URL
https://opencores.org/ocsvn/openrisc/openrisc/trunk
Subversion Repositories openrisc
[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-stable/] [gdb-7.2/] [include/] [opcode/] [m68k.h] - Rev 862
Go to most recent revision | Compare with Previous | Blame | View Log
/* Opcode table header for m680[01234]0/m6888[12]/m68851. Copyright 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB, GAS, and the GNU binutils. GDB, GAS, and the GNU binutils are free software; you can redistribute them and/or modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later version. GDB, GAS, and the GNU binutils are distributed in the hope that they will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this file; see the file COPYING3. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */ /* These are used as bit flags for the arch field in the m68k_opcode structure. */ #define _m68k_undef 0 #define m68000 0x001 #define m68010 0x002 #define m68020 0x004 #define m68030 0x008 #define m68040 0x010 #define m68060 0x020 #define m68881 0x040 #define m68851 0x080 #define cpu32 0x100 /* e.g., 68332 */ #define fido_a 0x200 #define m68k_mask 0x3ff #define mcfmac 0x400 /* ColdFire MAC. */ #define mcfemac 0x800 /* ColdFire EMAC. */ #define cfloat 0x1000 /* ColdFire FPU. */ #define mcfhwdiv 0x2000 /* ColdFire hardware divide. */ #define mcfisa_a 0x4000 /* ColdFire ISA_A. */ #define mcfisa_aa 0x8000 /* ColdFire ISA_A+. */ #define mcfisa_b 0x10000 /* ColdFire ISA_B. */ #define mcfisa_c 0x20000 /* ColdFire ISA_C. */ #define mcfusp 0x40000 /* ColdFire USP instructions. */ #define mcf_mask 0x7e400 /* Handy aliases. */ #define m68040up (m68040 | m68060) #define m68030up (m68030 | m68040up) #define m68020up (m68020 | m68030up) #define m68010up (m68010 | cpu32 | fido_a | m68020up) #define m68000up (m68000 | m68010up) #define mfloat (m68881 | m68040 | m68060) #define mmmu (m68851 | m68030 | m68040 | m68060) /* The structure used to hold information for an opcode. */ struct m68k_opcode { /* The opcode name. */ const char *name; /* The pseudo-size of the instruction(in bytes). Used to determine number of bytes necessary to disassemble the instruction. */ unsigned int size; /* The opcode itself. */ unsigned long opcode; /* The mask used by the disassembler. */ unsigned long match; /* The arguments. */ const char *args; /* The architectures which support this opcode. */ unsigned int arch; }; /* The structure used to hold information for an opcode alias. */ struct m68k_opcode_alias { /* The alias name. */ const char *alias; /* The instruction for which this is an alias. */ const char *primary; }; /* We store four bytes of opcode for all opcodes because that is the most any of them need. The actual length of an instruction is always at least 2 bytes, and is as much longer as necessary to hold the operands it has. The match field is a mask saying which bits must match particular opcode in order for an instruction to be an instance of that opcode. The args field is a string containing two characters for each operand of the instruction. The first specifies the kind of operand; the second, the place it is stored. If the first char of args is '.', it indicates that the opcode is two words. This is only necessary when the match field does not have any bits set in the second opcode word. Such a '.' is skipped for operand processing. */ /* Kinds of operands: Characters used: AaBbCcDdEeFfGgHIiJjKkLlMmnOopQqRrSsTtUuVvWwXxYyZz01234|*~%;@!&$?/<>#^+- D data register only. Stored as 3 bits. A address register only. Stored as 3 bits. a address register indirect only. Stored as 3 bits. R either kind of register. Stored as 4 bits. r either kind of register indirect only. Stored as 4 bits. At the moment, used only for cas2 instruction. F floating point coprocessor register only. Stored as 3 bits. O an offset (or width): immediate data 0-31 or data register. Stored as 6 bits in special format for BF... insns. + autoincrement only. Stored as 3 bits (number of the address register). - autodecrement only. Stored as 3 bits (number of the address register). Q quick immediate data. Stored as 3 bits. This matches an immediate operand only when value is in range 1 .. 