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Transcript of 1 INSTRUCTIONS: LANGUAGE OF THE MACHINE CHAPTER 3.
1
INSTRUCTIONS:LANGUAGE OF THE
MACHINE
CHAPTER 3
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Instruction Set Architecture
• Computer architecture instruction set is the interface between hardware and software.
• The attributes of an instruction set include– Instruction Set (what operations can be performed?)
– Instruction Format (how are instructions specified?)
– Data storage (where is data located?)
– Addressing Modes (how is data accessed?)
– Exceptional Conditions (what happens if something goes wrong?)
• A good understanding of computer architecture is important for compiler writers, operating system designers, and general computer programmers.
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MIPS R3000 Instruction Set Architecture (Summary)
• Instruction Categories– Load/Store
– Computational
– Jump and Branch
– Floating Point
– Memory Management
– Special
R0 - R31
PCHI
LO
OP
OP
OP
rs rt rd shamt funct
rs rt immediate
jump target
3 Instruction Formats: all 32 bits wide (fixed Size)
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Instruction Execution
Instruction
Fetch
Instruction
Decode
Operand
Fetch
Execute
Result
Store
Next
Instruction
Obtain instruction from program storage
Determine required actions and instruction size
Locate and obtain operand data: From where: memory, instruction, etc.How many operands?How are the operands located?
Compute result value or status:What data type is the result?
Deposit results in storage for later useWhere to deposit the result?
Determine successor instruction
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MIPS Instructions
• MIPS is an Assembly Language• Assembly languages are more primitive than higher level languages e.g., no
sophisticated control flow• Assembly languages are very restrictive
e.g., MIPS Arithmetic Instructions• We’ll be working with the MIPS instruction set architecture
– similar to other architectures developed since the 1980's
– used by NEC, Nintendo, Silicon Graphics, Sony
Design goals: maximize performance and minimize cost, reduce design time
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Registers
• Registers are special locations on the processor– “Bricks” of computer construction– Used in hardware design and visible to the programmer– Very fast access
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MIPS Addressing Modes (Location of operands)• Addressing modes specify where the data used by an
instruction is located. Data can be in registers, memory or within the instruction itself (available immediately).
Mode Example Action
register direct add $s1, $s2, $s3 $s1 = $s2 + $s3
immediate addi $s1, $s2, 200 $s1 = $s2 + 200
base + index lw $s1, 200($s2) $s1 = mem[200 + $s2]
PC-relative beq $s1, $s2, 200 if ($s1 == $s2) PC = PC+4+200*4
Pseudo-direct j 4000 PC = (PC[31:28], 4000*4)
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MIPS Addressing Modes
op rs rt rd
immed
register
Register (direct)
op rs rt
register
Base+index
+
Memory
immedop rs rtImmediate
immedop rs rt
PC
PC-relative
+
Memory
• All MIPS instructions are 32 bits wide - fixed length• The instruction format depends on the addressing mode
add $s1, $s2, $s3
addi $s1, $s2, 200
lw $s1, 200($s2)
beq $s1, $s2, 200
What happens if immed. Increases?
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MIPS Addressing Modes/Instruction Formats
addressopPseudo-direct
x$4
Memory
j 4000
Addressing Mode
Instruction Format/Type
Register (direct)
R-type
Immediate
I-TypeBase + index
PC-relative
Pseudo-direct J-Type
op rs rt rd
immedop rs rt
addressop
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MIPS Instruction Fields : R-Type and I-Type
• Register type (R-type) and immediate type (I-Type) instructions have the following formats:
shamt funct
6 bits5 bits
rd
5 bits
rt
5 bits
rs
5 bits
op
6 bits
immedrtrsop
R-type
I-type
Field Meaning
op Basic operation of the instruction (opcode)
rs First register source operand
rt Second register source operand
rd Register destination operand (gets result)
shamt Shift amount
funct Function field - selects the variant of the operation in the op field (function code)
immed Immediate value
e.g. add, sub, and, or
sw, lw, beq
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Representing Instructions in the Computer
• Computer represents numbers in base 2 (binary)– Series of high and low electronic signals in hardware (on and off)
• Instructions are stored in hardware in the same way– Can be represented as numbers
• Assembly to machine code
add $t0, $s0, $s1
0 32
6 bits5 bits
8
5 bits
18
5 bits
17
5 bits
0
6 bits
000000 10001 10010 01000 00000 100000
op rs rt rd shamt funct
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Register Names in MIPS Assembly Language• There is a convention for mapping register names into general
purpose register numbers. Only 32 registers provided.
• Design Principle: smaller is faster. Why?
A large number of registers increase the instruction execution time because electronic signals longer travel further.
