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Chapter2 - Machine Instructions and Programs

The document discusses machine instructions and binary number representations. It covers: 1) Three common representations for signed integers: sign-magnitude, one's complement, and two's complement. It argues that two's complement is simplest and most common as it allows for simpler addition and subtraction. 2) How addition and subtraction work in two's complement representation through examples. It also defines overflow conditions that can occur with addition and subtraction. 3) Sign extension, which is extending the sign bit of a multi-bit number during arithmetic operations to preserve the signed value.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
174 views

Chapter2 - Machine Instructions and Programs

The document discusses machine instructions and binary number representations. It covers: 1) Three common representations for signed integers: sign-magnitude, one's complement, and two's complement. It argues that two's complement is simplest and most common as it allows for simpler addition and subtraction. 2) How addition and subtraction work in two's complement representation through examples. It also defines overflow conditions that can occur with addition and subtraction. 3) Sign extension, which is extending the sign bit of a multi-bit number during arithmetic operations to preserve the signed value.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 2.

Machine
Instructions and
Programs
Objectives
 Machine instructions and program execution,
including branching and subroutine call and return
operations.
 Number representation and addition/subtraction in
the 2’s-complement system.
 Addressing methods for accessing register and
memory operands.
 Assembly language for representing machine
instructions, data, and programs.
 Program-controlled Input/Output operations.
Number, Arithmetic
Operations, and
Characters
Signed Integer
 3 major representations:
Sign and magnitude
One’s complement
Two’s complement
 Assumptions:
4-bit machine word
16 different values can be represented
Roughly half are positive, half are negative
Sign and Magnitude
Representation
-7 +0
-6 1111 0000 +1
1110 0001
-5 +2 +
1101 0010
-4 1100 0011 +3 0 100 = + 4

-3 1011 0100 +4 1 100 = - 4


1010 0101
-2 +5 -
1001 0110
-1 1000 0111 +6
-0 +7
High order bit is sign: 0 = positive (or zero), 1 = negative
Three low order bits is the magnitude: 0 (000) thru 7 (111)
Number range for n bits = +/-2n-1 -1
Two representations for 0
One’s Complement
Representation
-0 +0
-1 1111 0000 +1
1110 0001
-2 +2 +
1101 0010
-3 1100 0011 +3 0 100 = + 4

-4 1011 0100 +4 1 011 = - 4


1010 0101
-5 +5 -
1001 0110
-6 1000 0111 +6
-7 +7
 Subtraction implemented by addition & 1's complement
 Still two representations of 0! This causes some problems
 Some complexities in addition
Two’s Complement
Representation
-1 +0
-2 1111 0000 +1
1110 0001
-3 +2 +
like 1's comp 1101 0010
except shifted -4 1100 0011 +3 0 100 = + 4
one position
clockwise -5 1011 0100 +4 1 100 = - 4
1010 0101
-6 +5 -
1001 0110
-7 1000 0111 +6
-8 +7

 Only one representation for 0


 One more negative number than positive
number
Binary, Signed-Integer
Representations
B V alues represented
Page 28
Sign and
b3 b2b1b0 magnitude 1' s complement 2' s complement

0 1 1 1 +7 +7 + 7
0 1 1 0 +6 +6 + 6
0 1 0 1 +5 +5 + 5
0 1 0 0 +4 +4 + 4
0 0 1 1 +3 +3 + 3
0 0 1 0 +2 +2 + 2
0 0 0 1 +1 +1 + 1
0 0 0 0 +0 +0 + 0
1 0 0 0 - 0 -7 - 8
1 0 0 1 - 1 -6 - 7
1 0 1 0 - 2 -5 - 6
1 0 1 1 - 3 -4 - 5
1 1 0 0 - 4 -3 - 4
1 1 0 1 - 5 -2 - 3
1 1 1 0 - 6 - 1 - 2
1 1 1 1 - 7 -0 - 1

Figure 2.1. Binary, signed-integer representations.


