Chapt 04
Chapt 04
Chapt 04
Lecture 1
• Operand Types
• Instruction Operand Notation
• Direct Memory Operands
• MOV Instruction
• Zero & Sign Extension
• XCHG Instruction
• Direct-Offset Instructions
alternate format
.data
bVal BYTE 100
bVal2 BYTE ?
wVal WORD 2
dVal DWORD 5
.code
mov ds,45 immediate move to DS not permitted
mov esi,wVal size mismatch
mov eip,dVal EIP cannot be the destination
mov 25,bVal immediate value cannot be destination
mov bVal2,bVal memory-to-memory move not permitted
mov bl,10001111b
movzx ax,bl ; zero-extension
call DumpRegs
mov bl, 10001111b; chart Zero Extension
movzx eax,bl; showing movzx with eax register
call DumpRegs
Irvine, Kip R. Assembly Language for x86 Processors 6/e, 2010. 10
Sign Extension
The MOVSX instruction fills the upper half of the destination
with a copy of the source operand's sign bit.
mov bl,10001111b
movsx ax,bl ; sign extension
.data
arrayB BYTE 10h,20h,30h,40h
.code
mov al,arrayB+1 ; AL = 20h
mov al,[arrayB+1] ; alternative notation
• Step1: copy the first value into EAX and exchange it with the
value in the second position.
mov eax,arrayD
xchg eax,[arrayD+4]
• Step 2: Exchange EAX with the third array value and copy the
value in EAX to the first array position.
xchg eax,[arrayD+8]
mov arrayD,eax
; xchg examples
mov eax,arrayD
xchg eax,[arrayD+4]
xchg eax,[arrayD+8]
mov arrayD,eax
mov eax, [arrayD]
mov ebx, [arrayD+4]
mov ecx, [arrayD+8]
callDumpRegs
Irvine, Kip R. Assembly Language for x86 Processors 6/e, 2010. 17
Evaluate this . . .
• We want to write a program that adds the following three bytes:
.data
myBytes BYTE 80h,66h,0A5h
movzx ax,myBytes
18B mov bl,[myBytes+1]
add ax,bx
mov bl,[myBytes+2]
add ax,bx ; AX = sum
Lecture 2
.data
myWord WORD 1000h
myDword DWORD 10000000h
.code
inc myWord ; 1001h
dec myWord ; 1000h
inc myDword ; 10000001h
mov ax,00FFh
inc ax ; AX = 0100h
mov ax,00FFh
inc al ; AX = 0000h
.data
myByte BYTE 0FFh, 0
.code
mov al,myByte ; AL =
FFh
mov ah,[myByte+1] ; AH =
00h
dec ah ; AH =
FFh
inc al ; AL =
00h
dec ax ; AX =
FEFF
.data
var1 DWORD 10000h
var2 DWORD 20000h
.code ; ---EAX---
mov eax,var1 ; 00010000h
add eax,var2 ; 00030000h
add ax,0FFFFh ; 0003FFFFh
add eax,1 ; 00040000h
sub ax,1 ; 0004FFFFh
.data
valB BYTE -1
valW WORD +32767
.code
mov al,valB ; AL = -1
neg al ; AL = +1
neg valW ; valW = -32767
.data
valB BYTE 1,0
valC SBYTE -128
.code
neg valB ; CF = 1, OF = 0
neg [valB + 1] ; CF = 0, OF = 0
neg valC ; CF = 1, OF = 1
Rval DWORD ?
Xval DWORD 26
Yval DWORD 30
Zval DWORD 40
.code
mov eax,Xval
neg eax ; EAX = -26
mov ebx,Yval
sub ebx,Zval ; EBX = -10
add eax,ebx
mov Rval,eax ; -36
mov ebx,Yval
neg ebx
add ebx,Zval
mov eax,Xval
sub eax,ebx
mov Rval,eax
part of executes
executes
ALU
conditional jumps
arithmetic & bitwise
operations attached to used by provide
affect
status flags
branching logic
You can use diagrams such as these to express the relationships between assembly
language concepts.
mov cx,1
sub cx,1 ; CX = 0, ZF = 1
mov ax,0FFFFh
inc ax ; AX = 0, ZF = 1
inc ax ; AX = 1, ZF = 0
Remember...
• A flag is set when it equals 1.
• A flag is clear when it equals 0.
mov al,0FFh
add al,1 ; CF = 1, AL = 00
mov al,0
sub al,1 ; CF = 1, AL = FF
mov ax,00FFh
add ax,1 ; AX= SF= ZF= CF=
0100h 0 0 0
sub ax,1 ; AX= SF= ZF= CF=
00FFh 0 0 0
add al,1 ; AL= SF= ZF= CF=
00h 0 1 1
mov bh,6Ch
add bh,95h ; BH= SF= ZF= CF=
01h 0 0 1
mov al,2
sub al,3 ; AL= SF= ZF= CF=
FFh 1 0 1
; Example 1
mov al,+127
add al,1 ; OF = 1, AL = ??
; Example 2
mov al,7Fh ; OF = 1, AL = 80h
add al,1
The two examples are identical at the binary level because 7Fh
equals +127. To determine the value of the destination operand,
it is often easier to calculate in hexadecimal.
mov al,-2
add al,+127 ; OF = 0
mov al,-128
neg al ; CF = 1 OF = 1
mov ax,8000h
add ax,2 ; CF = 0 OF = 0
mov ax,0
sub ax,2 ; CF = 1 OF = 0
mov al,-5
sub al,+125 ; OF = 1
Lecture 3
• OFFSET Operator
• PTR Operator
• TYPE Operator
• LENGTHOF Operator
• SIZEOF Operator
• LABEL Directive
.data
bVal BYTE ?
wVal WORD ?
dVal DWORD ?
dVal2 DWORD ?
