0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views38 pages

05 Machine Basics

Uploaded by

g3za9rma6
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views38 pages

05 Machine Basics

Uploaded by

g3za9rma6
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 38

Carnegie Mellon

14-513 18-613

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition


Carnegie Mellon

Machine-Level Programming I: Basics


14-513/18-613: Introduction to Computer Systems
5th Lecture, May 27, 2020

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 2


Carnegie Mellon

Today: Machine Programming I: Basics


 History of Intel processors and architectures
 Assembly Basics: Registers, operands, move
 Arithmetic & logical operations
 C, assembly, machine code

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 3


Carnegie Mellon

Levels of Abstraction
#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
C programmer int i, n = 10, t1 = 0, t2 = 1, nxt;
for (i = 1; i <= n; ++i){
printf("%d, ", t1);
nxt = t1 + t2;
t1 = t2;
t2 = nxt; } Nice clean layers,
return 0; }
but beware…
Assembly programmer

Computer Designer
Gates, clocks, circuit layout, …

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 4


Carnegie Mellon

Definitions
 Architecture: (also ISA: instruction set architecture) The
parts of a processor design that one needs to understand
for writing correct machine/assembly code
 Examples: instruction set specification, registers
 Machine Code: The byte-level programs that a processor executes
 Assembly Code: A text representation of machine code

 Microarchitecture: Implementation of the architecture


 Examples: cache sizes and core frequency

 Example ISAs:
 Intel: x86, IA32, Itanium, x86-64
 ARM: Used in almost all mobile phones
 RISC V: New open-source ISA
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 5
Carnegie Mellon

Assembly/Machine Code View


CPU Memory
Addresses
Registers
Data Code
PC Data
Condition Instructions Stack
Codes

Programmer-Visible State
 PC: Program counter  Memory
 Byte addressable array
 Address of next instruction
 Code and user data
 Called “RIP” (x86-64)
 Stack to support procedures
 Register file
 Heavily used program data
 Condition codes
 Store status information about most
recent arithmetic or logical operation
 Used for conditional branching
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 6
Carnegie Mellon

Assembly Characteristics: Data Types


 “Integer” data of 1, 2, 4, or 8 bytes
 Data values
 Addresses (untyped pointers)

 Floating point data of 4, 8, or 10 bytes

 (SIMD vector data types of 8, 16, 32 or 64 bytes)

 Code: Byte sequences encoding series of instructions

 No aggregate types such as arrays or structures


 Just contiguously allocated bytes in memory

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 7


Carnegie Mellon

x86-64 Integer Registers


%rax %eax %r8 %r8d

%rbx %ebx %r9 %r9d

%rcx %ecx %r10 %r10d

%rdx %edx %r11 %r11d

%rsi %esi %r12 %r12d

%rdi %edi %r13 %r13d

%rsp %esp %r14 %r14d

%rbp %ebp %r15 %r15d

 Can reference low-order 4 bytes (also low-order 1 & 2 bytes)


 Not part of memory (or cache)
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 8
Carnegie Mellon

Assembly Characteristics: Operations


 Transfer data between memory and register
 Load data from memory into register
 Store register data into memory

 Perform arithmetic function on register or memory data

 Transfer control
 Unconditional jumps to/from procedures
 Conditional branches
 Indirect branches

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 9


Carnegie Mellon

Memory Addressing Modes


 Most General Form
D(Rb,Ri,S) Mem[Reg[Rb]+S*Reg[Ri]+ D]
 D: Constant “displacement” 1, 2, or 4 bytes
 Rb: Base register: Any of 16 integer registers
 Ri: Index register: Any, except for %rsp
 S: Scale: 1, 2, 4, or 8 (why these numbers?)

 Special Cases
(Rb,Ri) Mem[Reg[Rb]+Reg[Ri]]
D(Rb,Ri) Mem[Reg[Rb]+Reg[Ri]+D]
(Rb,Ri,S) Mem[Reg[Rb]+S*Reg[Ri]]

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 10


Carnegie Mellon

Address Computation Examples


%rdx 0xf000
%rcx 0x0100

Address
Expression Address
Computation
0x8(%rdx) 0xf000 + 0x8 0xf008
(%rdx,%rcx) 0xf000 + 0x100 0xf100
(%rdx,%rcx,4) 0xf000 + 4*0x100 0xf400
0x80(,%rdx,2) 2*0xf000 + 0x80 0x1e080
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 11
Carnegie Mellon

Address Computation Examples


%rdx 0xf000
%rcx 0x0100

Address
Expression Address
Computation
0x8(%rdx) 0xf000 + 0x8 0xf008
(%rdx,%rcx) 0xf000 + 0x100 0xf100
(%rdx,%rcx,4) 0xf000 + 4*0x100 0xf400
0x80(,%rdx,2) 2*0xf000 + 0x80 0x1e080
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 12
Carnegie Mellon