Addition and Subtraction – 2’s
Complement
4 0100 -4 1100
+3 0011 + (-3) 1101
If carry-in to the high
order bit = 7 0111 -7 11001
carry-out then ignore
carry

if carry-in differs from 4 0100 -4 1100


carry-out then overflow
-3 1101 +3 0011
1 10001 -1 1111

Simpler addition scheme makes twos complement the most common


choice for integer number systems within digital systems
2’s-Complement Add and
Subtract Operations
(a) 0010 ( + 2) (b) 0100 ( + 4)
+ 0011 ( + 3) + 1010 - 6
Page 31 - 2
0101 ( + 5) 1110
(c) 1011 - 5 (d) 0111 ( + 7)
+ 1110 - 2 + 1101  - 3
1001 - 7 0100 ( + 4)
(e) 1101 - 3 1101
- 1001 - 7 + 0111
0100 ( + 4)
(f) 0010 ( + 2) 0010
- 0100 ( + 4) + 1100
1110  - 2
(g) 0110 ( + 6) 0110
- 0011 ( + 3) + 1101
0011 ( + 3)
(h) 1001  - 7 1001
- 1011 - 5 + 0101
1110  - 2
(i) 1001 - 7 1001
- 0001 ( + 1) + 1111
1000  - 8
(j) 0010 ( + 2) 0010
- 1101  - 3 + 0011
0101 ( + 5)

Figure 2.4. 2's-complement Add and Subtract operations.


Overflow - Add two positive numbers to get a
negative number or two negative numbers to
get a positive number

-1 +0 -1 +0
-2 1111 0000 +1 -2 1111 0000 +1
1110 0001 1110 0001
-3 +2 -3
1101 1101 +2
0010 0010
-4 -4
1100 0011 +3 1100 0011 +3
-5 1011 -5 1011
0100 +4 0100 +4
1010 1010
-6 0101 -6 0101
1001
+5 +5
0110 1001
0110
-7 1000 0111 +6 -7 1000 +6
0111
-8 +7 -8 +7

5 + 3 = -8 -7 - 2 = +7
Overflow Conditions
0111 1000
5 0101 -7 1001
3 0011 -2 1100
-8 1000 7 10111
Overflow Overflow
0000 1111
5 0101 -3 1101
2 0010 -5 1011
7 0111 -8 11000
No overflow No overflow
Overflow when carry-in to the high-order bit does not equal carry out
Sign Extension
 Task:
 Given w-bit signed integer x

 Convert it to w+k-bit integer with same value

 Rule:
 Make k copies of sign bit:

 X  = xw–1 ,…, xw–1 , xw–1 , xw–2 ,…, x0


w
X • • •
k copies of MSB

• • •

X • • • • • •
k w
Sign Extension Example

short int x = 15213;


int ix = (int) x;
short int y = -15213;
int iy = (int) y;

Decimal Hex Binary


x 15213 3B 6D 00111011 01101101
ix 15213 00 00 C4 92 00000000 00000000 00111011 01101101
y -15213 C4 93 11000100 10010011
iy -15213 FF FF C4 93 11111111 11111111 11000100 10010011
Memory Locations,
Addresses, and
Operations
Memory Location, Addresses,
and Operation
n bits
first word
 Memory consists
second word
of many millions of
storage cells,
each of which can •
store 1 bit. •

 Data is usually i th word
accessed in n-bit
groups. n is called
word length. •


last word

Figure 2.5. Memory words.


Memory Location, Addresses,
and Operation
 32-bit word length example
32 bits

b 31 b 30 b1 b0




Sign bit: b 31= 0 for positive numbers
b 31= 1 for negative numbers

(a) A signed integer

8 bits 8 bits 8 bits 8 bits

ASCII ASCII ASCII ASCII


character character character character

(b) Four characters


Memory Location, Addresses,
and Operation
 To retrieve information from memory, either for one
word or one byte (8-bit), addresses for each location
are needed.
 A k-bit address memory has 2k memory locations,
namely 0 – 2k-1, called memory space.
 24-bit memory: 224 = 16,777,216 = 16M (1M=220)
 32-bit memory: 232 = 4G (1G=230)
 1K(kilo)=210
 1T(tera)=240
Memory Location, Addresses,
and Operation
 It is impractical to assign distinct addresses
to individual bit locations in the memory.
 The most practical assignment is to have
successive addresses refer to successive
byte locations in the memory – byte-
addressable memory.
 Byte locations have addresses 0, 1, 2, … If
word length is 32 bits, they successive words
are located at addresses 0, 4, 8,…
Big-Endian and Little-Endian
Assignments
Big-Endian: lower byte addresses are used for the most significant bytes of the word
Little-Endian: opposite ordering. lower byte addresses are used for the less significant
bytes of the word
Word
address Byte address Byte address

