asm6809(1)                  General Commands Manual                 asm6809(1)



NAME
       asm6809--6809 cross-assembler

SYNOPSIS
       asm6809 [OPTION]... [SOURCE-FILE]...

DESCRIPTION
       asm6809 is a portable macro cross assembler targeting the Motorola 6809
       and  Hitachi  6309  processors.  These  processors  are  most  commonly
       encountered in the Dragon and Tandy Colour Computer.

OPTIONS
       -B, --bin
              output raw binary file (default)

       -D, --dragondos
              output DragonDOS binary file

       -C, --coco
              output CoCo RS-DOS ("DECB") segmented binary file

       -S, --srec
              output Motorola SREC file

       -H, --hex
              output Intel hex record file

       -e, --exec addr
              EXEC address (for output formats that support one)

       -8, -9, --6809
              use 6809 ISA (default)

       -3, --6309
              use 6309 ISA (6809 with extensions)

       -d, --define sym[=number]
              define a symbol

       --setdp value
              initial value assumed for DP [undefined]

       -o, --output file
              output filename

       -l, --listing file
              create listing file

       -E, --exports file
              create exports table

       -s, --symbols file
              create symbol table

       -q, --quiet
              don't warn about illegal (but working) code

       -v, --verbose
              warn about explicitly inefficient code

       --help show help

       --version
              show program version

       If more than one SOURCE-FILE is specified, they are assembled as though
       they were all in one file.

USAGE
       Text is read in and parsed, then as  many  passes  are  made  over  the
       parsed  source as necessary (up to a limit), until symbols are resolved
       and addresses are stable. The fastest or smallest representation should
       always be chosen where there is ambiguity.

       Output  formats are: Raw binary, DragonDOS binary, CoCo RS-DOS ("DECB")
       binary, Motorola SREC, Intel HEX.

       Additional optional output files are:

       o A listing file is an annotated copy of the source file with addresses
         and generated code prepended to each line.

       o An  exports file contains a list of all macro definitions and symbols
         flagged for export with the EXPORT pseudo-op. Suitable for  inclusion
         in subsequent source files.

       o A symbols file contains a list of all non-local symbols. Suitable for
         inclusion in subsequent source files, but beware multiple definitions
         errors if two source files include a common set of symbols.

       Home page: <http://www.6809.org.uk/asm6809/>

   Differences to other assemblers
       Motorola syntax allows a comment to follow any operands, separated from
       them only by whitespace. To an extent, this assembler accepts that, but
       be  aware that as spaces are allowed within expressions, if the comment
       looks like it is continuing an expression it will generate bad code (or
       raise an error if the result is syntactically incorrect). Example:

              0000  8605                  lda     #5
              0002  C60A                  ldb     #5 * 2  twice first number

       A  strict  Motorola assembler would generate bytes C6 05 for the second
       line, as the "* 2" would be ignored. For consistency,  it  is  best  to
       introduce  end of line comments with a ; character. An asterisk (*) can
       introduce whole line comments.

       An unquoted semicolon always introduces a comment. The  alternate  form
       of  the  6309  instructions AIM, OIM, etc. listed in some documentation
       that uses a semicolon as a separator is not accepted.

       A symbol may be forward referenced; any time a reference  is  unresolv-
       able, another pass is triggered, up to some defined maximum.

       In 6809 indexed addressing, the offset size will default to the fastest
       possible form, e.g. if the offset is  an  expression  that  happens  to
       evaluate to zero, the no offset form will be used. Prepend << to coerce
       a 5 bit offset, < to coerce 8 bits or > to coerce 16 bits.

       asm6809 currently has no support for OS-9 modules  or  multiple  object
       linking.

   Program syntax
       Program  files  are  considered  line by line. Each line contains up to
       three fields, separated by whitespace:  label,  instruction  and  argu-
       ments. An unquoted semicolon (;) indicates that the rest of the line is
       to be considered a comment. Whole line comments may be introduced  with
       an  asterisk  (*).  Motorola-style end of line comments without a ; are
       accepted, but see the notes about assembler differences.

       Any label must appear at the very beginning of the line. If a label  is
       omitted,  whitespace  must  appear  before  the operator field. Certain
       pseudo-ops may affect a label's meaning, but usually  labels  define  a
       symbol  referring to the current position in the code (Program Counter,
       or PC).

       The  instruction  field  contains   either   an   instruction   op-code
       (mnemonic),  a  pseudo-op  (assembler  directive),  or a macro name for
       expansion.

