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The Sparc version of as supports the following additional
machine directives:
.alignThis must be followed by the desired alignment in bytes.
.commonThis must be followed by a symbol name, a positive number, and
"bss". This behaves somewhat like .comm, but the
syntax is different.
.halfThis is functionally identical to .short.
.nwordOn the Sparc, the .nword directive produces native word sized value,
ie. if assembling with -32 it is equivalent to .word, if assembling
with -64 it is equivalent to .xword.
.procThis directive is ignored. Any text following it on the same line is also ignored.
.registerThis directive declares use of a global application or system register.
It must be followed by a register name %g2, %g3, %g6 or %g7, comma and
the symbol name for that register. If symbol name is #scratch,
it is a scratch register, if it is #ignore, it just suppresses any
errors about using undeclared global register, but does not emit any
information about it into the object file. This can be useful e.g. if you
save the register before use and restore it after.
.reserveThis must be followed by a symbol name, a positive number, and
"bss". This behaves somewhat like .lcomm, but the
syntax is different.
.segThis must be followed by "text", "data", or
"data1". It behaves like .text, .data, or
.data 1.
.skipThis is functionally identical to the .space directive.
.wordOn the Sparc, the .word directive produces 32 bit values,
instead of the 16 bit values it produces on many other machines.
.xwordOn the Sparc V9 processor, the .xword directive produces
64 bit values.
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