0 0 1 2 3 0 3 2 1 0

4 4 5 6 7 4 7 6 5 4

• •
• •
• •
k k k k k k k k k k
2 -4 2 -4 2 -3 2- 2 2 - 1 2 - 4 2- 1 2 - 2 2 -3 2 -4

(a) Big-endian assignment (b) Little-endian assignment

Figure 2.7. Byte and word addressing.


Memory Location, Addresses,
and Operation
 Address ordering of bytes
 Word alignment
 Words are said to be aligned in memory if they
begin at a byte addr. that is a multiple of the num
of bytes in a word.
 16-bit word: word addresses: 0, 2, 4,….
 32-bit word: word addresses: 0, 4, 8,….
 64-bit word: word addresses: 0, 8,16,….
 Access numbers, characters, and character
strings
Memory Operation
 Load (or Read or Fetch)
 Copy the content. The memory content doesn’t change.
 Address – Load
 Registers can be used
 Store (or Write)
 Overwrite the content in memory
 Address and Data – Store
 Registers can be used
Instruction and
Instruction Sequencing
“Must-Perform” Operations
 Data transfers between the memory and the
processor registers
 Arithmetic and logic operations on data
 Program sequencing and control
 I/O transfers
Register Transfer Notation
 Identify a location by a symbolic name
standing for its hardware binary address
(LOC, R0,…)
 Contents of a location are denoted by placing
square brackets around the name of the
location (R1←[LOC], R3 ←[R1]+[R2])
 Register Transfer Notation (RTN)
Assembly Language Notation
 Represent machine instructions and
programs.
 Move LOC, R1 = R1←[LOC]
 Add R1, R2, R3 = R3 ←[R1]+[R2]
CPU Organization
 Single Accumulator
 Result usually goes to the Accumulator
 Accumulator has to be saved to memory quite often
 General Register
 Registers hold operands thus reduce memory traffic
 Register bookkeeping
 Stack
 Operands and result are always in the stack
Instruction Formats
 Three-Address Instructions
 ADD R1, R2, R3 R1 ← R2 + R3
 Two-Address Instructions
 ADD R1, R2 R1 ← R1 + R2
 One-Address Instructions
 ADD M AC ← AC + M[AR]
 Zero-Address Instructions
 ADD TOS ← TOS + (TOS – 1)
 RISC Instructions
 Lots of registers. Memory is restricted to Load & Store

Opcode Operand(s) or Address(es)


Instruction Formats
Example: Evaluate (A+B)  (C+D)
 Three-Address

1. ADD R1, A, B ; R1 ← M[A] + M[B]


2. ADD R2, C, D ; R2 ← M[C] + M[D]
3. MUL X, R1, R2 ; M[X] ← R1  R2
Instruction Formats
Example: Evaluate (A+B)  (C+D)
 Two-Address

1. MOV R1, A ; R1 ← M[A]


2. ADD R1, B ; R1 ← R1 + M[B]
3. MOV R2, C ; R2 ← M[C]
4. ADD R2, D ; R2 ← R2 + M[D]
5. MUL R1, R2 ; R1 ← R1  R2
6. MOV X, R1 ; M[X] ← R1
Instruction Formats
Example: Evaluate (A+B)  (C+D)
 One-Address

1. LOAD A ; AC ← M[A]
2. ADD B ; AC ← AC + M[B]
3. STORET ; M[T] ← AC
4. LOAD C ; AC ← M[C]
5. ADD D ; AC ← AC + M[D]
6. MUL T ; AC ← AC  M[T]
7. STOREX ; M[X] ← AC
Instruction Formats
Example: Evaluate (A+B)  (C+D)
 Zero-Address