.code
mov esi,OFFSET bVal ; ESI = 00404000
mov esi,OFFSET wVal ; ESI = 00404001
mov esi,OFFSET dVal ; ESI = 00404003
mov esi,OFFSET dVal2 ; ESI = 00404007
.data
myDouble DWORD 12345678h
.code
mov ax,myDouble ; error – why?
.data
myBytes BYTE 12h,34h,56h,78h
.code
mov ax,WORD PTR [myBytes] ; AX = 3412h
mov ax,WORD PTR [myBytes+2] ; AX = 7856h
mov eax,DWORD PTR myBytes ; EAX = 78563412h
.data
varB BYTE 65h,31h,02h,05h
varW WORD 6543h,1202h
varD DWORD 12345678h
.code
mov ax,WORD PTR [varB+2] ; a.
0502h
mov bl,BYTE PTR varD ; b.
78h
mov bl,BYTE PTR [varW+2] ; c.
02h
mov ax,WORD PTR [varD+2] ; d.
1234h
mov eax,DWORD PTR varW ; e.
12026543h
.data
var1 BYTE ?
var2 WORD ?
var3 DWORD ?
var4 QWORD ?
.code
mov eax,TYPE var1 ; 1
mov eax,TYPE var2 ; 2
mov eax,TYPE var3 ; 4
mov eax,TYPE var4 ; 8
.code
mov ecx,LENGTHOF array1 ; 32
.data SIZEOF
byte1 BYTE 10,20,30 ; 3
array1 WORD 30 DUP(?),0,0 ; 64
array2 WORD 5 DUP(3 DUP(?)) ; 30
array3 DWORD 1,2,3,4 ; 16
digitStr BYTE "12345678",0 ; 9
.code
mov ecx,SIZEOF array1 ; 64
.data
array WORD 10,20,
30,40,
50,60
.code
mov eax,LENGTHOF array ; 6
mov ebx,SIZEOF array ; 12
.data
array WORD 10,20
WORD 30,40
WORD 50,60
.code
mov eax,LENGTHOF array ; 2
mov ebx,SIZEOF array ; 4
.data
dwList LABEL DWORD
wordList LABEL WORD
intList BYTE 00h,10h,00h,20h
.code
mov eax,dwList ; 20001000h
mov cx,wordList ; 1000h
mov dl,intList ; 00h
Lecture 4
• Indirect Operands
• Array Sum Example
• Indexed Operands
• Pointers
.data
val1 BYTE 10h,20h,30h
.code
mov esi,OFFSET val1
mov al,[esi] ; dereference ESI (AL = 10h)
inc esi
mov al,[esi] ; AL = 20h
inc esi
mov al,[esi] ; AL = 30h
.data
myCount WORD 0
.code
mov esi,OFFSET myCount
inc [esi] ; error: ambiguous
inc WORD PTR [esi] ; ok
.data
arrayW WORD 1000h,2000h,3000h
.code
mov esi,OFFSET arrayW
mov ax,[esi]
add esi,2 ; or: add esi,TYPE
arrayW
add ax,[esi]
add esi,2
add ax,[esi] ; AX = sum of the array
.data
arrayW WORD 1000h,2000h,3000h
.code
mov esi,0
mov ax,[arrayW + esi] ; AX = 1000h
mov ax,arrayW[esi] ; alternate format
add esi,2
add ax,[arrayW + esi]
etc.
.data
arrayB BYTE 0,1,2,3,4,5
arrayW WORD 0,1,2,3,4,5
arrayD DWORD 0,1,2,3,4,5
.code
mov esi,4
mov al,arrayB[esi*TYPE arrayB] ; 04
mov bx,arrayW[esi*TYPE arrayW] ; 0004
mov edx,arrayD[esi*TYPE arrayD] ; 00000004
.data
arrayW WORD 1000h,2000h,3000h
ptrW DWORD arrayW
.code
mov esi,ptrW
mov ax,[esi] ; AX = 1000h
Alternate format:
Lecture 5
• JMP Instruction
• LOOP Instruction
• LOOP Example
• Summing an Integer Array
• Copying a String
(a) 128
(b) +127
mov ecx,0
How many times will the loop X2:
execute? inc ax
4,294,967,296 loop X2
.data
count DWORD ?
.code
mov ecx,100 ; set outer loop count
L1:
mov count,ecx ; save outer loop count
mov ecx,20 ; set inner loop count
L2: .
.
loop L2 ; repeat the inner loop
mov ecx,count ; restore outer loop count
loop L1 ; repeat the outer loop
.data
intarray WORD 100h,200h,300h,400h
.code
mov edi,OFFSET intarray ; address of intarray
mov ecx,LENGTHOF intarray ; loop counter
mov ax,0 ; zero the accumulator
L1:
add ax,[edi] ; add an integer
add edi,TYPE intarray ; point to next integer
loop L1 ; repeat until ECX = 0
.data
source BYTE "This is the source string",0 good use of
target BYTE SIZEOF source DUP(0) SIZEOF
.code
mov esi,0 ; index register
mov ecx,SIZEOF source ; loop counter
L1:
mov al,source[esi] ; get char from source
mov target[esi],al ; store it in the target
inc esi ; move to next character
loop L1 ; repeat for entire string