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680 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
README
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======
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General and licensing information
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---------------------------------
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AVRA v1.3.0 - Assember for the Atmel AVR microcontroller family
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Licensing information
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
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(at your option) any later version. Please read below for for information.
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Disclaimer
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~~~~~~~~~~
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This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
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WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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GNU General Public License for more details.
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GNU General Public License
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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along with this program; see the file "COPYING". If not, visit
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http://www.gnu.org or write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
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59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. You can
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also contact the authors of AVRA to receive a copy of the COPYING file.
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Trademarks and copyright
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Atmel, AVR, AVR Studio, Intel, Windows are registered enterprises, brands
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and registered trademarks. The mentioned companies have no relation to
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AVRA and are therefore not responslible for any problems that occur when
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using AVRA. Many thanks for your products, support and efforts.
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Introducion
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-----------
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AVRA is an assembler for Atmel AVR microcontrollers, and it is almost
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compatible with Atmel's own assembler AVRASM32. The programming
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principles and conceptions are based on the ANSI programming language "C".
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The initial version of AVRA was written by John Anders Haugum. He released
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all versions until v0.7. All later versions were released by Tobias Weber.
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Differences between AVRA and AVRASM32
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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There are some differences between the original Atmel assembler AVRASM32 and AVRA. Basically AVRA is designed to replace AVRASM32 without special changes in your current Atmel AVR Studio enviroment.
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Command line options have been adapted as far as it was possible until now. Jumping to fault containing line directly by double-clicking on the error message in the output window does work as with AVRASM32.
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The differences in detail
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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- Support for some extra preprocessor directives.
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.define, .undef, .ifdef, .ifndef, .if, .else, .endif, .elif, .elseif, .warning
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- Not all command line options are supported.
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Specifying an eeprom file (-e) is not supported. All eeprom data is
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put out into a file called program.eep.hex and always Intel hex
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format. Other hex file formats than Intel are currently not supported.
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- Forward references not supported for .ifdef and .ifndef directives.
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This makes sure, that directives like .ifdef and .undef are working
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properly. If you are familiar with the C programming language, you
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should get easily into AVRA. See chapter "Programming techniques" for
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more information about how to write proper code.
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- Enhanced macro support
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AVRA has some new features for writing flexible macros. This should
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increase the ability to reuse code e.g. build your own library.
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- Debugging support
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AVRA creates a coff file everytime the assembly was sucessful. This
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file allows AVR Studio or any coff compatible debugger to simulate
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or emulate the program.
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- Meta tags for assembly time
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This helps you tracking versions of your software and can also be
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used to generate customer specific serial numbers.
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Compatibility
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Since AVRA is written in ANSI C, it should be possible to compile it on
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most system platforms. If you have problems compiling AVRA, please leave
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a message on the sourceforge message board or send a mail to the
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authors of AVRA.
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Installation
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------------
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To install avra you should copy the avra-executable to an apropriate
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location. To compile you should rename the appropriate makefile, and
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perform a make (use smake for Amiga SAS/C, and nmake for Mickeysoft
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visual c++).
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Linux
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~~~~~
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To compile avra you need gcc and the automake utilities. These will create
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a ./configure script that evaluates your system enviroment. To get the
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AVRA executable, you have to issue the following commands:
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aclocal
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autoconf
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automake -a
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./configure
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make && make install
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AmigaOS
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~~~~~~~
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avra can be copied any apropriate directory. If you are using the source
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distribution a 'make install' will do the same.
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Microsoft Windows
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If you received the Windows binary package, look into the \bin
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directory where you can find avra.exe. This should be copied to any
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apropriate location. You can also overwrite AVRASM32.EXE in your
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Atmel AVR Studio. If you want to compile it yourself you could download then
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OpenWatcom C/C++ Toolchain for windows and create a new project and add the C
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and H files to it and compile.
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Apple OS X
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~~~~~~~~~~
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If you recieved the Apple OS X binary package, look into the bin directory this
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file is compiled universal and should run on intel 32 and 64 bit and powerpc. If
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you want to compile it yourself go to the src directory and invoke `make -f
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makefiles/Makefiles.osx` and then the executable should be created.
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Synopsis
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--------
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Command line usage
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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usage: AVRA [-f][O|M|I|G] output file type
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[-o <filename>] output file name
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[-l <filename>] generate list file
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[-m <mapfile>] generate map file
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[--define <symbol>[=<value>]] [--includedir <dir>] [--listmac]
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[--max_errors <number>] [--devices] [--version]
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[-h] [--help] general help
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[-W NoRegDef] supress register redefinition warnings
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<file to assemble>
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Parameter list
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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--listfile -l : Create list file
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--mapfile -m : Create map file
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--define -D : Define symbol.
