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d7a5f2f | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 | // Copyright 2018 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
/*
Package arm64 implements an ARM64 assembler. Go assembly syntax is different from GNU ARM64
syntax, but we can still follow the general rules to map between them.
# Instructions mnemonics mapping rules
1. Most instructions use width suffixes of instruction names to indicate operand width rather than
using different register names.
Examples:
ADC R24, R14, R12 <=> adc x12, x14, x24
ADDW R26->24, R21, R15 <=> add w15, w21, w26, asr #24
FCMPS F2, F3 <=> fcmp s3, s2
FCMPD F2, F3 <=> fcmp d3, d2
FCVTDH F2, F3 <=> fcvt h3, d2
2. Go uses .P and .W suffixes to indicate post-increment and pre-increment.
Examples:
MOVD.P -8(R10), R8 <=> ldr x8, [x10],#-8
MOVB.W 16(R16), R10 <=> ldrsb x10, [x16,#16]!
MOVBU.W 16(R16), R10 <=> ldrb x10, [x16,#16]!
3. Go uses a series of MOV instructions as load and store.
64-bit variant ldr, str, stur => MOVD;
32-bit variant str, stur, ldrsw => MOVW;
32-bit variant ldr => MOVWU;
ldrb => MOVBU; ldrh => MOVHU;
ldrsb, sturb, strb => MOVB;
ldrsh, sturh, strh => MOVH.
4. Go moves conditions into opcode suffix, like BLT.
5. Go adds a V prefix for most floating-point and SIMD instructions, except cryptographic extension
instructions and floating-point(scalar) instructions.
Examples:
VADD V5.H8, V18.H8, V9.H8 <=> add v9.8h, v18.8h, v5.8h
VLD1.P (R6)(R11), [V31.D1] <=> ld1 {v31.1d}, [x6], x11
VFMLA V29.S2, V20.S2, V14.S2 <=> fmla v14.2s, v20.2s, v29.2s
AESD V22.B16, V19.B16 <=> aesd v19.16b, v22.16b
SCVTFWS R3, F16 <=> scvtf s17, w6
6. Align directive
Go asm supports the PCALIGN directive, which indicates that the next instruction should be aligned
to a specified boundary by padding with NOOP instruction. The alignment value supported on arm64
must be a power of 2 and in the range of [8, 2048].
Examples:
PCALIGN $16
MOVD $2, R0 // This instruction is aligned with 16 bytes.
PCALIGN $1024
MOVD $3, R1 // This instruction is aligned with 1024 bytes.
PCALIGN also changes the function alignment. If a function has one or more PCALIGN directives,
its address will be aligned to the same or coarser boundary, which is the maximum of all the
alignment values.
In the following example, the function Add is aligned with 128 bytes.
Examples:
TEXT ·Add(SB),$40-16
MOVD $2, R0
PCALIGN $32
MOVD $4, R1
PCALIGN $128
MOVD $8, R2
RET
On arm64, functions in Go are aligned to 16 bytes by default, we can also use PCALIGN to set the
function alignment. The functions that need to be aligned are preferably using NOFRAME and NOSPLIT
to avoid the impact of the prologues inserted by the assembler, so that the function address will
have the same alignment as the first hand-written instruction.
In the following example, PCALIGN at the entry of the function Add will align its address to 2048 bytes.
Examples:
TEXT ·Add(SB),NOSPLIT|NOFRAME,$0
PCALIGN $2048
MOVD $1, R0
MOVD $1, R1
RET
7. Move large constants to vector registers.
Go asm uses VMOVQ/VMOVD/VMOVS to move 128-bit, 64-bit and 32-bit constants into vector registers, respectively.
And for a 128-bit integer, it take two 64-bit operands, for the low and high parts separately.
Examples:
VMOVS $0x11223344, V0
VMOVD $0x1122334455667788, V1
VMOVQ $0x1122334455667788, $0x99aabbccddeeff00, V2 // V2=0x99aabbccddeeff001122334455667788
8. Move an optionally-shifted 16-bit immediate value to a register.
The instructions are MOVK(W), MOVZ(W) and MOVN(W), the assembly syntax is "op $(uimm16<<shift), <Rd>". The <uimm16>
is the 16-bit unsigned immediate, in the range 0 to 65535; For the 32-bit variant, the <shift> is 0 or 16, for the
64-bit variant, the <shift> is 0, 16, 32 or 48.
