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The Renease M32R version of as
has a few machine
dependent options:
-m32rx
as
can assemble code for several different members of the
Renesas M32R family. Normally the default is to assemble code for
the M32R microprocessor. This option may be used to change the default
to the M32RX microprocessor, which adds some more instructions to the
basic M32R instruction set, and some additional parameters to some of
the original instructions.
-m32r2
This option changes the target processor to the M32R2 microprocessor.
-m32r
This option can be used to restore the assembler’s default behaviour of assembling for the M32R microprocessor. This can be useful if the default has been changed by a previous command line option.
-little
This option tells the assembler to produce little-endian code and data. The default is dependent upon how the toolchain was configured.
-EL
This is a synonym for -little.
-big
This option tells the assembler to produce big-endian code and data.
-EB
This is a synonum for -big.
-KPIC
This option specifies that the output of the assembler should be marked as position-independent code (PIC).
-parallel
This option tells the assembler to attempts to combine two sequential instructions into a single, parallel instruction, where it is legal to do so.
-no-parallel
This option disables a previously enabled -parallel option.
-no-bitinst
This option disables the support for the extended bit-field instructions provided by the M32R2. If this support needs to be re-enabled the -bitinst switch can be used to restore it.
-O
This option tells the assembler to attempt to optimize the instructions that it produces. This includes filling delay slots and converting sequential instructions into parallel ones. This option implies -parallel.
-warn-explicit-parallel-conflicts
Instructs as
to produce warning messages when
questionable parallel instructions are encountered. This option is
enabled by default, but gcc
disables it when it invokes
as
directly. Questionable instructions are those whose
behaviour would be different if they were executed sequentially. For
example the code fragment ‘mv r1, r2 || mv r3, r1’ produces a
different result from ‘mv r1, r2 \n mv r3, r1’ since the former
moves r1 into r3 and then r2 into r1, whereas the later moves r2 into r1
and r3.
-Wp
This is a shorter synonym for the -warn-explicit-parallel-conflicts option.
-no-warn-explicit-parallel-conflicts
Instructs as
not to produce warning messages when
questionable parallel instructions are encountered.
-Wnp
This is a shorter synonym for the -no-warn-explicit-parallel-conflicts option.
-ignore-parallel-conflicts
This option tells the assembler’s to stop checking parallel instructions for constraint violations. This ability is provided for hardware vendors testing chip designs and should not be used under normal circumstances.
-no-ignore-parallel-conflicts
This option restores the assembler’s default behaviour of checking parallel instructions to detect constraint violations.
-Ip
This is a shorter synonym for the -ignore-parallel-conflicts option.
-nIp
This is a shorter synonym for the -no-ignore-parallel-conflicts option.
-warn-unmatched-high
This option tells the assembler to produce a warning message if a
.high
pseudo op is encountered without a matching .low
pseudo op. The presence of such an unmatched pseudo op usually
indicates a programming error.
-no-warn-unmatched-high
Disables a previously enabled -warn-unmatched-high option.
-Wuh
This is a shorter synonym for the -warn-unmatched-high option.
-Wnuh
This is a shorter synonym for the -no-warn-unmatched-high option.
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