       Pseudo-ops allow conditional assembly and inline data, can affect  code
       placement  and  symbol  values  and  be  used  to include further files
       inline. See the section on Pseudo-ops for more information.

       Arguments are a comma-separated list: either  instruction  operands  or
       arguments  to a pseudo-op or macro. Permitted arguments are specific to
       the instruction or pseudo-op, but in general they may be:

       o An expression.

       o A register name, with optional pre-decrement or post-increment.

       o A nested list surrounded by [ and ]. This is generally only  used  to
         indicate indirect indexed addressing.

       In addition, any argument may be preceded by:

       o #, indicate immediate value.

       o <<, force 5-bit index offset.

       o <, force direct addressing, 8-bit value or 8-bit index offset.

       o >, force extended addressing, 16-bit value or 16-bit index offset.

   Expressions
       Expressions are formed of:

       o A decimal number.

       o An octal number preceded by @ or with a leading 0.

       o A binary number preceded by % or 0b.

       o A hexadecimal number preceded by $ or 0x.

       o A  floating point number: decimal digits surrounding exactly one full
         stop (.).

       o A single quote followed by any ASCII character  (yielding  the  ASCII
         value of that character).

       o A symbol name, local forward reference or local back reference.

       o Any of the above prefixed with a unary minus (-) or plus (+).

       o A string delimited either by double quotes or /.

       o A  combination  of any of the above with arithmetic, bitwise, logical
         or relational operators.

       o Parenthesis to specify precedence.

       The assembler uses  multiple  passes  to  resolve  expressions.  If  an
       expression  refers  to  a  symbol that cannot currently be resolved, an
       extra pass is triggered. Similarly, if a symbol  is  assigned  a  value
       (e.g.  by  an  EQU pseudo-op) that differs to its value on the previous
       pass, another is triggered until it becomes stable.

       When not directly used for their contents (e.g. by FCC), strings can be
       used  in  place of integer values. The ASCII value of each character is
       used to represent 8 bits of the integer result up to 32 bits. Example:

              0000  CC443A                ldd     #"D:"

   Operators
       The following operators are available, listed in  descending  order  of
       precedence  (where  operators share a precedence, left-to-right evalua-
       tion is performed):
                         |
               Operator  | Description
              -----------+----------------------
                  +      | unary plus
                  -      | unary minus
                 ! ~     | logical, bitwise NOT
              -----------+----------------------
                  *      | multiplication
                  /      | division
                  %      | modulo
              -----------+----------------------
                  +      | addition
                  -      | subtraction
              -----------+----------------------
                  <<     | bitwise shift left
                  >>     | bitwise shift right
              -----------+----------------------
                 < <=    | relational operators
                 > >=    | relational operators
              -----------+----------------------
                  ==     | relational equal
                  !=     | relational not equal
              -----------+----------------------
                  &      | bitwise AND
              -----------+----------------------
                  ^      | bitwise XOR
              -----------+----------------------
                  |      | bitwise OR
              -----------+----------------------
                  &&     | logical AND
              -----------+----------------------
                  ||     | logical OR
              -----------+----------------------
                  ?:     | ternary operator

       Division always returns a floating point result. Other arithmetic oper-
       ators return integers if both operands are integers, otherwise floating
       point. Bitwise operators and modulo all cast their operands to integers
       and  return an integer. Relational and logical operators result in 0 if
       false, 1 if true. Integer calculations are performed  using  the  plat-
       form's int64_t type, floating point uses double.

   Conditional assembly
       The pseudo-ops IF, ELSIF, ELSE and ENDIF guide conditional assembly. IF
       and ELSIF take one argument, which is evaluated as an integer.  If  the
       result  is non-zero, the following code will be assembled, else it will
       be skipped. Undefined symbols encountered while evaluating  the  condi-
       tion are interpreted as zero (false) rather than raising an error.

       Conditional  assembly pseudo-ops are permitted within macro definitions
       and will be evaluated at the time of  expansion,  therefore  positional
       variables can be used to affect macro expansion.

   Sections
       Code can be placed into named sections with the SECTION pseudo-op. This
       can make breaking source into multiple input  files  more  comfortable.
       Without  ORG or PUT directives, sections will follow each other in mem-
       ory in the order they are first defined.

       Within each section, there may exist multiple  spans  of  discontiguous
       data. Certain output formats are able to represent this, for the others
       (e.g. DragonDOS), the spans are combined first, with the  gaps  between
       them padded with zero bytes.

