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AS(1)			     GNU Development Tools			 AS(1)

NAME
       AS - the	portable GNU assembler.

SYNOPSIS
       as [-a[cdhlns][=file]] [--alternate] [-D]
	[--defsym sym=val] [-f]	[-g] [--gstabs]
	[--gstabs+] [--gdwarf-2] [--help] [-I dir] [-J]
	[-K] [-L] [--listing-lhs-width=NUM]
	[--listing-lhs-width2=NUM] [--listing-rhs-width=NUM]
	[--listing-cont-lines=NUM] [--keep-locals] [-o
	objfile] [-R] [--reduce-memory-overheads] [--statistics]
	[-v] [-version]	[--version] [-W] [--warn]
	[--fatal-warnings] [-w]	[-x] [-Z] [@FILE]
	[--target-help]	[target-options]
	[--|files ...]

       Target Alpha options:
	  [-mcpu]
	  [-mdebug | -no-mdebug]
	  [-relax] [-g]	[-Gsize]
	  [-F] [-32addr]

       Target ARC options:
	  [-marc[5|6|7|8]]
	  [-EB|-EL]

       Target ARM options:
	  [-mcpu=processor[+extension...]]
	  [-march=architecture[+extension...]]
	  [-mfpu=floating-point-format]
	  [-mfloat-abi=abi]
	  [-meabi=ver]
	  [-mthumb]
	  [-EB|-EL]
	  [-mapcs-32|-mapcs-26|-mapcs-float|
	   -mapcs-reentrant]
	  [-mthumb-interwork] [-k]

       Target CRIS options:
	  [--underscore	| --no-underscore]
	  [--pic] [-N]
	  [--emulation=criself | --emulation=crisaout]
	  [--march=v0_v10 | --march=v10	| --march=v32 |
       --march=common_v10_v32]

       Target D10V options:
	  [-O]

       Target D30V options:
	  [-O|-n|-N]

       Target i386 options:
	  [--32|--64] [-n]
	  [-march=CPU] [-mtune=CPU]

       Target i960 options:
	  [-ACA|-ACA_A|-ACB|-ACC|-AKA|-AKB|
	   -AKC|-AMC]
	  [-b] [-no-relax]

       Target IA-64 options:
	  [-mconstant-gp|-mauto-pic]
	  [-milp32|-milp64|-mlp64|-mp64]
	  [-mle|mbe]
	  [-mtune=itanium1|-mtune=itanium2]
	  [-munwind-check=warning|-munwind-check=error]
	  [-mhint.b=ok|-mhint.b=warning|-mhint.b=error]
	  [-x|-xexplicit] [-xauto] [-xdebug]

       Target IP2K options:
	  [-mip2022|-mip2022ext]

       Target M32C options:
	  [-m32c|-m16c]

       Target M32R options:
	  [--m32rx|--[no-]warn-explicit-parallel-conflicts|
	  --W[n]p]

       Target M680X0 options:
	  [-l] [-m68000|-m68010|-m68020|...]

       Target M68HC11 options:
	  [-m68hc11|-m68hc12|-m68hcs12]
	  [-mshort|-mlong]
	  [-mshort-double|-mlong-double]
	  [--force-long-branches] [--short-branches]
	  [--strict-direct-mode] [--print-insn-syntax]
	  [--print-opcodes] [--generate-example]

       Target MCORE options:
	  [-jsri2bsr] [-sifilter] [-relax]
	  [-mcpu=[210|340]]

       Target MIPS options:
	  [-nocpp] [-EL] [-EB] [-O[optimization	level]]
	  [-g[debug level]] [-G	num] [-KPIC] [-call_shared]
	  [-non_shared]	[-xgot [-mvxworks-pic]
	  [-mabi=ABI] [-32] [-n32] [-64] [-mfp32] [-mgp32]
	  [-march=CPU] [-mtune=CPU] [-mips1] [-mips2]
	  [-mips3] [-mips4] [-mips5] [-mips32] [-mips32r2]
	  [-mips64] [-mips64r2]
	  [-construct-floats] [-no-construct-floats]
	  [-trap] [-no-break] [-break] [-no-trap]
	  [-mfix7000] [-mno-fix7000]
	  [-mips16] [-no-mips16]
	  [-msmartmips]	[-mno-smartmips]
	  [-mips3d] [-no-mips3d]
	  [-mdmx] [-no-mdmx]
	  [-mdsp] [-mno-dsp]
	  [-mdspr2] [-mno-dspr2]
	  [-mmt] [-mno-mt]
	  [-mdebug] [-no-mdebug]
	  [-mpdr] [-mno-pdr]

