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      1 <!--{
      2 	"Title": "A Quick Guide to Go's Assembler",
      3 	"Path":  "/doc/asm"
      4 }-->
      5 
      6 <h2 id="introduction">A Quick Guide to Go's Assembler</h2>
      7 
      8 <p>
      9 This document is a quick outline of the unusual form of assembly language used by the <code>gc</code> Go compiler.
     10 The document is not comprehensive.
     11 </p>
     12 
     13 <p>
     14 The assembler is based on the input style of the Plan 9 assemblers, which is documented in detail
     15 <a href="http://plan9.bell-labs.com/sys/doc/asm.html">elsewhere</a>.
     16 If you plan to write assembly language, you should read that document although much of it is Plan 9-specific.
     17 The current document provides a summary of the syntax and the differences with
     18 what is explained in that document, and
     19 describes the peculiarities that apply when writing assembly code to interact with Go.
     20 </p>
     21 
     22 <p>
     23 The most important thing to know about Go's assembler is that it is not a direct representation of the underlying machine.
     24 Some of the details map precisely to the machine, but some do not.
     25 This is because the compiler suite (see
     26 <a href="http://plan9.bell-labs.com/sys/doc/compiler.html">this description</a>)
     27 needs no assembler pass in the usual pipeline.
     28 Instead, the compiler operates on a kind of semi-abstract instruction set,
     29 and instruction selection occurs partly after code generation.
     30 The assembler works on the semi-abstract form, so
     31 when you see an instruction like <code>MOV</code>
     32 what the tool chain actually generates for that operation might
     33 not be a move instruction at all, perhaps a clear or load.
     34 Or it might correspond exactly to the machine instruction with that name.
     35 In general, machine-specific operations tend to appear as themselves, while more general concepts like
     36 memory move and subroutine call and return are more abstract.
     37 The details vary with architecture, and we apologize for the imprecision; the situation is not well-defined.
     38 </p>
     39 
     40 <p>
     41 The assembler program is a way to parse a description of that
     42 semi-abstract instruction set and turn it into instructions to be
     43 input to the linker.
     44 If you want to see what the instructions look like in assembly for a given architecture, say amd64, there
     45 are many examples in the sources of the standard library, in packages such as
     46 <a href="/pkg/runtime/"><code>runtime</code></a> and
     47 <a href="/pkg/math/big/"><code>math/big</code></a>.
     48 You can also examine what the compiler emits as assembly code
     49 (the actual output may differ from what you see here):
     50 </p>
     51 
     52 <pre>
     53 $ cat x.go
     54 package main
     55 
     56 func main() {
     57 	println(3)
     58 }
     59 $ GOOS=linux GOARCH=amd64 go tool compile -S x.go        # or: go build -gcflags -S x.go
     60 
     61 --- prog list "main" ---
     62 0000 (x.go:3) TEXT    main+0(SB),$8-0
     63 0001 (x.go:3) FUNCDATA $0,gcargs0+0(SB)
     64 0002 (x.go:3) FUNCDATA $1,gclocals0+0(SB)
     65 0003 (x.go:4) MOVQ    $3,(SP)
     66 0004 (x.go:4) PCDATA  $0,$8
     67 0005 (x.go:4) CALL    ,runtime.printint+0(SB)
     68 0006 (x.go:4) PCDATA  $0,$-1
     69 0007 (x.go:4) PCDATA  $0,$0
     70 0008 (x.go:4) CALL    ,runtime.printnl+0(SB)
     71 0009 (x.go:4) PCDATA  $0,$-1
     72 0010 (x.go:5) RET     ,
     73 ...
     74 </pre>
     75 
     76 <p>
     77 The <code>FUNCDATA</code> and <code>PCDATA</code> directives contain information
     78 for use by the garbage collector; they are introduced by the compiler.
     79 </p> 
     80 
     81 <!-- Commenting out because the feature is gone but it's popular and may come back.