1. PUSH A ; TOS ← A
2. PUSH B ; TOS ← B
3. ADD ; TOS ← (A + B)
4. PUSH C ; TOS ← C
5. PUSH D ; TOS ← D
6. ADD ; TOS ← (C + D)
7. MUL ; TOS ←
(C+D)(A+B)
8. POP X ; M[X] ← TOS
Instruction Formats
Example: Evaluate (A+B)  (C+D)
 RISC

1. LOAD R1, A ; R1 ← M[A]


2. LOAD R2, B ; R2 ← M[B]
3. LOAD R3, C ; R3 ← M[C]
4. LOAD R4, D ; R4 ← M[D]
5. ADD R1, R1, R2 ; R1 ← R1 + R2
6. ADD R3, R3, R4 ; R3 ← R3 + R4
7. MUL R1, R1, R3 ; R1 ← R1  R3
8. STOREX, R1 ; M[X] ← R1
Using Registers
 Registers are faster
 Shorter instructions
 The number of registers is smaller (e.g. 32
registers need 5 bits)
 Potential speedup
 Minimize the frequency with which data is
moved back and forth between the memory
and processor registers.
Instruction Execution and
Straight-Line Sequencing
Address Contents

i
Assumptions:
Begin execution here Move A,R0
i +4
3-instruction
program
- One memory operand
Add B,R0
i +8
segment per instruction
Move R0,C
- 32-bit word length
- Memory is byte
addressable
A - Full memory address
can be directly specified
in a single-word instruction
B Data for
the program
Two-phase procedure
-Instruction fetch
-Instruction execute
C
Page 43

Figure 2.8. A program for C +


i Move NUM1,R0
i+4 Add NUM2,R0

Branching i+8 Add NUM3,R0




i + 4n - 4 Add NUMn,R0
i + 4n Move R0,SUM




SUM
NUM1
NUM2




NUMn

Figure 2.9. A straight-line program for adding n numbers.


Move N,R1
Clear R0

Branching LOOP
Determine address of
"Next" number and add
Program "Next" number to R0
loop
Decrement R1
Branch>0 LOOP
Branch target
Move R0,SUM

Conditional branch




SUM
N n
NUM1

Figure 2.10. Using a loop to add n numbers. NUM2



NUMn

Condition Codes
 Condition code flags
 Condition code register / status register
 N (negative)
 Z (zero)
 V (overflow)
 C (carry)
 Different instructions affect different flags
Conditional Branch
Instructions
 Example: A: 11110000
 A: 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 +(−B): 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0
 B: 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 11011100

C=1 Z=0
S=1
V=0
Status Bits

Cn-1
A B

Cn ALU
F
V Z S C
Fn-1

Zero Check
Addressing Modes
Generating Memory Addresses
 How to specify the address of branch target?
 Can we give the memory operand address
directly in a single Add instruction in the
loop?
 Use a register to hold the address of NUM1;
then increment by 4 on each pass through
the loop.
Addressing Modes

Opcode Mode ...


 Implied
 AC is implied in “ADD M[AR]” in “One-Address”
instr.
 TOS is implied in “ADD” in “Zero-Address” instr.
 Immediate
 The use of a constant in “MOV R1, 5”, i.e. R1 ←
5
 Register
 Indicate which register holds the operand
Addressing Modes
 Register Indirect
 Indicate the register that holds the number of the
register that holds the operand R1
MOV R1, (R2)
R2 = 3
 Autoincrement / Autodecrement
 Access & update in 1 instr. R3 = 5
 Direct Address
 Use the given address to access a memory
location
Addressing Modes
 Indirect Address
 Indicate the memory location that holds the
address of the memory location that holds the
data
AR = 101

100
101 0 1 0 4
102
103
104 1 1 0 A
Addressing Modes

 Relative Address
0
 EA = PC + Relative Addr 1
PC = 2 2

100
AR = 100
101
102 1 1 0 A
Could be Positive 103
or Negative 104
(2’s Complement)
Addressing Modes
 Indexed
 EA = Index Register + Relative Addr

