Section 14.1 Logical Instructions
Two numeric operators, addition and subtraction, were introduced in Section 9.2. Many data items are better thought of as bit patterns rather than numerical entities. For example, study Table 2.13.1 and see if you can determine which bit determines the case (upper/lower) of the alphabetic characters.
In order to manipulate individual character codes in a text string, we introduce the bit-wise logical instructions in this section. The bitwise logical operations were shown in the truth tables in Table 4.4.2–Table 4.4.4. The instructions available to us to perform the three binary operations are:
AND-
Performs a bitwise AND between two integers.
AND{S}{<c>} {<Rd>,} <Rn>, #<const> % immediate AND{S}{<c>} {<Rd>,} <Rn>, <Rm>{, <shift>} % register AND{S}{<c>} {<Rd>,} <Rn>, <Rm>, <type> <Rs> % register-shifted registerIf ‘
S’ is present the condition flags are updated according to the result. If absent, the condition flags are not changed.<c>is the condition code, Table 9.2.1.<Rd>specifies the destination register, and<Rm>and<Rn>are the source registers.<Rs>contains the shift amount in the “register-shifted register” form.\(-257 \le const \le +256\text{,}\) or \(const = +256, +260, +264, \ldots, +65280\text{,}\) or \(const = -261, -265, \ldots, -65281\text{.}\) This odd sequence of values will be explained in Section 11.3.3
<shift>and<type>are explained in Section 9.2.3
In the “immediate” form, a bitwise AND is performed between
<const>and the value in<Rn>. In the “register” and “register-shifted register” forms, a bitwise AND is performed between the value in<Rm>and the value in<Rn>. If a shift is specified, the value in<Rm>is shifted by the specified amount before the AND is performed. If<Rd>is present the result is stored there and<Rn>is unchanged. If not, the result is stored in<Rn>. The values in<Rm>and<Rs>are unchanged. ORR-
Performs a bitwise inclusive OR between two integers.
ORR{S}{<c>} {<Rd>,} <Rn>, #<const> % immediate ORR{S}{<c>} {<Rd>,} <Rn>, <Rm>{, <shift>} % register ORR{S}{<c>} {<Rd>,} <Rn, <Rm>, <type> <Rs> % register-shifted registerIf ‘
S’ is present the condition flags are updated according to the result. If absent, the condition flags are not changed.<c>is the condition code, Table 9.2.1.<Rd>specifies the destination register, and<Rm>and<Rn>are the source registers.<Rs>contains the shift amount in the “register-shifted register” form.\(-257 \le const \le +256\text{,}\) or \(const = +256, +260, +264, \ldots, +65280\text{,}\) or \(const = -261, -265, \ldots, -65281\text{.}\) This odd sequence of values will be explained in Section 11.3.3
<shift>and<type>are explained in Section 9.2.3
In the “immediate” form, a bitwise inclusive OR is performed between
<const>and the value in<Rn>. In the “register” and “register-shifted register” forms, a bitwise inclusive OR is performed between the value in<Rm>and the value in<Rn>. If a shift is specified, the value in<Rm>is shifted by the specified amount before the inclusive OR is performed. If<Rd>is present the result is stored there and<Rn>is unchanged. If not, the result is stored in<Rn>. The values in<Rm>and<Rs>are unchanged. EOR-
Performs a bitwise exclusive EOR between two integers.
EOR{S}{<c>} {<Rd>,} <Rn>, #<const> % immediate EOR{S}{<c>} {<Rd>,} <Rn>, <Rm>{, <shift>} % register EOR{S}{<c>} {<Rd>,} <Rn, <Rm>, <type> <Rs> % register-shifted registerIf ‘
S’ is present the condition flags are updated according to the result. If absent, the condition flags are not changed.<c>is the condition code, Table 9.2.1.<Rd>specifies the destination register, and<Rm>and<Rn>are the source registers.<Rs>contains the shift amount in the “register-shifted register” form.\(-257 \le const \le +256\text{,}\) or \(const = +256, +260, +264, \ldots, +65280\text{,}\) or \(const = -261, -265, \ldots, -65281\text{.}\) This odd sequence of values will be explained in Section 11.3.3
<shift>and<type>are explained in Section 9.2.3
In the “immediate” form, a bitwise exclusive OR is performed between
<const>and the value in<Rn>. In the “register” and “register-shifted register” forms, a bitwise exclusive OR is performed between the value in<Rm>and the value in<Rn>. If a shift is specified, the value in<Rm>is shifted by the specified amount before the exclusive OR is performed. If<Rd>is present the result is stored there and<Rn>is unchanged. If not, the result is stored in<Rn>. The values in<Rm>and<Rs>are unchanged.
