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AS(1)			     GNU Development Tools			 AS(1)

NAME
       AS - the	portable GNU assembler.

SYNOPSIS
       as [-a[cdghlns][=file]] [--alternate] [-D]
	[--compress-debug-sections]  [--nocompress-debug-sections]
	[--debug-prefix-map old=new]
	[--defsym sym=val] [-f]	[-g] [--gstabs]
	[--gstabs+] [--gdwarf-<N>] [--gdwarf-sections]
	[--gdwarf-cie-version=VERSION]
	[--help] [-I dir] [-J]
	[-K] [-L] [--listing-lhs-width=NUM]
	[--listing-lhs-width2=NUM] [--listing-rhs-width=NUM]
	[--listing-cont-lines=NUM] [--keep-locals]
	[--no-pad-sections]
	[-o objfile] [-R]
	[--statistics]
	[-v] [-version]	[--version]
	[-W] [--warn] [--fatal-warnings] [-w] [-x]
	[-Z] [@FILE]
	[--sectname-subst] [--size-check=[error|warning]]
	[--elf-stt-common=[no|yes]]
	[--generate-missing-build-notes=[no|yes]]
	[--multibyte-handling=[allow|warn|warn-sym-only]]
	[--target-help]	[target-options]
	[--|files ...]

TARGET
       Target AArch64 options:
	  [-EB|-EL]
	  [-mabi=ABI]

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

       Target ARC options:
	  [-mcpu=cpu]
	  [-mA6|-mARC600|-mARC601|-mA7|-mARC700|-mEM|-mHS]
	  [-mcode-density]
	  [-mrelax]
	  [-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 Blackfin options:
	  [-mcpu=processor[-sirevision]]
	  [-mfdpic]
	  [-mno-fdpic]
	  [-mnopic]

       Target BPF options:
	  [-EL]	[-EB]

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

       Target C-SKY options:
	  [-march=arch]	[-mcpu=cpu]
	  [-EL]	[-mlittle-endian] [-EB]	[-mbig-endian]
	  [-fpic] [-pic]
	  [-mljump] [-mno-ljump]
	  [-force2bsr] [-mforce2bsr] [-no-force2bsr] [-mno-force2bsr]
	  [-jsri2bsr] [-mjsri2bsr] [-no-jsri2bsr ] [-mno-jsri2bsr]
	  [-mnolrw ] [-mno-lrw]
	  [-melrw] [-mno-elrw]
	  [-mlaf ] [-mliterals-after-func]
	  [-mno-laf] [-mno-literals-after-func]
	  [-mlabr] [-mliterals-after-br]
	  [-mno-labr] [-mnoliterals-after-br]
	  [-mistack] [-mno-istack]
	  [-mhard-float] [-mmp]	[-mcp] [-mcache]
	  [-msecurity] [-mtrust]
	  [-mdsp] [-medsp] [-mvdsp]

       Target D10V options:
	  [-O]

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

       Target EPIPHANY options:
	  [-mepiphany|-mepiphany16]

       Target H8/300 options:
	  [-h-tick-hex]

       Target i386 options:
	  [--32|--x32|--64] [-n]
	  [-march=CPU[+EXTENSION...]] [-mtune=CPU]

       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]	[-relax] [-h-tick-hex]

       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|-mm9s12x|-mm9s12xg]
	  [-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 Meta options:
	  [-mcpu=cpu] [-mfpu=cpu] [-mdsp=cpu] Target MICROBLAZE	options:

       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]
	  [-mfp64] [-mgp64] [-mfpxx]
	  [-modd-spreg]	[-mno-odd-spreg]
	  [-march=CPU] [-mtune=CPU] [-mips1] [-mips2]
	  [-mips3] [-mips4] [-mips5] [-mips32] [-mips32r2]
	  [-mips32r3] [-mips32r5] [-mips32r6] [-mips64]	[-mips64r2]
	  [-mips64r3] [-mips64r5] [-mips64r6]
	  [-construct-floats] [-no-construct-floats]
	  [-mignore-branch-isa]	[-mno-ignore-branch-isa]
	  [-mnan=encoding]
	  [-trap] [-no-break] [-break] [-no-trap]
	  [-mips16] [-no-mips16]
	  [-mmips16e2] [-mno-mips16e2]
	  [-mmicromips]	[-mno-micromips]
	  [-msmartmips]	[-mno-smartmips]
	  [-mips3d] [-no-mips3d]
	  [-mdmx] [-no-mdmx]
	  [-mdsp] [-mno-dsp]
	  [-mdspr2] [-mno-dspr2]
	  [-mdspr3] [-mno-dspr3]
	  [-mmsa] [-mno-msa]
	  [-mxpa] [-mno-xpa]
	  [-mmt] [-mno-mt]
	  [-mmcu] [-mno-mcu]
	  [-mcrc] [-mno-crc]
	  [-mginv] [-mno-ginv]
	  [-mloongson-mmi] [-mno-loongson-mmi]
	  [-mloongson-cam] [-mno-loongson-cam]
	  [-mloongson-ext] [-mno-loongson-ext]
	  [-mloongson-ext2] [-mno-loongson-ext2]
	  [-minsn32] [-mno-insn32]
	  [-mfix7000] [-mno-fix7000]
	  [-mfix-rm7000] [-mno-fix-rm7000]
	  [-mfix-vr4120] [-mno-fix-vr4120]
	  [-mfix-vr4130] [-mno-fix-vr4130]
	  [-mfix-r5900]	[-mno-fix-r5900]
	  [-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 Nios II options:
	  [-relax-all] [-relax-section]	[-no-relax]
	  [-EB]	[-EL]

       Target NDS32 options:
	   [-EL] [-EB] [-O] [-Os] [-mcpu=cpu]
	   [-misa=isa] [-mabi=abi] [-mall-ext]
	   [-m[no-]16-bit]  [-m[no-]perf-ext] [-m[no-]perf2-ext]
	   [-m[no-]string-ext] [-m[no-]dsp-ext]	[-m[no-]mac] [-m[no-]div]
	   [-m[no-]audio-isa-ext] [-m[no-]fpu-sp-ext] [-m[no-]fpu-dp-ext]
	   [-m[no-]fpu-fma] [-mfpu-freg=FREG] [-mreduced-regs]
	   [-mfull-regs] [-m[no-]dx-regs] [-mpic] [-mno-relax]
	   [-mb2bb]

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

       Target picoJava options:
	  [-mb|-me]

       Target PowerPC options:
	  [-a32|-a64]
	  [-mpwrx|-mpwr2|-mpwr|-m601|-mppc|-mppc32|-m603|-m604|-m403|-m405|
	   -m440|-m464|-m476|-m7400|-m7410|-m7450|-m7455|-m750cl|-mgekko|
	   -mbroadway|-mppc64|-m620|-me500|-e500x2|-me500mc|-me500mc64|-me5500|
	   -me6500|-mppc64bridge|-mbooke|-mpower4|-mpwr4|-mpower5|-mpwr5|-mpwr5x|
	   -mpower6|-mpwr6|-mpower7|-mpwr7|-mpower8|-mpwr8|-mpower9|-mpwr9-ma2|
	   -mcell|-mspe|-mspe2|-mtitan|-me300|-mcom]
	  [-many] [-maltivec|-mvsx|-mhtm|-mvle]
	  [-mregnames|-mno-regnames]
	  [-mrelocatable|-mrelocatable-lib|-K PIC] [-memb]
	  [-mlittle|-mlittle-endian|-le|-mbig|-mbig-endian|-be]
	  [-msolaris|-mno-solaris]
	  [-nops=count]

       Target PRU options:
	  [-link-relax]
	  [-mnolink-relax]
	  [-mno-warn-regname-label]

       Target RISC-V options:
	  [-fpic|-fPIC|-fno-pic]
	  [-march=ISA]
	  [-mabi=ABI]
	  [-mlittle-endian|-mbig-endian]

       Target RL78 options:
	  [-mg10]
	  [-m32bit-doubles|-m64bit-doubles]

       Target RX options:
	  [-mlittle-endian|-mbig-endian]
	  [-m32bit-doubles|-m64bit-doubles]
	  [-muse-conventional-section-names]
	  [-msmall-data-limit]
	  [-mpid]
	  [-mrelax]
	  [-mint-register=number]
	  [-mgcc-abi|-mrx-abi]