With 32 registers, each can be represented using just 5 bits. If you increase the number of registers, more bits will be required.
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Register Names in MIPS Assembly Language
Register name Register number Register usage
$zero 0 constant 0
$at 1 assembler: large constants
$v0-$v1 2-3 results (func. ret. values)
$a0-$a3 4-7 arguments
$t0-$t7 8-15 temporaries
$s0-$s7 16-23 saved
$t8-$t9 24-25 more temps
HI, LO 26-27 multiplication and division
$gp 28 global pointer
$sp 29 stack pointer
$fp 30 frame pointer
$ra 31 return address
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MIPS arithmetic
• A compiler translates high-level code to assembly language e.g MIPS. All MIPS arithmetic instructions have 3 operands– Design Principle: Simplicity favors regularity– Same number of operands and in the same order
• Variables are typically stored in registers - why ?• Operand order is fixed (destination first)
• Example 1:
C code: a = b + c;
MIPS code: add $s0, $s1, $s2The registers $s0, $s1, $s2 are associated with variables by compiler, say $s0 with a, $s1 with b and $s2 with c.
• Example 2:C code: a = b - c;MIPS code: sub $s0, $s1, $s2
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MIPS arithmetic: Using temporary registers
• Example 3:C Code: a = (b + c) - (d + c);
Assume the variables a, b, c, and d are in registers $s3, $s4,$s5, and $s6, respectively.
Instruction Commentadd $t2, $s4, $s5 $t2 = b + c
add $t3, $s6, $s5 $t3 = d + csub $s3, $t2, $t3 a = $t2 - $t3
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Registers vs. Memory
Processor I/O
Control
Datapath
Memory
Input
Output
• Arithmetic instructions operands must be registers, — only 32 registers provided
• Compiler associates variables with registers
• What about programs with lots of variables? The compiler keeps the most frequently used variables in registers and the rest in memory. This is called spilling of registers.
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Memory Organization
• Viewed as a large, single-dimension array, with an address.
• A memory address is an index into the array
• "Byte addressing" means that each index points to a byte of memory.
0
1
2
3
4
5
6...
8 bits of data
8 bits of data
8 bits of data
8 bits of data
8 bits of data
8 bits of data
8 bits of data
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Memory Organization
• Bytes are nice, but most data items use larger "words"• For MIPS, a word is 32 bits or 4 bytes.
• 232 bytes with byte addresses from 0 to 232-1• 230 words with byte addresses 0, 4, 8, ... 232-4• Words are aligned. That is, their addresses are multiples of 4.
0
4
8
12
...
32 bits of data
32 bits of data
32 bits of data
32 bits of data
Registers hold 32 bits of data
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• Instructions are bits
• Programs are stored in memory — to be read or written just like data
Fetch & Execute Cycle
– Instructions are fetched and put into a special register (PC)
– Bits in the register "control" the subsequent actions
– Fetch the “next” instruction and continue
Processor Memorymemory for data, programs,
compilers, editors, etc.
Stored Program Concept
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Example of Using MIPS Instructions - Arrays• Arrays are often stored in memory - why?• Replace the C code for
A[11] = A[10] + b
by equivalent MIPS instructions.• Assume b is in register $s5, the starting address for array A is in $s6,
using and 32-bit integer data. • Instruction Comment
lw $t3, 40 ($s6) $t3 = A[10]
add $t4, $t3, $s5 $t4 = A[10] + b
sw $t4, 44($s6) A[11] = $t4• Why are array indices multiplied by 4? Store word has destination last• Write assembly instructions to:
b = A[10] + c;
A[11] = b + c;
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• Conditional statements allow us to make decisions. These decision making instructions– alter the control flow,
– i.e., change the "next" instruction to be executed
• MIPS unconditional branch instructions:j label
• MIPS conditional branch instructions:bne $t0, $t1, Label
beq $t0, $t1, Label • Example: if (i==j) h = i + j;
MIPS: bne $s0, $s1, Label
add $s3, $s0, $s1Label: ....
MIPS – Conditional / Unconditional Instructions
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MIPS – Conditional / Unconditional Instructions
• Replace the C code for if (i = = j) f = g + h; else f = g - h;
by equivalent MIPS instructions.Assume variables f through j correspond to registers $s0 through $s4.