       Target MMIX options:
	  [--fixed-special-register-names] [--globalize-symbols]
	  [--gnu-syntax] [--relax] [--no-predefined-symbols]
	  [--no-expand]	[--no-merge-gregs] [-x]
	  [--linker-allocated-gregs]

       Target PDP11 options:
	  [-mpic|-mno-pic] [-mall] [-mno-extensions]
	  [-mextension|-mno-extension]
	  [-mcpu] [-mmachine]

       Target picoJava options:
	  [-mb|-me]

       Target PowerPC options:
	  [-mpwrx|-mpwr2|-mpwr|-m601|-mppc|-mppc32|-m603|-m604|
	   -m403|-m405|-mppc64|-m620|-mppc64bridge|-mbooke|
	   -mbooke32|-mbooke64]
	  [-mcom|-many|-maltivec] [-memb]
	  [-mregnames|-mno-regnames]
	  [-mrelocatable|-mrelocatable-lib]
	  [-mlittle|-mlittle-endian|-mbig|-mbig-endian]
	  [-msolaris|-mno-solaris]

       Target SPARC options:
	  [-Av6|-Av7|-Av8|-Asparclet|-Asparclite
	   -Av8plus|-Av8plusa|-Av9|-Av9a]
	  [-xarch=v8plus|-xarch=v8plusa] [-bump]
	  [-32|-64]

       Target TIC54X options:
	[-mcpu=54[123589]|-mcpu=54[56]lp] [-mfar-mode|-mf]
	[-merrors-to-file _filename_|-me _filename_]

       Target Z80 options:
	 [-z80]	[-r800]
	 [ -ignore-undocumented-instructions] [-Wnud]
	 [ -ignore-unportable-instructions] [-Wnup]
	 [ -warn-undocumented-instructions] [-Wud]
	 [ -warn-unportable-instructions] [-Wup]
	 [ -forbid-undocumented-instructions] [-Fud]
	 [ -forbid-unportable-instructions] [-Fup]

       Target Xtensa options:
	[--[no-]text-section-literals] [--[no-]absolute-literals]
	[--[no-]target-align] [--[no-]longcalls]
	[--[no-]transform]
	[--rename-section oldname=newname]

DESCRIPTION
       GNU as is really	a family of assemblers.	 If you	use (or	have used) the
       GNU assembler on	one architecture, you should find a fairly similar
       environment when	you use	it on another architecture.  Each version has
       much in common with the others, including object	file formats, most
       assembler directives (often called pseudo-ops) and assembler syntax.

       as is primarily intended	to assemble the	output of the GNU C compiler
       "gcc" for use by	the linker "ld".  Nevertheless,	we've tried to make as
       assemble	correctly everything that other	assemblers for the same
       machine would assemble.	Any exceptions are documented explicitly.
       This doesn't mean as always uses	the same syntax	as another assembler
       for the same architecture; for example, we know of several incompatible
       versions	of 680x0 assembly language syntax.

       Each time you run as it assembles exactly one source program.  The
       source program is made up of one	or more	files.	(The standard input is
       also a file.)

       You give	as a command line that has zero	or more	input file names.  The
       input files are read (from left file name to right).  A command line
       argument	(in any	position) that has no special meaning is taken to be
       an input	file name.

       If you give as no file names it attempts	to read	one input file from
       the as standard input, which is normally	your terminal.	You may	have
       to type ctl-D to	tell as	there is no more program to assemble.

       Use -- if you need to explicitly	name the standard input	file in	your
       command line.

       If the source is	empty, as produces a small, empty object file.

       as may write warnings and error messages	to the standard	error file
       (usually	your terminal).	 This should not happen	when  a	compiler runs
       as automatically.  Warnings report an assumption	made so	that as	could
       keep assembling a flawed	program; errors	report a grave problem that
       stops the assembly.