     82 
     83 <p>
     84 To see what gets put in the binary after linking, add the <code>-a</code> flag to the linker:
     85 </p>
     86 
     87 <pre>
     88 $ go tool 6l -a x.6        # or: go build -ldflags -a x.go
     89 codeblk [0x2000,0x1d059) at offset 0x1000
     90 002000	main.main            | (3)	TEXT	main.main+0(SB),$8
     91 002000	65488b0c25a0080000   | (3)	MOVQ	2208(GS),CX
     92 002009	483b21               | (3)	CMPQ	SP,(CX)
     93 00200c	7707                 | (3)	JHI	,2015
     94 00200e	e83da20100           | (3)	CALL	,1c250+runtime.morestack00
     95 002013	ebeb                 | (3)	JMP	,2000
     96 002015	4883ec08             | (3)	SUBQ	$8,SP
     97 002019	                     | (3)	FUNCDATA	$0,main.gcargs0+0(SB)
     98 002019	                     | (3)	FUNCDATA	$1,main.gclocals0+0(SB)
     99 002019	48c7042403000000     | (4)	MOVQ	$3,(SP)
    100 002021	                     | (4)	PCDATA	$0,$8
    101 002021	e8aad20000           | (4)	CALL	,f2d0+runtime.printint
    102 002026	                     | (4)	PCDATA	$0,$-1
    103 002026	                     | (4)	PCDATA	$0,$0
    104 002026	e865d40000           | (4)	CALL	,f490+runtime.printnl
    105 00202b	                     | (4)	PCDATA	$0,$-1
    106 00202b	4883c408             | (5)	ADDQ	$8,SP
    107 00202f	c3                   | (5)	RET	,
    108 ...
    109 </pre>
    110 
    111 -->
    112 
    113 <h3 id="constants">Constants</h3>
    114 
    115 <p>
    116 Although the assembler takes its guidance from the Plan 9 assemblers,
    117 it is a distinct program, so there are some differences.
    118 One is in constant evaluation.
    119 Constant expressions in the assembler are parsed using Go's operator
    120 precedence, not the C-like precedence of the original.
    121 Thus <code>3&amp;1<<2</code> is 4, not 0it parses as <code>(3&amp;1)<<2</code>
    122 not <code>3&amp;(1<<2)</code>.
    123 Also, constants are always evaluated as 64-bit unsigned integers.
    124 Thus <code>-2</code> is not the integer value minus two,
    125 but the unsigned 64-bit integer with the same bit pattern.
    126 The distinction rarely matters but
    127 to avoid ambiguity, division or right shift where the right operand's
    128 high bit is set is rejected.
    129 </p>
    130 
    131 <h3 id="symbols">Symbols</h3>
    132 
    133 <p>
    134 Some symbols, such as <code>R1</code> or <code>LR</code>,
    135 are predefined and refer to registers.
    136 The exact set depends on the architecture.
    137 </p>
    138 
    139 <p>
    140 There are four predeclared symbols that refer to pseudo-registers.
    141 These are not real registers, but rather virtual registers maintained by
    142 the tool chain, such as a frame pointer.
    143 The set of pseudo-registers is the same for all architectures:
    144 </p>
    145 
    146 <ul>
    147 
    148 <li>
    149 <code>FP</code>: Frame pointer: arguments and locals.
    150 </li>
    151 
    152 <li>
    153 <code>PC</code>: Program counter:
    154 jumps and branches.
    155 </li>
    156 
    157 <li>
    158 <code>SB</code>: Static base pointer: global symbols.
    159 </li>
    160 
    161 <li>
    162 <code>SP</code>: Stack pointer: top of stack.
    163 </li>
    164 
    165 </ul>
    166 
    167 <p>
    168 All user-defined symbols are written as offsets to the pseudo-registers
    169 <code>FP</code> (arguments and locals) and <code>SB</code> (globals).
    170 </p>
    171 
    172 <p>
    173 The <code>SB</code> pseudo-register can be thought of as the origin of memory, so the symbol <code>foo(SB)</code>
    174 is the name <code>foo</code> as an address in memory.
    175 This form is used to name global functions and data.
    176 Adding <code>&lt;&gt;</code> to the name, as in <span style="white-space: nowrap"><code>foo&lt;&gt;(SB)</code></span>, makes the name
    177 visible only in the current source file, like a top-level <code>static</code> declaration in a C file.
    178 Adding an offset to the name refers to that offset from the symbol's address, so
    179 <code>a+4(SB)</code> is four bytes past the start of <code>foo</code>.
    180 </p>
    181 
    182 <p>
    183 The <code>FP</code> pseudo-register is a virtual frame pointer
    184 used to refer to function arguments.
    185 The compilers maintain a virtual frame pointer and refer to the arguments on the stack as offsets from that pseudo-register.
