align\fR pseudo-op zero or more null byte if the current location
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is a multiple of the argument of .align.
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.SS "Segment Control"
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.PP
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Every item assembled goes in one of the four segments: text, rom, data,
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or bss. By using the \fI.sect\fR pseudo-op with argument
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\fI.text, .rom, .data\fR or \fI.bss\fR, the programmer can force the
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next items to go in a particular segment.
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.SS "External Names"
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.PP
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A symbol can be given global scope by including it in a \fI.define\fR pseudo-op.
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Multiple names may be listed, separate by commas.
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It must be used to export symbols defined in the current program.
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Names not defined in the current program are treated as "undefined
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external" automatically, although it is customary to make this explicit
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with the \fI.extern\fR pseudo-op.
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.SS "Common"
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.PP
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The \fI.comm\fR pseudo-op declares storage that can be common to more than
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one module. There are two arguments: a name and an absolute expression giving
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the size in bytes of the area named by the symbol.
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The type of the symbol becomes
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external. The statement can appear in any segment.
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If you think this has something to do with FORTRAN, you are right.
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.SS "Examples"
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.PP
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In the kernel directory, there are several assembly code files that are
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worth inspecting as examples.
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However, note that these files, are designed to first be
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run through the C preprocessor. (The very first character is a # to signal
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this.) Thus they contain numerous constructs
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that are not pure assembler.
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For true assembler examples, compile any C program provided with
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.MX
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using the \fB\(enS\fR flag.
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This will result in an assembly language file with a suffix with the same
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name as the C source file, but ending with the .s suffix.
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