       If you are invoking as via the GNU C compiler, you can use the -Wa
       option to pass arguments	through	to the assembler.  The assembler
       arguments must be separated from	each other (and	the -Wa) by commas.
       For example:

	       gcc -c -g -O -Wa,-alh,-L	file.c

       This passes two options to the assembler: -alh (emit a listing to
       standard	output with high-level and assembly source) and	-L (retain
       local symbols in	the symbol table).

       Usually you do not need to use this -Wa mechanism, since	many compiler
       command-line options are	automatically passed to	the assembler by the
       compiler.  (You can call	the GNU	compiler driver	with the -v option to
       see precisely what options it passes to each compilation	pass,
       including the assembler.)

OPTIONS
       @file
	   Read	command-line options from file.	 The options read are inserted
	   in place of the original @file option.  If file does	not exist, or
	   cannot be read, then	the option will	be treated literally, and not
	   removed.

	   Options in file are separated by whitespace.	 A whitespace
	   character may be included in	an option by surrounding the entire
	   option in either single or double quotes.  Any character (including
	   a backslash)	may be included	by prefixing the character to be
	   included with a backslash.  The file	may itself contain additional
	   @file options; any such options will	be processed recursively.

       -a[cdhlmns]
	   Turn	on listings, in	any of a variety of ways:

	   -ac omit false conditionals

	   -ad omit debugging directives

	   -ah include high-level source

	   -al include assembly

	   -am include macro expansions

	   -an omit forms processing

	   -as include symbols

	   =file
	       set the name of the listing file

	   You may combine these options; for example, use -aln	for assembly
	   listing without forms processing.  The =file	option,	if used, must
	   be the last one.  By	itself,	-a defaults to -ahls.

       --alternate
	   Begin in alternate macro mode.

       -D  Ignored.  This option is accepted for script	compatibility with
	   calls to other assemblers.

       --defsym	sym=value
	   Define the symbol sym to be value before assembling the input file.
	   value must be an integer constant.  As in C,	a leading 0x indicates
	   a hexadecimal value,	and a leading 0	indicates an octal value.  The
	   value of the	symbol can be overridden inside	a source file via the
	   use of a ".set" pseudo-op.

       -f  "fast"---skip whitespace and	comment	preprocessing (assume source
	   is compiler output).

       -g
       --gen-debug
	   Generate debugging information for each assembler source line using
	   whichever debug format is preferred by the target.  This currently
	   means either	STABS, ECOFF or	DWARF2.

       --gstabs
	   Generate stabs debugging information	for each assembler line.  This
	   may help debugging assembler	code, if the debugger can handle it.

       --gstabs+
	   Generate stabs debugging information	for each assembler line, with
	   GNU extensions that probably	only gdb can handle, and that could
	   make	other debuggers	crash or refuse	to read	your program.  This
	   may help debugging assembler	code.  Currently the only GNU
	   extension is	the location of	the current working directory at
	   assembling time.

       --gdwarf-2
	   Generate DWARF2 debugging information for each assembler line.
	   This	may help debugging assembler code, if the debugger can handle
	   it.	Note---this option is only supported by	some targets, not all
	   of them.

       --help
	   Print a summary of the command line options and exit.

       --target-help
	   Print a summary of all target specific options and exit.

       -I dir
	   Add directory dir to	the search list	for ".include" directives.

       -J  Don't warn about signed overflow.

       -K  Issue warnings when difference tables altered for long
	   displacements.

       -L
       --keep-locals
	   Keep	(in the	symbol table) local symbols.  These symbols start with
	   system-specific local label prefixes, typically .L for ELF systems
	   or L	for traditional	a.out systems.

       --listing-lhs-width=number
	   Set the maximum width, in words, of the output data column for an
	   assembler listing to	number.

       --listing-lhs-width2=number
	   Set the maximum width, in words, of the output data column for
	   continuation	lines in an assembler listing to number.

       --listing-rhs-width=number
	   Set the maximum width of an input source line, as displayed in a
	   listing, to number bytes.

       --listing-cont-lines=number
	   Set the maximum number of lines printed in a	listing	for a single
	   line	of input to number + 1.