    186 Thus <code>0(FP)</code> is the first argument to the function,
    187 <code>8(FP)</code> is the second (on a 64-bit machine), and so on.
    188 However, when referring to a function argument this way, it is necessary to place a name
    189 at the beginning, as in <code>first_arg+0(FP)</code> and <code>second_arg+8(FP)</code>.
    190 (The meaning of the offsetoffset from the frame pointerdistinct
    191 from its use with <code>SB</code>, where it is an offset from the symbol.)
    192 The assembler enforces this convention, rejecting plain <code>0(FP)</code> and <code>8(FP)</code>.
    193 The actual name is semantically irrelevant but should be used to document
    194 the argument's name.
    195 It is worth stressing that <code>FP</code> is always a
    196 pseudo-register, not a hardware
    197 register, even on architectures with a hardware frame pointer.
    198 </p>
    199 
    200 <p>
    201 For assembly functions with Go prototypes, <code>go</code> <code>vet</code> will check that the argument names
    202 and offsets match.
    203 On 32-bit systems, the low and high 32 bits of a 64-bit value are distinguished by adding
    204 a <code>_lo</code> or <code>_hi</code> suffix to the name, as in <code>arg_lo+0(FP)</code> or <code>arg_hi+4(FP)</code>.
    205 If a Go prototype does not name its result, the expected assembly name is <code>ret</code>.
    206 </p>
    207 
    208 <p>
    209 The <code>SP</code> pseudo-register is a virtual stack pointer
    210 used to refer to frame-local variables and the arguments being
    211 prepared for function calls.
    212 It points to the top of the local stack frame, so references should use negative offsets
    213 in the range [framesize, 0):
    214 <code>x-8(SP)</code>, <code>y-4(SP)</code>, and so on.
    215 </p>
    216 
    217 <p>
    218 On architectures with a hardware register named <code>SP</code>,
    219 the name prefix distinguishes
    220 references to the virtual stack pointer from references to the architectural
    221 <code>SP</code> register.
    222 That is, <code>x-8(SP)</code> and <code>-8(SP)</code>
    223 are different memory locations:
    224 the first refers to the virtual stack pointer pseudo-register,
    225 while the second refers to the
    226 hardware's <code>SP</code> register.
    227 </p>
    228 
    229 <p>
    230 On machines where <code>SP</code> and <code>PC</code> are
    231 traditionally aliases for a physical, numbered register,
    232 in the Go assembler the names <code>SP</code> and <code>PC</code>
    233 are still treated specially;
    234 for instance, references to <code>SP</code> require a symbol,
    235 much like <code>FP</code>.
    236 To access the actual hardware register use the true <code>R</code> name.
    237 For example, on the ARM architecture the hardware
    238 <code>SP</code> and <code>PC</code> are accessible as
    239 <code>R13</code> and <code>R15</code>.
    240 </p>
    241 
    242 <p>
    243 Branches and direct jumps are always written as offsets to the PC, or as
    244 jumps to labels:
    245 </p>
    246 
    247 <pre>
    248 label:
    249 	MOVW $0, R1
    250 	JMP label
    251 </pre>
    252 
    253 <p>
    254 Each label is visible only within the function in which it is defined.
    255 It is therefore permitted for multiple functions in a file to define
    256 and use the same label names.
    257 Direct jumps and call instructions can target text symbols,
    258 such as <code>name(SB)</code>, but not offsets from symbols,
    259 such as <code>name+4(SB)</code>.
    260 </p>
    261 
    262 <p>
    263 Instructions, registers, and assembler directives are always in UPPER CASE to remind you
    264 that assembly programming is a fraught endeavor.
    265 (Exception: the <code>g</code> register renaming on ARM.)
    266 </p>
    267 
    268 <p>
    269 In Go object files and binaries, the full name of a symbol is the 
    270 package path followed by a period and the symbol name:
    271 <code>fmt.Printf</code> or <code>math/rand.Int</code>.
    272 Because the assembler's parser treats period and slash as punctuation,
    273 those strings cannot be used directly as identifier names.
    274 Instead, the assembler allows the middle dot character U+00B7
    275 and the division slash U+2215 in identifiers and rewrites them to
    276 plain period and slash.
    277 Within an assembler source file, the symbols above are written as
    278 <code>fmtPrintf</code> and <code>mathrandInt</code>.
