Commit 67f799c4 authored by Michael Munday's avatar Michael Munday

doc: add s390x information to asm.html

Fixes #16362

Change-Id: I676718a1149ed2f3ff80cb031e25de7043805399
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/25157Reviewed-by: 's avatarRob Pike <r@golang.org>
parent d0256118
......@@ -780,6 +780,64 @@ mode as on the x86, but the only scale allowed is <code>1</code>.
</ul>
<h3 id="s390x">IBM z/Architecture, a.k.a. s390x</h3>
<p>
The registers <code>R10</code> and <code>R11</code> are reserved.
The assembler uses them to hold temporary values when assembling some instructions.
</p>
<p>
<code>R13</code> points to the <code>g</code> (goroutine) structure.
This register must be referred to as <code>g</code>; the name <code>R13</code> is not recognized.
</p>
<p>
<code>R15</code> points to the stack frame and should typically only be accessed using the
virtual registers <code>SP</code> and <code>FP</code>.
</p>
<p>
Load- and store-multiple instructions operate on a range of registers.
The range of registers is specified by a start register and an end register.
For example, <code>LMG</code> <code>(R9),</code> <code>R5,</code> <code>R7</code> would load
<code>R5</code>, <code>R6</code> and <code>R7</code> with the 64-bit values at
<code>0(R9)</code>, <code>8(R9)</code> and <code>16(R9)</code> respectively.
</p>
<p>
Storage-and-storage instructions such as <code>MVC</code> and <code>XC</code> are written
with the length as the first argument.
For example, <code>XC</code> <code>$8,</code> <code>(R9),</code> <code>(R9)</code> would clear
eight bytes at the address specified in <code>R9</code>.
</p>
<p>
If a vector instruction takes a length or an index as an argument then it will be the
first argument.
For example, <code>VLEIF</code> <code>$1,</code> <code>$16,</code> <code>V2</code> will load
the value sixteen into index one of <code>V2</code>.
Care should be taken when using vector instructions to ensure that they are available at
runtime.
To use vector instructions a machine must have both the vector facility (bit 129 in the
facility list) and kernel support.
Without kernel support a vector instruction will have no effect (it will be equivalent
to a <code>NOP</code> instruction).
</p>
<p>
Addressing modes:
</p>
<ul>
<li>
<code>(R5)(R6*1)</code>: The location at <code>R5</code> plus <code>R6</code>.
It is a scaled mode as on the x86, but the only scale allowed is <code>1</code>.
</li>
</ul>
<h3 id="unsupported_opcodes">Unsupported opcodes</h3>
<p>
......
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