       Target s390 options:
	  [-m31|-m64] [-mesa|-mzarch] [-march=CPU]
	  [-mregnames|-mno-regnames]
	  [-mwarn-areg-zero]

       Target SCORE options:
	  [-EB][-EL][-FIXDD][-NWARN]
	  [-SCORE5][-SCORE5U][-SCORE7][-SCORE3]
	  [-march=score7][-march=score3]
	  [-USE_R1][-KPIC][-O0][-G num][-V]

       Target SPARC options:
	  [-Av6|-Av7|-Av8|-Aleon|-Asparclet|-Asparclite
	   -Av8plus|-Av8plusa|-Av8plusb|-Av8plusc|-Av8plusd
	   -Av8plusv|-Av8plusm|-Av9|-Av9a|-Av9b|-Av9c
	   -Av9d|-Av9e|-Av9v|-Av9m|-Asparc|-Asparcvis
	   -Asparcvis2|-Asparcfmaf|-Asparcima|-Asparcvis3
	   -Asparcvisr|-Asparc5]
	  [-xarch=v8plus|-xarch=v8plusa]|-xarch=v8plusb|-xarch=v8plusc
	   -xarch=v8plusd|-xarch=v8plusv|-xarch=v8plusm|-xarch=v9
	   -xarch=v9a|-xarch=v9b|-xarch=v9c|-xarch=v9d|-xarch=v9e
	   -xarch=v9v|-xarch=v9m|-xarch=sparc|-xarch=sparcvis
	   -xarch=sparcvis2|-xarch=sparcfmaf|-xarch=sparcima
	   -xarch=sparcvis3|-xarch=sparcvisr|-xarch=sparc5
	   -bump]
	  [-32|-64]
	  [--enforce-aligned-data][--dcti-couples-detect]

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

       Target TIC6X options:
	  [-march=arch]	[-mbig-endian|-mlittle-endian]
	  [-mdsbt|-mno-dsbt] [-mpid=no|-mpid=near|-mpid=far]
	  [-mpic|-mno-pic]

       Target TILE-Gx options:
	  [-m32|-m64][-EB][-EL]

       Target Visium options:
	  [-mtune=arch]

       Target Xtensa options:
	[--[no-]text-section-literals] [--[no-]auto-litpools]
	[--[no-]absolute-literals]
	[--[no-]target-align] [--[no-]longcalls]
	[--[no-]transform]
	[--rename-section oldname=newname]
	[--[no-]trampolines]
	[--abi-windowed|--abi-call0]

       Target Z80 options:
	 [-march=CPU[-EXT][+EXT]]
	 [-local-prefix=PREFIX]
	 [-colonless]
	 [-sdcc]
	 [-fp-s=FORMAT]
	 [-fp-d=FORMAT]

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

	   -ac omit false conditionals

	   -ad omit debugging directives

	   -ag include general information, like as version and	options	passed

	   -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.

       --compress-debug-sections
	   Compress DWARF debug	sections using zlib with SHF_COMPRESSED	from
	   the ELF ABI.	 The resulting object file may not be compatible with
	   older linkers and object file utilities.  Note if compression would
	   make	a given	section	larger then it is not compressed.

       --compress-debug-sections=none
       --compress-debug-sections=zlib
       --compress-debug-sections=zlib-gnu
       --compress-debug-sections=zlib-gabi
	   These options control how DWARF debug sections are compressed.
	   --compress-debug-sections=none is equivalent	to
	   --nocompress-debug-sections.	 --compress-debug-sections=zlib	and
	   --compress-debug-sections=zlib-gabi are equivalent to
	   --compress-debug-sections.  --compress-debug-sections=zlib-gnu
	   compresses DWARF debug sections using zlib.	The debug sections are
	   renamed to begin with .zdebug.  Note	if compression would make a
	   given section larger	then it	is not compressed nor renamed.

       --nocompress-debug-sections
	   Do not compress DWARF debug sections.  This is usually the default
	   for all targets except the x86/x86_64, but a	configure time option
	   can be used to override this.

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

       --debug-prefix-map old=new
	   When	assembling files in directory old, record debugging
	   information describing them as in new instead.

       --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.	 When the debug	format is
	   DWARF then a	".debug_info" and ".debug_line"	section	is only
	   emitted when	the assembly file doesn't generate one itself.

       --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.

       --gdwarf-3
	   This	option is the same as the --gdwarf-2 option, except that it
	   allows for the possibility of the generation	of extra debug
	   information as per version 3	of the DWARF specification.  Note -
	   enabling this option	does not guarantee the generation of any extra
	   information,	the choice to do so is on a per	target basis.

       --gdwarf-4
	   This	option is the same as the --gdwarf-2 option, except that it
	   allows for the possibility of the generation	of extra debug
	   information as per version 4	of the DWARF specification.  Note -
	   enabling this option	does not guarantee the generation of any extra
	   information,	the choice to do so is on a per	target basis.

       --gdwarf-5
	   This	option is the same as the --gdwarf-2 option, except that it
	   allows for the possibility of the generation	of extra debug
	   information as per version 5	of the DWARF specification.  Note -
	   enabling this option	does not guarantee the generation of any extra
	   information,	the choice to do so is on a per	target basis.

       --gdwarf-sections
	   Instead of creating a .debug_line section, create a series of
	   .debug_line.foo sections where foo is the name of the corresponding
	   code	section.  For example a	code section called .text.func will
	   have	its dwarf line number information placed into a	section	called
	   .debug_line.text.func.  If the code section is just called .text
	   then	debug line section will	still be called	just .debug_line
	   without any suffix.

       --gdwarf-cie-version=version
	   Control which version of DWARF Common Information Entries (CIEs)
	   are produced.  When this flag is not	specificed the default is
	   version 1, though some targets can modify this default.  Other
	   possible values for version are 3 or	4.

       --size-check=error
       --size-check=warning
	   Issue an error or warning for invalid ELF .size directive.

       --elf-stt-common=no
       --elf-stt-common=yes
	   These options control whether the ELF assembler should generate
	   common symbols with the "STT_COMMON"	type.  The default can be
	   controlled by a configure option --enable-elf-stt-common.

       --generate-missing-build-notes=yes
       --generate-missing-build-notes=no
	   These options control whether the ELF assembler should generate GNU
	   Build attribute notes if none are present in	the input sources.
	   The default can be controlled by the	--enable-generate-build-notes
	   configure option.

       --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.

       --multibyte-handling=allow
       --multibyte-handling=warn
       --multibyte-handling=warn-sym-only
	   Controls how	the assembler handles multibyte	characters in the
	   input.  The default (which can be restored by using the allow
	   argument) is	to allow such characters without complaint.  Using the
	   warn	argument will make the assembler generate a warning message
	   whenever any	multibyte character is encountered.  Using the warn-
	   sym-only argument will only cause a warning to be generated when a
	   symbol is defined with a name that contains multibyte characters.
	   (References to undefined symbols will not generate a	warning).

       --no-pad-sections
	   Stop	the assembler for padding the ends of output sections to the
	   alignment of	that section.  The default is to pad the sections, but
	   this	can waste space	which might be needed on targets which have
	   tight memory	constraints.

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

       -R  Fold	the data section into the text section.

       --sectname-subst
	   Honor substitution sequences	in section names.

       --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 the
       64-bit mode of the ARM Architecture (AArch64).

       -EB This	option specifies that the output generated by the assembler
	   should be marked as being encoded for a big-endian processor.

       -EL This	option specifies that the output generated by the assembler
	   should be marked as being encoded for a little-endian processor.

       -mabi=abi
	   Specify which ABI the source	code uses.  The	recognized arguments
	   are:	"ilp32"	and "lp64", which decides the generated	object file in
	   ELF32 and ELF64 format respectively.	 The default is	"lp64".

