Previous: Modifiers, Up: Constraints [Contents][Index]
Whenever possible, you should use the general-purpose constraint letters
in asm
arguments, since they will convey meaning more readily to
people reading your code. Failing that, use the constraint letters
that usually have very similar meanings across architectures. The most
commonly used constraints are ‘m’ and ‘r’ (for memory and
general-purpose registers respectively; see Simple Constraints), and
‘I’, usually the letter indicating the most common
immediate-constant format.
Each architecture defines additional constraints. These constraints
are used by the compiler itself for instruction generation, as well as
for asm
statements; therefore, some of the constraints are not
particularly useful for asm
. Here is a summary of some of the
machine-dependent constraints available on some particular machines;
it includes both constraints that are useful for asm
and
constraints that aren’t. The compiler source file mentioned in the
table heading for each architecture is the definitive reference for
the meanings of that architecture’s constraints.
k
The stack pointer register (SP
)
w
Floating point register, Advanced SIMD vector register or SVE vector register
x
Like w
, but restricted to registers 0 to 15 inclusive.
y
Like w
, but restricted to registers 0 to 7 inclusive.
Upl
One of the low eight SVE predicate registers (P0
to P7
)
Upa
Any of the SVE predicate registers (P0
to P15
)
I
Integer constant that is valid as an immediate operand in an ADD
instruction
J
Integer constant that is valid as an immediate operand in a SUB
instruction (once negated)
K
Integer constant that can be used with a 32-bit logical instruction
L
Integer constant that can be used with a 64-bit logical instruction
M
Integer constant that is valid as an immediate operand in a 32-bit MOV
pseudo instruction. The MOV
may be assembled to one of several different
machine instructions depending on the value
N
Integer constant that is valid as an immediate operand in a 64-bit MOV
pseudo instruction
S
An absolute symbolic address or a label reference
Y
Floating point constant zero
Z
Integer constant zero
Ush
The high part (bits 12 and upwards) of the pc-relative address of a symbol within 4GB of the instruction
Q
A memory address which uses a single base register with no offset
Ump
A memory address suitable for a load/store pair instruction in SI, DI, SF and DF modes
I
Immediate integer in the range -16 to 64
J
Immediate 16-bit signed integer
Kf
Immediate constant -1
L
Immediate 15-bit unsigned integer
A
Immediate constant that can be inlined in an instruction encoding: integer -16..64, or float 0.0, +/-0.5, +/-1.0, +/-2.0, +/-4.0, 1.0/(2.0*PI)
B
Immediate 32-bit signed integer that can be attached to an instruction encoding
C
Immediate 32-bit integer in range -16..4294967295 (i.e. 32-bit unsigned integer or ‘A’ constraint)
DA
Immediate 64-bit constant that can be split into two ‘A’ constants
DB
Immediate 64-bit constant that can be split into two ‘B’ constants
U
Any unspec
Y
Any symbol_ref
or label_ref
v
VGPR register
Sg
SGPR register
SD
SGPR registers valid for instruction destinations, including VCC, M0 and EXEC
SS
SGPR registers valid for instruction sources, including VCC, M0, EXEC and SCC
Sm
SGPR registers valid as a source for scalar memory instructions (excludes M0 and EXEC)
Sv
SGPR registers valid as a source or destination for vector instructions (excludes EXEC)
ca
All condition registers: SCC, VCCZ, EXECZ
cs
Scalar condition register: SCC
cV
Vector condition register: VCC, VCC_LO, VCC_HI
e
EXEC register (EXEC_LO and EXEC_HI)
RB
Memory operand with address space suitable for buffer_*
instructions
RF
Memory operand with address space suitable for flat_*
instructions
RS
Memory operand with address space suitable for s_*
instructions
RL
Memory operand with address space suitable for ds_*
LDS instructions
RG
Memory operand with address space suitable for ds_*
GDS instructions
RD
Memory operand with address space suitable for any ds_*
instructions
RM
Memory operand with address space suitable for global_*
instructions
q
Registers usable in ARCompact 16-bit instructions: r0
-r3
,
r12
-r15
. This constraint can only match when the -mq
option is in effect.
e
Registers usable as base-regs of memory addresses in ARCompact 16-bit memory
instructions: r0
-r3
, r12
-r15
, sp
.
This constraint can only match when the -mq
option is in effect.
D
ARC FPX (dpfp) 64-bit registers. D0
, D1
.
I
A signed 12-bit integer constant.
Cal
constant for arithmetic/logical operations. This might be any constant that can be put into a long immediate by the assmbler or linker without involving a PIC relocation.
K
A 3-bit unsigned integer constant.
L
A 6-bit unsigned integer constant.
CnL
One’s complement of a 6-bit unsigned integer constant.
CmL
Two’s complement of a 6-bit unsigned integer constant.
M
A 5-bit unsigned integer constant.
O
A 7-bit unsigned integer constant.
P
A 8-bit unsigned integer constant.