The current Go assembler does not accept zero shifts, such as "op $0, Rd" and "op $(0<<(16|32|48)), Rd" instructions.
Examples:
MOVK $(10<<32), R20 <=> movk x20, #10, lsl #32
MOVZW $(20<<16), R8 <=> movz w8, #20, lsl #16
MOVK $(0<<16), R10 will be reported as an error by the assembler.
Special Cases.
(1) umov is written as VMOV.
(2) br is renamed JMP, blr is renamed CALL.
(3) No need to add "W" suffix: LDARB, LDARH, LDAXRB, LDAXRH, LDTRH, LDXRB, LDXRH.
(4) In Go assembly syntax, NOP is a zero-width pseudo-instruction serves generic purpose, nothing
related to real ARM64 instruction. NOOP serves for the hardware nop instruction. NOOP is an alias of
HINT $0.
Examples:
VMOV V13.B[1], R20 <=> mov x20, v13.b[1]
VMOV V13.H[1], R20 <=> mov w20, v13.h[1]
JMP (R3) <=> br x3
CALL (R17) <=> blr x17
LDAXRB (R19), R16 <=> ldaxrb w16, [x19]
NOOP <=> nop
# Register mapping rules
1. All basic register names are written as Rn.
2. Go uses ZR as the zero register and RSP as the stack pointer.
3. Bn, Hn, Dn, Sn and Qn instructions are written as Fn in floating-point instructions and as Vn
in SIMD instructions.
# Argument mapping rules
1. The operands appear in left-to-right assignment order.
Go reverses the arguments of most instructions.
Examples:
ADD R11.SXTB<<1, RSP, R25 <=> add x25, sp, w11, sxtb #1
VADD V16, V19, V14 <=> add d14, d19, d16
Special Cases.
(1) Argument order is the same as in the GNU ARM64 syntax: cbz, cbnz and some store instructions,
such as str, stur, strb, sturb, strh, sturh stlr, stlrb. stlrh, st1.
Examples:
MOVD R29, 384(R19) <=> str x29, [x19,#384]
MOVB.P R30, 30(R4) <=> strb w30, [x4],#30
STLRH R21, (R19) <=> stlrh w21, [x19]
(2) MADD, MADDW, MSUB, MSUBW, SMADDL, SMSUBL, UMADDL, UMSUBL <Rm>, <Ra>, <Rn>, <Rd>
Examples:
MADD R2, R30, R22, R6 <=> madd x6, x22, x2, x30
SMSUBL R10, R3, R17, R27 <=> smsubl x27, w17, w10, x3
(3) FMADDD, FMADDS, FMSUBD, FMSUBS, FNMADDD, FNMADDS, FNMSUBD, FNMSUBS <Fm>, <Fa>, <Fn>, <Fd>
Examples:
FMADDD F30, F20, F3, F29 <=> fmadd d29, d3, d30, d20
FNMSUBS F7, F25, F7, F22 <=> fnmsub s22, s7, s7, s25
(4) BFI, BFXIL, SBFIZ, SBFX, UBFIZ, UBFX $<lsb>, <Rn>, $<width>, <Rd>
Examples:
BFIW $16, R20, $6, R0 <=> bfi w0, w20, #16, #6
UBFIZ $34, R26, $5, R20 <=> ubfiz x20, x26, #34, #5
(5) FCCMPD, FCCMPS, FCCMPED, FCCMPES <cond>, Fm. Fn, $<nzcv>
Examples:
FCCMPD AL, F8, F26, $0 <=> fccmp d26, d8, #0x0, al
FCCMPS VS, F29, F4, $4 <=> fccmp s4, s29, #0x4, vs
FCCMPED LE, F20, F5, $13 <=> fccmpe d5, d20, #0xd, le
FCCMPES NE, F26, F10, $0 <=> fccmpe s10, s26, #0x0, ne
(6) CCMN, CCMNW, CCMP, CCMPW <cond>, <Rn>, $<imm>, $<nzcv>
Examples:
CCMP MI, R22, $12, $13 <=> ccmp x22, #0xc, #0xd, mi