8. M moveq immediate data. Stored as 8 bits. This matches an immediate operand only when value is in range -128..127 T trap vector immediate data. Stored as 4 bits. k K-factor for fmove.p instruction. Stored as a 7-bit constant or a three bit register offset, depending on the field type. # immediate data. Stored in special places (b, w or l) which say how many bits to store. ^ immediate data for floating point instructions. Special places are offset by 2 bytes from '#'... B pc-relative address, converted to an offset that is treated as immediate data. d displacement and register. Stores the register as 3 bits and stores the displacement in the entire second word. C the CCR. No need to store it; this is just for filtering validity. S the SR. No need to store, just as with CCR. U the USP. No need to store, just as with CCR. E the MAC ACC. No need to store, just as with CCR. e the EMAC ACC[0123]. G the MAC/EMAC MACSR. No need to store, just as with CCR. g the EMAC ACCEXT{01,23}. H the MASK. No need to store, just as with CCR. i the MAC/EMAC scale factor. I Coprocessor ID. Not printed if 1. The Coprocessor ID is always extracted from the 'd' field of word one, which means that an extended coprocessor opcode can be skipped using the 'i' place, if needed. s System Control register for the floating point coprocessor. J Misc register for movec instruction, stored in 'j' format. Possible values: 0x000 SFC Source Function Code reg [60, 40, 30, 20, 10] 0x001 DFC Data Function Code reg [60, 40, 30, 20, 10] 0x002 CACR Cache Control Register [60, 40, 30, 20, mcf] 0x003 TC MMU Translation Control [60, 40] 0x004 ITT0 Instruction Transparent Translation reg 0 [60, 40] 0x005 ITT1 Instruction Transparent Translation reg 1 [60, 40] 0x006 DTT0 Data Transparent Translation reg 0 [60, 40] 0x007 DTT1 Data Transparent Translation reg 1 [60, 40] 0x008 BUSCR Bus Control Register [60] 0x800 USP User Stack Pointer [60, 40, 30, 20, 10] 0x801 VBR Vector Base reg [60, 40, 30, 20, 10, mcf] 0x802 CAAR Cache Address Register [ 30, 20] 0x803 MSP Master Stack Pointer [ 40, 30, 20] 0x804 ISP Interrupt Stack Pointer [ 40, 30, 20] 0x805 MMUSR MMU Status reg [ 40] 0x806 URP User Root Pointer [60, 40] 0x807 SRP Supervisor Root Pointer [60, 40] 0x808 PCR Processor Configuration reg [60] 0xC00 ROMBAR ROM Base Address Register [520X] 0xC04 RAMBAR0 RAM Base Address Register 0 [520X] 0xC05 RAMBAR1 RAM Base Address Register 0 [520X] 0xC0F MBAR0 RAM Base Address Register 0 [520X] 0xC04 FLASHBAR FLASH Base Address Register [mcf528x] 0xC05 RAMBAR Static RAM Base Address Register [mcf528x] L Register list of the type d0-d7/a0-a7 etc. (New! Improved! Can also hold fp0-fp7, as well!) The assembler tries to see if the registers match the insn by looking at where the insn wants them stored. l Register list like L, but with all the bits reversed. Used for going the other way. . . c cache identifier which may be "nc" for no cache, "ic" for instruction cache, "dc" for data cache, or "bc" for both caches. Used in cinv and cpush. Always stored in position "d". u Any register, with ``upper'' or ``lower'' specification. Used in the mac instructions with size word. The remainder are all stored as 6 bits using an address mode and a register number; they differ in which addressing modes they match. * all (modes 0-6,7.0-4) ~ alterable memory (modes 2-6,7.0,7.1) (not 0,1,7.2-4) % alterable (modes 0-6,7.0,7.1) (not 7.2-4) ; data (modes 0,2-6,7.0-4) (not 1) @ data, but not immediate (modes 0,2-6,7.0-3) (not 1,7.4) ! control (modes 2,5,6,7.0-3) (not 0,1,3,4,7.4) & alterable control (modes 2,5,6,7.0,7.1) (not 0,1,3,4,7.2-4) $ alterable data (modes 0,2-6,7.0,7.1) (not 1,7.2-4) ? alterable control, or data register (modes 0,2,5,6,7.0,7.1) (not 1,3,4,7.2-4) / control, or data register (modes 0,2,5,6,7.0-3) (not 1,3,4,7.4) > *save operands (modes 2,4,5,6,7.0,7.1) (not 0,1,3,7.2-4) < *restore operands (modes 2,3,5,6,7.0-3) (not 0,1,4,7.4) coldfire move operands: m (modes 0-4) n (modes 5,7.2) o (modes 6,7.0,7.1,7.3,7.4) p (modes 0-5) coldfire bset/bclr/btst/mulsl/mulul operands: q (modes 0,2-5) v (modes 0,2-5,7.0,7.1) b (modes 0,2-5,7.2) w (modes 2-5,7.2) y (modes 2,5) z (modes 2,5,7.2) x mov3q immediate operand. j coprocessor ET operand. K coprocessor command number. 