       -o objfile
	   Name	the object-file	output from as objfile.

       -R  Fold	the data section into the text section.

	   Set the default size	of GAS's hash tables to	a prime	number close
	   to number.  Increasing this value can reduce	the length of time it
	   takes the assembler to perform its tasks, at	the expense of
	   increasing the assembler's memory requirements.  Similarly reducing
	   this	value can reduce the memory requirements at the	expense	of
	   speed.

       --reduce-memory-overheads
	   This	option reduces GAS's memory requirements, at the expense of
	   making the assembly processes slower.  Currently this switch	is a
	   synonym for --hash-size=4051, but in	the future it may have other
	   effects as well.

       --statistics
	   Print the maximum space (in bytes) and total	time (in seconds) used
	   by assembly.

       --strip-local-absolute
	   Remove local	absolute symbols from the outgoing symbol table.

       -v
       -version
	   Print the as	version.

       --version
	   Print the as	version	and exit.

       -W
       --no-warn
	   Suppress warning messages.

       --fatal-warnings
	   Treat warnings as errors.

       --warn
	   Don't suppress warning messages or treat them as errors.

       -w  Ignored.

       -x  Ignored.

       -Z  Generate an object file even	after errors.

       -- | files ...
	   Standard input, or source files to assemble.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for an	ARC
       processor.

       -marc[5|6|7|8]
	   This	option selects the core	processor variant.

       -EB | -EL
	   Select either big-endian (-EB) or little-endian (-EL) output.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the ARM
       processor family.

       -mcpu=processor[+extension...]
	   Specify which ARM processor variant is the target.

       -march=architecture[+extension...]
	   Specify which ARM architecture variant is used by the target.

       -mfpu=floating-point-format
	   Select which	Floating Point architecture is the target.

       -mfloat-abi=abi
	   Select which	floating point ABI is in use.

       -mthumb
	   Enable Thumb	only instruction decoding.

       -mapcs-32 | -mapcs-26 | -mapcs-float | -mapcs-reentrant
	   Select which	procedure calling convention is	in use.

       -EB | -EL
	   Select either big-endian (-EB) or little-endian (-EL) output.

       -mthumb-interwork
	   Specify that	the code has been generated with interworking between
	   Thumb and ARM code in mind.

       -k  Specify that	PIC code has been generated.

       See the info pages for documentation of the CRIS-specific options.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for a D10V
       processor.

       -O  Optimize output by parallelizing instructions.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for a D30V
       processor.

       -O  Optimize output by parallelizing instructions.

       -n  Warn	when nops are generated.

       -N  Warn	when a nop after a 32-bit multiply instruction is generated.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the Intel
       80960 processor.

       -ACA | -ACA_A | -ACB | -ACC | -AKA | -AKB | -AKC	| -AMC
	   Specify which variant of the	960 architecture is the	target.

       -b  Add code to collect statistics about	branches taken.

       -no-relax
	   Do not alter	compare-and-branch instructions	for long
	   displacements; error	if necessary.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the
       Ubicom IP2K series.

       -mip2022ext
	   Specifies that the extended IP2022 instructions are allowed.

       -mip2022
	   Restores the	default	behaviour, which restricts the permitted
	   instructions	to just	the basic IP2022 ones.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the
       Renesas M32C and	M16C processors.

       -m32c
	   Assemble M32C instructions.

       -m16c
	   Assemble M16C instructions (the default).

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the
       Renesas M32R (formerly Mitsubishi M32R) series.

       --m32rx
	   Specify which processor in the M32R family is the target.  The
	   default is normally the M32R, but this option changes it to the
	   M32RX.

       --warn-explicit-parallel-conflicts or --Wp
	   Produce warning messages when questionable parallel constructs are
	   encountered.

       --no-warn-explicit-parallel-conflicts or	--Wnp
	   Do not produce warning messages when	questionable parallel
	   constructs are encountered.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the
       Motorola	68000 series.

       -l  Shorten references to undefined symbols, to one word	instead	of
	   two.

       -m68000 | -m68008 | -m68010 | -m68020 | -m68030
       | -m68040 | -m68060 | -m68302 | -m68331 | -m68332
       | -m68333 | -m68340 | -mcpu32 | -m5200
	   Specify what	processor in the 68000 family is the target.  The
	   default is normally the 68020, but this can be changed at
	   configuration time.