H
Any const_double value.
h
In Thumb state, the core registers r8
-r15
.
k
The stack pointer register.
l
In Thumb State the core registers r0
-r7
. In ARM state this
is an alias for the r
constraint.
t
VFP floating-point registers s0
-s31
. Used for 32 bit values.
w
VFP floating-point registers d0
-d31
and the appropriate
subset d0
-d15
based on command line options.
Used for 64 bit values only. Not valid for Thumb1.
y
The iWMMX co-processor registers.
z
The iWMMX GR registers.
G
The floating-point constant 0.0
I
Integer that is valid as an immediate operand in a data processing instruction. That is, an integer in the range 0 to 255 rotated by a multiple of 2
J
Integer in the range -4095 to 4095
K
Integer that satisfies constraint ‘I’ when inverted (ones complement)
L
Integer that satisfies constraint ‘I’ when negated (twos complement)
M
Integer in the range 0 to 32
Q
A memory reference where the exact address is in a single register
(‘‘m’’ is preferable for asm
statements)
R
An item in the constant pool
S
A symbol in the text segment of the current file
Uv
A memory reference suitable for VFP load/store insns (reg+constant offset)
Uy
A memory reference suitable for iWMMXt load/store instructions.
Uq
A memory reference suitable for the ARMv4 ldrsb instruction.
l
Registers from r0 to r15
a
Registers from r16 to r23
d
Registers from r16 to r31
w
Registers from r24 to r31. These registers can be used in ‘adiw’ command
e
Pointer register (r26–r31)
b
Base pointer register (r28–r31)
q
Stack pointer register (SPH:SPL)
t
Temporary register r0
x
Register pair X (r27:r26)
y
Register pair Y (r29:r28)
z
Register pair Z (r31:r30)
I
Constant greater than -1, less than 64
J
Constant greater than -64, less than 1
K
Constant integer 2
L
Constant integer 0
M
Constant that fits in 8 bits
N
Constant integer -1
O
Constant integer 8, 16, or 24
P
Constant integer 1
G
A floating point constant 0.0
Q
A memory address based on Y or Z pointer with displacement.
a
P register
d
D register
z
A call clobbered P register.
qn
A single register. If n is in the range 0 to 7, the corresponding D
register. If it is A
, then the register P0.
D
Even-numbered D register
W
Odd-numbered D register
e
Accumulator register.
A
Even-numbered accumulator register.
B
Odd-numbered accumulator register.
b
I register
v
B register
f
M register
c
Registers used for circular buffering, i.e. I, B, or L registers.
C
The CC register.
t
LT0 or LT1.
k
LC0 or LC1.
u
LB0 or LB1.
x
Any D, P, B, M, I or L register.
y
Additional registers typically used only in prologues and epilogues: RETS, RETN, RETI, RETX, RETE, ASTAT, SEQSTAT and USP.
w
Any register except accumulators or CC.
Ksh
Signed 16 bit integer (in the range -32768 to 32767)
Kuh
Unsigned 16 bit integer (in the range 0 to 65535)
Ks7
Signed 7 bit integer (in the range -64 to 63)
Ku7
Unsigned 7 bit integer (in the range 0 to 127)
Ku5
Unsigned 5 bit integer (in the range 0 to 31)
Ks4
Signed 4 bit integer (in the range -8 to 7)
Ks3
Signed 3 bit integer (in the range -3 to 4)
Ku3
Unsigned 3 bit integer (in the range 0 to 7)
Pn
Constant n, where n is a single-digit constant in the range 0 to 4.
PA
An integer equal to one of the MACFLAG_XXX constants that is suitable for use with either accumulator.
PB
An integer equal to one of the MACFLAG_XXX constants that is suitable for use only with accumulator A1.
M1
Constant 255.
M2
Constant 65535.
J
An integer constant with exactly a single bit set.
L
An integer constant with all bits set except exactly one.
H
Q
Any SYMBOL_REF.
b
Registers from r0 to r14 (registers without stack pointer)
t
Register from r0 to r11 (all 16-bit registers)
p
Register from r12 to r15 (all 32-bit registers)
I
Signed constant that fits in 4 bits
J
Signed constant that fits in 5 bits
K
Signed constant that fits in 6 bits
L
Unsigned constant that fits in 4 bits
M
Signed constant that fits in 32 bits
N
Check for 64 bits wide constants for add/sub instructions
G
Floating point constant that is legal for store immediate
a
The mini registers r0 - r7.
b
The low registers r0 - r15.
c
C register.
y
HI and LO registers.
l
LO register.
h
HI register.
v
Vector registers.
z
Stack pointer register (SP).
U16
An unsigned 16-bit constant.
K
An unsigned 5-bit constant.
L
A signed 11-bit constant.
Cm1
A signed 11-bit constant added to -1. Can only match when the -m1reg-reg option is active.
Cl1
Left-shift of -1, i.e., a bit mask with a block of leading ones, the rest being a block of trailing zeroes. Can only match when the -m1reg-reg option is active.
Cr1
Right-shift of -1, i.e., a bit mask with a trailing block of ones, the rest being zeroes. Or to put it another way, one less than a power of two. Can only match when the -m1reg-reg option is active.
Cal
Constant for arithmetic/logical operations.
