Chapter 8 Central Processor Unit (S08CPUV5)
MC9S08QL8 MCU Series Reference Manual, Rev. 1
NXP Semiconductors
99
8.3
Addressing Modes
Addressing modes define the way the CPU accesses operands and data. In the HCS08, memory, status and
control registers, and input/output (I/O) ports share a single 64-Kbyte CPU address space. This
arrangement means that the same instructions that access variables in RAM can also be used to access I/O
and control registers or nonvolatile program space.
Some instructions use more than one addressing mode. For instance, move instructions use one addressing
mode to specify the source operand and a second addressing mode to specify the destination address.
Instructions such as BRCLR, BRSET, CBEQ, and DBNZ use one addressing mode to specify the location
of an operand for a test and then use relative addressing mode to specify the branch destination address
when the tested condition is true. For BRCLR, BRSET, CBEQ, and DBNZ, the addressing mode listed in
the instruction set tables is the addressing mode needed to access the operand to be tested, and relative
addressing mode is implied for the branch destination.
8.3.1
Inherent Addressing Mode (INH)
In this addressing mode, operands needed to complete the instruction (if any) are located within CPU
registers so the CPU does not need to access memory to get any operands.
8.3.2
Relative Addressing Mode (REL)
Relative addressing mode is used to specify the destination location for branch instructions. A signed 8-bit
offset value is located in the memory location immediately following the opcode. During execution, if the
branch condition is true, the signed offset is sign-extended to a 16-bit value and is added to the current
contents of the program counter, which causes program execution to continue at the branch destination
address.
8.3.3
Immediate Addressing Mode (IMM)
In immediate addressing mode, the operand needed to complete the instruction is included in the object
code immediately following the instruction opcode in memory. In the case of a 16-bit immediate operand,
the high-order byte is located in the next memory location after the opcode, and the low-order byte is
located in the next memory location after that.
8.3.4
Direct Addressing Mode (DIR)
In direct addressing mode, the instruction includes the low-order eight bits of an address in the direct page
(0x0000–0x00FF). During execution a 16-bit address is formed by concatenating an implied 0x00 for the
high-order half of the address and the direct address from the instruction to get the 16-bit address where
the desired operand is located. This is faster and more memory efficient than specifying a complete 16-bit
address for the operand.
Summary of Contents for MC9S08QL4
Page 4: ...MC9S08QL8 MCU Series Reference Manual Rev 1 4 NXP Semiconductors...
Page 36: ...Chapter 3 Modes of Operation MC9S08QL8 MCU Series Reference Manual Rev 1 36 NXP Semiconductors...
Page 56: ...Chapter 4 Memory MC9S08QL8 MCU Series Reference Manual Rev 1 56 NXP Semiconductors...
Page 172: ...Modulo Timer S08MTIMV1 MC9S08QL8 MCU Series Reference Manual Rev 1 172 NXP Semiconductors...
Page 238: ...Development Support MC9S08QL8 MCU Series Reference Manual Rev 1 238 NXP Semiconductors...
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