4 (modes 2,3,4,5) */ /* For the 68851: */ /* I didn't use much imagination in choosing the following codes, so many of them aren't very mnemonic. -rab 0 32 bit pmmu register Possible values: 000 TC Translation Control Register (68030, 68851) 1 16 bit pmmu register 111 AC Access Control (68851) 2 8 bit pmmu register 100 CAL Current Access Level (68851) 101 VAL Validate Access Level (68851) 110 SCC Stack Change Control (68851) 3 68030-only pmmu registers (32 bit) 010 TT0 Transparent Translation reg 0 (aka Access Control reg 0 -- AC0 -- on 68ec030) 011 TT1 Transparent Translation reg 1 (aka Access Control reg 1 -- AC1 -- on 68ec030) W wide pmmu registers Possible values: 001 DRP Dma Root Pointer (68851) 010 SRP Supervisor Root Pointer (68030, 68851) 011 CRP Cpu Root Pointer (68030, 68851) f function code register (68030, 68851) 0 SFC 1 DFC V VAL register only (68851) X BADx, BACx (16 bit) 100 BAD Breakpoint Acknowledge Data (68851) 101 BAC Breakpoint Acknowledge Control (68851) Y PSR (68851) (MMUSR on 68030) (ACUSR on 68ec030) Z PCSR (68851) | memory (modes 2-6, 7.*) t address test level (68030 only) Stored as 3 bits, range 0-7. Also used for breakpoint instruction now. */ /* Places to put an operand, for non-general operands: Characters used: BbCcDdFfGgHhIijkLlMmNnostWw123456789/ s source, low bits of first word. d dest, shifted 9 in first word 1 second word, shifted 12 2 second word, shifted 6 3 second word, shifted 0 4 third word, shifted 12 5 third word, shifted 6 6 third word, shifted 0 7 second word, shifted 7 8 second word, shifted 10 9 second word, shifted 5 E second word, shifted 9 D store in both place 1 and place 3; for divul and divsl. B first word, low byte, for branch displacements W second word (entire), for branch displacements L second and third words (entire), for branch displacements (also overloaded for move16) b second word, low byte w second word (entire) [variable word/long branch offset for dbra] W second word (entire) (must be signed 16 bit value) l second and third word (entire) g variable branch offset for bra and similar instructions. The place to store depends on the magnitude of offset. t store in both place 7 and place 8; for floating point operations c branch offset for cpBcc operations. The place to store is word two if bit six of word one is zero, and words two and three if bit six of word one is one. i Increment by two, to skip over coprocessor extended operands. Only works with the 'I' format. k Dynamic K-factor field. Bits 6-4 of word 2, used as a register number. Also used for dynamic fmovem instruction. C floating point coprocessor constant - 7 bits. Also used for static K-factors... j Movec register #, stored in 12 low bits of second word. m For M[S]ACx; 4 bits split with MSB shifted 6 bits in first word and remaining 3 bits of register shifted 9 bits in first word. Indicate upper/lower in 1 bit shifted 7 bits in second word. Use with `R' or `u' format. n `m' withouth upper/lower indication. (For M[S]ACx; 4 bits split with MSB shifted 6 bits in first word and remaining 3 bits of register shifted 9 bits in first word. No upper/lower indication is done.) Use with `R' or `u' format. o For M[S]ACw; 4 bits shifted 12 in second word (like `1'). Indicate upper/lower in 1 bit shifted 7 bits in second word. Use with `R' or `u' format. M For M[S]ACw; 4 bits in low bits of first word. Indicate upper/lower in 1 bit shifted 6 bits in second word. Use with `R' or `u' format. N For M[S]ACw; 4 bits in low bits of second word. Indicate upper/lower in 1 bit shifted 6 bits in second word. Use with `R' or `u' format. h shift indicator (scale factor), 1 bit shifted 10 in second word Places to put operand, for general operands: d destination, shifted 6 bits in first word b source, at low bit of first word, and immediate uses one byte w source, at low bit of first word, and immediate uses two bytes l source, at low bit of first word, and immediate uses four bytes s source, at low bit of first word. Used sometimes in contexts where immediate is not allowed anyway. f single precision float, low bit of 1st word, immediate uses 4 bytes F double precision float, low bit of 1st word, immediate uses 8 bytes x extended precision float, low bit of 1st word, immediate uses 12 bytes p packed float, low bit of 1st word, immediate uses 12 bytes G EMAC accumulator, load (bit 4 2nd word, !bit8 first word) H EMAC accumulator, non load (bit 4 2nd word, bit 8 first word) F EMAC ACCx f EMAC ACCy I MAC/EMAC scale factor / Like 's', but set 2nd word, bit 5 if trailing_ampersand set ] first word, bit 10 */ extern const struct m68k_opcode m68k_opcodes[]; extern const struct m68k_opcode_alias m68k_opcode_aliases[]; extern const int m68k_numopcodes, m68k_numaliases; /* end of m68k-opcode.h */
Go to most recent revision | Compare with Previous | Blame | View Log