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--includedir -I : Additional include dirs.
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--listmac : List macro expansion in listfile.
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--max_errors : Maximum number of errors before exit
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(default: 10)
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--devices : List out supported devices.
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--version : Version information.
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--help, -h : This help text.
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Warning supression
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Since avra 1.1 there is a possibility to supress certain warnings.
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Currently only register reassignment warnings can be supressed.
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Example: avra -W NoRegDef
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Programming techniques
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----------------------
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Using directives
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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AVRA offers a number of directives that are not part of Atmel's
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assembler. These directives should help you creating versatile code that
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can be designed more modular.
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Directive .define
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To define a constant, use ".define". This does the same thing as ".equ",
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it is just a little more C style. Keep in mind that AVRA is not case
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sensitive. Do not mix ".def" and ".define", because ".def" is used to
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assign registers only. This is due to backward compatibility to Atmel's
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AVRASM32. Here is an example on how .define can be used.
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.define network 1
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Now "network" is set to the value 1. You may want to assemble a specific
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part of your code depeding on a define or switch setting. You can test
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your defined word on existence (.ifdef and .ifndef) as well as on the
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value it represents. The following code shows a way to prevent error
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messages due to testing undefined constants. Conditional directives must
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always end with an .endif directive.
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.ifndef network
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.define network 0
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.endif
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Directive .if and .else
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The three lines in the last example set the default value of "network".
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In the next example, you see how we can use default values. If a constant
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has not defined previously, it is set to zero. Now you can test wether
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e.g. network support is included into the assemby process.
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.if network = 1
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.include "include\tcpip.asm"
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.else
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.include "include\dummynet.asm"
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.endif
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In the second part of the above listing you see the use of .else, which
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defines the part of the condition that is being executed if the equation
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of the preceding .if statement is not equal. You can also use the else
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statement to test another equasion. For that purpose use .elif, which
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means "else if". Always close this conditional part with ".endif"
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Directive .error
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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This directive can be used to throw errors if a part in the code has reached
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that should not be reached. The following example shows how we can stop
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the assembly process if a particular value has not been previously set.
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.ifndef network
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.error "network is not configured!" ;the assembler stops here
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Directive .nolist and .list
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The ouput to the list file can be paused by this two directives. After
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avra discovers a .nolist while assembling, it stops output to the list file.
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After a .list directive is detected, it continues the normal list file output.
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Directive .includepath
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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By default, any file that is included from within the source file must
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either be a single filename or a complete absolute path. With the directive
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.includepath you can set an additional include path . Furthermore you can
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set as many include paths as you want. Be sure not no use same filename
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in separate includes, because then it is no longer clear which one avra
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should take.
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Using include files
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-------------------
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To avoid multiple inclusions of include files, you may use some pre-
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processor directives. See example file stack.asm that is being included
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into the main programm file as well as in other include files.
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.ifndef _STACK_ASM_
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.define _STACK_ASM_
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.include "include/config.inc"
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; *** stack macro ***
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.dseg
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m_stack: .byte __stack_size__
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.cseg
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.macro stack_setup
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load [v:w,m_stack + __stack_size__]
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outp [SPREG,v:w]
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.endm
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.endif ; avoid multiple inclusion of stack.asm
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Using build date meta tags
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If you like to implement compiler build time and date into your
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program, you can make use of some sepcial tags that avra supports.
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%MINUTE% is being replaced by the current minute (00-59)
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%HOUR% is being replaced by the current hour (00-23)
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%DAY% is being replaced by the current day of month (01-31)
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%MONTH% is being replaced by the current month (01-12)
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%YEAR% is being replaced by the current year (2004-9999)
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buildtime: .db "Release date %DAY%.%MONTH%.%YEAR% %HOUR%:%MINUTE%"
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This line will then assembled by avra into:
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buildtime: .db "Release date 10.05.2004 19:54"
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You may also create a self defined serial number with meta tags:
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.define serialnumber %DAY% + %MONTH%*31 + (%YEAR% - 2000) *31*12
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The %TAG% is translated before any other parsing happens. The real
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output can be found in the list file.
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Macro features
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--------------
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Sometimes you have to work with 16 bit or greater variables stored
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in 8 bit registers. The enhanced macro support allows you to write short
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and flexible macros that simplify access to big variables. The extended
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mode is active, as soon as you use parenthesis like this "[ ]" to wrap
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macro parameters.
