3.8 KiB
8086 support disclaimer
Millfork does not support Intel 8086 directly.
Instead, it generates Intel 8080 code and translates it automatically to 8086 machine code.
For convenience, most undocumented 8085 instructions and Z80 instructions using IX
are also translated.
This means that:
-
code is going to be large and slow;
-
there is no support for writing 8086 assembly;
-
Millfork currently translates majority of Intel 8085 assembly instructions to 8086 machine code, so you can write 8080/Z80 assembly instead.
InstructionsRST
(8080),RIM
,SIM
(8085),RSTV
,ARHL
,RLDE
(8085 undocumented) are not supported.
For example, code like
asm {
LD HL, x
LD BC, i
ADD HL, BC
JP C, skip
LD A, IX(5)
LD (HL), A
skip:
}
is compiled to
MOV BX, x
MOV CX, i
ADD BX, CX
JNC .next
JMP skip
.next:
MOV AL, BYTE PTR [BP+5]
MOV BYTE PTR [BX], AL
skip:
Generated assembly output uses Intel 8086 syntax.
Configuring code generation
There are three options that influence the 8086 code generation:
-
ix_stack
(command line equivalent-fuse-ix-for-stack
for enabling,-fno-use-index-for-stack
for disabling) -
emit_8085
(command line equivalent-f8085-ops
for enabling,-fno-8085-ops
for disabling) -
emit_illegals
(command line equivalent-fillegals
for enabling,-fno-illegals
for disabling)
emit_8085
and emit_illegals
have effect only together.
Major deficiencies of generated code
-
hardware multiplication is not used
-
many 16-bit operations are not used
-
many operations are restricted to the
AL
register -
the overflow flag is not used
-
signed comparisons are suboptimal and as buggy as on 8080 (8085 has the undocumented K flag that could be used here, but Millfork does not use it)
-
DAS
is not used -
conditional jumps are never optimized to short 2-byte jumps and always use 5 bytes
-
the
SI
register is reloaded before every use -
the converter translates the
DAD
instruction (16-bitADD
on Z80) toADD
, which may change behaviour of assembly code, as 8080'sDAD
changes only the carry flag, and 8086'sADD
changes many flags. Luckily, this is not an issue with Millfork code, as the optimizer does not assume anything about flags after that instruction. The proper sequence isLAHF
/ADD r1,r2
/RCR SI,1
/SAHF
/RCL SI,1
, but it is obviously too slow. -
the converter translates the
INX
instruction (16-bitINC
on Z80) toINC
, and similarly, theDCX
instruction (16-bitDEC
on Z80) toDEC
, which may change behaviour of assembly code, as 8080'sINX
andDCX
don't change any flags, and 8086'sINC
andDEC
change many flags. Luckily, this is not an issue with Millfork code, as the optimizer does not assume anything about flags after that instruction. The proper sequence isLAHF
/INC r
(orDEC r
)/SAHF
, but it is obviously too slow.
Register mapping
The registers are translated as following:
A → AL
B → CH C → CL BC → CX
D → DH E → DL DE → DX
H → BH L → BL HL → BX
SP → SP
IX → BP
The AH
register is used as a temporary register for holding the flags.
The SI
register is used as a temporary register for holding the address in 8080's LDAX
/STAX
(LD (DE),A
/LD(BC),A
/LD A,(DE)
/LD A,(BC)
on Z80)
and 8085's undocumented LDSI
/SHLX
/LHLX
(LD DE,SP+n
/LD (DE),HL
/LD HL,(DE)
in Z80 syntax).
The DI
register is currently not used.
Future development
There won't be any major future development related to 8086 support, unless a full 8086 backend that is independent from the 8080 backend is created.
The current solution was developed only as a proof of concept.