Useful with XR = 2
“Autoincrement” or
“Autodecrement”
+

100
AR = 100
101
Could be Positive
or Negative 102 1 1 0 A
(2’s Complement) 103
104
Addressing Modes
 Base Register
 EA = Base Register + Relative Addr

Could be Positive AR = 2
or Negative
(2’s Complement)
+

100 0 0 0 5
BR = 100
101 0 0 1 2
102 0 0 0 A
Usually points 103 0 1 0 7
to the beginning 104 0 0 5 9
of an array
Addressing Modes
Name Assem bler syn tax Addressing function
 The different
ways in which Immediate #Value Op erand = Value
the location of
an operand is Register Ri EA = Ri
specified in Absolute (Direct) LOC EA = LOC
an instruction
are referred to Indirect (Ri ) EA = [Ri ]
as addressing (LOC) EA = [LOC]
modes.
Index X(R i) EA = [Ri ] + X

Base with index (Ri ,Rj ) EA = [Ri ] + [Rj ]


Base with index X(R i,Rj ) EA = [Ri ] + [Rj ] + X
and offset

Relative X(PC) EA = [PC] + X

Autoincremen t (Ri )+ EA = [Ri ] ;


Incremen t Ri

Autodecrement  (Ri ) Decremen t R i ;


EA = [Ri]
Indexing and Arrays
 Index mode – the effective address of the operand
is generated by adding a constant value to the
contents of a register.
 Index register
 X(Ri): EA = X + [Ri]
 The constant X may be given either as an explicit
number or as a symbolic name representing a
numerical value.
 If X is shorter than a word, sign-extension is
needed.
Indexing and Arrays
 In general, the Index mode facilitates access
to an operand whose location is defined
relative to a reference point within the data
structure in which the operand appears.
 Several variations:
(Ri, Rj): EA = [Ri] + [Rj]
X(Ri, Rj): EA = X + [Ri] + [Rj]
Relative Addressing
 Relative mode – the effective address is determined
by the Index mode using the program counter in
place of the general-purpose register.
 X(PC) – note that X is a signed number
 Branch>0 LOOP
 This location is computed by specifying it as an
offset from the current value of PC.
 Branch target may be either before or after the
branch instruction, the offset is given as a singed
num.
Additional Modes
 Autoincrement mode – the effective address of the operand is the
contents of a register specified in the instruction. After accessing
the operand, the contents of this register are automatically
incremented to point to the next item in a list.
 (Ri)+. The increment is 1 for byte-sized operands, 2 for 16-bit
operands, and 4 for 32-bit operands.
 Autodecrement mode: -(Ri) – decrement first
Move N,R1
Move #NUM1,R2 Initialization
Clear R0
LOOP Add (R2)+,R0
Decrement R1
Branch>0 LOOP
Move R0,SUM

Figure 2.16. The Autoincrement addressing mode used in the program of Figure 2.12.
Assembly Language
Types of Instructions
 Data Transfer Instructions
Name Mnemonic Data value is
Load LD not modified
Store ST
Move MOV
Exchange XCH
Input IN
Output OUT
Push PUSH
Pop POP
Data Transfer Instructions
Mode Assembly Register Transfer
Direct address LD ADR AC ← M[ADR]
Indirect address LD @ADR AC ← M[M[ADR]]
Relative address LD $ADR AC ← M[PC+ADR]
Immediate operand LD #NBR AC ← NBR
Index addressing LD ADR(X) AC ← M[ADR+XR]
Register LD R1 AC ← R1
Register indirect LD (R1) AC ← M[R1]
Autoincrement LD (R1)+ AC ← M[R1], R1 ← R1+1
Data Manipulation Instructions
 Arithmetic Name Mnemonic
Increment INC
 Logical & Bit Manipulation Decrement DEC
Add ADD
 Shift Subtract SUB
Multiply MUL
Divide DIV
Name Mnemonic Add with carry ADDC
Clear CLR Subtract with borrow SUBB
Complement COM Name Negate MnemonicNEG
AND AND Logical shift right SHR
OR OR Logical shift left SHL
Exclusive-OR XOR Arithmetic shift right SHRA
Clear carry CLRC Arithmetic shift left SHLA
Set carry SETC Rotate right ROR
Complement Rotate left ROL
COMC
carry Rotate right through
Enable interrupt EI RORC
carry
Program Control Instructions
Name Mnemonic
Branch BR
Jump JMP
Skip SKP
Subtract A – B but
Call CALL don’t store the result