   Local labels
       Local labels are considered local to the current section. A local label
       is any decimal number used in the label field, and the same local label
       may appear mulitple times, unlike other labels.

       As  an operand, a decimal number followed by B or F is considered to be
       a back or forward reference to the previous or next occurrence of  that
       numerical local label in the section.

       In this example, the 1 label occurs twice, but each use of 1B refers to
       the closest one searching backwards:

              0000  8E0400    scroll      ldx     #$0400
              0003  EC8820    1           ldd     32,x
              0006  ED81                  std     ,x++
              0008  8C05E0                cmpx    #$05e0
              000B  25F6                  blo     1B
              000D  CC6060                ldd     #$6060
              0010  ED81      1           std     ,x++
              0012  8C0600                cmpx    #$0600
              0015  25F9                  blo     1B
              0017  39                    rts

       An exclamation mark (!) in the label field is treated as a local  label
       numbered  zero. Operands of < and > are considered equivalent to 0B and
       0F respectively, and can therefore refer to the ! local label. This  is
       included for compatibility with other assemblers.

       As  local labels can be repeated, their position is used to distinguish
       them. For this reason, all file inclusions  and  macro  expansion  must
       occur  during  the  first pass so that the absolute line count at which
       each local label is encountered remains the same between passes.

   Macros
       Start a macro definition by specifying a  name  for  it  in  the  label
       field,  and  MACRO in the instruction field. Finish the definition with
       ENDM in the instruction field.

       Use a macro by specifying its name in the instruction field. Any  argu-
       ments  given  will  be available during expansion as a positional vari-
       able.

       Positional variables can be used within strings, or pasted to form sym-
       bol  names.  In either case, they must be quoted or they will be passed
       by value, which will result in an error if they do  not  correspond  to
       valid symbols by themselves.

       The  positional  variables  are referred to with \{1}, \{2}, ..., \{n}.
       For the first nine arguments, the braces are not required, so  \1,  \2,
       ...,  \9  are  valid  alternatives. For compatibility with the TSC Flex
       assembler, another form is accepted: &{1}, &{2}, ...,  &{n}.  Within  a
       string,  the shorter &1, &2, ..., &9 is still valid, but as this can be
       confused with bitwise AND, it is not permitted elsewhere.

       Here's a silly example demonstrating positional  variables  and  symbol
       pasting. Consider the following macro definition and utilising code:

              go_left         equ     -1
              go_right        equ     +1
              move            macro
                              lda     x_position
                              adda    #go_\1
                              sta     x_position
                              endm
              do_move
                              move    "right"
                              rts
              x_position      rmb     1

       The main code generated is as follows:

              0000            do_move
              0000                        move    "right"
              0000  B60009                lda     x_position
              0003  8B01                  adda    #go_\1
              0005  B70009                sta     x_position
              0008  39                    rts

   Pseudo-ops
       Conditional assembly:

       IF condition
              Subsequent  lines  are  assembled only if condition evaluates to
              true (non-zero).

       ELSIF condition
              Subsequent lines are assembled only  if  all  preceding  IF  and
              ELSIF  pseudo-ops evaluated to false (zero) and condition evalu-
              ates to true (non-zero).

       ELSE   Subsequent lines are assembled only  if  all  preceding  IF  and
              ELSIF pseudo-ops evaluated to false (zero).

       ENDIF  Terminate an IF statement.

       Macro definition:

       MACRO  Start  defining  a macro. The macro's name shall be in the label
              field. Subsequent lines up to the enclosing ENDM pseudo-op  will
              not  be assembled until the macro is expanded. Macro definitions
              may be nested; that is, using a macro may define another macro.

       ENDM   Finish a macro definition started with MACRO.

       Inline data:

       FCB value[,value]...
       FCC value[,value]...
              Form Constant Byte. Each value is evaluated either to  a  number
              or a string. Numbers are truncated to 8 bits and stored directly
              as bytes. For strings, the ASCII  value  of  each  character  is
              stored in sequential bytes.

              Historically, FCB handled bytes and FCC (Form Constant Character
              string) handled strings. asm6809 treats them as synonymous,  but
              is  rather  more strict about what is allowed as a string delim-
              iter.

       FCN value[,value]...
              Identical to FCC, but a terminating zero byte  is  stored  after
              the  data.  Included to increase compatibility with other assem-
              blers.

       FCS value[,value]...

       Like FCC, but the last byte in each value has its top bit set. This  is
       the  format  used  to represent keywords in the Dragon and Tandy Colour
       Computer BASIC ROMs.