       -mcpu=processor[+extension...]
	   This	option specifies the target processor.	The assembler will
	   issue an error message if an	attempt	is made	to assemble an
	   instruction which will not execute on the target processor.	The
	   following processor names are recognized: "cortex-a34",
	   "cortex-a35", "cortex-a53", "cortex-a55", "cortex-a57",
	   "cortex-a65", "cortex-a65ae", "cortex-a72", "cortex-a73",
	   "cortex-a75", "cortex-a76", "cortex-a76ae", "cortex-a77",
	   "cortex-a78", "cortex-a78ae", "cortex-a78c",	"cortex-a510",
	   "cortex-a710", "ares", "exynos-m1", "falkor", "neoverse-n1",
	   "neoverse-n2", "neoverse-e1", "neoverse-v1",	"qdf24xx", "saphira",
	   "thunderx", "vulcan", "xgene1" "xgene2", "cortex-r82", "cortex-x1",
	   and "cortex-x2".  The special name "all" may	be used	to allow the
	   assembler to	accept instructions valid for any supported processor,
	   including all optional extensions.

	   In addition to the basic instruction	set, the assembler can be told
	   to accept, or restrict, various extension mnemonics that extend the
	   processor.

	   If some implementations of a	particular processor can have an
	   extension, then then	those extensions are automatically enabled.
	   Consequently, you will not normally have to specify any additional
	   extensions.

       -march=architecture[+extension...]
	   This	option specifies the target architecture.  The assembler will
	   issue an error message if an	attempt	is made	to assemble an
	   instruction which will not execute on the target architecture.  The
	   following architecture names	are recognized:	"armv8-a",
	   "armv8.1-a",	"armv8.2-a", "armv8.3-a", "armv8.4-a" "armv8.5-a",
	   "armv8.6-a",	"armv8.7-a", "armv8.8-a", "armv8-r", "armv9-a",
	   "armv9.1-a",	"armv9.2-a", and "armv9.3-a".

	   If both -mcpu and -march are	specified, the assembler will use the
	   setting for -mcpu.  If neither are specified, the assembler will
	   default to -mcpu=all.

	   The architecture option can be extended with	the same instruction
	   set extension options as the	-mcpu option.  Unlike -mcpu,
	   extensions are not always enabled by	default,

       -mverbose-error
	   This	option enables verbose error messages for AArch64 gas.	This
	   option is enabled by	default.

       -mno-verbose-error
	   This	option disables	verbose	error messages in AArch64 gas.

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

       -mcpu
	   This	option specifies the target processor.	If an attempt is made
	   to assemble an instruction which will not execute on	the target
	   processor, the assembler may	either expand the instruction as a
	   macro or issue an error message.  This option is equivalent to the
	   ".arch" directive.

	   The following processor names are recognized: 21064,	"21064a",
	   21066, 21068, 21164,	"21164a", "21164pc", 21264, "21264a",
	   "21264b", "ev4", "ev5", "lca45", "ev5", "ev56", "pca56", "ev6",
	   "ev67", "ev68".  The	special	name "all" may be used to allow	the
	   assembler to	accept instructions valid for any Alpha	processor.

	   In order to support existing	practice in OSF/1 with respect to
	   ".arch", and	existing practice within MILO (the Linux ARC
	   bootloader),	the numbered processor names (e.g. 21064) enable the
	   processor-specific PALcode instructions, while the "electro-vlasic"
	   names (e.g. "ev4") do not.

       -mdebug
       -no-mdebug
	   Enables or disables the generation of ".mdebug" encapsulation for
	   stabs directives and	procedure descriptors.	The default is to
	   automatically enable	".mdebug" when the first stabs directive is
	   seen.

       -relax
	   This	option forces all relocations to be put	into the object	file,
	   instead of saving space and resolving some relocations at assembly
	   time.  Note that this option	does not propagate all symbol
	   arithmetic into the object file, because not	all symbol arithmetic
	   can be represented.	However, the option can	still be useful	in
	   specific applications.

       -replace
       -noreplace
	   Enables or disables the optimization	of procedure calls, both at
	   assemblage and at link time.	 These options are only	available for
	   VMS targets and "-replace" is the default.  See section 1.4.1 of
	   the OpenVMS Linker Utility Manual.

       -g  This	option is used when the	compiler generates debug information.
	   When	gcc is using mips-tfile	to generate debug information for
	   ECOFF, local	labels must be passed through to the object file.
	   Otherwise this option has no	effect.

       -Gsize
	   A local common symbol larger	than size is placed in ".bss", while
	   smaller symbols are placed in ".sbss".

       -F
       -32addr
	   These options are ignored for backward compatibility.

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

       -mcpu=cpu
	   This	option selects the core	processor variant.

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

       -mcode-density
	   Enable Code Density extension instructions.

       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.

       -mccs
	   Turns on CodeComposer Studio	assembly syntax	compatibility mode.

       -k  Specify that	PIC code has been generated.

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

       -mcpu=processor[-sirevision]
	   This	option specifies the target processor.	The optional
	   sirevision is not used in assembler.	 It's here such	that GCC can
	   easily pass down its	"-mcpu=" option.  The assembler	will issue an
	   error message if an attempt is made to assemble an instruction
	   which will not execute on the target	processor.  The	following
	   processor names are recognized: "bf504", "bf506", "bf512", "bf514",
	   "bf516", "bf518", "bf522", "bf523", "bf524",	"bf525", "bf526",
	   "bf527", "bf531", "bf532", "bf533", "bf534",	"bf535"	(not
	   implemented yet), "bf536", "bf537", "bf538",	"bf539", "bf542",
	   "bf542m", "bf544", "bf544m",	"bf547", "bf547m", "bf548", "bf548m",
	   "bf549", "bf549m", "bf561", and "bf592".

       -mfdpic
	   Assemble for	the FDPIC ABI.

       -mno-fdpic
       -mnopic
	   Disable -mfdpic.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the Linux
       kernel BPF processor family.

       @chapter	BPF Dependent Features

   Options
       -EB This	option specifies that the assembler should emit	big-endian
	   eBPF.

       -EL This	option specifies that the assembler should emit	little-endian
	   eBPF.

       Note that if no endianness option is specified in the command line, the
       host endianness is used.	 See the info pages for	documentation of the
       CRIS-specific options.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the C-SKY
       processor family.

       -march=archname
	   Assemble for	architecture archname.	The --help option lists	valid
	   values for archname.

       -mcpu=cpuname
	   Assemble for	architecture cpuname.  The --help option lists valid
	   values for cpuname.

       -EL
       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate little-endian output.

       -EB
       -mbig-endian
	   Generate big-endian output.

       -fpic
       -pic
	   Generate position-independent code.

       -mljump
       -mno-ljump
	   Enable/disable transformation of the	short branch instructions
	   "jbf", "jbt", and "jbr" to "jmpi".  This option is for V2
	   processors only.  It	is ignored on CK801 and	CK802 targets, which
	   do not support the "jmpi" instruction, and is enabled by default
	   for other processors.

       -mbranch-stub
       -mno-branch-stub
	   Pass	through	"R_CKCORE_PCREL_IMM26BY2" relocations for "bsr"
	   instructions	to the linker.

	   This	option is only available for bare-metal	C-SKY V2 ELF targets,
	   where it is enabled by default.  It cannot be used in code that
	   will	be dynamically linked against shared libraries.

       -force2bsr
       -mforce2bsr
       -no-force2bsr
       -mno-force2bsr
	   Enable/disable transformation of "jbsr" instructions	to "bsr".
	   This	option is always enabled (and -mno-force2bsr is	ignored) for
	   CK801/CK802 targets.	 It is also always enabled when	-mbranch-stub
	   is in effect.

       -jsri2bsr
       -mjsri2bsr
       -no-jsri2bsr
       -mno-jsri2bsr
	   Enable/disable transformation of "jsri" instructions	to "bsr".
	   This	option is enabled by default.

       -mnolrw
       -mno-lrw
	   Enable/disable transformation of "lrw" instructions into a
	   "movih"/"ori" pair.

       -melrw
       -mno-elrw
	   Enable/disable extended "lrw" instructions.	This option is enabled
	   by default for CK800-series processors.

       -mlaf
       -mliterals-after-func
       -mno-laf
       -mno-literals-after-func
	   Enable/disable placement of literal pools after each	function.

       -mlabr
       -mliterals-after-br
       -mno-labr
       -mnoliterals-after-br
	   Enable/disable placement of literal pools after unconditional
	   branches.  This option is enabled by	default.

       -mistack
       -mno-istack
	   Enable/disable interrupt stack instructions.	 This option is
	   enabled by default on CK801,	CK802, and CK802 processors.