Return RET
Compare
CMP
(Subtract) 10110001
Test (AND) TST
00001000

Mask
00000000
Conditional Branch
Instructions

Mnemonic Branch Condition Tested Condition


BZ Branch if zero Z=1
BNZ Branch if not zero Z=0
BC Branch if carry C=1
BNC Branch if no carry C=0
BP Branch if plus S=0
BM Branch if minus S=1
BV Branch if overflow V=1
Branch if no
BNV V=0
overflow
Basic Input/Output
Operations
I/O
 The data on which the instructions operate
are not necessarily already stored in memory.
 Data need to be transferred between
processor and outside world (disk, keyboard,
etc.)
 I/O operations are essential, the way they are
performed can have a significant effect on the
performance of the computer.
Program-Controlled I/O
Example
 Read in character input from a keyboard and
produce character output on a display screen.
 Rate of data transfer (keyboard, display, processor)
 Difference in speed between processor and I/O device
creates the need for mechanisms to synchronize the
transfer of data.
 A solution: on output, the processor sends the first
character and then waits for a signal from the display that
the character has been received. It then sends the second
character. Input is sent from the keyboard in a similar way.
Program-Controlled I/O
Example
Bus

Processor
DATAIN DATAOUT

SIN SOUT
- Registers
- Flags Keyboard Display
- Device interface

Figure 2.19 Bus connection for processor, keyboard, and display.


Program-Controlled I/O
Example
 Machine instructions that can check the state
of the status flags and transfer data:
READWAIT Branch to READWAIT if SIN = 0
Input from DATAIN to R1

WRITEWAIT Branch to WRITEWAIT if SOUT = 0


Output from R1 to DATAOUT
Program-Controlled I/O
Example
 Memory-Mapped I/O – some memory
address values are used to refer to peripheral
device buffer registers. No special
instructions are needed. Also use device
status registers.

READWAIT Testbit #3, INSTATUS


Branch=0 READWAIT
MoveByte DATAIN, R1
Program-Controlled I/O
Example
 Assumption – the initial state of SIN is 0 and the
initial state of SOUT is 1.
 Any drawback of this mechanism in terms of
efficiency?
 Two wait loopsprocessor execution time is wasted
 Alternate solution?
 Interrupt
Stacks
Home Work
 For each Addressing modes mentioned
before, state one example for each
addressing mode stating the specific benefit
for using such addressing mode for such an
application.
Stack Organization

Current
Top of Stack
 LIFO TOS 0
Last In First Out 1
2
3
4
5
SP 6 0 1 2 3
7 0 0 5 5
FULL EMPTY 8 0 0 0 8
9 0 0 2 5
Stack Bottom 10 0 0 1 5
Stack
Stack Organization

Current 1 6 9 0
Top of Stack
 PUSH TOS 0
SP ← SP – 1 1
M[SP] ← DR 2
3
If (SP = 0) then (FULL ← 1) 4
EMPTY ← 0 5 1 6 9 0
SP 6 0 1 2 3
7 0 0 5 5
FULL EMPTY 8 0 0 0 8
9 0 0 2 5
Stack Bottom 10 0 0 1 5
Stack
Stack Organization
Current
Top of Stack
 POP TOS 0
DR ← M[SP] 1
SP ← SP + 1 2
3
If (SP = 11) then (EMPTY ← 1) 4
FULL ← 0 5 1 6 9 0
SP 6 0 1 2 3
7 0 0 5 5
FULL EMPTY 8 0 0 0 8
9 0 0 2 5
Stack Bottom 10 0 0 1 5
Stack
Stack Organization
 Memory Stack
 PUSH PC 0
1
SP ← SP – 1 2
M[SP] ← DR
 POP AR 100
101
DR ← M[SP]
102
SP ← SP + 1
200
SP 201
202
Reverse Polish Notation
 Infix Notation
A+B
 Prefix or Polish Notation
+AB
 Postfix or Reverse Polish Notation (RPN)
AB+
(2) (4)  (3) (3)  +
RPN (8) (3) (3)  +
AB+CD ABCD+
(8) (9) +
17
Reverse Polish Notation
 Example
(A + B)  [C  (D + E) + F]