Moving Data %rax


 Moving Data %rcx
movq Source, Dest %rdx
 Operand Types %rbx
 Immediate: Constant integer data %rsi

Example: $0x400, $-533 %rdi
 Like C constant, but prefixed with ‘$’
 Encoded with 1, 2, or 4 bytes
%rsp
 Register: One of 16 integer registers %rbp
 Example: %rax, %r13
 But %rsp reserved for special use %rN
 Others have special uses for particular instructions
 Memory: 8 consecutive bytes of memory at address given by register
 Simplest example: (%rax)
 Various other “addressing modes” Warning: Intel docs use
mov Dest, Source
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 13
Carnegie Mellon

movq Operand Combinations

Source Dest Src,Dest C Analog

Reg movq $0x4,%rax temp = 0x4;


Imm
Mem movq $-147,(%rax) *p = -147;

Reg movq %rax,%rdx temp2 = temp1;


movq Reg
Mem movq %rax,(%rdx) *p = temp;

Mem Reg movq (%rax),%rdx temp = *p;

Cannot do memory-memory transfer with a single instruction


Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 14
Carnegie Mellon

Understanding Swap()
Memory
void swap Registers
(long *xp, long *yp)
{ %rdi
long t0 = *xp;
%rsi
long t1 = *yp;
*xp = t1; %rax
*yp = t0;
} %rdx

Register Value
%rdi xp
%rsi yp
swap:
%rax t0
movq (%rdi), %rax # t0 = *xp
%rdx t1 movq (%rsi), %rdx # t1 = *yp
movq %rdx, (%rdi) # *xp = t1
movq %rax, (%rsi) # *yp = t0
ret
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 15
Carnegie Mellon

Understanding Swap()
Memory
Registers Address
123 0x120
%rdi 0x120
0x118
%rsi 0x100
0x110
%rax 0x108
%rdx 456 0x100

swap:
movq (%rdi), %rax # t0 = *xp
movq (%rsi), %rdx # t1 = *yp
movq %rdx, (%rdi) # *xp = t1
movq %rax, (%rsi) # *yp = t0
ret

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 16


Carnegie Mellon

Understanding Swap()
Memory
Registers Address
123 0x120
%rdi 0x120
0x118
%rsi 0x100
0x110
%rax 123 0x108
%rdx 456 0x100

swap:
movq (%rdi), %rax # t0 = *xp
movq (%rsi), %rdx # t1 = *yp
movq %rdx, (%rdi) # *xp = t1
movq %rax, (%rsi) # *yp = t0
ret

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 17


Carnegie Mellon

Understanding Swap()
Memory
Registers Address
123 0x120
%rdi 0x120
0x118
%rsi 0x100
0x110
%rax 123 0x108
%rdx 456 456 0x100

swap:
movq (%rdi), %rax # t0 = *xp
movq (%rsi), %rdx # t1 = *yp
movq %rdx, (%rdi) # *xp = t1
movq %rax, (%rsi) # *yp = t0
ret

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 18


Carnegie Mellon

Understanding Swap()
Memory
Registers Address
456 0x120
%rdi 0x120
0x118
%rsi 0x100
0x110
%rax 123 0x108
%rdx 456 456 0x100

swap:
movq (%rdi), %rax # t0 = *xp
movq (%rsi), %rdx # t1 = *yp
movq %rdx, (%rdi) # *xp = t1
movq %rax, (%rsi) # *yp = t0
ret

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 19


Carnegie Mellon

Understanding Swap()
Memory
Registers Address
456 0x120
%rdi 0x120
0x118
%rsi 0x100
0x110
%rax 123 0x108
%rdx 456 123 0x100

swap:
movq (%rdi), %rax # t0 = *xp
movq (%rsi), %rdx # t1 = *yp
movq %rdx, (%rdi) # *xp = t1
movq %rax, (%rsi) # *yp = t0
ret

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 20


Carnegie Mellon

Today: Machine Programming I: Basics


 History of Intel processors and architectures
 Assembly Basics: Registers, operands, move
 Arithmetic & logical operations
 C, assembly, machine code

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 21


Carnegie Mellon

Address Computation Instruction


 leaq Src, Dst
 Src is address mode expression
 Set Dst to address denoted by expression

 Uses
 Computing addresses without a memory reference

E.g., translation of p = &x[i];
 Computing arithmetic expressions of the form x + k*y
 k = 1, 2, 4, or 8
 Example
long
long m12(long
m12(long x)
x)
{
Converted to ASM by compiler:
{
return
return x*12;
x*12; leaq
leaq (%rdi,%rdi,2),
(%rdi,%rdi,2), %rax
%rax #
# t
t =
= x+2*x
x+2*x
}
} salq
salq $2,
$2, %rax
%rax #
# return
return t<<2
t<<2
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 22
Carnegie Mellon

