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Microcontroller Intel 8051

Microcontroller Intel 8051. [Instruction Set]. Structure of Assembly Language. [ label: ] mnemonic [ operands ] [ ;comment ] Example: MOV R1, #25H ; load data 25H into R1. 8051 Assembly Language. Registers. MOV Instruction: MOV destination, source Example: MOV A, $55H

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Microcontroller Intel 8051

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  1. Microcontroller Intel 8051 [Instruction Set]

  2. Structure of Assembly Language [ label: ] mnemonic [operands] [ ;comment ] Example: MOV R1, #25H ; load data 25H into R1

  3. 8051 Assembly Language • Registers MOV Instruction: MOV destination, source Example: MOV A, $55H MOV R0, A MOV A, R3

  4. Instruction Groups • The 8051 has 255 instructions • Every 8-bit opcode from 00 to FF is used except for A5. • The instructions are grouped into 5 groups • Arithmetic • Logic • Data Transfer • Boolean • Branching

  5. Arithmetic Instructions • ADD • 8-bit addition between the accumulator (A) and a second operand. • The result is always in the accumulator. • The CY flag is set/reset appropriately. • ADDC • 8-bit addition between the accumulator, a second operand and the previous value of the CY flag. • Useful for 16-bit addition in two steps. • The CY flag is set/reset appropriately.

  6. Arithmetic Instructions • DA • Decimal adjust the accumulator. • Format the accumulator into a proper 2 digit packed BCD number. • Operates only on the accumulator. • Works only after the ADD instruction. • SUBB • Subtract with Borrow. • Subtract an operand and the previous value of the borrow (carry) flag from the accumulator. • A  A - <operand> - CY. • The result is always saved in the accumulator. • The CY flag is set/reset appropriately.

  7. Arithmetic Instructions • INC • Increment the operand by one. • The operand can be a register, a direct address, an indirect address, the data pointer. • DEC • Decrement the operand by one. • The operand can be a register, a direct address, an indirect address. • MUL AB / DIV AB • Multiply A by B and place result in A:B. • Divide A by B and place result in A:B.

  8. Logical Operations • ANL / ORL • Work on byte sized operands or the CY flag. • ANL A, Rn • ANL A, direct • ANL A, @Ri • ANL A, #data • ANL direct, A • ANL direct, #data • ANL C, bit • ANL C, /bit

  9. Logical Operations • XRL • Works on bytes only. • CPL / CLR • Complement / Clear. • Work on the accumulator or a bit. • CLR P1.2

  10. Logical Operations • RL / RLC / RR / RRC • Rotate the accumulator. • RL and RR without the carry • RLC and RRC rotate through the carry. • SWAP A • Swap the upper and lower nibbles of the accumulator. • No compare instruction. • Built into conditional branching instructions.

  11. Data Transfer Instructions • MOV • 8-bit data transfer for internal RAM and the SFR. • MOV A, Rn MOV A, direct • MOV A, @Ri MOV A, #data • MOV Rn, A MOV Rn, direct • MOV Rn, #data MOV direct, A • MOV direct, Rn MOV direct, direct • MOV direct, @Ri MOV direct, #data • MOV @Ri, A MOV @Ri, direct • MOV @Ri, #data

  12. Data Transfer Operations • MOV • 1-bit data transfer involving the CY flag • MOV C, bit • MOV bit, C • MOV • 16-bit data transfer involving the DPTR • MOV DPTR, #data

  13. Data Transfer Instructions • MOVC • Move Code Byte • Load the accumulator with a byte from program memory. • Must use indexed addressing • MOVC A, @A+DPTR • MOVC A, @A+PC

  14. Data Transfer Instructions • MOVX • Data transfer between the accumulator and a byte from external data memory. • MOVX A, @Ri • MOVX A, @DPTR • MOVX @Ri, A • MOVX @DPTR, A

  15. Data Transfer Instructions • PUSH / POP • Push and Pop a data byte onto the stack. • The data byte is identified by a direct address from the internal RAM locations. • PUSH DPL • POP 40H

  16. Data Transfer Instructions • XCH • Exchange accumulator and a byte variable • XCH A, Rn • XCH A, direct • XCH A, @Ri • XCHD • Exchange lower digit of accumulator with the lower digit of the memory location specified. • XCHD A, @Ri • The lower 4-bits of the accumulator are exchanged with the lower 4-bits of the internal memory location identified indirectly by the index register. • The upper 4-bits of each are not modified.