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Auto type conversion for macros
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Values representing more than 8 Bits are usualy kept in a set of byte
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wide registers. To simplify 16 Bit or greater operations, I added a new
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language definitions. Words can be written as r16:r17, whereas register
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r16 contains the higher part and register r17 the lower part of this
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16 Bit value.
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Macro data types
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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There are 3 data types that can be used. They will be added as character
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separated by one underline character.
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immediate values _i
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registers _8,_16,_24,_32,_40,_48,_56,_64
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void parameter _v
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16 Bit Source and Destionation registers 'dst' and 'src'
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src = YH:YL
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dst = ZH:ZL
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Within the parenthesis, the two words src and dst are interpreted as YH:YL
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and ZH:ZL. Normal code outside of the macro parameter parenthesis can
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still make use of these special key words "src" and "dst".
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Examples for automatic type conversion
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To simplify the parameters in the demonstration below, we need to
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redefine some registers.
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.def a = r16 ; general purpose registers
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.def b = r17
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.def c = r18
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.def d = r19
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.def w = r20 ; working register
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.def v = r21 ; working register
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If we substract 16 Bit values stored in a, higher byte and b, lower byte
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with that in c:d, we usually have to use the following command sequence:
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sub b,d
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sbc a,c
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Now we can do the following steps to simplify 16 or more Bit manipulations
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.macro subs
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.message "no parameters specified"
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.endm
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.macro subs_16_16
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sub @1,@3
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sbc @0,@2
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.endm
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.macro subs_16_8
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sub @1,@2
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sbci @0,0
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.endm
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;now we can write a 16 Bit subraction as:
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subs [a:b,c:d]
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;or for calculating 16 minus 8 Bit
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subs [a:b,c]
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Overloading macros
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Like in you are used to C functions, you can write macros for different
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parameter lists. If you would like to have a versatile macro, you can
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specify a unique macro for each parameter situation. See the next sample.
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.macro load
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; this message is shown if you use the macro within your code
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; specifying no parameters. If your macro allows the case where
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; no parameters are given, exchange .message with your code.
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.message "no parameters specified"
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.endm
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; Here we define the macro "load" for the case it is being used
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; with two registers as first parameter and a immediate (constant)
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; value as second parameter.
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.macro load_16_i
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ldi @0,high(@2)
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ldi @1,low(@2)
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.endm
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; the same case, but now with a 32 bit register value as first
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; parameter
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.macro load_32_i
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ldi @0,BYTE4(@4)
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ldi @1,BYTE3(@4)
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ldi @2,high(@4)
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ldi @3,low(@4)
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.endm
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; Now let's see how these macros are being used in the code
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load [a:b,15] ;uses macro load_16_i to load immediate
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load [a:b:c:d,15] ;uses macro load_32_i to load immediate
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More examples
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.dseg
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counter .byte 2
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.cseg
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.macro poke
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.message "no parameters"
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.endm
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.macro poke_i_16_i
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ldi @1,high(@3)
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sts @0+0,@1
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ldi @2,low(@3)
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sts @0+1,@2
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.endm
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.macro poke_i_i
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ldi w,@1
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sts @0+0,w
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.endm
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.macro poke_i_v_i
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ldi w,high(@3)
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sts @0+0,w
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ldi w,low(@3)
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sts @0+1,w
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.endm
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.macro poke_i_v_v_v_i
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ldi w,high(@3)
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sts @0+0,w
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ldi w,low(@3)
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sts @0+1,w
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ldi w,BYTE3(@3)
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sts @0+2,w
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ldi w,BYTE4(@3)
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sts @0+3,w
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.endm
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; this writes '9999' into the memory at 'counter'
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; uses only the working register for transfering the values.
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poke [counter,w:w,9999]
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; works same as above, but the transferred value '9999' is also
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; kept in the pair of register a:b
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poke [counter,a:b,9999]
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; in my design 'w' is always working reg. which implies that
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; it cannot be used for normal variables. The following example
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; uses poke_i_i because the parameter contains two immediate values.
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poke [counter,9999] ;uses poke_i_i
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; to be able to choose between a 8,16 or 32 Bit operation, you just
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; add a void parameter.
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poke [counter,,9999] ;uses poke_i_v_i
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; and the same for 32 Bit pokes
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poke [counter,,,,9999] ;uses poke_i_v_v_v_i
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Loops within macros
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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One problem you may have experienced, is that labels defined within macros
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are defined twice if you call the macro for example two times. Now you can
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use labels for macro loops. Loops within macros must end with '_%'. the
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"%" symbol is replaced by a running number.