       -m68881 | -m68882 | -mno-68881 |	-mno-68882
	   The target machine does (or does not) have a	floating-point
	   coprocessor.	 The default is	to assume a coprocessor	for 68020,
	   68030, and cpu32.  Although the basic 68000 is not compatible with
	   the 68881, a	combination of the two can be specified, since it's
	   possible to do emulation of the coprocessor instructions with the
	   main	processor.

       -m68851 | -mno-68851
	   The target machine does (or does not) have a	memory-management unit
	   coprocessor.	 The default is	to assume an MMU for 68020 and up.

       For details about the PDP-11 machine dependent features options,	see
       PDP-11-Options.

       -mpic | -mno-pic
	   Generate position-independent (or position-dependent) code.	The
	   default is -mpic.

       -mall
       -mall-extensions
	   Enable all instruction set extensions.  This	is the default.

       -mno-extensions
	   Disable all instruction set extensions.

       -mextension | -mno-extension
	   Enable (or disable) a particular instruction	set extension.

       -mcpu
	   Enable the instruction set extensions supported by a	particular
	   CPU,	and disable all	other extensions.

       -mmachine
	   Enable the instruction set extensions supported by a	particular
	   machine model, and disable all other	extensions.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for a
       picoJava	processor.

       -mb Generate "big endian" format	output.

       -ml Generate "little endian" format output.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the
       Motorola	68HC11 or 68HC12 series.

       -m68hc11	| -m68hc12 | -m68hcs12
	   Specify what	processor is the target.  The default is defined by
	   the configuration option when building the assembler.

       -mshort
	   Specify to use the 16-bit integer ABI.

       -mlong
	   Specify to use the 32-bit integer ABI.

       -mshort-double
	   Specify to use the 32-bit double ABI.

       -mlong-double
	   Specify to use the 64-bit double ABI.

       --force-long-branches
	   Relative branches are turned	into absolute ones. This concerns
	   conditional branches, unconditional branches	and branches to	a sub
	   routine.

       -S | --short-branches
	   Do not turn relative	branches into absolute ones when the offset is
	   out of range.

       --strict-direct-mode
	   Do not turn the direct addressing mode into extended	addressing
	   mode	when the instruction does not support direct addressing	mode.

       --print-insn-syntax
	   Print the syntax of instruction in case of error.

       --print-opcodes
	   print the list of instructions with syntax and then exit.

       --generate-example
	   print an example of instruction for each possible instruction and
	   then	exit.  This option is only useful for testing as.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the SPARC
       architecture:

       -Av6 | -Av7 | -Av8 | -Asparclet | -Asparclite
       -Av8plus	| -Av8plusa | -Av9 | -Av9a
	   Explicitly select a variant of the SPARC architecture.

	   -Av8plus and	-Av8plusa select a 32 bit environment.	-Av9 and -Av9a
	   select a 64 bit environment.

	   -Av8plusa and -Av9a enable the SPARC	V9 instruction set with
	   UltraSPARC extensions.

       -xarch=v8plus | -xarch=v8plusa
	   For compatibility with the Solaris v9 assembler.  These options are
	   equivalent to -Av8plus and -Av8plusa, respectively.

       -bump
	   Warn	when the assembler switches to another architecture.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the 'c54x
       architecture.

       -mfar-mode
	   Enable extended addressing mode.  All addresses and relocations
	   will	assume extended	addressing (usually 23 bits).

       -mcpu=CPU_VERSION
	   Sets	the CPU	version	being compiled for.

       -merrors-to-file	FILENAME
	   Redirect error output to a file, for	broken systems which don't
	   support such	behaviour in the shell.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for a MIPS
       processor.

       -G num
	   This	option sets the	largest	size of	an object that can be
	   referenced implicitly with the "gp" register.  It is	only accepted
	   for targets that use	ECOFF format, such as a	DECstation running
	   Ultrix.  The	default	value is 8.

       -EB Generate "big endian" format	output.

       -EL Generate "little endian" format output.