This is like i
, except that for position independent code,
no symbols / expressions needing relocations are allowed.
Csy
Symbolic constant for call/jump instruction.
Rcs
The register class usable in short insns. This is a register class constraint, and can thus drive register allocation. This constraint won’t match unless -mprefer-short-insn-regs is in effect.
Rsc
The the register class of registers that can be used to hold a sibcall call address. I.e., a caller-saved register.
Rct
Core control register class.
Rgs
The register group usable in short insns. This constraint does not use a register class, so that it only passively matches suitable registers, and doesn’t drive register allocation.
Rra
Matches the return address if it can be replaced with the link register.
Rcc
Matches the integer condition code register.
Sra
Matches the return address if it is in a stack slot.
Cfm
Matches control register values to switch fp mode, which are encapsulated in
UNSPEC_FP_MODE
.
a
Register in the class ACC_REGS
(acc0
to acc7
).
b
Register in the class EVEN_ACC_REGS
(acc0
to acc7
).
c
Register in the class CC_REGS
(fcc0
to fcc3
and
icc0
to icc3
).
d
Register in the class GPR_REGS
(gr0
to gr63
).
e
Register in the class EVEN_REGS
(gr0
to gr63
).
Odd registers are excluded not in the class but through the use of a machine
mode larger than 4 bytes.
f
Register in the class FPR_REGS
(fr0
to fr63
).
h
Register in the class FEVEN_REGS
(fr0
to fr63
).
Odd registers are excluded not in the class but through the use of a machine
mode larger than 4 bytes.
l
Register in the class LR_REG
(the lr
register).
q
Register in the class QUAD_REGS
(gr2
to gr63
).
Register numbers not divisible by 4 are excluded not in the class but through
the use of a machine mode larger than 8 bytes.
t
Register in the class ICC_REGS
(icc0
to icc3
).
u
Register in the class FCC_REGS
(fcc0
to fcc3
).
v
Register in the class ICR_REGS
(cc4
to cc7
).
w
Register in the class FCR_REGS
(cc0
to cc3
).
x
Register in the class QUAD_FPR_REGS
(fr0
to fr63
).
Register numbers not divisible by 4 are excluded not in the class but through
the use of a machine mode larger than 8 bytes.
z
Register in the class SPR_REGS
(lcr
and lr
).
A
Register in the class QUAD_ACC_REGS
(acc0
to acc7
).
B
Register in the class ACCG_REGS
(accg0
to accg7
).
C
Register in the class CR_REGS
(cc0
to cc7
).
G
Floating point constant zero
I
6-bit signed integer constant
J
10-bit signed integer constant
L
16-bit signed integer constant
M
16-bit unsigned integer constant
N
12-bit signed integer constant that is negative—i.e. in the range of -2048 to -1
O
Constant zero
P
12-bit signed integer constant that is greater than zero—i.e. in the range of 1 to 2047.
A
An absolute address
B
An offset address
W
A register indirect memory operand
e
An offset address.
f
An offset address.
O
The constant zero or one
I
A 16-bit signed constant (-32768 … 32767)
w
A bitfield mask suitable for bext or bins
x
An inverted bitfield mask suitable for bext or bins
L
A 16-bit unsigned constant, multiple of 4 (0 … 65532)
S
A 20-bit signed constant (-524288 … 524287)
b
A constant for a bitfield width (1 … 16)
KA
A 10-bit signed constant (-512 … 511)
a
General register 1
f
Floating point register
q
Shift amount register
x
Floating point register (deprecated)
y
Upper floating point register (32-bit), floating point register (64-bit)
Z
Any register
I
Signed 11-bit integer constant
J
Signed 14-bit integer constant
K
Integer constant that can be deposited with a zdepi
instruction
L
Signed 5-bit integer constant
M
Integer constant 0
N
Integer constant that can be loaded with a ldil
instruction
O
Integer constant whose value plus one is a power of 2
P
Integer constant that can be used for and
operations in depi
and extru
instructions
S
Integer constant 31
U
Integer constant 63
G
Floating-point constant 0.0
A
A lo_sum
data-linkage-table memory operand
Q
A memory operand that can be used as the destination operand of an integer store instruction
R
A scaled or unscaled indexed memory operand
T
A memory operand for floating-point loads and stores
W
A register indirect memory operand
a
General register r0
to r3
for addl
instruction
b
Branch register
c
Predicate register (‘c’ as in “conditional”)
d
Application register residing in M-unit
e
Application register residing in I-unit
f
Floating-point register
m
Memory operand. If used together with ‘<’ or ‘>’, the operand can have postincrement and postdecrement which require printing with ‘%Pn’ on IA-64.
G
Floating-point constant 0.0 or 1.0
I
14-bit signed integer constant
J
22-bit signed integer constant
K
8-bit signed integer constant for logical instructions
L
8-bit adjusted signed integer constant for compare pseudo-ops
M
6-bit unsigned integer constant for shift counts
N
9-bit signed integer constant for load and store postincrements
O
The constant zero
P
0 or -1 for dep
instruction
Q
Non-volatile memory for floating-point loads and stores
R
Integer constant in the range 1 to 4 for shladd
instruction
S
Memory operand except postincrement and postdecrement. This is now roughly the same as ‘m’ when not used together with ‘<’ or ‘>’.