Some Arithmetic Operations


 Two Operand Instructions:
FormatComputation
addq Src,Dest Dest = Dest + Src
subq Src,Dest Dest = Dest  Src
imulq Src,Dest Dest = Dest * Src
shlq Src,Dest Dest = Dest << Src Synonym: salq
sarq Src,Dest Dest = Dest >> Src Arithmetic
shrq Src,Dest Dest = Dest >> Src Logical
xorq Src,Dest Dest = Dest ^ Src
andq Src,Dest Dest = Dest & Src
orq Src,Dest Dest = Dest | Src
 Watch out for argument order! Src,Dest
(Warning: Intel docs use “op Dest,Src”)
 No distinction between signed and unsigned int (why?)
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 23
Carnegie Mellon

Some Arithmetic Operations


 One Operand Instructions
incq Dest Dest = Dest + 1
decq Dest Dest = Dest  1
negq Dest Dest =  Dest
notq Dest Dest = ~Dest

 See book for more instructions

 Depending how you count, there are 2,034 total x86 instructions

 (If you count all addr modes, op widths, flags, it’s actually 3,683)

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 24


Carnegie Mellon

Arithmetic Expression Example


arith:
leaq (%rdi,%rsi), %rax
long
long arith
arith addq %rdx, %rax
(long
(long x,
x, long
long y,y, long
long z)z) leaq (%rsi,%rsi,2), %rdx
{
{ salq $4, %rdx
long
long t1
t1 == x+y;
x+y; leaq 4(%rdi,%rdx), %rcx
long
long t2
t2 == z+t1;
z+t1; imulq %rcx, %rax
long
long t3
t3 == x+4;
x+4; ret
long
long t4
t4 == y
y ** 48;
48;
long
long t5
t5 == t3
t3 ++ t4;
t4;
Interesting Instructions
long
long rval
rval == t2
t2 *
* t5;
t5;  leaq: address computation
return
return rval;
rval;  salq: shift
}
}  imulq: multiplication
 Curious: only used once…

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 25


Carnegie Mellon

Understanding Arithmetic Expression


Example arith:
leaq (%rdi,%rsi), %rax # t1
long
long arith
arith addq %rdx, %rax # t2
(long
(long x,
x, long
long y,y, long
long z)z) leaq (%rsi,%rsi,2), %rdx
{
{ salq $4, %rdx # t4
long
long t1
t1 == x+y;
x+y; leaq 4(%rdi,%rdx), %rcx # t5
long
long t2
t2 == z+t1;
z+t1; imulq %rcx, %rax # rval
long
long t3
t3 == x+4;
x+4; ret
long
long t4
t4 == y
y ** 48;
48;
long
long t5
t5 == t3
t3 ++ t4;
t4; Register Use(s)
long
long rval
rval == t2
t2 *
* t5;
t5; %rdi Argument x
return
return rval;
rval;
}
} %rsi Argument y
%rdx Argument z,
t4
%rax t1, t2, rval
%rcx t5

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 26


Carnegie Mellon

Today: Machine Programming I: Basics


 History of Intel processors and architectures
 Assembly Basics: Registers, operands, move
 Arithmetic & logical operations
 C, assembly, machine code

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 27


Carnegie Mellon

Turning C into Object Code


 Code in files p1.c p2.c
 Compile with command: gcc –Og p1.c p2.c -o p
 Use basic optimizations (-Og) [New to recent versions of GCC]
 Put resulting binary in file p

text C program (p1.c p2.c)

Compiler (gcc –Og -S)

text Asm program (p1.s p2.s)

Assembler (gcc or as)

binary Object program (p1.o p2.o) Static libraries


(.a)
Linker (gcc or ld)

binary Executable program (p)

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 28


Carnegie Mellon

Compiling Into Assembly


C Code (sum.c) Generated x86-64 Assembly
long plus(long x, long y); sumstore:
pushq %rbx
void sumstore(long x, long y, movq %rdx, %rbx
long *dest) call plus
{ movq %rax, (%rbx)
long t = plus(x, y); popq %rbx
*dest = t; ret
}
Obtain (on shark machine) with command
gcc –Og –S sum.c
Produces file sum.s
Warning: Will get very different results on non-Shark
machines (Andrew Linux, Mac OS-X, …) due to
different versions of gcc and different compiler
settings. 29
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition
Carnegie Mellon