  17. Boolean Operations • This group of instructions is associated with the single-bit operations of the 8051. • This group allows manipulating the individual bits of bit addressable registers and memory locations as well as the CY flag. • The P, OV, and AC flags cannot be directly altered. • This group includes: • Set, clear, and, or complement, move. • Conditional jumps.

  18. Boolean Operations • CLR • Clear a bit or the CY flag. • CLR P1.1 • CLR C • SETB • Set a bit or the CY flag. • SETB A.2 • SETB C • CPL • Complement a bit or the CY flag. • CPL 40H ; Complement bit 40 of the bit addressable memory

  19. Boolean Operations • ORL / ANL • OR / AND a bit with the CY flag. • ORL C, 20H ; OR bit 20 of bit addressable ; memory with the CY flag • ANL C, /34H ; AND complement of bit 34 of bit addressable memory with the CY flag. • MOV • Data transfer between a bit and the CY flag. • MOV C, 3FH ; Copy the CY flag to bit 3F of the bit addressable memory. • MOV P1.2, C ; Copy the CY flag to bit 2 of P1.

  20. Boolean Operations • JC / JNC • Jump to a relative address if CY is set / cleared. • JB / JNB • Jump to a relative address if a bit is set / cleared. • JB ACC.2, <label> • JBC • Jump to a relative address if a bit is set and clear the bit.

  21. Branching Instructions • The 8051 provides four different types of unconditional jump instructions: • Short Jump – SJMP • Uses an 8-bit signed offset relative to the 1st byte of the next instruction. • Long Jump – LJMP • Uses a 16-bit address. • 3 byte instruction capable of referencing any location in the entire 64K of program memory.

  22. Branching Instructions • Absolute Jump – AJMP • Uses an 11-bit address. • 2 byte instruction • The upper 3-bits of the address combine with the 5-bit opcode to form the 1st byte and the lower 8-bits of the address form the 2nd byte. • The 11-bit address is substituted for the lower 11-bits of the PC to calculate the 16-bit address of the target. • The location referenced must be within the 2K Byte memory page containing the AJMP instruction. • Indirect Jump – JMP • JMP @A + DPTR

  23. Branching Instructions • The 8051 provides 2 forms for the CALL instruction: • Absolute Call – ACALL • Uses an 11-bit address similar to AJMP • The subroutine must be within the same 2K page. • Long Call – LCALL • Uses a 16-bit address similar to LJMP • The subroutine can be anywhere. • Both forms push the 16-bit address of the next instruction on the stack and update the stack pointer.

  24. Branching Instructions • The 8051 provides 2 forms for the return instruction: • Return from subroutine – RET • Pop the return address from the stack and continue execution there. • Return from ISV – RETI • Pop the return address from the stack. • Restore the interrupt logic to accept additional interrupts at the same priority level as the one just processed. • Continue execution at the address retrieved from the stack. • The PSW is not automatically restored.

  25. Branching Instructions • The 8051 supports 5 different conditional jump instructions. • ALL conditional jump instructions use an 8-bit signed offset. • Jump on Zero – JZ / JNZ • Jump if the A == 0 / A != 0 • The check is done at the time of the instruction execution. • Jump on Carry – JC / JNC • Jump if the C flag is set / cleared.

  26. Branching Instructions • Jump on Bit – JB / JNB • Jump if the specified bit is set / cleared. • Any addressable bit can be specified. • Jump if the Bit is set then Clear the bit – JBC • Jump if the specified bit is set. • Then clear the bit.

  27. Branching Instructions • Compare and Jump if Not Equal – CJNE • Compare the magnitude of the two operands and jump if they are not equal. • The values are considered to be unsigned. • The Carry flag is set / cleared appropriately. • CJNE A, direct, rel • CJNE A, #data, rel • CJNE Rn, #data, rel • CJNE @Ri, #data, rel

  28. Branching Instructions • Decrement and Jump if Not Zero – DJNZ • Decrement the first operand by 1 and jump to the location identified by the second operand if the resulting value is not zero. • DJNZ Rn, rel • DJNZ direct, rel • No Operation • NOP

  29. Addressing Modes • Five addressing modes are available: • Immediate • Register • Direct • Indirect • Indexed • There are three more modes: • Relative • Absolute • Long These are used with calls, branches and jumps and are handled automatically by the assembler.