       FCV value[,value]...

       Like FCC, but ASCII is translated into the  values  typically  required
       for display by the MC6847 VDG as present in the Dragon and Tandy Colour
       Computer.

       FCI value[,value]...

       Like FCV, but inverts bit 6 for inverse video.

       FDB value[,value]...
              Form Double Byte. Each value is evaluated to a number, which  is
              truncated  to  16  bits and stored as two successive bytes (big-
              endian).

       FQB value[,value]...
              Form Quad Byte. Each value is evaluated to a  number,  which  is
              truncated  to  32 bits and stored as four successive bytes (big-
              endian).

       FILL value,count
              Insert count bytes of value. This is effectively the same as the
              two-argument form of RZB with its arguments swapped.

       RZB count[,value]
       ZMB count[,value]
       BSZ count[,value]
              Reserve Zeroed Bytes. Inserts a sequence of count bytes of zero,
              or value if specified. The two-argument form is effectively  the
              same as FILL with its arguments swapped.

              ZMB  and  BSZ  are  alternate forms recognised for compatibility
              with other assemblers.

       Code placement & addressing:

       ORG address
              Sets the Program Counter--the base address assumed for the  next
              assembled  instruction. Unless followed by a PUT pseudo-op, this
              will also be the instruction's actual address in memory. A label
              on the same line will define a symbol with a value of the speci-
              fied address.

       PUT address
              Modify the put address--the Program Counter  is  unaffected,  so
              the  assumed  address  for  subsequent  instructions remains the
              same, but the actual data will be located elsewhere. Useful  for
              assembling  code  that  is  going to be copied into place before
              executing.

       RMB count
              Reserve Memory Bytes. The  Program  Counter  is  advanced  count
              bytes.  In  some  output  formats this region may be padded with
              zeroes, in others a new loadable section may be created.

       SECTION name
       CODE
       DATA
       BSS
       RAM
       AUTO   Switch to the named section. The Program Counter  will  continue
              from  the  last  value  it had while assembling this section, or
              follow the previous section if had not previously been seen.

              Each of CODE, DATA, BSS, RAM, and AUTO  switches  to  a  section
              named after the pseudo-op. They are recognised for compatibility
              with other assemblers.

       SETDP page
              Set the assumed value of the Direct Page (DP) register  to  page
              for  subsequent instructions. Any non-negative page is truncated
              to 8 bits, or specify a negative  number  to  disable  automatic
              direct addressing.

              See the section on Direct Page addressing for more information.

       Symbols:

       EQU value
              Short for "equate", this must be used with a label and defines a
              symbol with the specified value. This may be  any  single  valid
              argument (e.g. an expression or a string).

       EXPORT name[,name]...
              Each name--either the name of a macro or a symbol--is flagged to
              be exported. Exported macros and symbols will be listed  in  the
              exports output file, if specified.

       SET value
              Similar  to  EQU,  this  must be used with a label and defines a
              symbol with the specified value. Unlike EQU,  you  can  use  SET
              multiple  times  to  assign  different values to the same symbol
              without error.

       Files:

       END [address]
              Signifies the end of input. All further lines are disregarded.

              Optionally specifies an EXEC address to be included in the  out-
              put, where supported by the output format. An EXEC address spec-
              ified on the command line  will  override  any  value  specified
              here.

       INCLUDE filename
              Includes the contents of another file at this point in assembly.
              The filename argument must be a string, i.e. delimited by quotes
              or / characters.

       INCLUDEBIN filename
              Includes  the  binary data from filename (which, as with INCLUDE
              must be a delimited string) directly.

   Direct Page addressing
       The 6809 extends the zero page concept from other processors by  allow-
       ing fast accesses to whichever page is selected by the Direct Page reg-
       ister (DP). An assembler is not able to keep track of what the code has
       set this register to, but the information is useful when deciding which
       addressing mode to use for an  instruction.  The  SETDP  pseudo-op,  or
       --setdp  option, informs the assembler that the supplied value is to be
       assumed for DP. Set this to a negative number to undefine it  and  dis-
       able automatic use of direct addressing (this is the default).

LICENCE
       This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published  by  the
       Free  Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your
       option) any later version.

       This program is distributed in the hope that it  will  be  useful,  but
       WITHOUT  ANY  WARRANTY;  without  even  the  implied  warranty  of MER-
       CHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the  GNU  General
       Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
       with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.



asm6809-2.11                       May 2018                         asm6809(1)