       The following options explicitly	enable certain optional	instructions.
       These features are also enabled implicitly by using "-mcpu=" to specify
       a processor that	supports it.

       -mhard-float
	   Enable hard float instructions.

       -mmp
	   Enable multiprocessor instructions.

       -mcp
	   Enable coprocessor instructions.

       -mcache
	   Enable cache	prefetch instruction.

       -msecurity
	   Enable C-SKY	security instructions.

       -mtrust
	   Enable C-SKY	trust instructions.

       -mdsp
	   Enable DSP instructions.

       -medsp
	   Enable enhanced DSP instructions.

       -mvdsp
	   Enable vector DSP instructions.

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

       -mepiphany
	   Specifies that the both 32 and 16 bit instructions are allowed.
	   This	is the default behavior.

       -mepiphany16
	   Restricts the permitted instructions	to just	the 16 bit set.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for an	H8/300
       processor.  @chapter H8/300 Dependent Features

   Options
       The Renesas H8/300 version of "as" has one machine-dependent option:

       -h-tick-hex
	   Support H'00	style hex constants in addition	to 0x00	style.

       -mach=name
	   Sets	the H8300 machine variant.  The	following machine names	are
	   recognised: "h8300h", "h8300hn", "h8300s", "h8300sn", "h8300sx" and
	   "h8300sxn".

       The following options are available when	as is configured for an	i386
       processor.

       --32 | --x32 | --64
	   Select the word size, either	32 bits	or 64 bits.  --32 implies
	   Intel i386 architecture, while --x32	and --64 imply AMD x86-64
	   architecture	with 32-bit or 64-bit word-size	respectively.

	   These options are only available with the ELF object	file format,
	   and require that the	necessary BFD support has been included	(on a
	   32-bit platform you have to add --enable-64-bit-bfd to configure
	   enable 64-bit usage and use x86-64 as target	platform).

       -n  By default, x86 GAS replaces	multiple nop instructions used for
	   alignment within code sections with multi-byte nop instructions
	   such	as leal	0(%esi,1),%esi.	 This switch disables the optimization
	   if a	single byte nop	(0x90) is explicitly specified as the fill
	   byte	for alignment.

       --divide
	   On SVR4-derived platforms, the character / is treated as a comment
	   character, which means that it cannot be used in expressions.  The
	   --divide option turns / into	a normal character.  This does not
	   disable / at	the beginning of a line	starting a comment, or affect
	   using # for starting	a comment.

       -march=CPU[+EXTENSION...]
	   This	option specifies the target processor.	The assembler will
	   issue an error message if an	attempt	is made	to assemble an
	   instruction which will not execute on the target processor.	The
	   following processor names are recognized: "i8086", "i186", "i286",
	   "i386", "i486", "i586", "i686", "pentium", "pentiumpro",
	   "pentiumii",	"pentiumiii", "pentium4", "prescott", "nocona",
	   "core", "core2", "corei7", "iamcu", "k6", "k6_2", "athlon",
	   "opteron", "k8", "amdfam10",	"bdver1", "bdver2", "bdver3",
	   "bdver4", "znver1", "znver2", "znver3", "btver1", "btver2",
	   "generic32" and "generic64".

	   In addition to the basic instruction	set, the assembler can be told
	   to accept various extension mnemonics.  For example,
	   "-march=i686+sse4+vmx" extends i686 with sse4 and vmx.  The
	   following extensions	are currently supported: 8087, 287, 387, 687,
	   "no87", "no287", "no387", "no687", "cmov", "nocmov",	"fxsr",
	   "nofxsr", "mmx", "nommx", "sse", "sse2", "sse3", "sse4a", "ssse3",
	   "sse4.1", "sse4.2", "sse4", "nosse",	"nosse2", "nosse3", "nosse4a",
	   "nossse3", "nosse4.1", "nosse4.2", "nosse4",	"avx", "avx2",
	   "noavx", "noavx2", "adx", "rdseed", "prfchw", "smap", "mpx",	"sha",
	   "rdpid", "ptwrite", "cet", "gfni", "vaes", "vpclmulqdq",
	   "prefetchwt1", "clflushopt",	"se1", "clwb", "movdiri", "movdir64b",
	   "enqcmd", "serialize", "tsxldtrk", "kl", "nokl", "widekl",
	   "nowidekl", "hreset", "avx512f", "avx512cd",	"avx512er",
	   "avx512pf", "avx512vl", "avx512bw", "avx512dq", "avx512ifma",
	   "avx512vbmi", "avx512_4fmaps", "avx512_4vnniw", "avx512_vpopcntdq",
	   "avx512_vbmi2", "avx512_vnni", "avx512_bitalg",
	   "avx512_vp2intersect", "tdx", "avx512_bf16",	"avx_vnni",
	   "avx512_fp16", "noavx512f", "noavx512cd", "noavx512er",
	   "noavx512pf", "noavx512vl", "noavx512bw", "noavx512dq",
	   "noavx512ifma", "noavx512vbmi", "noavx512_4fmaps",
	   "noavx512_4vnniw", "noavx512_vpopcntdq", "noavx512_vbmi2",
	   "noavx512_vnni", "noavx512_bitalg", "noavx512_vp2intersect",
	   "notdx", "noavx512_bf16", "noavx_vnni", "noavx512_fp16",
	   "noenqcmd", "noserialize", "notsxldtrk", "amx_int8",	"noamx_int8",
	   "amx_bf16", "noamx_bf16", "amx_tile", "noamx_tile", "nouintr",
	   "nohreset", "vmx", "vmfunc",	"smx", "xsave",	"xsaveopt", "xsavec",
	   "xsaves", "aes", "pclmul", "fsgsbase", "rdrnd", "f16c", "bmi2",
	   "fma", "movbe", "ept", "lzcnt", "popcnt", "hle", "rtm", "invpcid",
	   "clflush", "mwaitx",	"clzero", "wbnoinvd", "pconfig", "waitpkg",
	   "uintr", "cldemote",	"rdpru", "mcommit", "sev_es", "lwp", "fma4",
	   "xop", "cx16", "syscall", "rdtscp", "3dnow",	"3dnowa", "sse4a",
	   "sse5", "snp", "invlpgb", "tlbsync",	"svme" and "padlock".  Note
	   that	rather than extending a	basic instruction set, the extension
	   mnemonics starting with "no"	revoke the respective functionality.

	   When	the ".arch" directive is used with -march, the ".arch"
	   directive will take precedent.

       -mtune=CPU
	   This	option specifies a processor to	optimize for. When used	in
	   conjunction with the	-march option, only instructions of the
	   processor specified by the -march option will be generated.

	   Valid CPU values are	identical to the processor list	of -march=CPU.

       -msse2avx
	   This	option specifies that the assembler should encode SSE
	   instructions	with VEX prefix.

       -muse-unaligned-vector-move
	   This	option specifies that the assembler should encode aligned
	   vector move as unaligned vector move.

       -msse-check=none
       -msse-check=warning
       -msse-check=error
	   These options control if the	assembler should check SSE
	   instructions.  -msse-check=none will	make the assembler not to
	   check SSE instructions,  which is the default.  -msse-check=warning
	   will	make the assembler issue a warning for any SSE instruction.
	   -msse-check=error will make the assembler issue an error for	any
	   SSE instruction.

       -mavxscalar=128
       -mavxscalar=256
	   These options control how the assembler should encode scalar	AVX
	   instructions.  -mavxscalar=128 will encode scalar AVX instructions
	   with	128bit vector length, which is the default.  -mavxscalar=256
	   will	encode scalar AVX instructions with 256bit vector length.

	   WARNING: Don't use this for production code - due to	CPU errata the
	   resulting code may not work on certain models.

       -mvexwig=0
       -mvexwig=1
	   These options control how the assembler should encode VEX.W-ignored
	   (WIG) VEX instructions.  -mvexwig=0 will encode WIG VEX
	   instructions	with vex.w = 0,	which is the default.  -mvexwig=1 will
	   encode WIG EVEX instructions	with vex.w = 1.

	   WARNING: Don't use this for production code - due to	CPU errata the
	   resulting code may not work on certain models.