  30. Immediate Addressing • The data is directly specified in the instruction. • Useful for getting constants into registers. • Immediate data must be preceded with a “#” sign. • MOV R0, #0F0H ; Load R0 with the value F0H • The immediate value is a maximum of 8-bits. • One exception, when dealing with the DPTR register it can be 16-bits. • MOV DPTR, #2000H ; Load the value 2000H into the DPTR register

  31. Register Addressing Mode • Direct access to eight registers – R0 through R7. • MOV A, R0 • MOV R1, A • ADD A, R1 • Not all combinations are valid. • MOV R2, R1 ; Invalid • There are 4 banks of registers accessible through register addressing. • Only one bank can be accessed at a time controllable through bit RS0 and RS1 of the PSW. • MOV PSW, #00011000B • Set RS0:RS1 to 11, therefore, accessing register bank 3.

  32. Direct Addressing • Direct addressing can access any on-chip hardware register. • All on-chip memory locations and registers have 8-bit addresses. • Can use the 8-bit address in the instruction. • MOV A, 4H ; Amem[04H] • Or can use the register name. • MOV A, R4 • Don’t get confused with Immediate mode. • No “#” sign.

  33. Indirect Addressing • R0 and R1 may be used as pointer registers where their contents indicate an address in internal RAM where the data is to be read or written. • MOV R1, #40H ; Make R1 point to location 40 • MOV A, @R1 ; Move the contents of 40H to A • MOV @R0, R1 ; Move contents of R1 into the ; memory location pointed to by R0.

  34. Indirect Addressing • Can also be used for accessing external memory: • Can use R0 and R1 to point to external memory locations 00H to FFH. • MOVX A, @R1 ; Move contents of external memory location whose address is in R1 into A • Can also use DPTR to point to all 64k of external memory. • MOVX A, @DPTR

  35. Indexed Addressing • Use a register for storing a pointer to memory and another register for storing an offset. • The effective address is the sum of the two: • EA = Pointer + Offset • MOVC A, @A+DPTR ; Move byte from memory located at DPTR+A to A.

  36. Program Control Instructions • Unconditional Branch • ajmp addr11 ; absolute jump • ljmp addr16 ; long jump • sjmp rel ; short jump to relative address • jmp @A+DPTR ; jump indirect • Conditional branch • jz, jnz rel ; short conditional jump to rel. addr • djnz rel ; decrement and jump if not zero • cjne rel ; compare and jump if not equal • Subroutine Call • acall addr11 ; absolute subroutine call • lcall addr16 ; long subroutine call • ret ; return from subroutine call • reti ; return from ISV

  37. Target Address • Target address can be, • absolute: A complete physical address • addr16: 16 bit address, anywhere in the 64k • addr11: 11 bit address, anywhere within 2k page. • rel: relative (forward or backward) -128 bytes to +127 bytes from the current code location • Target address calculation for relative jumps • PC of next instruction + rel address • For jump backwards, drop the carry • PC = 15H, SJMP 0FEH • Address is 15H + FEH = 13H • Basically jump to next instruction minus two (current instruction)

  38. Conditional Jumps • jz, jnz : Conditional on A=0 • Checks to see if A is zero • jz jumps if A is zero and jnz jumps is A not zero • No arithmetic op need be performed (unlike 8086/8085) • djnz : dec a byte and jump if not equal to zero • djnz Rn, rel • djnz direct, rel • jnc : Conditional on carry CY flag • jc rel • jnc rel • cjne : compare and jump if not equal • cjne A, direct, rel • cjne Rn, #data, rel • cjne @Rn, #data, rel

  39. Loop using djnz • Add 3 to A ten times mov A, #0 ; clear A mov R2, #10 ; R2  10, can also say 0AH AGAIN: add A, #03 ; add 3 to A djnz R2, AGAIN ; repeat until R2==0 mov R5, A ; save the result in R5 • Loop within loop using djnz mov R3, #100 loop1: mov R2, #10 ; trying for 1000 loop iterations loop2: nop ; no operation djnz R2, loop2 ; repeat loop2 until R2==0 djnz R3, loop1 ; repeat loop1 until R3==0

  40. Unconditional Jumps • LJMP addr16 • Long jump. • Jump to a 2byte target address • 3 byte instruction • SJMP rel • Jump to a relative address from PC+127 to PC-128 • Jump to PC + 127 (00H – 7FH) • Jump to PC – 128 (80H – FFH)

  41. Call Instructions • Subroutines: • Reusable code snippets • LCALL addr16 • Long call. • 3 byte instruction. • Call any subroutine in entire 64k code space • PC is stored on the stack • ACALL addr11 • 2 byte instruction • Call any subroutine within 2k of code space • Other than this, same behavior as LCALL • Saves code ROM for devices with less than 64K ROM • RET • Return from a subroutine call, Pops PC from stack

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