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