       -mevexlig=128
       -mevexlig=256
       -mevexlig=512
	   These options control how the assembler should encode length-
	   ignored (LIG) EVEX instructions.  -mevexlig=128 will	encode LIG
	   EVEX	instructions with 128bit vector	length,	which is the default.
	   -mevexlig=256 and -mevexlig=512 will	encode LIG EVEX	instructions
	   with	256bit and 512bit vector length, respectively.

       -mevexwig=0
       -mevexwig=1
	   These options control how the assembler should encode w-ignored
	   (WIG) EVEX instructions.  -mevexwig=0 will encode WIG EVEX
	   instructions	with evex.w = 0, which is the default.	-mevexwig=1
	   will	encode WIG EVEX	instructions with evex.w = 1.

       -mmnemonic=att
       -mmnemonic=intel
	   This	option specifies instruction mnemonic for matching
	   instructions.  The ".att_mnemonic" and ".intel_mnemonic" directives
	   will	take precedent.

       -msyntax=att
       -msyntax=intel
	   This	option specifies instruction syntax when processing
	   instructions.  The ".att_syntax" and	".intel_syntax"	directives
	   will	take precedent.

       -mnaked-reg
	   This	option specifies that registers	don't require a	% prefix.  The
	   ".att_syntax" and ".intel_syntax" directives	will take precedent.

       -madd-bnd-prefix
	   This	option forces the assembler to add BND prefix to all branches,
	   even	if such	prefix was not explicitly specified in the source
	   code.

       -mno-shared
	   On ELF target, the assembler	normally optimizes out non-PLT
	   relocations against defined non-weak	global branch targets with
	   default visibility.	The -mshared option tells the assembler	to
	   generate code which may go into a shared library where all non-weak
	   global branch targets with default visibility can be	preempted.
	   The resulting code is slightly bigger.  This	option only affects
	   the handling	of branch instructions.

       -mbig-obj
	   On PE/COFF target this option forces	the use	of big object file
	   format, which allows	more than 32768	sections.

       -momit-lock-prefix=no
       -momit-lock-prefix=yes
	   These options control how the assembler should encode lock prefix.
	   This	option is intended as a	workaround for processors, that	fail
	   on lock prefix. This	option can only	be safely used with single-
	   core, single-thread computers -momit-lock-prefix=yes	will omit all
	   lock	prefixes.  -momit-lock-prefix=no will encode lock prefix as
	   usual, which	is the default.

       -mfence-as-lock-add=no
       -mfence-as-lock-add=yes
	   These options control how the assembler should encode lfence,
	   mfence and sfence.  -mfence-as-lock-add=yes will encode lfence,
	   mfence and sfence as	lock addl $0x0,	(%rsp) in 64-bit mode and lock
	   addl	$0x0, (%esp) in	32-bit mode.  -mfence-as-lock-add=no will
	   encode lfence, mfence and sfence as usual, which is the default.

       -mrelax-relocations=no
       -mrelax-relocations=yes
	   These options control whether the assembler should generate relax
	   relocations,	R_386_GOT32X, in 32-bit	mode, or R_X86_64_GOTPCRELX
	   and R_X86_64_REX_GOTPCRELX, in 64-bit mode.
	   -mrelax-relocations=yes will	generate relax relocations.
	   -mrelax-relocations=no will not generate relax relocations.	The
	   default can be controlled by	a configure option
	   --enable-x86-relax-relocations.

       -malign-branch-boundary=NUM
	   This	option controls	how the	assembler should align branches	with
	   segment prefixes or NOP.  NUM must be a power of 2.	It should be 0
	   or no less than 16.	Branches will be aligned within	NUM byte
	   boundary.  -malign-branch-boundary=0, which is the default, doesn't
	   align branches.

       -malign-branch=TYPE[+TYPE...]
	   This	option specifies types of branches to align. TYPE is
	   combination of jcc, which aligns conditional	jumps, fused, which
	   aligns fused	conditional jumps, jmp,	which aligns unconditional
	   jumps, call which aligns calls, ret,	which aligns rets, indirect,
	   which aligns	indirect jumps and calls.  The default is
	   -malign-branch=jcc+fused+jmp.

       -malign-branch-prefix-size=NUM
	   This	option specifies the maximum number of prefixes	on an
	   instruction to align	branches.  NUM should be between 0 and 5.  The
	   default NUM is 5.

       -mbranches-within-32B-boundaries
	   This	option aligns conditional jumps, fused conditional jumps and
	   unconditional jumps within 32 byte boundary with up to 5 segment
	   prefixes on an instruction.	It is equivalent to
	   -malign-branch-boundary=32 -malign-branch=jcc+fused+jmp
	   -malign-branch-prefix-size=5.  The default doesn't align branches.

       -mlfence-after-load=no
       -mlfence-after-load=yes
	   These options control whether the assembler should generate lfence
	   after load instructions.  -mlfence-after-load=yes will generate
	   lfence.  -mlfence-after-load=no will	not generate lfence, which is
	   the default.

       -mlfence-before-indirect-branch=none
       -mlfence-before-indirect-branch=all
       -mlfence-before-indirect-branch=register
       -mlfence-before-indirect-branch=memory
	   These options control whether the assembler should generate lfence
	   before indirect near	branch instructions.
	   -mlfence-before-indirect-branch=all will generate lfence before
	   indirect near branch	via register and issue a warning before
	   indirect near branch	via memory.  It	also implicitly	sets
	   -mlfence-before-ret=shl when	there's	no explicit
	   -mlfence-before-ret=.  -mlfence-before-indirect-branch=register
	   will	generate lfence	before indirect	near branch via	register.
	   -mlfence-before-indirect-branch=memory will issue a warning before
	   indirect near branch	via memory.
	   -mlfence-before-indirect-branch=none	will not generate lfence nor
	   issue warning, which	is the default.	 Note that lfence won't	be
	   generated before indirect near branch via register with
	   -mlfence-after-load=yes since lfence	will be	generated after
	   loading branch target register.

       -mlfence-before-ret=none
       -mlfence-before-ret=shl
       -mlfence-before-ret=or
       -mlfence-before-ret=yes
       -mlfence-before-ret=not
	   These options control whether the assembler should generate lfence
	   before ret.	-mlfence-before-ret=or will generate generate or
	   instruction with lfence.  -mlfence-before-ret=shl/yes will generate
	   shl instruction with	lfence.	-mlfence-before-ret=not	will generate
	   not instruction with	lfence.	-mlfence-before-ret=none will not
	   generate lfence, which is the default.

       -mx86-used-note=no
       -mx86-used-note=yes
	   These options control whether the assembler should generate
	   GNU_PROPERTY_X86_ISA_1_USED and GNU_PROPERTY_X86_FEATURE_2_USED GNU
	   property notes.  The	default	can be controlled by the
	   --enable-x86-used-note configure option.

       -mevexrcig=rne
       -mevexrcig=rd
       -mevexrcig=ru
       -mevexrcig=rz
	   These options control how the assembler should encode SAE-only EVEX
	   instructions.  -mevexrcig=rne will encode RC	bits of	EVEX
	   instruction with 00,	which is the default.  -mevexrcig=rd,
	   -mevexrcig=ru and -mevexrcig=rz will	encode SAE-only	EVEX
	   instructions	with 01, 10 and	11 RC bits, respectively.

       -mamd64
       -mintel64
	   This	option specifies that the assembler should accept only AMD64
	   or Intel64 ISA in 64-bit mode.  The default is to accept common,
	   Intel64 only	and AMD64 ISAs.

       -O0 | -O	| -O1 |	-O2 | -Os
	   Optimize instruction	encoding with smaller instruction size.	 -O
	   and -O1 encode 64-bit register load instructions with 64-bit
	   immediate as	32-bit register	load instructions with 31-bit or
	   32-bits immediates, encode 64-bit register clearing instructions
	   with	32-bit register	clearing instructions, encode 256-bit/512-bit
	   VEX/EVEX vector register clearing instructions with 128-bit VEX
	   vector register clearing instructions, encode 128-bit/256-bit EVEX
	   vector register load/store instructions with	VEX vector register
	   load/store instructions, and	encode 128-bit/256-bit EVEX packed
	   integer logical instructions	with 128-bit/256-bit VEX packed
	   integer logical.