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Loop example
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^^^^^^^^^^^^
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; Definition of the macro
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.macro write_8_8
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write_%:
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st Z+,@0
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dec @1
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brne write_%
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.endm
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; Use in user code
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write [a,b]
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write [c,d]
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; After assembling this code, the result looks like this
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write_1:
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st Z+,a
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dec b
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brne write_1
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write_2:
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st Z+,c
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dec d
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brne write_2
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Warnings and Errors
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-------------------
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Some errors and warnings may confuse you a little bit so we will try to
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clear some frequently asked questions about such cases.
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Constant out of range
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This warning occurs if a value exceeds the byte or word value of a assignment.
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Read the comment posted by Jim Galbraith:
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The expression (~0x80) is a Bitwise Not operation. This
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operator returns the input expression with all its bits
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inverted. If 0x80 represents -128, then 0x7f, or +127
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should be ok. If this is considered as a 32-bit expression
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(AVRA internal representation), then it appears to be more
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like oxffffffff-0x80 or 0xffffffff^0x80. The result would then
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be 0xffffff7f. The assembler would then have to be told or it
|
||
would have to decide, based on context, how much
|
||
significance to assign to the higher bits. I have also
|
||
encountered such conditions with various assemblers,
|
||
including AVRA. To make sure the assembler does what I
|
||
really want, I use a construct like 0xff-0x80 or 0xff^0x80.
|
||
This way the bit significance cannot extend beyond bit-7 and
|
||
there cannot be any misunderstanding.
|
||
|
||
Can't use .DB directive in data segment
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
.DB and .DW is only used to assign constant data in eeprom or code space.
|
||
The reason why using it within data segment is forbidden is, that you
|
||
cannot set ram content at assembly time. The values must be programmed into
|
||
ROM area and at boot read from ROM into RAM. This is up to the user code.
|
||
You can only allocate memory for your variables using labels and the .byte
|
||
directive.
|
||
|
||
.dseg
|
||
my_string: .byte 15
|
||
|
||
BYTE directive
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
.BYTE directive can only be used in data segment (.DSEG)
|
||
|
||
This directive cannot be used in code or eeprom region because this only
|
||
allocates memory without assgning distinct values to it. Please use .db
|
||
or .dw instead.
|
||
|
||
Internal assembler error
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
If you get an "Internal assembler error" please contact the project maintainer
|
||
by sending him a code example and a description of your working enviroment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
AVRA internals
|
||
--------------
|
||
|
||
This section provides thoughts of the avra internal design. I have to admit
|
||
that the code of avra is anything else than clean and optimized. To increase
|
||
the code readability I will try to give you some standards that should improve
|
||
quality. The following standards are similar to what GNU proposes.
|
||
|
||
Coding standards
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
Tab space is always 2 spaces. The Tab character (ascii 9) is not used.
|
||
if,while,for are always opened on the same line but closed on the next line.
|
||
The closing bracket is in the same column as the first letter of the loop
|
||
directive.
|
||
|
||
Example:
|
||
----
|
||
while(i > 0) {
|
||
do_something();
|
||
}
|
||
----
|
||
|
||
|
||
Credits
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
We would like to thank the following people for giving contributions,
|
||
patches and bug reports, as well as suggestions and new ideas.
|
||
|
||
----
|
||
Jon Anders Haugum (project founder)
|
||
Burkhard Arenfeld (release 1.2.0)
|
||
Tobias Weber (old maintainer)
|
||
Jerry Jacobs (release 1.3.0)
|
||
Bernt Hembre
|
||
Nils Str<74>m
|
||
Roberto Biancardi
|
||
Qwerty Jones
|
||
Ben Hitchcock (Maker of the mac port)
|
||
Daniel Drotos
|
||
Laurence Boyd II
|
||
Varuzhan Danielyan
|
||
Laurence Turner
|
||
Eugene R. O'Bryan
|
||
Dmitry Dicky
|
||
Bob Harris (Maker of coff support)
|
||
Tobias Weber (enhanced macro support)
|
||
Lesha Bogdanow
|
||
Jim Galbraith
|
||
Mark Brinicombe
|
||
Igor Nikolayenko
|
||
Peter Hettkamp
|
||
Herb Poppe
|
||
David Burke
|
||
Alexey Pavluchenko
|
||
Alan Probandt
|
||
Mariusz Matuszek
|
||
Arne Rossius
|
||
Marti Tichacek
|
||
Patrick Parity
|
||
Johannes Overmann
|
||
Roland Riegel
|
||
Peter Katzmann
|
||
Donald D. Davis
|
||
----
|
||
|
||
And all the anonymous people who submitted patches!
|
||
|
||
Thank you for your work and support.
|
||
|
||
References
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
http://www.suprafluid.com/avra
|
||
http://www.avrfreaks.de
|
||
http://www.atmel.com
|