MB95630H Series
12
FUJITSU SEMICONDUCTOR LIMITED
MN702-00009-2v0-E
CHAPTER 2 CPU
2.2 General-purpose Register
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Features of General-purpose Registers
The general-purpose register has the following features.
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High-speed access to RAM with short instructions (general-purpose register addressing).
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Grouping registers into a block of register banks facilitates data protection and division of
registers in terms of functions.
A general-purpose register bank can be allocated exclusively to an interrupt service routine or a
vector call (CALLV #0 to #7) service routine. For instance, the fourth register bank is always
assigned to the second interrupt.
Data of a general-purpose register before an interrupt can be saved to a dedicated register bank
by just specifying that register bank at the beginning of an interrupt service routine. This
therefore eliminates the need to save data of a general-purpose register in a stack, thereby
enabling the CPU to receive interrupts at high speed.
Note:
In an interrupt service routine, include one of the following in a program to ensure that
values of the interrupt level bits (CCR:IL[1:0]) of the condition code register are not
modified when modifying a register bank pointer (RP) to specify a register bank.
•
Read the interrupt level bits and save their values before writing a value to the RP.
•
Directly write a new value to the RP mirror address "0x0078" to update the RP.
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As for a product whose RAM size is 256 bytes, the area available for general-purpose
registers is from "0x0100" to "0x018F", which is half of that of the product whose RAM
size is 512 bytes or above. Therefore, when using a program development tool such
as a C compiler to set a general-purpose register area, ensure that the area used as a
general-purpose register area does not exceed the size of RAM installed.
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