	   -O2 includes	-O1 optimization plus encodes 256-bit/512-bit EVEX
	   vector register clearing instructions with 128-bit EVEX vector
	   register clearing instructions.  In 64-bit mode VEX encoded
	   instructions	with commutative source	operands will also have	their
	   source operands swapped if this allows using	the 2-byte VEX prefix
	   form	instead	of the 3-byte one.  Certain forms of AND as well as OR
	   with	the same (register) operand specified twice will also be
	   changed to TEST.

	   -Os includes	-O2 optimization plus encodes 16-bit, 32-bit and
	   64-bit register tests with immediate	as 8-bit register test with
	   immediate.  -O0 turns off this optimization.

       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).

       -relax
	   Enable support for link-time	relaxations.

       -h-tick-hex
	   Support H'00	style hex constants in addition	to 0x00	style.

       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.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for an	Altera
       Nios II processor.

       -relax-section
	   Replace identified out-of-range branches with PC-relative "jmp"
	   sequences when possible.  The generated code	sequences are suitable
	   for use in position-independent code, but there is a	practical
	   limit on the	extended branch	range because of the length of the
	   sequences.  This option is the default.

       -relax-all
	   Replace branch instructions not determinable	to be in range and all
	   call	instructions with "jmp"	and "callr" sequences (respectively).
	   This	option generates absolute relocations against the target
	   symbols and is not appropriate for position-independent code.

       -no-relax
	   Do not replace any branches or calls.

       -EB Generate big-endian output.

       -EL Generate little-endian output.  This	is the default.

       -march=architecture
	   This	option specifies the target architecture.  The assembler
	   issues an error message if an attempt is made to assemble an
	   instruction which will not execute on the target architecture.  The
	   following architecture names	are recognized:	"r1", "r2".  The
	   default is "r1".

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

       -mlink-relax
	   Assume that LD would	optimize LDI32 instructions by checking	the
	   upper 16 bits of the	expression. If they are	all zeros, then	LD
	   would shorten the LDI32 instruction to a single LDI.	In such	case
	   "as"	will output DIFF relocations for diff expressions.

       -mno-link-relax
	   Assume that LD would	not optimize LDI32 instructions. As a
	   consequence,	DIFF relocations will not be emitted.

       -mno-warn-regname-label
	   Do not warn if a label name matches a register name.	Usually
	   assembler programmers will want this	warning	to be emitted. C
	   compilers may want to turn this off.

       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
       -mips32r3
       -mips32r5
       -mips32r6
       -mips64
       -mips64r2
       -mips64r3
       -mips64r5
       -mips64r6
	   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,	-mips32r3,
	   -mips32r5, -mips32r6, -mips64, -mips64r2, -mips64r3,	-mips64r5, and
	   -mips64r6 correspond	to generic MIPS	V, MIPS32, MIPS32 Release 2,
	   MIPS32 Release 3, MIPS32 Release 5, MIPS32 Release 6, MIPS64,
	   MIPS64 Release 2, MIPS64 Release 3, MIPS64 Release 5, and MIPS64
	   Release 6 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.

       -mfix-rm7000
       -mno-fix-rm7000
	   Cause nops to be inserted if	a dmult	or dmultu instruction is
	   followed by a load instruction.

       -mfix-r5900
       -mno-fix-r5900
	   Do not attempt to schedule the preceding instruction	into the delay
	   slot	of a branch instruction	placed at the end of a short loop of
	   six instructions or fewer and always	schedule a "nop" instruction
	   there instead.  The short loop bug under certain conditions causes
	   loops to execute only once or twice,	due to a hardware bug in the
	   R5900 chip.

       -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.

       -mgp64
       -mfp64
	   The register	sizes are normally inferred from the ISA and ABI, but
	   these flags force a certain group of	registers to be	treated	as 64
	   bits	wide at	all times.  -mgp64 controls the	size of	general-
	   purpose registers and -mfp64	controls the size of floating-point
	   registers.

       -mfpxx
	   The register	sizes are normally inferred from the ISA and ABI, but
	   using this flag in combination with -mabi=32	enables	an ABI variant
	   which will operate correctly	with floating-point registers which
	   are 32 or 64	bits wide.

       -modd-spreg
       -mno-odd-spreg
	   Enable use of floating-point	operations on odd-numbered single-
	   precision registers when supported by the ISA.  -mfpxx implies
	   -mno-odd-spreg, otherwise the default is -modd-spreg.

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

       -mmips16e2
       -mno-mips16e2
	   Enable the use of MIPS16e2 instructions in MIPS16 mode.  This is
	   equivalent to putting ".module mips16e2" at the start of the
	   assembly file.  -mno-mips16e2 turns off this	option.

       -mmicromips
       -mno-micromips
	   Generate code for the microMIPS processor.  This is equivalent to
	   putting ".module micromips" at the start of the assembly file.
	   -mno-micromips turns	off this option.  This is equivalent to
	   putting ".module nomicromips" at the	start of the assembly file.

       -msmartmips
       -mno-smartmips
	   Enables the SmartMIPS extension to the MIPS32 instruction set.
	   This	is equivalent to putting ".module 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.

       -mdspr3
       -mno-dspr3
	   Generate code for the DSP Release 3 Application Specific Extension.
	   This	option implies -mdsp and -mdspr2.  This	tells the assembler to
	   accept DSP Release 3	instructions.  -mno-dspr3 turns	off this
	   option.

       -mmsa
       -mno-msa
	   Generate code for the MIPS SIMD Architecture	Extension.  This tells
	   the assembler to accept MSA instructions.  -mno-msa turns off this
	   option.

       -mxpa
       -mno-xpa
	   Generate code for the MIPS eXtended Physical	Address	(XPA)
	   Extension.  This tells the assembler	to accept XPA instructions.
	   -mno-xpa 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.

       -mmcu
       -mno-mcu
	   Generate code for the MCU Application Specific Extension.  This
	   tells the assembler to accept MCU instructions.  -mno-mcu turns off
	   this	option.

       -mcrc
       -mno-crc
	   Generate code for the MIPS cyclic redundancy	check (CRC)
	   Application Specific	Extension.  This tells the assembler to	accept
	   CRC instructions.  -mno-crc turns off this option.

       -mginv
       -mno-ginv
	   Generate code for the Global	INValidate (GINV) Application Specific
	   Extension.  This tells the assembler	to accept GINV instructions.
	   -mno-ginv turns off this option.

       -mloongson-mmi
       -mno-loongson-mmi
	   Generate code for the Loongson MultiMedia extensions	Instructions
	   (MMI) Application Specific Extension.  This tells the assembler to
	   accept MMI instructions.  -mno-loongson-mmi turns off this option.

       -mloongson-cam
       -mno-loongson-cam
	   Generate code for the Loongson Content Address Memory (CAM)
	   instructions.  This tells the assembler to accept Loongson CAM
	   instructions.  -mno-loongson-cam turns off this option.

       -mloongson-ext
       -mno-loongson-ext
	   Generate code for the Loongson EXTensions (EXT) instructions.  This
	   tells the assembler to accept Loongson EXT instructions.
	   -mno-loongson-ext turns off this option.

       -mloongson-ext2
       -mno-loongson-ext2
	   Generate code for the Loongson EXTensions R2	(EXT2) instructions.
	   This	option implies -mloongson-ext.	This tells the assembler to
	   accept Loongson EXT2	instructions.  -mno-loongson-ext2 turns	off
	   this	option.

       -minsn32
       -mno-insn32
	   Only	use 32-bit instruction encodings when generating code for the
	   microMIPS processor.	 This option inhibits the use of any 16-bit
	   instructions.  This is equivalent to	putting	".set insn32" at the
	   start of the	assembly file.	-mno-insn32 turns off this option.
	   This	is equivalent to putting ".set noinsn32" at the	start of the
	   assembly file.  By default -mno-insn32 is selected, allowing	all
	   instructions	to be used.

       --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.

       --relax-branch
       --no-relax-branch
	   The --relax-branch option enables the relaxation of out-of-range
	   branches.  By default --no-relax-branch is selected,	causing	any
	   out-of-range	branches to produce an error.

       -mignore-branch-isa
       -mno-ignore-branch-isa
	   Ignore branch checks	for invalid transitions	between	ISA modes.
	   The semantics of branches does not provide for an ISA mode switch,
	   so in most cases the	ISA mode a branch has been encoded for has to
	   be the same as the ISA mode of the branch's target label.
	   Therefore GAS has checks implemented	that verify in branch assembly
	   that	the two	ISA modes match.  -mignore-branch-isa disables these
	   checks.  By default -mno-ignore-branch-isa is selected, causing any
	   invalid branch requiring a transition between ISA modes to produce
	   an error.