       -mips1
       -mips2
       -mips3
       -mips4
       -mips5
       -mips32
       -mips32r2
       -mips64
       -mips64r2
	   Generate code for a particular MIPS Instruction Set Architecture
	   level.  -mips1 is an	alias for -march=r3000,	-mips2 is an alias for
	   -march=r6000, -mips3	is an alias for	-march=r4000 and -mips4	is an
	   alias for -march=r8000.  -mips5, -mips32, -mips32r2,	-mips64, and
	   -mips64r2 correspond	to generic MIPS	V, MIPS32, MIPS32 Release 2,
	   MIPS64, and MIPS64 Release 2	ISA processors,	respectively.

       -march=CPU
	   Generate code for a particular MIPS cpu.

       -mtune=cpu
	   Schedule and	tune for a particular MIPS cpu.

       -mfix7000
       -mno-fix7000
	   Cause nops to be inserted if	the read of the	destination register
	   of an mfhi or mflo instruction occurs in the	following two
	   instructions.

       -mdebug
       -no-mdebug
	   Cause stabs-style debugging output to go into an ECOFF-style
	   .mdebug section instead of the standard ELF .stabs sections.

       -mpdr
       -mno-pdr
	   Control generation of ".pdr"	sections.

       -mgp32
       -mfp32
	   The register	sizes are normally inferred from the ISA and ABI, but
	   these flags force a certain group of	registers to be	treated	as 32
	   bits	wide at	all times.  -mgp32 controls the	size of	general-
	   purpose registers and -mfp32	controls the size of floating-point
	   registers.

       -mips16
       -no-mips16
	   Generate code for the MIPS 16 processor.  This is equivalent	to
	   putting ".set mips16" at the	start of the assembly file.
	   -no-mips16 turns off	this option.

       -msmartmips
       -mno-smartmips
	   Enables the SmartMIPS extension to the MIPS32 instruction set. This
	   is equivalent to putting ".set smartmips" at	the start of the
	   assembly file.  -mno-smartmips turns	off this option.

       -mips3d
       -no-mips3d
	   Generate code for the MIPS-3D Application Specific Extension.  This
	   tells the assembler to accept MIPS-3D instructions.	-no-mips3d
	   turns off this option.

       -mdmx
       -no-mdmx
	   Generate code for the MDMX Application Specific Extension.  This
	   tells the assembler to accept MDMX instructions.  -no-mdmx turns
	   off this option.

       -mdsp
       -mno-dsp
	   Generate code for the DSP Release 1 Application Specific Extension.
	   This	tells the assembler to accept DSP Release 1 instructions.
	   -mno-dsp turns off this option.

       -mdspr2
       -mno-dspr2
	   Generate code for the DSP Release 2 Application Specific Extension.
	   This	option implies -mdsp.  This tells the assembler	to accept DSP
	   Release 2 instructions.  -mno-dspr2 turns off this option.

       -mmt
       -mno-mt
	   Generate code for the MT Application	Specific Extension.  This
	   tells the assembler to accept MT instructions.  -mno-mt turns off
	   this	option.

       --construct-floats
       --no-construct-floats
	   The --no-construct-floats option disables the construction of
	   double width	floating point constants by loading the	two halves of
	   the value into the two single width floating	point registers	that
	   make	up the double width register.  By default --construct-floats
	   is selected,	allowing construction of these floating	point
	   constants.

       --emulation=name
	   This	option causes as to emulate as configured for some other
	   target, in all respects, including output format (choosing between
	   ELF and ECOFF only),	handling of pseudo-opcodes which may generate
	   debugging information or store symbol table information, and
	   default endianness.	The available configuration names are:
	   mipsecoff, mipself, mipslecoff, mipsbecoff, mipslelf, mipsbelf.
	   The first two do not	alter the default endianness from that of the
	   primary target for which the	assembler was configured; the others
	   change the default to little- or big-endian as indicated by the b
	   or l	in the name.  Using -EB	or -EL will override the endianness
	   selection in	any case.

	   This	option is currently supported only when	the primary target as
	   is configured for is	a MIPS ELF or ECOFF target.  Furthermore, the
	   primary target or others specified with --enable-targets=...	at
	   configuration time must include support for the other format, if
	   both	are to be available.  For example, the Irix 5 configuration
	   includes support for	both.