Rsp
Rfb
Rsb
‘$sp’, ‘$fb’, ‘$sb’.
Rcr
Any control register, when they’re 16 bits wide (nothing if control registers are 24 bits wide)
Rcl
Any control register, when they’re 24 bits wide.
R0w
R1w
R2w
R3w
$r0, $r1, $r2, $r3.
R02
$r0 or $r2, or $r2r0 for 32 bit values.
R13
$r1 or $r3, or $r3r1 for 32 bit values.
Rdi
A register that can hold a 64 bit value.
Rhl
$r0 or $r1 (registers with addressable high/low bytes)
R23
$r2 or $r3
Raa
Address registers
Raw
Address registers when they’re 16 bits wide.
Ral
Address registers when they’re 24 bits wide.
Rqi
Registers that can hold QI values.
Rad
Registers that can be used with displacements ($a0, $a1, $sb).
Rsi
Registers that can hold 32 bit values.
Rhi
Registers that can hold 16 bit values.
Rhc
Registers chat can hold 16 bit values, including all control registers.
Rra
$r0 through R1, plus $a0 and $a1.
Rfl
The flags register.
Rmm
The memory-based pseudo-registers $mem0 through $mem15.
Rpi
Registers that can hold pointers (16 bit registers for r8c, m16c; 24 bit registers for m32cm, m32c).
Rpa
Matches multiple registers in a PARALLEL to form a larger register. Used to match function return values.
Is3
-8 … 7
IS1
-128 … 127
IS2
-32768 … 32767
IU2
0 … 65535
In4
-8 … -1 or 1 … 8
In5
-16 … -1 or 1 … 16
In6
-32 … -1 or 1 … 32
IM2
-65536 … -1
Ilb
An 8 bit value with exactly one bit set.
Ilw
A 16 bit value with exactly one bit set.
Sd
The common src/dest memory addressing modes.
Sa
Memory addressed using $a0 or $a1.
Si
Memory addressed with immediate addresses.
Ss
Memory addressed using the stack pointer ($sp).
Sf
Memory addressed using the frame base register ($fb).
Ss
Memory addressed using the small base register ($sb).
S1
$r1h
d
A general register (r0
to r31
).
z
A status register (rmsr
, $fcc1
to $fcc7
).
d
A general-purpose register. This is equivalent to r
unless
generating MIPS16 code, in which case the MIPS16 register set is used.
f
A floating-point register (if available).
h
Formerly the hi
register. This constraint is no longer supported.
l
The lo
register. Use this register to store values that are
no bigger than a word.
x
The concatenated hi
and lo
registers. Use this register
to store doubleword values.
c
A register suitable for use in an indirect jump. This will always be
$25
for -mabicalls.
v
Register $3
. Do not use this constraint in new code;
it is retained only for compatibility with glibc.
y
Equivalent to r
; retained for backwards compatibility.
z
A floating-point condition code register.
I
A signed 16-bit constant (for arithmetic instructions).
J
Integer zero.
K
An unsigned 16-bit constant (for logic instructions).
L
A signed 32-bit constant in which the lower 16 bits are zero.
Such constants can be loaded using lui
.
M
A constant that cannot be loaded using lui
, addiu
or ori
.
N
A constant in the range -65535 to -1 (inclusive).
O
A signed 15-bit constant.
P
A constant in the range 1 to 65535 (inclusive).
G
Floating-point zero.
R
An address that can be used in a non-macro load or store.
ZC
A memory operand whose address is formed by a base register and offset
that is suitable for use in instructions with the same addressing mode
as ll
and sc
.
ZD
An address suitable for a prefetch
instruction, or for any other
instruction with the same addressing mode as prefetch
.
a
Address register
d
Data register
f
68881 floating-point register, if available
I
Integer in the range 1 to 8
J
16-bit signed number
K
Signed number whose magnitude is greater than 0x80
L
Integer in the range -8 to -1
M
Signed number whose magnitude is greater than 0x100
N
Range 24 to 31, rotatert:SI 8 to 1 expressed as rotate
O
16 (for rotate using swap)
P
Range 8 to 15, rotatert:HI 8 to 1 expressed as rotate
R
Numbers that mov3q can handle
G
Floating point constant that is not a 68881 constant
S
Operands that satisfy ’m’ when -mpcrel is in effect
T
Operands that satisfy ’s’ when -mpcrel is not in effect
Q
Address register indirect addressing mode
U
Register offset addressing
W
const_call_operand
Cs
symbol_ref or const
Ci
const_int
C0
const_int 0
Cj
Range of signed numbers that don’t fit in 16 bits
Cmvq
Integers valid for mvq
Capsw
Integers valid for a moveq followed by a swap
Cmvz
Integers valid for mvz
Cmvs
Integers valid for mvs
Ap
push_operand
Ac
Non-register operands allowed in clr
A
An absolute address
B
An offset address
W
A register indirect memory operand
I
A constant in the range of 0 to 255.