       -mnan=encoding
	   Select between the IEEE 754-2008 (-mnan=2008) or the	legacy
	   (-mnan=legacy) NaN encoding format.	The latter is the default.

       --emulation=name
	   This	option was formerly used to switch between ELF and ECOFF
	   output on targets like IRIX 5 that supported	both.  MIPS ECOFF
	   support was removed in GAS 2.24, so the option now serves little
	   purpose.  It	is retained for	backwards compatibility.

	   The available configuration names are: mipself, mipslelf and
	   mipsbelf.  Choosing mipself now has no effect, since	the output is
	   always ELF.	mipslelf and mipsbelf select little- and big-endian
	   output respectively,	but -EL	and -EB	are now	the preferred options
	   instead.

       -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 a
       LoongArch processor.

       -fpic
       -fPIC
	   Generate position-independent code

       -fno-pic
	   Don't generate position-independent code (default)

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

       "-mcpu=metac11"
	   Generate code for Meta 1.1.

       "-mcpu=metac12"
	   Generate code for Meta 1.2.

       "-mcpu=metac21"
	   Generate code for Meta 2.1.

       "-mfpu=metac21"
	   Allow code to use FPU hardware of Meta 2.1.

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

       The following options are available when	as is configured for a NDS32
       processor.

       "-O1"
	   Optimize for	performance.

       "-Os"
	   Optimize for	space.

       "-EL"
	   Produce little endian data output.

       "-EB"
	   Produce little endian data output.

       "-mpic"
	   Generate PIC.

       "-mno-fp-as-gp-relax"
	   Suppress fp-as-gp relaxation	for this file.

       "-mb2bb-relax"
	   Back-to-back	branch optimization.

       "-mno-all-relax"
	   Suppress all	relaxation for this file.

       "-march=<arch name>"
	   Assemble for	architecture <arch name> which could be	v3, v3j, v3m,
	   v3f,	v3s, v2, v2j, v2f, v2s.

       "-mbaseline=<baseline>"
	   Assemble for	baseline <baseline> which could	be v2, v3, v3m.

       "-mfpu-freg=FREG"
	   Specify a FPU configuration.

	   "0	   8 SP	/  4 DP	registers"
	   "1	  16 SP	/  8 DP	registers"
	   "2	  32 SP	/ 16 DP	registers"
	   "3	  32 SP	/ 32 DP	registers"
       "-mabi=abi"
	   Specify a abi version <abi> could be	v1, v2,	v2fp, v2fpp.

       "-m[no-]mac"
	   Enable/Disable Multiply instructions	support.

       "-m[no-]div"
	   Enable/Disable Divide instructions support.

       "-m[no-]16bit-ext"
	   Enable/Disable 16-bit extension

       "-m[no-]dx-regs"
	   Enable/Disable d0/d1	registers

       "-m[no-]perf-ext"
	   Enable/Disable Performance extension

       "-m[no-]perf2-ext"
	   Enable/Disable Performance extension	2

       "-m[no-]string-ext"
	   Enable/Disable String extension

       "-m[no-]reduced-regs"
	   Enable/Disable Reduced Register configuration (GPR16) option

       "-m[no-]audio-isa-ext"
	   Enable/Disable AUDIO	ISA extension

       "-m[no-]fpu-sp-ext"
	   Enable/Disable FPU SP extension

       "-m[no-]fpu-dp-ext"
	   Enable/Disable FPU DP extension

       "-m[no-]fpu-fma"
	   Enable/Disable FPU fused-multiply-add instructions

       "-mall-ext"
	   Turn	on all extensions and instructions support

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

       -a32
	   Generate ELF32 or XCOFF32.

       -a64
	   Generate ELF64 or XCOFF64.

       -K PIC
	   Set EF_PPC_RELOCATABLE_LIB in ELF flags.

       -mpwrx |	-mpwr2
	   Generate code for POWER/2 (RIOS2).

       -mpwr
	   Generate code for POWER (RIOS1)

       -m601
	   Generate code for PowerPC 601.

       -mppc, -mppc32, -m603, -m604
	   Generate code for PowerPC 603/604.

       -m403, -m405
	   Generate code for PowerPC 403/405.

       -m440
	   Generate code for PowerPC 440.  BookE and some 405 instructions.

       -m464
	   Generate code for PowerPC 464.

       -m476
	   Generate code for PowerPC 476.

       -m7400, -m7410, -m7450, -m7455
	   Generate code for PowerPC 7400/7410/7450/7455.

       -m750cl,	-mgekko, -mbroadway
	   Generate code for PowerPC 750CL/Gekko/Broadway.

       -m821, -m850, -m860
	   Generate code for PowerPC 821/850/860.

       -mppc64,	-m620
	   Generate code for PowerPC 620/625/630.

       -me500, -me500x2
	   Generate code for Motorola e500 core	complex.

       -me500mc
	   Generate code for Freescale e500mc core complex.

       -me500mc64
	   Generate code for Freescale e500mc64	core complex.

       -me5500
	   Generate code for Freescale e5500 core complex.

       -me6500
	   Generate code for Freescale e6500 core complex.

       -mspe
	   Generate code for Motorola SPE instructions.

       -mspe2
	   Generate code for Freescale SPE2 instructions.

       -mtitan
	   Generate code for AppliedMicro Titan	core complex.

       -mppc64bridge
	   Generate code for PowerPC 64, including bridge insns.

       -mbooke
	   Generate code for 32-bit BookE.

       -ma2
	   Generate code for A2	architecture.

       -me300
	   Generate code for PowerPC e300 family.

       -maltivec
	   Generate code for processors	with AltiVec instructions.

       -mvle
	   Generate code for Freescale PowerPC VLE instructions.

       -mvsx
	   Generate code for processors	with Vector-Scalar (VSX) instructions.

       -mhtm
	   Generate code for processors	with Hardware Transactional Memory
	   instructions.

       -mpower4, -mpwr4
	   Generate code for Power4 architecture.

       -mpower5, -mpwr5, -mpwr5x
	   Generate code for Power5 architecture.

       -mpower6, -mpwr6
	   Generate code for Power6 architecture.

       -mpower7, -mpwr7
	   Generate code for Power7 architecture.

       -mpower8, -mpwr8
	   Generate code for Power8 architecture.

       -mpower9, -mpwr9
	   Generate code for Power9 architecture.

       -mpower10, -mpwr10
	   Generate code for Power10 architecture.

       -mcell
       -mcell
	   Generate code for Cell Broadband Engine architecture.

       -mcom
	   Generate code Power/PowerPC common instructions.

       -many
	   Generate code for any architecture (PWR/PWRX/PPC).

       -mregnames
	   Allow symbolic names	for registers.

       -mno-regnames
	   Do not allow	symbolic names for registers.

       -mrelocatable
	   Support for GCC's -mrelocatable option.

       -mrelocatable-lib
	   Support for GCC's -mrelocatable-lib option.

       -memb
	   Set PPC_EMB bit in ELF flags.

       -mlittle, -mlittle-endian, -le
	   Generate code for a little endian machine.

       -mbig, -mbig-endian, -be
	   Generate code for a big endian machine.

       -msolaris
	   Generate code for Solaris.

       -mno-solaris
	   Do not generate code	for Solaris.

       -nops=count
	   If an alignment directive inserts more than count nops, put a
	   branch at the beginning to skip execution of	the nops.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for a RISC-V
       processor.

       -fpic
       -fPIC
	   Generate position-independent code

       -fno-pic
	   Don't generate position-independent code (default)

       -march=ISA
	   Select the base isa,	as specified by	ISA.  For example
	   -march=rv32ima.  If this option and the architecture	attributes
	   aren't set, then assembler will check the default configure setting
	   --with-arch=ISA.

       -misa-spec=ISAspec
	   Select the default isa spec version.	 If the	version	of ISA isn't
	   set by -march, then assembler helps to set the version according to
	   the default chosen spec.  If	this option isn't set, then assembler
	   will	check the default configure setting --with-isa-spec=ISAspec.