    279 The assembly listings generated by the compilers when using the <code>-S</code> flag
    280 show the period and slash directly instead of the Unicode replacements
    281 required by the assemblers.
    282 </p>
    283 
    284 <p>
    285 Most hand-written assembly files do not include the full package path
    286 in symbol names, because the linker inserts the package path of the current
    287 object file at the beginning of any name starting with a period:
    288 in an assembly source file within the math/rand package implementation,
    289 the package's Int function can be referred to as <code>Int</code>.
    290 This convention avoids the need to hard-code a package's import path in its
    291 own source code, making it easier to move the code from one location to another.
    292 </p>
    293 
    294 <h3 id="directives">Directives</h3>
    295 
    296 <p>
    297 The assembler uses various directives to bind text and data to symbol names.
    298 For example, here is a simple complete function definition. The <code>TEXT</code>
    299 directive declares the symbol <code>runtimeprofileloop</code> and the instructions
    300 that follow form the body of the function.
    301 The last instruction in a <code>TEXT</code> block must be some sort of jump, usually a <code>RET</code> (pseudo-)instruction.
    302 (If it's not, the linker will append a jump-to-itself instruction; there is no fallthrough in <code>TEXTs</code>.)
    303 After the symbol, the arguments are flags (see below)
    304 and the frame size, a constant (but see below):
    305 </p>
    306 
    307 <pre>
    308 TEXT runtimeprofileloop(SB),NOSPLIT,$8
    309 	MOVQ	$runtimeprofileloop1(SB), CX
    310 	MOVQ	CX, 0(SP)
    311 	CALL	runtimeexternalthreadhandler(SB)
    312 	RET
    313 </pre>
    314 
    315 <p>
    316 In the general case, the frame size is followed by an argument size, separated by a minus sign.
    317 (It's not a subtraction, just idiosyncratic syntax.)
    318 The frame size <code>$24-8</code> states that the function has a 24-byte frame
    319 and is called with 8 bytes of argument, which live on the caller's frame.
    320 If <code>NOSPLIT</code> is not specified for the <code>TEXT</code>,
    321 the argument size must be provided.
    322 For assembly functions with Go prototypes, <code>go</code> <code>vet</code> will check that the
    323 argument size is correct.
    324 </p>
    325 
    326 <p>
    327 Note that the symbol name uses a middle dot to separate the components and is specified as an offset from the
    328 static base pseudo-register <code>SB</code>.
    329 This function would be called from Go source for package <code>runtime</code> using the
    330 simple name <code>profileloop</code>.
    331 </p>
    332 
    333 <p>
    334 Global data symbols are defined by a sequence of initializing
    335 <code>DATA</code> directives followed by a <code>GLOBL</code> directive.
    336 Each <code>DATA</code> directive initializes a section of the
    337 corresponding memory.
    338 The memory not explicitly initialized is zeroed.
    339 The general form of the <code>DATA</code> directive is
    340 
    341 <pre>
    342 DATA	symbol+offset(SB)/width, value
    343 </pre>
    344 
    345 <p>
    346 which initializes the symbol memory at the given offset and width with the given value.
    347 The <code>DATA</code> directives for a given symbol must be written with increasing offsets.
    348 </p>
    349 
    350 <p>
    351 The <code>GLOBL</code> directive declares a symbol to be global.
    352 The arguments are optional flags and the size of the data being declared as a global,
    353 which will have initial value all zeros unless a <code>DATA</code> directive
    354 has initialized it.
    355 The <code>GLOBL</code> directive must follow any corresponding <code>DATA</code> directives.
    356 </p>
    357 
    358 <p>
    359 For example,
    360 </p>
    361 
    362 <pre>
    363 DATA divtab&lt;&gt;+0x00(SB)/4, $0xf4f8fcff
    364 DATA divtab&lt;&gt;+0x04(SB)/4, $0xe6eaedf0
    365 ...
    366 DATA divtab&lt;&gt;+0x3c(SB)/4, $0x81828384
    367 GLOBL divtab&lt;&gt;(SB), RODATA, $64
    368 
    369 GLOBL runtimetlsoffset(SB), NOPTR, $4
    370 </pre>
    371 
    372 <p>
    373 declares and initializes <code>divtab&lt;&gt;</code>, a read-only 64-byte table of 4-byte integer values,
    374 and declares <code>runtimetlsoffset</code>, a 4-byte, implicitly zeroed variable that
    375 contains no pointers.
