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.2byte expression [, expression]*.4byte expression [, expression]*.8byte expression [, expression]*These directives write 2, 4 or 8 byte values to the output section.
.align expression [, expression]This is the generic .align directive. For the ARM however if the first argument is zero (ie no alignment is needed) the assembler will behave as if the argument had been 2 (ie pad to the next four byte boundary). This is for compatibility with ARM’s own assembler.
.arch nameSelect the target architecture. Valid values for name are the same as for the -march commandline option.
Specifying .arch clears any previously selected architecture
extensions.
.arch_extension nameAdd or remove an architecture extension to the target architecture. Valid values for name are the same as those accepted as architectural extensions by the -mcpu commandline option.
.arch_extension may be used multiple times to add or remove extensions
incrementally to the architecture being compiled for.
.armThis performs the same action as .code 32.
.bssThis directive switches to the .bss section.
.cantunwindPrevents unwinding through the current function. No personality routine or exception table data is required or permitted.
.code [16|32]This directive selects the instruction set being generated. The value 16 selects Thumb, with the value 32 selecting ARM.
.cpu nameSelect the target processor. Valid values for name are the same as for the -mcpu commandline option.
Specifying .cpu clears any previously selected architecture
extensions.
name .dn register name [.type] [[index]]name .qn register name [.type] [[index]]The dn and qn directives are used to create typed
and/or indexed register aliases for use in Advanced SIMD Extension
(Neon) instructions. The former should be used to create aliases
of double-precision registers, and the latter to create aliases of
quad-precision registers.
If these directives are used to create typed aliases, those aliases can be used in Neon instructions instead of writing types after the mnemonic or after each operand. For example:
x .dn d2.f32
y .dn d3.f32
z .dn d4.f32[1]
vmul x,y,z
This is equivalent to writing the following:
vmul.f32 d2,d3,d4[1]
Aliases created using dn or qn can be destroyed using
unreq.
.eabi_attribute tag, valueSet the EABI object attribute tag to value.
The tag is either an attribute number, or one of the following:
Tag_CPU_raw_name, Tag_CPU_name, Tag_CPU_arch,
Tag_CPU_arch_profile, Tag_ARM_ISA_use,
Tag_THUMB_ISA_use, Tag_FP_arch, Tag_WMMX_arch,
Tag_Advanced_SIMD_arch, Tag_PCS_config,
Tag_ABI_PCS_R9_use, Tag_ABI_PCS_RW_data,
Tag_ABI_PCS_RO_data, Tag_ABI_PCS_GOT_use,
Tag_ABI_PCS_wchar_t, Tag_ABI_FP_rounding,
Tag_ABI_FP_denormal, Tag_ABI_FP_exceptions,
Tag_ABI_FP_user_exceptions, Tag_ABI_FP_number_model,
Tag_ABI_align_needed, Tag_ABI_align_preserved,
Tag_ABI_enum_size, Tag_ABI_HardFP_use,
Tag_ABI_VFP_args, Tag_ABI_WMMX_args,
Tag_ABI_optimization_goals, Tag_ABI_FP_optimization_goals,
Tag_compatibility, Tag_CPU_unaligned_access,
Tag_FP_HP_extension, Tag_ABI_FP_16bit_format,
Tag_MPextension_use, Tag_DIV_use,
Tag_nodefaults, Tag_also_compatible_with,
Tag_conformance, Tag_T2EE_use,
Tag_Virtualization_use
The value is either a number, "string", or
number, "string" depending on the tag.
Note - the following legacy values are also accepted by tag:
Tag_VFP_arch, Tag_ABI_align8_needed,
Tag_ABI_align8_preserved, Tag_VFP_HP_extension,
.evenThis directive aligns to an even-numbered address.
.extend expression [, expression]*.ldouble expression [, expression]*These directives write 12byte long double floating-point values to the output section. These are not compatible with current ARM processors or ABIs.
.fnendMarks the end of a function with an unwind table entry. The unwind index table entry is created when this directive is processed.
If no personality routine has been specified then standard personality routine 0 or 1 will be used, depending on the number of unwind opcodes required.
.fnstartMarks the start of a function with an unwind table entry.
.force_thumbThis directive forces the selection of Thumb instructions, even if the target processor does not support those instructions
.fpu nameSelect the floating-point unit to assemble for. Valid values for name are the same as for the -mfpu commandline option.
.handlerdataMarks the end of the current function, and the start of the exception table
entry for that function. Anything between this directive and the
.fnend directive will be added to the exception table entry.
Must be preceded by a .personality or .personalityindex
directive.
.inst opcode [ , … ].inst.n opcode [ , … ].inst.w opcode [ , … ]Generates the instruction corresponding to the numerical value opcode.
.inst.n and .inst.w allow the Thumb instruction size to be
specified explicitly, overriding the normal encoding rules.