Instruction Commentbne $s3, $s4, Else if (i != j) goto Elseadd $s0, $s1, $s2 f = g + h
j Exit go to ExitElse: sub $s0, $s1, $s2 f = g - hExit:
• How would you implement the loop while (k < j) k = k + j;
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MIPS function assembling
• Assume v = $a0, k = $a1, temp = $s1.• Temporaries used are $t1 (storing into array) and a
temporary holder $t2 (for address of array element).swap(int v[], int k){
int temp;temp = v[k];v[k] = v[k+1];v[k+1] = temp;
}
swap:# save s/t registers on stack heremuli $t2, $a1, 4 #t2 = k*4add $t2, $a0, $t2 #t2 has address of v[k]lw $s1, 0($t2) #temp = v[k]lw $t1, 4($t2) #t1 gets v[k+1]sw $t1, 0($t2) #store t1 into v[k]sw $s1, 4($t2) #store temp into v[k+1]# restore registers from stack herejr $ra #jump back after call
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• Instructions, like registers and words of data, are also 32 bits long– Example: add $t0, $s1, $s2– registers have numbers, $t0=8, $s1=17, $s2=18
• Instruction Format:
000000 10001 10010 01000 00000 100000
op rs rt rd shamt funct
• Can you guess what the field names stand for?
Machine Language
op = Basic operation of the instruction: opcoders = The first register source operandrt = The second register source operandrd = The register destination operandshamt = shift amountfunct = function code
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• Consider the load-word and store-word instructions,– Design Principle: Good design demands a compromise (maintaining
same format)
• Introduce a new type of instruction format– I-type for data transfer instructions
– Other format was R-type for register computations
• Example: lw $t0, 32($s2)
35 18 8 32 op rs rt 16 bit number
• Where's the compromise? (To maintain same length, we settled with introducing another format RATHER that having the same format but working with varying lengths)
Machine Language
$s2 $t0
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Machine Language
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So far:
• Instruction Meaningadd $s1,$s2,$s3 $s1 = $s2 + $s3sub $s1,$s2,$s3 $s1 = $s2 – $s3and $s1,$s2,$s3 $s1 = $s2 and $s3 lw $s1,100($s2) $s1 = Memory[$s2+100] sw $s1,100($s2) Memory[$s2+100] = $s1bne $s4,$s5,L Next instr. is at Label if $s4 ° $s5beq $s4,$s5,L Next instr. is at Label if $s4 = $s5j Label Next instr. is at Label
• Formats:
op rs rt rd shamt funct
op rs rt 16 bit address
op 26 bit address
R
I
J
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• Small constants are used quite frequently (50% of operands) e.g., A = A + 5;
B = B + 1;C = C - 18;
• Design Principle: Make the common fast– put 'typical constants' in memory and load them.
– create hard-wired registers (like $zero) for constants like zero.addi $t0, $zero, 100
add $t0, $t1, $zero
Constants
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• Assembly provides convenient symbolic representation– much easier than writing down numbers
– e.g., destination first
• Machine language is the underlying reality– e.g., destination is no longer first
• Assembly can provide 'pseudo-instructions'– e.g., “move $t0, $t1” exists only in Assembly
– would be implemented using “add $t0,$t1,$zero”
• When considering performance you should count real instructions
Assembly Language vs. Machine Language
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Pseudo-instructions
• The MIPS assembler supports several pseudo-instructions:– not directly supported in hardware– implemented using one or more supported instructions– simplify assembly language programming and translation
• For example, the pseudo-instructionmove $t0, $t1
is implemented asadd $t0, $zero, $t1
• The pseudo-instructionblt $s0, $s1, Else
is implemented asslt $at, $s0, $s1bne $at, $zero, Else
It is safer to use labels, rather than constants, when implementing branches. Why?
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• Things we are not going to coversign and zero-extensionhandling larger constantssupport for procedureslinkers, loaders, memory layoutstacks, frames, recursionmanipulating strings and pointersinterrupts and exceptionssystem calls and conventions
• We've focused on architectural issues– basics of MIPS assembly language and machine code
Other Issues
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Miscellaneous MIPS Instructions• break
– A breakpoint trap occurs, transfers control to exception handler• syscall
– A system trap occurs, transfers control to exception handler• coprocessor instructions
– Provide support for floating point• TLB instructions
– Provide support for virtual memory• return from exception
– Used after an exception is generated to restore control to user• load word left/right
– Supports misaligned word loads• store word left/right
– Supports misaligned word stores• All MIPS R2000 Instructions are given in Appendix A.10
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• Design alternative:
– provide more powerful operations
– goal is to reduce number of instructions executed
– danger is a slower cycle time and/or a higher CPI
• Sometimes referred to as “RISC vs. CISC” Reduced vs.
Complex Instruction Set Computer.
– virtually all new instruction sets since 1982 have been RISC
– VAX: minimize code size, make assembly language easy
instructions from 1 to 54 bytes long!
Alternative Architectures
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PowerPC
• Indexed addressing– example: lw $t1,$a0+$s3 #$t1=Memory[$a0+$s3]– What do we have to do in MIPS?