    376 </p>
    377 
    378 <p>
    379 There may be one or two arguments to the directives.
    380 If there are two, the first is a bit mask of flags,
    381 which can be written as numeric expressions, added or or-ed together,
    382 or can be set symbolically for easier absorption by a human.
    383 Their values, defined in the standard <code>#include</code>  file <code>textflag.h</code>, are:
    384 </p>
    385 
    386 <ul>
    387 <li>
    388 <code>NOPROF</code> = 1
    389 <br>
    390 (For <code>TEXT</code> items.)
    391 Don't profile the marked function.  This flag is deprecated.
    392 </li>
    393 <li>
    394 <code>DUPOK</code> = 2
    395 <br>
    396 It is legal to have multiple instances of this symbol in a single binary.
    397 The linker will choose one of the duplicates to use.
    398 </li>
    399 <li>
    400 <code>NOSPLIT</code> = 4
    401 <br>
    402 (For <code>TEXT</code> items.)
    403 Don't insert the preamble to check if the stack must be split.
    404 The frame for the routine, plus anything it calls, must fit in the
    405 spare space at the top of the stack segment.
    406 Used to protect routines such as the stack splitting code itself.
    407 </li>
    408 <li>
    409 <code>RODATA</code> = 8
    410 <br>
    411 (For <code>DATA</code> and <code>GLOBL</code> items.)
    412 Put this data in a read-only section.
    413 </li>
    414 <li>
    415 <code>NOPTR</code> = 16
    416 <br>
    417 (For <code>DATA</code> and <code>GLOBL</code> items.)
    418 This data contains no pointers and therefore does not need to be
    419 scanned by the garbage collector.
    420 </li>
    421 <li>
    422 <code>WRAPPER</code> = 32
    423 <br>
    424 (For <code>TEXT</code> items.)
    425 This is a wrapper function and should not count as disabling <code>recover</code>.
    426 </li>
    427 <li>
    428 <code>NEEDCTXT</code> = 64
    429 <br>
    430 (For <code>TEXT</code> items.)
    431 This function is a closure so it uses its incoming context register.
    432 </li>
    433 </ul>
    434 
    435 <h3 id="runtime">Runtime Coordination</h3>
    436 
    437 <p>
    438 For garbage collection to run correctly, the runtime must know the
    439 location of pointers in all global data and in most stack frames.
    440 The Go compiler emits this information when compiling Go source files,
    441 but assembly programs must define it explicitly.
    442 </p>
    443 
    444 <p>
    445 A data symbol marked with the <code>NOPTR</code> flag (see above)
    446 is treated as containing no pointers to runtime-allocated data.
    447 A data symbol with the <code>RODATA</code> flag
    448 is allocated in read-only memory and is therefore treated
    449 as implicitly marked <code>NOPTR</code>.
    450 A data symbol with a total size smaller than a pointer
    451 is also treated as implicitly marked <code>NOPTR</code>.
    452 It is not possible to define a symbol containing pointers in an assembly source file;
    453 such a symbol must be defined in a Go source file instead.
    454 Assembly source can still refer to the symbol by name
    455 even without <code>DATA</code> and <code>GLOBL</code> directives.
    456 A good general rule of thumb is to define all non-<code>RODATA</code>
    457 symbols in Go instead of in assembly.
    458 </p>
    459 
    460 <p>
    461 Each function also needs annotations giving the location of
    462 live pointers in its arguments, results, and local stack frame.
    463 For an assembly function with no pointer results and
    464 either no local stack frame or no function calls,
    465 the only requirement is to define a Go prototype for the function
    466 in a Go source file in the same package. The name of the assembly
    467 function must not contain the package name component (for example,
    468 function <code>Syscall</code> in package <code>syscall</code> should
    469 use the name <code>Syscall</code> instead of the equivalent name
    470 <code>syscallSyscall</code> in its <code>TEXT</code> directive).
    471 For more complex situations, explicit annotation is needed.
    472 These annotations use pseudo-instructions defined in the standard
    473 <code>#include</code> file <code>funcdata.h</code>.
    474 </p>
    475 
    476 <p>
    477 If a function has no arguments and no results,
    478 the pointer information can be omitted.