.ldouble expression [, expression]*See .extend.
.ltorgThis directive causes the current contents of the literal pool to be
dumped into the current section (which is assumed to be the .text
section) at the current location (aligned to a word boundary).
GAS maintains a separate literal pool for each section and each
sub-section. The .ltorg directive will only affect the literal
pool of the current section and sub-section. At the end of assembly
all remaining, un-empty literal pools will automatically be dumped.
Note - older versions of GAS would dump the current literal
pool any time a section change occurred. This is no longer done, since
it prevents accurate control of the placement of literal pools.
.movsp reg [, #offset]Tell the unwinder that reg contains an offset from the current stack pointer. If offset is not specified then it is assumed to be zero.
.object_arch nameOverride the architecture recorded in the EABI object attribute section.
Valid values for name are the same as for the .arch directive.
Typically this is useful when code uses runtime detection of CPU features.
.packed expression [, expression]*This directive writes 12-byte packed floating-point values to the output section. These are not compatible with current ARM processors or ABIs.
.pad #countGenerate unwinder annotations for a stack adjustment of count bytes. A positive value indicates the function prologue allocated stack space by decrementing the stack pointer.
.personality nameSets the personality routine for the current function to name.
.personalityindex indexSets the personality routine for the current function to the EABI standard routine number index
.poolThis is a synonym for .ltorg.
name .req register nameThis creates an alias for register name called name. For example:
foo .req r0
.save reglistGenerate unwinder annotations to restore the registers in reglist. The format of reglist is the same as the corresponding store-multiple instruction.
core registers
.save {r4, r5, r6, lr}
stmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r6, lr}
FPA registers
.save f4, 2 sfmfd f4, 2, [sp]!
VFP registers
.save {d8, d9, d10}
fstmdx sp!, {d8, d9, d10}
iWMMXt registers
.save {wr10, wr11}
wstrd wr11, [sp, #-8]!
wstrd wr10, [sp, #-8]!
or
.save wr11
wstrd wr11, [sp, #-8]!
.save wr10
wstrd wr10, [sp, #-8]!
.setfp fpreg, spreg [, #offset]Make all unwinder annotations relative to a frame pointer. Without this the unwinder will use offsets from the stack pointer.
The syntax of this directive is the same as the add or mov
instruction used to set the frame pointer. spreg must be either
sp or mentioned in a previous .movsp directive.
.movsp ip mov ip, sp … .setfp fp, ip, #4 add fp, ip, #4
.secrel32 expression [, expression]*This directive emits relocations that evaluate to the section-relative offset of each expression’s symbol. This directive is only supported for PE targets.
.syntax [unified | divided]This directive sets the Instruction Set Syntax as described in the ARM-Instruction-Set section.
.thumbThis performs the same action as .code 16.
.thumb_funcThis directive specifies that the following symbol is the name of a
Thumb encoded function. This information is necessary in order to allow
the assembler and linker to generate correct code for interworking
between Arm and Thumb instructions and should be used even if
interworking is not going to be performed. The presence of this
directive also implies .thumb
This directive is not neccessary when generating EABI objects. On these targets the encoding is implicit when generating Thumb code.
.thumb_setThis performs the equivalent of a .set directive in that it
creates a symbol which is an alias for another symbol (possibly not yet
defined). This directive also has the added property in that it marks
the aliased symbol as being a thumb function entry point, in the same
way that the .thumb_func directive does.
.tlsdescseq tls-variableThis directive is used to annotate parts of an inlined TLS descriptor trampoline. Normally the trampoline is provided by the linker, and this directive is not needed.
.unreq alias-nameThis undefines a register alias which was previously defined using the
req, dn or qn directives. For example:
foo .req r0
.unreq foo
An error occurs if the name is undefined. Note - this pseudo op can be used to delete builtin in register name aliases (eg ’r0’). This should only be done if it is really necessary.
.unwind_raw offset, byte1, …Insert one of more arbitary unwind opcode bytes, which are known to adjust the stack pointer by offset bytes.
For example .unwind_raw 4, 0xb1, 0x01 is equivalent to
.save {r0}
.vsave vfp-reglistGenerate unwinder annotations to restore the VFP registers in vfp-reglist using FLDMD. Also works for VFPv3 registers that are to be restored using VLDM. The format of vfp-reglist is the same as the corresponding store-multiple instruction.
VFP registers
.vsave {d8, d9, d10}
fstmdd sp!, {d8, d9, d10}
VFPv3 registers
.vsave {d15, d16, d17}
vstm sp!, {d15, d16, d17}
Since FLDMX and FSTMX are now deprecated, this directive should be
used in favour of .save for saving VFP registers for ARMv6 and above.
Next: ARM Opcodes, Previous: ARM Floating Point, Up: ARM-Dependent [Contents][Index]