N
A constant in the range of 0 to -255.
R12
Register R12.
R13
Register R13.
K
Integer constant 1.
L
Integer constant -1^20..1^19.
M
Integer constant 1-4.
Ya
Memory references which do not require an extended MOVX instruction.
Yl
Memory reference, labels only.
Ys
Memory reference, stack only.
w
LOW register class $r0 to $r7 constraint for V3/V3M ISA.
l
LOW register class $r0 to $r7.
d
MIDDLE register class $r0 to $r11, $r16 to $r19.
h
HIGH register class $r12 to $r14, $r20 to $r31.
t
Temporary assist register $ta (i.e. $r15).
k
Stack register $sp.
Iu03
Unsigned immediate 3-bit value.
In03
Negative immediate 3-bit value in the range of -7–0.
Iu04
Unsigned immediate 4-bit value.
Is05
Signed immediate 5-bit value.
Iu05
Unsigned immediate 5-bit value.
In05
Negative immediate 5-bit value in the range of -31–0.
Ip05
Unsigned immediate 5-bit value for movpi45 instruction with range 16–47.
Iu06
Unsigned immediate 6-bit value constraint for addri36.sp instruction.
Iu08
Unsigned immediate 8-bit value.
Iu09
Unsigned immediate 9-bit value.
Is10
Signed immediate 10-bit value.
Is11
Signed immediate 11-bit value.
Is15
Signed immediate 15-bit value.
Iu15
Unsigned immediate 15-bit value.
Ic15
A constant which is not in the range of imm15u but ok for bclr instruction.
Ie15
A constant which is not in the range of imm15u but ok for bset instruction.
It15
A constant which is not in the range of imm15u but ok for btgl instruction.
Ii15
A constant whose compliment value is in the range of imm15u and ok for bitci instruction.
Is16
Signed immediate 16-bit value.
Is17
Signed immediate 17-bit value.
Is19
Signed immediate 19-bit value.
Is20
Signed immediate 20-bit value.
Ihig
The immediate value that can be simply set high 20-bit.
Izeb
The immediate value 0xff.
Izeh
The immediate value 0xffff.
Ixls
The immediate value 0x01.
Ix11
The immediate value 0x7ff.
Ibms
The immediate value with power of 2.
Ifex
The immediate value with power of 2 minus 1.
U33
Memory constraint for 333 format.
U45
Memory constraint for 45 format.
U37
Memory constraint for 37 format.
I
Integer that is valid as an immediate operand in an instruction taking a signed 16-bit number. Range -32768 to 32767.
J
Integer that is valid as an immediate operand in an instruction taking an unsigned 16-bit number. Range 0 to 65535.
K
Integer that is valid as an immediate operand in an instruction taking only the upper 16-bits of a 32-bit number. Range 32-bit numbers with the lower 16-bits being 0.
L
Integer that is valid as an immediate operand for a shift instruction. Range 0 to 31.
M
Integer that is valid as an immediate operand for
only the value 0. Can be used in conjunction with
the format modifier z
to use r0
instead of 0
in the assembly output.
N
Integer that is valid as an immediate operand for a custom instruction opcode. Range 0 to 255.
P
An immediate operand for R2 andchi/andci instructions.
S
Matches immediates which are addresses in the small
data section and therefore can be added to gp
as a 16-bit immediate to re-create their 32-bit value.
U
Matches constants suitable as an operand for the rdprs and cache instructions.
v
A memory operand suitable for Nios II R2 load/store exclusive instructions.
w
A memory operand suitable for load/store IO and cache instructions.
I
Integer that is valid as an immediate operand in an instruction taking a signed 16-bit number. Range -32768 to 32767.
K
Integer that is valid as an immediate operand in an instruction taking an unsigned 16-bit number. Range 0 to 65535.
M
Signed 16-bit constant shifted left 16 bits. (Used with l.movhi
)
O
Zero
a
Floating point registers AC0 through AC3. These can be loaded from/to memory with a single instruction.
d
Odd numbered general registers (R1, R3, R5). These are used for 16-bit multiply operations.
D
A memory reference that is encoded within the opcode, but not auto-increment or auto-decrement.
f
Any of the floating point registers (AC0 through AC5).
G
Floating point constant 0.
h
Floating point registers AC4 and AC5. These cannot be loaded from/to memory with a single instruction.
I
An integer constant that fits in 16 bits.
J
An integer constant whose low order 16 bits are zero.
K
An integer constant that does not meet the constraints for codes ‘I’ or ‘J’.
L
The integer constant 1.
M
The integer constant -1.
N
The integer constant 0.
O
Integer constants 0 through 3; shifts by these amounts are handled as multiple single-bit shifts rather than a single variable-length shift.
Q
A memory reference which requires an additional word (address or offset) after the opcode.