• Update addressing– update a register as part of load (for marching through arrays)
– example: lwu $t0,4($s3) #$t0=Memory[$s3+4];$s3=$s3+4
– What do we have to do in MIPS?
• Others:– load multiple/store multiple
– a special counter register “bc Loop” decrement counter, if not 0 goto loop
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80x86
• 1978: The Intel 8086 is announced (16 bit architecture)
• 1980: The 8087 floating point coprocessor is added
• 1982: The 80286 increases address space to 24 bits, + instructions
• 1985: The 80386 extends to 32 bits, new addressing modes• 1989-1995: The 80486, Pentium, Pentium Pro add a few
instructions(mostly designed for higher performance)
• 1997: MMX is added
“This history illustrates the impact of the “golden handcuffs” of compatibility
“adding new features as someone might add clothing to a packed bag”
“an architecture that is difficult to explain and impossible to love”
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A dominant architecture: 80x86
• See your textbook for a more detailed description
• Complexity:– Instructions from 1 to 17 bytes long
– one operand must act as both a source and destination
– one operand can come from memory
– complex addressing modese.g., “base or scaled index with 8 or 32 bit displacement”
• Saving grace:– the most frequently used instructions are not too difficult to build
– compilers avoid the portions of the architecture that are slow
“what the 80x86 lacks in style is made up in quantity, making it beautiful from the right perspective”
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• Instruction complexity is only one variable– lower instruction count vs. higher CPI / lower clock rate
• Design Principles:– simplicity favors regularity
– smaller is faster
– good design demands compromise
– make the common case fast
• Instruction set architecture– a very important abstraction indeed!
Summary
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To summarize: MIPS InstructionsMIPS operands
Name Example Comments$s0-$s7, $t0-$t9, $zero, Fast locations for data. In MIPS, data must be in registers to perform
32 registers $a0-$a3, $v0-$v1, $gp, arithmetic. MIPS register $zero always equals 0. Register $at is $fp, $sp, $ra, $at reserved for the assembler to handle large constants.
Memory[0], Accessed only by data transfer instructions. MIPS uses byte addresses, so
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memory Memory[4], ..., sequential words differ by 4. Memory holds data structures, such as arrays,
words Memory[4294967292] and spilled registers, such as those saved on procedure calls.
MIPS assembly language
Category Instruction Example Meaning Commentsadd add $s1, $s2, $s3 $s1 = $s2 + $s3 Three operands; data in registers
Arithmetic subtract sub $s1, $s2, $s3 $s1 = $s2 - $s3 Three operands; data in registers
add immediate addi $s1, $s2, 100 $s1 = $s2 + 100 Used to add constants
load word lw $s1, 100($s2) $s1 = Memory[$s2 + 100] Word from memory to register
store word sw $s1, 100($s2) Memory[$s2 + 100] = $s1 Word from register to memory
Data transfer load byte lb $s1, 100($s2) $s1 = Memory[$s2 + 100] Byte from memory to register
store byte sb $s1, 100($s2) Memory[$s2 + 100] = $s1 Byte from register to memory
load upper immediate lui $s1, 100 $s1 = 100 * 216 Loads constant in upper 16 bits
branch on equal beq $s1, $s2, 25 if ($s1 == $s2) go to PC + 4 + 100
Equal test; PC-relative branch
Conditional
branch on not equal bne $s1, $s2, 25 if ($s1 != $s2) go to PC + 4 + 100
Not equal test; PC-relative
branch set on less than slt $s1, $s2, $s3 if ($s2 < $s3) $s1 = 1; else $s1 = 0
Compare less than; for beq, bne
set less than immediate
slti $s1, $s2, 100 if ($s2 < 100) $s1 = 1; else $s1 = 0
Compare less than constant
jump j 2500 go to 10000 Jump to target address
Uncondi- jump register jr $ra go to $ra For switch, procedure return
tional jump jump and link jal 2500 $ra = PC + 4; go to 10000 For procedure call
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To summarize: Policy of Use Conventions
Name Register number Usage$zero 0 the constant value 0$v0-$v1 2-3 values for results and expression evaluation$a0-$a3 4-7 arguments$t0-$t7 8-15 temporaries$s0-$s7 16-23 saved$t8-$t9 24-25 more temporaries$gp 28 global pointer$sp 29 stack pointer$fp 30 frame pointer$ra 31 return address
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Byte Halfword Word
Registers
Memory
Memory
Word
Memory
Word
Register
Register
1. Immediate addressing
2. Register addressing
3. Base addressing
4. PC-relative addressing
5. Pseudodirect addressing
op rs rt
op rs rt
op rs rt
op
op
rs rt
Address
Address
Address
rd . . . funct
Immediate
PC
PC
+
+
To summarize: MIPS Addressing Modes