	   Eventually, this option will	support	more configurations, with more
	   fine-grained	control	over the assembler's behavior, and will	be
	   supported for more processors.

       -nocpp
	   as ignores this option.  It is accepted for compatibility with the
	   native tools.

       --trap
       --no-trap
       --break
       --no-break
	   Control how to deal with multiplication overflow and	division by
	   zero.  --trap or --no-break (which are synonyms) take a trap
	   exception (and only work for	Instruction Set	Architecture level 2
	   and higher);	--break	or --no-trap (also synonyms, and the default)
	   take	a break	exception.

       -n  When	this option is used, as	will issue a warning every time	it
	   generates a nop instruction from a macro.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for an	MCore
       processor.

       -jsri2bsr
       -nojsri2bsr
	   Enable or disable the JSRI to BSR transformation.  By default this
	   is enabled.	The command line option	-nojsri2bsr can	be used	to
	   disable it.

       -sifilter
       -nosifilter
	   Enable or disable the silicon filter	behaviour.  By default this is
	   disabled.  The default can be overridden by the -sifilter command
	   line	option.

       -relax
	   Alter jump instructions for long displacements.

       -mcpu=[210|340]
	   Select the cpu type on the target hardware.	This controls which
	   instructions	can be assembled.

       -EB Assemble for	a big endian target.

       -EL Assemble for	a little endian	target.

       See the info pages for documentation of the MMIX-specific options.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for an	Xtensa
       processor.

       --text-section-literals | --no-text-section-literals
	   With	--text-section-literals, literal pools are interspersed	in the
	   text	section.  The default is --no-text-section-literals, which
	   places literals in a	separate section in the	output file.  These
	   options only	affect literals	referenced via PC-relative "L32R"
	   instructions; literals for absolute mode "L32R" instructions	are
	   handled separately.

       --absolute-literals | --no-absolute-literals
	   Indicate to the assembler whether "L32R" instructions use absolute
	   or PC-relative addressing.  The default is to assume	absolute
	   addressing if the Xtensa processor includes the absolute "L32R"
	   addressing option.  Otherwise, only the PC-relative "L32R" mode can
	   be used.

       --target-align |	--no-target-align
	   Enable or disable automatic alignment to reduce branch penalties at
	   the expense of some code density.  The default is --target-align.

       --longcalls | --no-longcalls
	   Enable or disable transformation of call instructions to allow
	   calls across	a greater range	of addresses.  The default is
	   --no-longcalls.

       --transform | --no-transform
	   Enable or disable all assembler transformations of Xtensa
	   instructions.  The default is --transform; --no-transform should be
	   used	only in	the rare cases when the	instructions must be exactly
	   as specified	in the assembly	source.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for a Z80
       family processor.

       -z80
	   Assemble for	Z80 processor.

       -r800
	   Assemble for	R800 processor.

       -ignore-undocumented-instructions
       -Wnud
	   Assemble undocumented Z80 instructions that also work on R800
	   without warning.

       -ignore-unportable-instructions
       -Wnup
	   Assemble all	undocumented Z80 instructions without warning.

       -warn-undocumented-instructions
       -Wud
	   Issue a warning for undocumented Z80	instructions that also work on
	   R800.

       -warn-unportable-instructions
       -Wup
	   Issue a warning for undocumented Z80	instructions that do not work
	   on R800.

       -forbid-undocumented-instructions
       -Fud
	   Treat all undocumented instructions as errors.

       -forbid-unportable-instructions
       -Fup
	   Treat undocumented Z80 instructions that do not work	on R800	as
	   errors.

SEE ALSO
       gcc(1), ld(1), and the Info entries for binutils	and ld.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) 1991, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 2000, 2001, 2002,
       2006, 2007 Free Software	Foundation, Inc.

       Permission is granted to	copy, distribute and/or	modify this document
       under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
       any later version published by the Free Software	Foundation; with no
       Invariant Sections, with	no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover
       Texts.  A copy of the license is	included in the	section	entitled "GNU
       Free Documentation License".

binutils-2.17.50		  2010-10-30				 AS(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | SEE ALSO | COPYRIGHT

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