R
A memory reference that is encoded within the opcode.
r
A general purpose register (GPR), r0
…r31
.
b
A base register. Like r
, but r0
is not allowed, so
r1
…r31
.
f
A floating point register (FPR), f0
…f31
.
d
A floating point register. This is the same as f
nowadays;
historically f
was for single-precision and d
was for
double-precision floating point.
v
An Altivec vector register (VR), v0
…v31
.
wa
A VSX register (VSR), vs0
…vs63
. This is either an
FPR (vs0
…vs31
are f0
…f31
) or a VR
(vs32
…vs63
are v0
…v31
).
When using wa
, you should use the %x
output modifier, so that
the correct register number is printed. For example:
asm ("xvadddp %x0,%x1,%x2" : "=wa" (v1) : "wa" (v2), "wa" (v3));
You should not use %x
for v
operands:
asm ("xsaddqp %0,%1,%2" : "=v" (v1) : "v" (v2), "v" (v3));
c
The count register, ctr
.
l
The link register, lr
.
x
Condition register field 0, cr0
.
y
Any condition register field, cr0
…cr7
.
I
A signed 16-bit constant.
J
An unsigned 16-bit constant shifted left 16 bits (use L
instead
for SImode
constants).
K
An unsigned 16-bit constant.
L
A signed 16-bit constant shifted left 16 bits.
eI
A signed 34-bit integer constant if prefixed instructions are supported.
m
A memory operand.
Normally, m
does not allow addresses that update the base register.
If the <
or >
constraint is also used, they are allowed and
therefore on PowerPC targets in that case it is only safe
to use m<>
in an asm
statement if that asm
statement
accesses the operand exactly once. The asm
statement must also
use %U<opno>
as a placeholder for the “update” flag in the
corresponding load or store instruction. For example:
asm ("st%U0 %1,%0" : "=m<>" (mem) : "r" (val));
is correct but:
asm ("st %1,%0" : "=m<>" (mem) : "r" (val));
is not.
Q
A memory operand addressed by just a base register.
Z
A memory operand accessed with indexed or indirect addressing.
a
An indexed or indirect address.
I
An unsigned 8-bit integer constant.
J
An unsigned 16-bit integer constant.
L
An unsigned 5-bit integer constant (for shift counts).
T
A text segment (program memory) constant label.
Z
Integer constant zero.
Int3
An integer constant in the range 1 … 7.
Int8
An integer constant in the range 0 … 255.
J
An integer constant in the range -255 … 0
K
The integer constant 1.
L
The integer constant -1.
M
The integer constant 0.
N
The integer constant 2.
O
The integer constant -2.
P
An integer constant in the range 1 … 15.
Qbi
The built-in compare types–eq, ne, gtu, ltu, geu, and leu.
Qsc
The synthetic compare types–gt, lt, ge, and le.
Wab
A memory reference with an absolute address.
Wbc
A memory reference using BC
as a base register, with an optional offset.
Wca
A memory reference using AX
, BC
, DE
, or HL
for the address, for calls.
Wcv
A memory reference using any 16-bit register pair for the address, for calls.
Wd2
A memory reference using DE
as a base register, with an optional offset.
Wde
A memory reference using DE
as a base register, without any offset.
Wfr
Any memory reference to an address in the far address space.
Wh1
A memory reference using HL
as a base register, with an optional one-byte offset.
Whb
A memory reference using HL
as a base register, with B
or C
as the index register.
Whl
A memory reference using HL
as a base register, without any offset.
Ws1
A memory reference using SP
as a base register, with an optional one-byte offset.
Y
Any memory reference to an address in the near address space.
A
The AX
register.
B
The BC
register.
D
The DE
register.
R
A
through L
registers.
S
The SP
register.
T
The HL
register.
Z08W
The 16-bit R8
register.
Z10W
The 16-bit R10
register.
Zint
The registers reserved for interrupts (R24
to R31
).
a
The A
register.
b
The B
register.
c
The C
register.
d
The D
register.
e
The E
register.
h
The H
register.
l
The L
register.
v
The virtual registers.
w
The PSW
register.
x
The X
register.
f
A floating-point register (if available).
I
An I-type 12-bit signed immediate.
J
Integer zero.
K
A 5-bit unsigned immediate for CSR access instructions.
A
An address that is held in a general-purpose register.
Q
An address which does not involve register indirect addressing or pre/post increment/decrement addressing.
Symbol
A symbol reference.
Int08
A constant in the range -256 to 255, inclusive.
Sint08
A constant in the range -128 to 127, inclusive.
Sint16
A constant in the range -32768 to 32767, inclusive.
Sint24
A constant in the range -8388608 to 8388607, inclusive.
Uint04
A constant in the range 0 to 15, inclusive.
a
Address register (general purpose register except r0)
c
Condition code register
d
Data register (arbitrary general purpose register)
f
Floating-point register
I
Unsigned 8-bit constant (0–255)
J
Unsigned 12-bit constant (0–4095)
K
Signed 16-bit constant (-32768–32767)
L
Value appropriate as displacement.
(0..4095)
for short displacement
(-524288..524287)
for long displacement
M
Constant integer with a value of 0x7fffffff.
N
Multiple letter constraint followed by 4 parameter letters.