    479 This is indicated by an argument size annotation of <code>$<i>n</i>-0</code>
    480 on the <code>TEXT</code> instruction.
    481 Otherwise, pointer information must be provided by
    482 a Go prototype for the function in a Go source file,
    483 even for assembly functions not called directly from Go.
    484 (The prototype will also let <code>go</code> <code>vet</code> check the argument references.)
    485 At the start of the function, the arguments are assumed
    486 to be initialized but the results are assumed uninitialized.
    487 If the results will hold live pointers during a call instruction,
    488 the function should start by zeroing the results and then 
    489 executing the pseudo-instruction <code>GO_RESULTS_INITIALIZED</code>.
    490 This instruction records that the results are now initialized
    491 and should be scanned during stack movement and garbage collection.
    492 It is typically easier to arrange that assembly functions do not
    493 return pointers or do not contain call instructions;
    494 no assembly functions in the standard library use
    495 <code>GO_RESULTS_INITIALIZED</code>.
    496 </p>
    497 
    498 <p>
    499 If a function has no local stack frame,
    500 the pointer information can be omitted.
    501 This is indicated by a local frame size annotation of <code>$0-<i>n</i></code>
    502 on the <code>TEXT</code> instruction.
    503 The pointer information can also be omitted if the
    504 function contains no call instructions.
    505 Otherwise, the local stack frame must not contain pointers,
    506 and the assembly must confirm this fact by executing the 
    507 pseudo-instruction <code>NO_LOCAL_POINTERS</code>.
    508 Because stack resizing is implemented by moving the stack,
    509 the stack pointer may change during any function call:
    510 even pointers to stack data must not be kept in local variables.
    511 </p>
    512 
    513 <h2 id="architectures">Architecture-specific details</h2>
    514 
    515 <p>
    516 It is impractical to list all the instructions and other details for each machine.
    517 To see what instructions are defined for a given machine, say ARM,
    518 look in the source for the <code>obj</code> support library for
    519 that architecture, located in the directory <code>src/cmd/internal/obj/arm</code>.
    520 In that directory is a file <code>a.out.go</code>; it contains
    521 a long list of constants starting with <code>A</code>, like this:
    522 </p>
    523 
    524 <pre>
    525 const (
    526 	AAND = obj.ABaseARM + obj.A_ARCHSPECIFIC + iota
    527 	AEOR
    528 	ASUB
    529 	ARSB
    530 	AADD
    531 	...
    532 </pre>
    533 
    534 <p>
    535 This is the list of instructions and their spellings as known to the assembler and linker for that architecture.
    536 Each instruction begins with an initial capital <code>A</code> in this list, so <code>AAND</code>
    537 represents the bitwise and instruction,
    538 <code>AND</code> (without the leading <code>A</code>),
    539 and is written in assembly source as <code>AND</code>.
    540 The enumeration is mostly in alphabetical order.
    541 (The architecture-independent <code>AXXX</code>, defined in the
    542 <code>cmd/internal/obj</code> package,
    543 represents an invalid instruction).
    544 The sequence of the <code>A</code> names has nothing to do with the actual
    545 encoding of the machine instructions.
    546 The <code>cmd/internal/obj</code> package takes care of that detail.
    547 </p>
    548 
    549 <p>
    550 The instructions for both the 386 and AMD64 architectures are listed in
    551 <code>cmd/internal/obj/x86/a.out.go</code>.
    552 </p>
    553 
    554 <p>
    555 The architectures share syntax for common addressing modes such as
    556 <code>(R1)</code> (register indirect),
    557 <code>4(R1)</code> (register indirect with offset), and
    558 <code>$foo(SB)</code> (absolute address).
    559 The assembler also supports some (not necessarily all) addressing modes
    560 specific to each architecture.
    561 The sections below list these.
    562 </p>
    563 
    564 <p>
    565 One detail evident in the examples from the previous sections is that data in the instructions flows from left to right:
    566 <code>MOVQ</code> <code>$0,</code> <code>CX</code> clears <code>CX</code>.
    567 This rule applies even on architectures where the conventional notation uses the opposite direction.
    568 </p>
    569 
    570 <p>
    571 Here follow some descriptions of key Go-specific details for the supported architectures.
    572 </p>
    573 
    574 <h3 id="x86">32-bit Intel 386</h3>
    575 
    576 <p>
    577 The runtime pointer to the <code>g</code> structure is maintained
    578 through the value of an otherwise unused (as far as Go is concerned) register in the MMU.