CCMNW AL, R1, $11, $8 <=> ccmn w1, #0xb, #0x8, al
(7) CCMN, CCMNW, CCMP, CCMPW <cond>, <Rn>, <Rm>, $<nzcv>
Examples:
CCMN VS, R13, R22, $10 <=> ccmn x13, x22, #0xa, vs
CCMPW HS, R19, R14, $11 <=> ccmp w19, w14, #0xb, cs
(9) CSEL, CSELW, CSNEG, CSNEGW, CSINC, CSINCW <cond>, <Rn>, <Rm>, <Rd> ;
FCSELD, FCSELS <cond>, <Fn>, <Fm>, <Fd>
Examples:
CSEL GT, R0, R19, R1 <=> csel x1, x0, x19, gt
CSNEGW GT, R7, R17, R8 <=> csneg w8, w7, w17, gt
FCSELD EQ, F15, F18, F16 <=> fcsel d16, d15, d18, eq
(10) TBNZ, TBZ $<imm>, <Rt>, <label>
(11) STLXR, STLXRW, STXR, STXRW, STLXRB, STLXRH, STXRB, STXRH <Rf>, (<Rn|RSP>), <Rs>
Examples:
STLXR ZR, (R15), R16 <=> stlxr w16, xzr, [x15]
STXRB R9, (R21), R19 <=> stxrb w19, w9, [x21]
(12) STLXP, STLXPW, STXP, STXPW (<Rf1>, <Rf2>), (<Rn|RSP>), <Rs>
Examples:
STLXP (R17, R19), (R4), R5 <=> stlxp w5, x17, x19, [x4]
STXPW (R30, R25), (R22), R13 <=> stxp w13, w30, w25, [x22]
2. Expressions for special arguments.
#<immediate> is written as $<immediate>.
Optionally-shifted immediate.
Examples:
ADD $(3151<<12), R14, R20 <=> add x20, x14, #0xc4f, lsl #12
ADDW $1864, R25, R6 <=> add w6, w25, #0x748
Optionally-shifted registers are written as <Rm>{<shift><amount>}.
The <shift> can be <<(lsl), >>(lsr), ->(asr), @>(ror).
Examples:
ADD R19>>30, R10, R24 <=> add x24, x10, x19, lsr #30
ADDW R26->24, R21, R15 <=> add w15, w21, w26, asr #24
Extended registers are written as <Rm>{.<extend>{<<<amount>}}.
<extend> can be UXTB, UXTH, UXTW, UXTX, SXTB, SXTH, SXTW or SXTX.
Examples:
ADDS R19.UXTB<<4, R9, R26 <=> adds x26, x9, w19, uxtb #4
ADDSW R14.SXTX, R14, R6 <=> adds w6, w14, w14, sxtx
Memory references: [<Xn|SP>{,#0}] is written as (Rn|RSP), a base register and an immediate
offset is written as imm(Rn|RSP), a base register and an offset register is written as (Rn|RSP)(Rm).
Examples:
LDAR (R22), R9 <=> ldar x9, [x22]
LDP 28(R17), (R15, R23) <=> ldp x15, x23, [x17,#28]
MOVWU (R4)(R12<<2), R8 <=> ldr w8, [x4, x12, lsl #2]
MOVD (R7)(R11.UXTW<<3), R25 <=> ldr x25, [x7,w11,uxtw #3]
MOVBU (R27)(R23), R14 <=> ldrb w14, [x27,x23]
Register pairs are written as (Rt1, Rt2).
Examples:
LDP.P -240(R11), (R12, R26) <=> ldp x12, x26, [x11],#-240
Register with arrangement and register with arrangement and index.
Examples:
VADD V5.H8, V18.H8, V9.H8 <=> add v9.8h, v18.8h, v5.8h
VLD1 (R2), [V21.B16] <=> ld1 {v21.16b}, [x2]
VST1.P V9.S[1], (R16)(R21) <=> st1 {v9.s}[1], [x16], x28
VST1.P [V13.H8, V14.H8, V15.H8], (R3)(R14) <=> st1 {v13.8h-v15.8h}, [x3], x14
VST1.P [V14.D1, V15.D1], (R7)(R23) <=> st1 {v14.1d, v15.1d}, [x7], x23
*/
package arm64
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