0..9:
number of the part counting from most to least significant
H,Q:
mode of the part
D,S,H:
mode of the containing operand
0,F:
value of the other parts (F—all bits set)
The constraint matches if the specified part of a constant has a value different from its other parts.
Q
Memory reference without index register and with short displacement.
R
Memory reference with index register and short displacement.
S
Memory reference without index register but with long displacement.
T
Memory reference with index register and long displacement.
U
Pointer with short displacement.
W
Pointer with long displacement.
Y
Shift count operand.
f
Floating-point register on the SPARC-V8 architecture and lower floating-point register on the SPARC-V9 architecture.
e
Floating-point register. It is equivalent to ‘f’ on the SPARC-V8 architecture and contains both lower and upper floating-point registers on the SPARC-V9 architecture.
c
Floating-point condition code register.
d
Lower floating-point register. It is only valid on the SPARC-V9 architecture when the Visual Instruction Set is available.
b
Floating-point register. It is only valid on the SPARC-V9 architecture when the Visual Instruction Set is available.
h
64-bit global or out register for the SPARC-V8+ architecture.
C
The constant all-ones, for floating-point.
A
Signed 5-bit constant
D
A vector constant
I
Signed 13-bit constant
J
Zero
K
32-bit constant with the low 12 bits clear (a constant that can be
loaded with the sethi
instruction)
L
A constant in the range supported by movcc
instructions (11-bit
signed immediate)
M
A constant in the range supported by movrcc
instructions (10-bit
signed immediate)
N
Same as ‘K’, except that it verifies that bits that are not in the
lower 32-bit range are all zero. Must be used instead of ‘K’ for
modes wider than SImode
O
The constant 4096
G
Floating-point zero
H
Signed 13-bit constant, sign-extended to 32 or 64 bits
P
The constant -1
Q
Floating-point constant whose integral representation can be moved into an integer register using a single sethi instruction
R
Floating-point constant whose integral representation can be moved into an integer register using a single mov instruction
S
Floating-point constant whose integral representation can be moved into an integer register using a high/lo_sum instruction sequence
T
Memory address aligned to an 8-byte boundary
U
Even register
W
Memory address for ‘e’ constraint registers
w
Memory address with only a base register
Y
Vector zero
a
Register file A (A0–A31).
b
Register file B (B0–B31).
A
Predicate registers in register file A (A0–A2 on C64X and higher, A1 and A2 otherwise).
B
Predicate registers in register file B (B0–B2).
C
A call-used register in register file B (B0–B9, B16–B31).
Da
Register file A, excluding predicate registers (A3–A31, plus A0 if not C64X or higher).
Db
Register file B, excluding predicate registers (B3–B31).
Iu4
Integer constant in the range 0 … 15.
Iu5
Integer constant in the range 0 … 31.
In5
Integer constant in the range -31 … 0.
Is5
Integer constant in the range -16 … 15.
I5x
Integer constant that can be the operand of an ADDA or a SUBA insn.
IuB
Integer constant in the range 0 … 65535.
IsB
Integer constant in the range -32768 … 32767.
IsC
Integer constant in the range -2^{20} … 2^{20} - 1.
Jc
Integer constant that is a valid mask for the clr instruction.
Js
Integer constant that is a valid mask for the set instruction.
Q
Memory location with A base register.
R
Memory location with B base register.
Z
Register B14 (aka DP).
R00
R01
R02
R03
R04
R05
R06
R07
R08
R09
R10
Each of these represents a register constraint for an individual register, from r0 to r10.
I
Signed 8-bit integer constant.
J
Signed 16-bit integer constant.
K
Unsigned 16-bit integer constant.
L
Integer constant that fits in one signed byte when incremented by one (-129 … 126).
m
Memory operand. If used together with ‘<’ or ‘>’, the operand can have postincrement which requires printing with ‘%In’ and ‘%in’ on TILE-Gx. For example:
asm ("st_add %I0,%1,%i0" : "=m<>" (*mem) : "r" (val));
M
A bit mask suitable for the BFINS instruction.
N
Integer constant that is a byte tiled out eight times.
O
The integer zero constant.
P
Integer constant that is a sign-extended byte tiled out as four shorts.
Q
Integer constant that fits in one signed byte when incremented (-129 … 126), but excluding -1.
S
Integer constant that has all 1 bits consecutive and starting at bit 0.
T
A 16-bit fragment of a got, tls, or pc-relative reference.
U
Memory operand except postincrement. This is roughly the same as ‘m’ when not used together with ‘<’ or ‘>’.
W
An 8-element vector constant with identical elements.
Y
A 4-element vector constant with identical elements.
Z0
The integer constant 0xffffffff.
Z1
The integer constant 0xffffffff00000000.
R00
R01
R02
R03
R04
R05
R06
R07
R08
R09
R10
Each of these represents a register constraint for an individual register, from r0 to r10.
I
Signed 8-bit integer constant.
J
Signed 16-bit integer constant.
K
Nonzero integer constant with low 16 bits zero.