    579 A OS-dependent macro <code>get_tls</code> is defined for the assembler if the source includes
    580 a special header, <code>go_asm.h</code>:
    581 </p>
    582 
    583 <pre>
    584 #include "go_asm.h"
    585 </pre>
    586 
    587 <p>
    588 Within the runtime, the <code>get_tls</code> macro loads its argument register
    589 with a pointer to the <code>g</code> pointer, and the <code>g</code> struct
    590 contains the <code>m</code> pointer.
    591 The sequence to load <code>g</code> and <code>m</code> using <code>CX</code> looks like this:
    592 </p>
    593 
    594 <pre>
    595 get_tls(CX)
    596 MOVL	g(CX), AX     // Move g into AX.
    597 MOVL	g_m(AX), BX   // Move g.m into BX.
    598 </pre>
    599 
    600 <p>
    601 Addressing modes:
    602 </p>
    603 
    604 <ul>
    605 
    606 <li>
    607 <code>(DI)(BX*2)</code>: The location at address <code>DI</code> plus <code>BX*2</code>.
    608 </li>
    609 
    610 <li>
    611 <code>64(DI)(BX*2)</code>: The location at address <code>DI</code> plus <code>BX*2</code> plus 64.
    612 These modes accept only 1, 2, 4, and 8 as scale factors.
    613 </li>
    614 
    615 </ul>
    616 
    617 <h3 id="amd64">64-bit Intel 386 (a.k.a. amd64)</h3>
    618 
    619 <p>
    620 The two architectures behave largely the same at the assembler level.
    621 Assembly code to access the <code>m</code> and <code>g</code>
    622 pointers on the 64-bit version is the same as on the 32-bit 386,
    623 except it uses <code>MOVQ</code> rather than <code>MOVL</code>:
    624 </p>
    625 
    626 <pre>
    627 get_tls(CX)
    628 MOVQ	g(CX), AX     // Move g into AX.
    629 MOVQ	g_m(AX), BX   // Move g.m into BX.
    630 </pre>
    631 
    632 <h3 id="arm">ARM</h3>
    633 
    634 <p>
    635 The registers <code>R10</code> and <code>R11</code>
    636 are reserved by the compiler and linker.
    637 </p>
    638 
    639 <p>
    640 <code>R10</code> points to the <code>g</code> (goroutine) structure.
    641 Within assembler source code, this pointer must be referred to as <code>g</code>;
    642 the name <code>R10</code> is not recognized.
    643 </p>
    644 
    645 <p>
    646 To make it easier for people and compilers to write assembly, the ARM linker
    647 allows general addressing forms and pseudo-operations like <code>DIV</code> or <code>MOD</code>
    648 that may not be expressible using a single hardware instruction.
    649 It implements these forms as multiple instructions, often using the <code>R11</code> register
    650 to hold temporary values.
    651 Hand-written assembly can use <code>R11</code>, but doing so requires
    652 being sure that the linker is not also using it to implement any of the other
    653 instructions in the function.
    654 </p>
    655 
    656 <p>
    657 When defining a <code>TEXT</code>, specifying frame size <code>$-4</code>
    658 tells the linker that this is a leaf function that does not need to save <code>LR</code> on entry.
    659 </p>
    660 
    661 <p>
    662 The name <code>SP</code> always refers to the virtual stack pointer described earlier.
    663 For the hardware register, use <code>R13</code>.
    664 </p>
    665 
    666 <p>
    667 Condition code syntax is to append a period and the one- or two-letter code to the instruction,
    668 as in <code>MOVW.EQ</code>.
    669 Multiple codes may be appended: <code>MOVM.IA.W</code>.
    670 The order of the code modifiers is irrelevant.
    671 </p>
    672 
    673 <p>
    674 Addressing modes:
    675 </p>
    676 
    677 <ul>
    678 
    679 <li>
    680 <code>R0-&gt;16</code>
    681 <br>
    682 <code>R0&gt;&gt;16</code>
    683 <br>
    684 <code>R0&lt;&lt;16</code>
    685 <br>
    686 <code>R0@&gt;16</code>:
    687 For <code>&lt;&lt;</code>, left shift <code>R0</code> by 16 bits.
    688 The other codes are <code>-&gt;</code> (arithmetic right shift),
    689 <code>&gt;&gt;</code> (logical right shift), and
    690 <code>@&gt;</code> (rotate right).
