Table of Contents for Programming Languages: a survey
" Goals of the 64bit MIPS architecture:
Use general-purpose registers with a load-store architecture Support these addressing modes: displacement (with an address offset size of 12–16 bits), immediate (size 8–16 bits), and register indirect Support these data sizes and types: 8-, 16-, 32-, and 64-bit integers and 64-bit IEEE 754 floating-point numbers Support these simple instructions, since they will dominate the number of instructions executed: load, store, add, subtract, move register-register, and shift Compare equal, compare not equal, compare less, branch (with a PC-relative address at least 8 bits long), jump, call, and return Use fixed instruction encoding if interested in performance, and use variable instruction encoding if interested in code size Provide at least 16 general-purpose registers, be sure all addressing modes apply to all data transfer instructions Aim for a minimalist instruction set
MIPS addressing modes
The data types are 8-bit bytes, 16-bit half words, 32-bit words, and 64-bit double words for integer data and 32-bit single precision and 64-bit double precision for floating point The only data addressing modes are immediate and displacement, both with 16-bit fields Register indirect is accomplished simply by placing 0 in the 16-bit displacement field Absolute addressing with a 16-bit field is accomplished by using register 0 as the base register MIPS memory is byte addressable with a 64-bit address Mode bit that allows software to select either Big Endian or Little Endian
" Goals of the 64bit MIPS architecture:
Use general-purpose registers with a load-store architecture Support these addressing modes: displacement (with an address offset size of 12–16 bits), immediate (size 8–16 bits), and register indirect Support these data sizes and types: 8-, 16-, 32-, and 64-bit integers and 64-bit IEEE 754 floating-point numbers Support these simple instructions, since they will dominate the number of instructions executed: load, store, add, subtract, move register-register, and shift Compare equal, compare not equal, compare less, branch (with a PC-relative address at least 8 bits long), jump, call, and return Use fixed instruction encoding if interested in performance, and use variable instruction encoding if interested in code size Provide at least 16 general-purpose registers, be sure all addressing modes apply to all data transfer instructions Aim for a minimalist instruction set
Registers in MIPS
32 64-bit general-purpose registers (GPRs), sometimes called integer registers, named R0, R1, ... , R31. 32 floating-point registers (FPRs), named F0, F1, ... , F31, which can hold 32 single-precision (32-bit) values or 32 double-precision (64-bit) values When holding one single-precision number, the other half an FPR is unused R0 is always 0
MIPS addressing modes
The data types are 8-bit bytes, 16-bit half words, 32-bit words, and 64-bit double words for integer data and 32-bit single precision and 64-bit double precision for floating point The only data addressing modes are immediate and displacement, both with 16-bit fields Register indirect is accomplished simply by placing 0 in the 16-bit displacement field Absolute addressing with a 16-bit field is accomplished by using register 0 as the base register MIPS memory is byte addressable with a 64-bit address Mode bit that allows software to select either Big Endian or Little Endian
MIPS instruction format
2 addressing modes that are to be encoded in the opcode 32 bit instructions (6 bit primary opcode)
MIPS operations
4 classes of operations (loads and stores, ALU operations, branches and jumps, and floating-point operations) Any of the general-purpose or floating-point registers may be loaded or stored Loading R0 has no effect Single-precision floating-point numbers occupy half a floating-point register Conversions between single and double precision must be done explicitly All ALU instructions are register-register instructions (add, subtract, AND, OR, XOR, and shifts) with immediate forms provided using a 16-bit sign-extended immediate Flow Control: Compare instructions: compare two registers to see if the first is less than the second. If true, a 1 is placed in the destination register (to represent true); otherwise a 0 is placed. Also called "set" operations because they set a register Jump instructions are differentiated by the two ways to specify the destination address and by whether or not a link is made Two types of jumps: plain jump and jump and link which places the return address in All branches are conditional specified by instruction which may test the register source for zero or nonzero, whether it contains a data value or the result of a compare, whether it's negative or equal to another register Floating point: Instructions indicate whether there is single or double precision (.S or .D) MIPS64 can perform two 32-bit operations on a single 64-bit register with paired single operations (.PS)
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in MIPS they have beq and bne but they replace ble etc with stuff like 'set if less than (a, b, r0); beq (r0, zero, LABEL)': http://www.cs.umd.edu/class/sum2003/cmsc311/Notes/Mips/pseudojump.html
with variants for addressing mode and type and special registers omitted:
add and beq bne div j jal (jump and link) load mult nor xor or store slt (set to 1 if less than) sll (lsl) srl (lsr) sra (asr) sub
DLX is MIPS for education
with variants for addressing mode and type and special registers omitted:
load, store lhi (load high immediate) mov add sub mult div and or sll (lsl) srl (lsr) sra (asr) slt (set if less than) sgt, sle, sge, sne beqz, bneq bfpg, bfpf (branch on comparison bit in the FP status register) j jal (jump and link) trap rfe (return to user code from exception) cvt (convert) LTF, GTF, LEF, GEF, EQF, NEF (compare and set comparison bit in the FP status register)
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