L
Integer constant that fits in one signed byte when incremented by one (-129 … 126).
m
Memory operand. If used together with ‘<’ or ‘>’, the operand can have postincrement which requires printing with ‘%In’ and ‘%in’ on TILEPro. For example:
asm ("swadd %I0,%1,%i0" : "=m<>" (mem) : "r" (val));
M
A bit mask suitable for the MM instruction.
N
Integer constant that is a byte tiled out four times.
O
The integer zero constant.
P
Integer constant that is a sign-extended byte tiled out as two shorts.
Q
Integer constant that fits in one signed byte when incremented (-129 … 126), but excluding -1.
T
A symbolic operand, or a 16-bit fragment of a got, tls, or pc-relative reference.
U
Memory operand except postincrement. This is roughly the same as ‘m’ when not used together with ‘<’ or ‘>’.
W
A 4-element vector constant with identical elements.
Y
A 2-element vector constant with identical elements.
b
EAM register mdb
c
EAM register mdc
f
Floating point register
l
General register, but not r29
, r30
and r31
t
Register r1
u
Register r2
v
Register r3
G
Floating-point constant 0.0
J
Integer constant in the range 0 .. 65535 (16-bit immediate)
K
Integer constant in the range 1 .. 31 (5-bit immediate)
L
Integer constant in the range -65535 .. -1 (16-bit negative immediate)
M
Integer constant -1
O
Integer constant 0
P
Integer constant 32
R
Legacy register—the eight integer registers available on all
i386 processors (a
, b
, c
, d
,
si
, di
, bp
, sp
).
q
Any register accessible as rl
. In 32-bit mode, a
,
b
, c
, and d
; in 64-bit mode, any integer register.
Q
Any register accessible as rh
: a
, b
,
c
, and d
.
a
The a
register.
b
The b
register.
c
The c
register.
d
The d
register.
S
The si
register.
D
The di
register.
A
The a
and d
registers. This class is used for instructions
that return double word results in the ax:dx
register pair. Single
word values will be allocated either in ax
or dx
.
For example on i386 the following implements rdtsc
:
unsigned long long rdtsc (void) { unsigned long long tick; __asm__ __volatile__("rdtsc":"=A"(tick)); return tick; }
This is not correct on x86-64 as it would allocate tick in either ax
or dx
. You have to use the following variant instead:
unsigned long long rdtsc (void) { unsigned int tickl, tickh; __asm__ __volatile__("rdtsc":"=a"(tickl),"=d"(tickh)); return ((unsigned long long)tickh << 32)|tickl; }
U
The call-clobbered integer registers.
f
Any 80387 floating-point (stack) register.
t
Top of 80387 floating-point stack (%st(0)
).
u
Second from top of 80387 floating-point stack (%st(1)
).
y
Any MMX register.
x
Any SSE register.
v
Any EVEX encodable SSE register (%xmm0-%xmm31
).
Yz
First SSE register (%xmm0
).
I
Integer constant in the range 0 … 31, for 32-bit shifts.
J
Integer constant in the range 0 … 63, for 64-bit shifts.
K
Signed 8-bit integer constant.
L
0xFF
or 0xFFFF
, for andsi as a zero-extending move.
M
0, 1, 2, or 3 (shifts for the lea
instruction).
N
Unsigned 8-bit integer constant (for in
and out
instructions).
G
Standard 80387 floating point constant.
C
SSE constant zero operand.
e
32-bit signed integer constant, or a symbolic reference known to fit that range (for immediate operands in sign-extending x86-64 instructions).
We
32-bit signed integer constant, or a symbolic reference known
to fit that range (for sign-extending conversion operations that
require non-VOIDmode
immediate operands).
Wz
32-bit unsigned integer constant, or a symbolic reference known
to fit that range (for zero-extending conversion operations that
require non-VOIDmode
immediate operands).
Wd
128-bit integer constant where both the high and low 64-bit word
satisfy the e
constraint.
Z
32-bit unsigned integer constant, or a symbolic reference known to fit that range (for immediate operands in zero-extending x86-64 instructions).
Tv
VSIB address operand.
Ts
Address operand without segment register.
a
Register r0.
b
Register r1.
c
Register r2.
d
Register r8.
e
Registers r0 through r7.
t
Registers r0 and r1.
y
The carry register.
z
Registers r8 and r9.
I
A constant between 0 and 3 inclusive.
J
A constant that has exactly one bit set.
K
A constant that has exactly one bit clear.
L
A constant between 0 and 255 inclusive.
M
A constant between -255 and 0 inclusive.
N
A constant between -3 and 0 inclusive.
O
A constant between 1 and 4 inclusive.
P
A constant between -4 and -1 inclusive.
Q
A memory reference that is a stack push.
R
A memory reference that is a stack pop.
S
A memory reference that refers to a constant address of known value.
T
The register indicated by Rx (not implemented yet).
U
A constant that is not between 2 and 15 inclusive.
Z
The constant 0.
a
General-purpose 32-bit register
b
One-bit boolean register
A
MAC16 40-bit accumulator register
I
Signed 12-bit integer constant, for use in MOVI instructions
J
Signed 8-bit integer constant, for use in ADDI instructions
K
Integer constant valid for BccI instructions
L
Unsigned constant valid for BccUI instructions
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