What it really looks like


.globl sumstore
Things that look weird
.type sumstore, @function and are preceded by a ‘.’
sumstore: are generally directives.
.LFB35:
.cfi_startproc
pushq %rbx
.cfi_def_cfa_offset 16 sumstore:
.cfi_offset 3, -16 pushq %rbx
movq %rdx, %rbx movq %rdx, %rbx
call plus call plus
movq %rax, (%rbx) movq %rax, (%rbx)
popq %rbx popq %rbx
.cfi_def_cfa_offset 8 ret
ret
.cfi_endproc
.LFE35:
.size sumstore, .-sumstore

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 30


Carnegie Mellon

Assembly Characteristics: Data Types


 “Integer” data of 1, 2, 4, or 8 bytes
 Data values
 Addresses (untyped pointers)

 Floating point data of 4, 8, or 10 bytes

 (SIMD vector data types of 8, 16, 32 or 64 bytes)

 Code: Byte sequences encoding series of instructions

 No aggregate types such as arrays or structures


 Just contiguously allocated bytes in memory

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 31


Carnegie Mellon

Assembly Characteristics: Operations


 Transfer data between memory and register
 Load data from memory into register
 Store register data into memory

 Perform arithmetic function on register or memory data

 Transfer control
 Unconditional jumps to/from procedures
 Conditional branches

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 32


Carnegie Mellon

Object Code
Code for sumstore  Assembler
0x0400595:  Translates .s into .o
0x53
0x48  Binary encoding of each instruction
0x89  Nearly-complete image of executable code
0xd3  Missing linkages between code in different
0xe8
files
0xf2
0xff  Linker
0xff  Resolves references between files
0xff •
0x48
Total of 14 bytes  Combines with static run-time libraries
• Each instruction 
E.g., code for malloc, printf
0x89
1, 3, or 5 bytes
0x03  Some libraries are dynamically linked
0x5b • Starts at address  Linking occurs when program begins
0xc3 0x0400595
execution

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 33


Carnegie Mellon

Machine Instruction Example


 C Code
*dest = t;  Store value t where designated by
dest
 Assembly
movq %rax, (%rbx)  Move 8-byte value to memory
Quad words in x86-64 parlance
 Operands:
t: Register %rax
dest: Register %rbx
*dest: Memory M[%rbx]
 Object Code
0x40059e: 48 89 03  3-byte instruction
 Stored at address 0x40059e

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 34


Carnegie Mellon

Disassembling Object Code


Disassembled
0000000000400595 <sumstore>:
400595: 53 push %rbx
400596: 48 89 d3 mov %rdx,%rbx
400599: e8 f2 ff ff ff callq 400590 <plus>
40059e: 48 89 03 mov %rax,(%rbx)
4005a1: 5b pop %rbx
4005a2: c3 retq

 Disassembler
objdump –d sum
 Useful tool for examining object code
 Analyzes bit pattern of series of instructions
 Produces approximate rendition of assembly code
 Can be run on either a.out (complete executable) or .o file

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 35


Carnegie Mellon

Alternate Disassembly
Disassembled

Dump of assembler code for function sumstore:


0x0000000000400595 <+0>: push %rbx
0x0000000000400596 <+1>: mov %rdx,%rbx
0x0000000000400599 <+4>: callq 0x400590 <plus>
0x000000000040059e <+9>: mov %rax,(%rbx)
0x00000000004005a1 <+12>:pop %rbx
0x00000000004005a2 <+13>:retq

 Within gdb Debugger


 Disassemble procedure
gdb sum
disassemble sumstore

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 36


Carnegie Mellon

Alternate Disassembly
Disassembled
Object
Code
Dump of assembler code for function sumstore:
0x0400595: 0x0000000000400595 <+0>: push %rbx
0x53 0x0000000000400596 <+1>: mov %rdx,%rbx
0x48 0x0000000000400599 <+4>: callq 0x400590 <plus>
0x89 0x000000000040059e <+9>: mov %rax,(%rbx)
0xd3 0x00000000004005a1 <+12>:pop %rbx
0xe8 0x00000000004005a2 <+13>:retq
0xf2
0xff
0xff
0xff
 Within gdb Debugger
0x48  Disassemble procedure
0x89 gdb sum
0x03
disassemble sumstore
0x5b
0xc3  Examine the 14 bytes starting at sumstore
x/14xb sumstore
Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 37
Carnegie Mellon

Machine Programming I: Summary


 History of Intel processors and architectures
 Evolutionary design leads to many quirks and artifacts
 C, assembly, machine code
 New forms of visible state: program counter, registers, ...
 Compiler must transform statements, expressions, procedures into
low-level instruction sequences
 Assembly Basics: Registers, operands, move
 The x86-64 move instructions cover wide range of data movement
forms
 Arithmetic
 C compiler will figure out different instruction combinations to
carry out computation

Bryant and O’Hallaron, Computer Systems: A Programmer’s Perspective, Third Edition 38

You might also like