Title: MIPS Assembly Tutorial
1MIPS Assembly Tutorial
2Types of Instructions
- There are 3 main types of assembly instructions
- Arithmetic - add, sub, mul, shifts, and, or, etc.
- Load/store
- Conditional - branches
3Arithmetic Instructions
add a, b, c a bc add a, a, d a da
dbc add a, a, e a ea edbc
Example Translate the following instructions to
assembly code
a bc d a-e
Solution
add a, b, c sub d, a, e
4Arithmetic Instructions
Example Translate the following instructions to
assembly code. Remember with RISC, only 1
operation per instruction! HINT - you may need
temporary variables
f (gh) - (ij)
Solution
add t0, g, h add t1, i, j sub f, t0, t1
5Operands
- In assembly code, you cant use variables such as
a, b, c, etc - In RISC instruction sets, operands must be
registers such as r1, r2, r3, etc - r0 is typically reserved to hold the immediate
value of 0 - There is a limited number of registers
- MIPS has 32
6Arithmetic Instructions Using Registers
Example Translate the following instructions to
assembly code. Assume that g, h, i, and j are
already stored in r1, r2, r3, and r4. Store f in
r5
f (gh) - (ij)
Solution
add r6, r1, r2 add r7, r3, r4 sub r5, r6, r7
7What about more data??
- With only a limited number of registers, not all
data can be stored in registers at the same time.
- Registers only store data that is currently being
operated on - Variables are stored in memory and then loaded
into registers when needed using data transfer
instructions - Load word (lw) and store word (sw)
8Load and store word
- Load word format
- lw destination register, memory location
- Store word format
- sw source register, memory location
- Memory location format
- Offset(base address)
- Base address starting location of data in
memory - Offset how far away is location to access from
base address - Values are added together
9LW Example
Example Assume that A is an array of 100 words.
Assume the base address is stored in r3, g is in
r1 and h is in r2
g h A8
Solution
Offset
This is simplified, more details later
lw r4, 8(r3) add r1, r2, r4
Base Address
10Data in Memory
- All variables/data are stored in memory
- You will need to do this in your assembler
- Your ISS will need a data structure to hold main
memory - Array is fine
11Addressing Data
- Architecture usually addresses data in bytes
(byte addressable) - 32-bit architecture 4 bytes 1 word
- lw/sw load/store 1 word or 4 bytes
- Thus, data/inst addresses are multiples of 4
- Data is word aligned to be more efficient
12Data in Memory
...
...
100 10 101 1
12 8 4 0
Address
Data
13LW/SW Example
Example Assume that A is an array of 100 words.
Assume the base address is stored in r3 and h is
stored in r2. You may directly calculate the
offset. Remember, each data piece is 4 bytes when
calculating the offset
A12 hA8
Solution
lw r1, 32(r3) add r4, r2, r1 sw r4, 48(r3)
14LW/SW Example
Example Assume that A is an array of 100 words.
Assume the base address is stored in r3 and g, h,
and i are in r1, r2, and r4 respectively.
Calculate the offset using assembly instructions
but dont use multiplication yet (mult
instruction is different)
g h Ai
Solution
add r5, r4, r4 Temp reg r52i add r5, r5,
r5 Temp reg r54i add r5, r5, r3 t1 addr
of Ai (4ir3) lw r6, 0(r5) Temp reg
r0ai add r1, r6, r2 ghai
15Translating MIPS Assm Language to Machine Language
- Translate human readable assembly code to machine
readable code (binary) - I will show examples in decimal for readability
- This is what you assembler will do but it will
output in binary.
16MIPS -gt Machine Language
Example Show the real MIPS language version of
the following instruction in both decimal and
binary
add r0, r1, r2
Solution
decimal
binary
6 bits
5 bits
5 bits
5 bits
5 bits
6 bits
Each segment is referred to as a field. Details
to come.
17MIPS Fields
- MIPS fields are giving names to make them easier
to discuss
6 bits
5 bits
5 bits
5 bits
5 bits
6 bits
- op Basic operation of the instruction,
typically called the opcode - rs The first register source operand
- rt The second register source operand
- rd The register destination operand, it gets
the result of the operation - shamt Shift amount (0 if not shift instruction)
- funct Function. This field selects the specific
variant of the operation in the op field, and is
sometimes called the function code
18MIPS Fields
- Problem occurs with an instruction needs a longer
field than that showed on the previous slide - I.e. LW must specify 2 registers and a constant.
Limited to 5-bit constant if use previous format. - Solution There are different formats for
different types of instructions - Previous slide is R-type (R-format)
- Rregister
19MIPS Fields
- I-type (I-format)
- Iimmediate
- Now LW can specify an address up to 16-bits
- Opcode determines the format
20MIPS Instruction Encoding
21MIPS Asm -gt Machine Language
Example Assume r1 is the base of A and r2
corresponds to h, the C statement is compiled
to What is the MIPS machine code for these
three instructions? (Use figure 3.5)
A300 h A300
lw r0, 1200(r1) add r0, r2, r0 sw r0, 1200(r1)
22MIPS Asm -gt Machine Language
lw r0, 1200(r1) add r0, r2, r0 sw r0, 1200(r1)
Solution
decimal
Address/shamt
op
rs
rt
rd
funct
binary
23Decision Instructions
- Branch/jump instructions
- Conditional branches
- beq register1, register2, Label
- bne register1, register2, Label
- Unconditional branches
- j Label
24Decision Instructions
Example Assume f-gtr0, g-gtr1, h-gtr2, i-gtr3, j-gtr4
if ( ij ) goto L1 f gh L1 f f-i
Solution
beq r3, r4, L1 add r0, r1, r2 L1 sub r0, r0, r3
Labels will need to be translated to instruction
address in your assembler
25Decision Instructions
Example Assume f-gtr0, g-gtr1, h-gtr2, i-gtr3, j-gtr4
if ( ij ) f gh L1 else f g-h L2
Solution
bne r3, r4, L1 add r0, r1, r2 j L2 L1 sub r0,
r1, r2 L2
26Decision Instructions
Example A is 100 elements with the base address
in r5. g-gtr1, h-gtr2, i-gtr3, j-gtr4
Loop g gAi i ij if ( i!h ) goto Loop
Solution
Loop add r6, r3, r3 add r6, r6, r6 add r6, r6,
r5 lw r7, 0(r6) add r1, r1, r7 add r3, r3,
r4 bne r3, r2, Loop
27While Loop
- Goto statements are bad, just used them as an
example. - You will want to use while loops
- Or for loops but I am just showing you while loops
28While Loop
Example Base address of save is in r6. i-gtr3,
j-gtr4, k-gtr5
while ( savei k ) i ij
Solution
Loop add r1, r3, r4 add r1, r1, r1 add r1, r1,
r6 lw r0, 0(r1) bne r0, r5, Exit add r3, r3,
r4 j Loop Exit
29Other Styles of MIPS Addressing
- Constant or immediate operands
- Programs often use constant values
- I.e. incrementing to the next data element while
scanning an array - addi instruction - adds an immediate value to a
register
30Immediate Operands
Example What is the machine code for the
following? (Remember the I-format instruction)
addi r4, r4, 4
Solution
decimal
op
rs
rt
Immediate
binary
31Addressing in Branches and Jumps
- Last instruction format - J-type (J-format)
- Branches do not use J-type.
- Must specify 2 registers to compare
- Use I-type