The bitwise NOT instruction, mvn, and the bitwise compare instruction, tst, have already been given.
Listings 14.1.1–14.1.2 show how the and instruction can be used to convert lowercase characters to uppercase when some of the characters may already be uppercase. The algorithms of both the main and toUpper functions are very similar to those of main and writeStr in Exercise 13.3.4 and Exercise 13.3.2, respectively, so I go directly to assembly language rather than show the C solution first.
@ upperCase.s
@ Prompts user to enter alphabetic characters, converts
@ all lowercase to uppercase and shows the result.
@ 2017-09-29: Bob Plantz
@ Define my Raspberry Pi
.cpu cortex-a53
.fpu neon-fp-armv8
.syntax unified @ modern syntax
@ Constant for assembler
.equ nBytes,50 @ amount of memory for string
@ Constant program data
.section .rodata
.align 2
prompt:
.asciz "Enter some alphabetic characters: "
@ The program
.text
.align 2
.global main
.type main, %function
main:
sub sp, sp, 8 @ space for fp, lr
str fp, [sp, 0] @ save fp
str lr, [sp, 4] @ and lr
add fp, sp, 4 @ set our frame pointer
mov r0, nBytes @ get memory from heap
bl malloc
mov r4, r0 @ pointer to new memory
ldr r0, promptAddr @ prompt user
bl writeStr
mov r0, r4 @ get user input
mov r1, nBytes @ limit input size
bl readLn
mov r0, r4 @ convert to uppercase
bl toUpper
mov r0, r4 @ echo user input
bl writeStr
mov r0, r4 @ free heap memory
bl free
mov r0, 0 @ return 0;
ldr fp, [sp, 0] @ restore caller fp
ldr lr, [sp, 4] @ lr
add sp, sp, 8 @ and sp
bx lr @ return
promptAddr:
.word prompt
toUpper function in Listing 14.1.2. (prog asm)@ toUpper.s
@ Converts all alpha characters to uppercase.
@ Calling sequence:
@ r0 <- address of string to be written
@ bl toUpper
@ returns number of characters written
@ 2017-09-29: Bob Plantz
@ Define my Raspberry Pi
.cpu cortex-a53
.fpu neon-fp-armv8
.syntax unified @ modern syntax
@ Useful source code constants
.equ upperMask,0x5f
.equ NUL,0
@ The code
.text
.align 2
.global toUpper
.type toUpper, %function
toUpper:
sub sp, sp, 16 @ space for saving regs
str r4, [sp, 0] @ save r4
str r5, [sp, 4] @ r5
str fp, [sp, 8] @ fp
str lr, [sp, 12] @ lr
add fp, sp, 12 @ set our frame pointer
mov r4, r0 @ r4 = string pointer
mov r5, 0 @ r5 = count
whileLoop:
ldrb r3, [r4] @ get a char
cmp r3, NUL @ end of string?
beq allDone @ yes, all done
and r3, r3, upperMask @ convert to uppercase
strb r3, [r4] @ update string
add r4, r4, 1 @ increment pointer var
add r5, r5, 1 @ count++
b whileLoop @ back to top
allDone:
mov r0, r5 @ return count;
ldr r4, [sp, 0] @ restore r4
ldr r5, [sp, 4] @ r5
ldr fp, [sp, 8] @ fp
ldr lr, [sp, 12] @ lr
add sp, sp, 16 @ restore sp
bx lr @ return