(A B +) (D E +) C  F + 
Reverse Polish Notation
 Stack Operation
(3) (4)  (5) (6)  +
PUSH 3
PUSH 4
6
MULT
PUSH 5 30
4
5
PUSH 6 3
42
12
MULT
ADD
Additional
Instructions
Logical Shifts
 Logical shift – shifting left (LShiftL) and shifting right
(LShiftR)
C R0 0

before: 0 0 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1 1

after: 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1 1 0 0

(a) Logical shift left LShiftL #2,R0

0 R0 C

before: 0 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1 1 0

after: 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1

(b) Logical shift right LShiftR #2,R0


Arithmetic Shifts

R0 C

before: 1 0 0 1 1 . . . 0 1 0 0

after: 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 . . . 0 1

(c) Ar ithmetic shift right AShiftR #2,R0


C R0

before: 0 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1 1

Rotate
0

after: 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1 1 0 1

(a) Rotate left without carry RotateL #2,R0

C R0

before: 0 0 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1 1

after: 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1 1 0 0

(b) Rotate left with carry RotateLC #2,R0

R0 C

before: 0 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1 1 0

after: 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1

(c) Rotate right without carry RotateR #2,R0

R0 C

before: 0 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1 1 0

after: 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 . . . 0 1

(d) Rotate right with carry RotateRC #2,R0

Figure 2.32. Rotate instructions.


Multiplication and Division
 Not very popular (especially division)
 Multiply Ri, Rj
Rj ← [Ri] х [Rj]
 2n-bit product case: high-order half in R(j+1)
 Divide Ri, Rj
Rj ← [Ri] / [Rj]
Quotient is in Rj, remainder may be placed in R(j+1)
Encoding of Machine
Instructions
Encoding of Machine
Instructions
 Assembly language program needs to be converted into machine
instructions. (ADD = 0100 in ARM instruction set)
 In the previous section, an assumption was made that all
instructions are one word in length.
 OP code: the type of operation to be performed and the type of
operands used may be specified using an encoded binary pattern
 Suppose 32-bit word length, 8-bit OP code (how many instructions
can we have?), 16 registers in total (how many bits?), 3-bit
addressing mode indicator.
 Add R1, R2 8 7 7 10
 Move 24(R0), R5
OP code Source Dest Other info
 LshiftR #2, R0
 Move #$3A, R1
 Branch>0 LOOP (a) One-word instruction
Encoding of Machine
Instructions
 What happens if we want to specify a memory
operand using the Absolute addressing mode?
 Move R2, LOC
 14-bit for LOC – insufficient
 Solution – use two words

OP code Source Dest Other info

Memory address/Immediate operand

(b) Two-word instruction


Encoding of Machine
Instructions
 Then what if an instruction in which two operands
can be specified using the Absolute addressing
mode?
 Move LOC1, LOC2
 Solution – use two additional words
 This approach results in instructions of variable
length. Complex instructions can be implemented,
closely resembling operations in high-level
programming languages – Complex Instruction Set
Computer (CISC)
Encoding of Machine
Instructions
 If we insist that all instructions must fit into a single
32-bit word, it is not possible to provide a 32-bit
address or a 32-bit immediate operand within the
instruction.
 It is still possible to define a highly functional
instruction set, which makes extensive use of the
processor registers.
 Add R1, R2 ----- yes
 Add LOC, R2 ----- no
 Add (R3), R2 ----- yes

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