    691 </li>
    692 
    693 <li>
    694 <code>R0-&gt;R1</code>
    695 <br>
    696 <code>R0&gt;&gt;R1</code>
    697 <br>
    698 <code>R0&lt;&lt;R1</code>
    699 <br>
    700 <code>R0@&gt;R1</code>:
    701 For <code>&lt;&lt;</code>, left shift <code>R0</code> by the count in <code>R1</code>.
    702 The other codes are <code>-&gt;</code> (arithmetic right shift),
    703 <code>&gt;&gt;</code> (logical right shift), and
    704 <code>@&gt;</code> (rotate right).
    705 
    706 </li>
    707 
    708 <li>
    709 <code>[R0,g,R12-R15]</code>: For multi-register instructions, the set comprising
    710 <code>R0</code>, <code>g</code>, and <code>R12</code> through <code>R15</code> inclusive.
    711 </li>
    712 
    713 <li>
    714 <code>(R5, R6)</code>: Destination register pair.
    715 </li>
    716 
    717 </ul>
    718 
    719 <h3 id="arm64">ARM64</h3>
    720 
    721 <p>
    722 The ARM64 port is in an experimental state.
    723 </p>
    724 
    725 <p>
    726 Instruction modifiers are appended to the instruction following a period.
    727 The only modifiers are <code>P</code> (postincrement) and <code>W</code>
    728 (preincrement):
    729 <code>MOVW.P</code>, <code>MOVW.W</code>
    730 </p>
    731 
    732 <p>
    733 Addressing modes:
    734 </p>
    735 
    736 <ul>
    737 
    738 <li>
    739 <code>(R5, R6)</code>: Register pair for <code>LDP</code>/<code>STP</code>.
    740 </li>
    741 
    742 </ul>
    743 
    744 <h3 id="ppc64">64-bit PowerPC, a.k.a. ppc64</h3>
    745 
    746 <p>
    747 The 64-bit PowerPC port is in an experimental state.
    748 </p>
    749 
    750 <p>
    751 Addressing modes:
    752 </p>
    753 
    754 <ul>
    755 
    756 <li>
    757 <code>(R5)(R6*1)</code>: The location at <code>R5</code> plus <code>R6</code>. It is a scaled
    758 mode as on the x86, but the only scale allowed is <code>1</code>.
    759 </li>
    760 
    761 <li>
    762 <code>(R5+R6)</code>: Alias for (R5)(R6*1)
    763 </li>
    764 
    765 </ul>
    766 
    767 <h3 id="unsupported_opcodes">Unsupported opcodes</h3>
    768 
    769 <p>
    770 The assemblers are designed to support the compiler so not all hardware instructions
    771 are defined for all architectures: if the compiler doesn't generate it, it might not be there.
    772 If you need to use a missing instruction, there are two ways to proceed.
    773 One is to update the assembler to support that instruction, which is straightforward
    774 but only worthwhile if it's likely the instruction will be used again.
    775 Instead, for simple one-off cases, it's possible to use the <code>BYTE</code>
    776 and <code>WORD</code> directives
    777 to lay down explicit data into the instruction stream within a <code>TEXT</code>.
    778 Here's how the 386 runtime defines the 64-bit atomic load function.
    779 </p>
    780 
    781 <pre>
    782 // uint64 atomicload64(uint64 volatile* addr);
    783 // so actually
    784 // void atomicload64(uint64 *res, uint64 volatile *addr);
    785 TEXT runtimeatomicload64(SB), NOSPLIT, $0-12
    786 	MOVL	ptr+0(FP), AX
    787 	TESTL	$7, AX
    788 	JZ	2(PC)
    789 	MOVL	0, AX // crash with nil ptr deref
    790 	LEAL	ret_lo+4(FP), BX
    791 	// MOVQ (%EAX), %MM0
    792 	BYTE $0x0f; BYTE $0x6f; BYTE $0x00
    793 	// MOVQ %MM0, 0(%EBX)
    794 	BYTE $0x0f; BYTE $0x7f; BYTE $0x03
    795 	// EMMS
    796 	BYTE $0x0F; BYTE $0x77
    797 	RET
    798 </pre>
    799