       -mpriv-spec=PRIVspec
	   Select the privileged spec version.	We can decide whether the CSR
	   is valid or not according to	the chosen spec.  If this option and
	   the privilege attributes aren't set,	then assembler will check the
	   default configure setting --with-priv-spec=PRIVspec.

       -mabi=ABI
	   Selects the ABI, which is either "ilp32" or "lp64", optionally
	   followed by "f", "d", or "q"	to indicate single-precision, double-
	   precision, or quad-precision	floating-point calling convention, or
	   none	to indicate the	soft-float calling convention.	Also, "ilp32"
	   can optionally be followed by "e" to	indicate the RVE ABI, which is
	   always soft-float.

       -mrelax
	   Take	advantage of linker relaxations	to reduce the number of
	   instructions	required to materialize	symbol addresses. (default)

       -mno-relax
	   Don't do linker relaxations.

       -march-attr
	   Generate the	default	contents for the riscv elf attribute section
	   if the .attribute directives	are not	set.  This section is used to
	   record the information that a linker	or runtime loader needs	to
	   check compatibility.	 This information includes ISA string, stack
	   alignment requirement, unaligned memory accesses, and the major,
	   minor and revision version of privileged specification.

       -mno-arch-attr
	   Don't generate the default riscv elf	attribute section if the
	   .attribute directives are not set.

       -mcsr-check
	   Enable the CSR checking for the ISA-dependent CRS and the read-only
	   CSR.	 The ISA-dependent CSR are only	valid when the specific	ISA is
	   set.	 The read-only CSR can not be written by the CSR instructions.

       -mno-csr-check
	   Don't do CSR	checking.

       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate code for a little endian machine.

       -mbig-endian
	   Generate code for a big endian machine.

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

       The following options are available when	as is configured for the s390
       processor family.

       -m31
       -m64
	   Select the word size, either	31/32 bits or 64 bits.

       -mesa
       -mzarch
	   Select the architecture mode, either	the Enterprise System
	   Architecture	(esa) or the z/Architecture mode (zarch).

       -march=processor
	   Specify which s390 processor	variant	is the target, g5 (or arch3),
	   g6, z900 (or	arch5),	z990 (or arch6), z9-109, z9-ec (or arch7), z10
	   (or arch8), z196 (or	arch9),	zEC12 (or arch10), z13 (or arch11),
	   z14 (or arch12), z15	(or arch13), or	z16 (or	arch14).

       -mregnames
       -mno-regnames
	   Allow or disallow symbolic names for	registers.

       -mwarn-areg-zero
	   Warn	whenever the operand for a base	or index register has been
	   specified but evaluates to zero.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for a
       TMS320C6000 processor.

       -march=arch
	   Enable (only) instructions from architecture	arch.  By default, all
	   instructions	are permitted.

	   The following values	of arch	are accepted: "c62x", "c64x", "c64x+",
	   "c67x", "c67x+", "c674x".

       -mdsbt
       -mno-dsbt
	   The -mdsbt option causes the	assembler to generate the
	   "Tag_ABI_DSBT" attribute with a value of 1, indicating that the
	   code	is using DSBT addressing.  The -mno-dsbt option, the default,
	   causes the tag to have a value of 0,	indicating that	the code does
	   not use DSBT	addressing.  The linker	will emit a warning if objects
	   of different	type (DSBT and non-DSBT) are linked together.

       -mpid=no
       -mpid=near
       -mpid=far
	   The -mpid= option causes the	assembler to generate the
	   "Tag_ABI_PID" attribute with	a value	indicating the form of data
	   addressing used by the code.	 -mpid=no, the default,	indicates
	   position-dependent data addressing, -mpid=near indicates position-
	   independent addressing with GOT accesses using near DP addressing,
	   and -mpid=far indicates position-independent	addressing with	GOT
	   accesses using far DP addressing.  The linker will emit a warning
	   if objects built with different settings of this option are linked
	   together.

       -mpic
       -mno-pic
	   The -mpic option causes the assembler to generate the "Tag_ABI_PIC"
	   attribute with a value of 1,	indicating that	the code is using
	   position-independent	code addressing,  The "-mno-pic" option, the
	   default, causes the tag to have a value of 0, indicating position-
	   dependent code addressing.  The linker will emit a warning if
	   objects of different	type (position-dependent and position-
	   independent)	are linked together.

       -mbig-endian
       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate code for the specified endianness.	The default is little-
	   endian.

       The following options are available when	as is configured for a TILE-Gx
       processor.

       -m32 | -m64
	   Select the word size, either	32 bits	or 64 bits.

       -EB | -EL
	   Select the endianness, either big-endian (-EB) or little-endian
	   (-EL).

       The following option is available when as is configured for a Visium
       processor.

       -mtune=arch
	   This	option specifies the target architecture.  If an attempt is
	   made	to assemble an instruction that	will not execute on the	target
	   architecture, the assembler will issue an error message.

	   The following names are recognized: "mcm24" "mcm" "gr5" "gr6"

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

       --text-section-literals | --no-text-section-literals
	   Control the treatment of literal pools.  The	default	is
	   --no-text-section-literals, which places literals in	separate
	   sections in the output file.	 This allows the literal pool to be
	   placed in a data RAM/ROM.  With --text-section-literals, the
	   literals are	interspersed in	the text section in order to keep them
	   as close as possible	to their references.  This may be necessary
	   for large assembly files, where the literals	would otherwise	be out
	   of range of the "L32R" instructions in the text section.  Literals
	   are grouped into pools following ".literal_position"	directives or
	   preceding "ENTRY" instructions.  These options only affect literals
	   referenced via PC-relative "L32R" instructions; literals for
	   absolute mode "L32R"	instructions are handled separately.

       --auto-litpools | --no-auto-litpools
	   Control the treatment of literal pools.  The	default	is
	   --no-auto-litpools, which in	the absence of --text-section-literals
	   places literals in separate sections	in the output file.  This
	   allows the literal pool to be placed	in a data RAM/ROM.  With
	   --auto-litpools, the	literals are interspersed in the text section
	   in order to keep them as close as possible to their references,
	   explicit ".literal_position"	directives are not required.  This may
	   be necessary	for very large functions, where	single literal pool at
	   the beginning of the	function may not be reachable by "L32R"
	   instructions	at the end.  These options only	affect literals
	   referenced via PC-relative "L32R" instructions; literals for
	   absolute mode "L32R"	instructions are handled separately.  When
	   used	together with --text-section-literals, --auto-litpools takes
	   precedence.

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

       --target-align |	--no-target-align
	   Enable or disable automatic alignment to reduce branch penalties at
	   some	expense	in code	size.	 This optimization is enabled by
	   default.  Note that the assembler will always align instructions
	   like	"LOOP" that have fixed alignment requirements.

       --longcalls | --no-longcalls
	   Enable or disable transformation of call instructions to allow
	   calls across	a greater range	of addresses.	 This option should be
	   used	when call targets can potentially be out of range.  It may
	   degrade both	code size and performance, but the linker can
	   generally optimize away the unnecessary overhead when a call	ends
	   up within range.  The default is --no-longcalls.

       --transform | --no-transform
	   Enable or disable all assembler transformations of Xtensa
	   instructions, including both	relaxation and optimization.  The
	   default is --transform; --no-transform should only be used in the
	   rare	cases when the instructions must be exactly as specified in
	   the assembly	source.	 Using --no-transform causes out of range
	   instruction operands	to be errors.

       --rename-section	oldname=newname
	   Rename the oldname section to newname.  This	option can be used
	   multiple times to rename multiple sections.

       --trampolines | --no-trampolines
	   Enable or disable transformation of jump instructions to allow
	   jumps across	a greater range	of addresses.	 This option should be
	   used	when jump targets can potentially be out of range.  In the
	   absence of such jumps this option does not affect code size or
	   performance.	 The default is	--trampolines.

       --abi-windowed |	--abi-call0
	   Choose ABI tag written to the ".xtensa.info"	section.  ABI tag
	   indicates ABI of the	assembly code.	A warning is issued by the
	   linker on an	attempt	to link	object files with inconsistent ABI
	   tags.  Default ABI is chosen	by the Xtensa core configuration.

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

       @chapter	Z80 Dependent Features

   Command-line	Options
       -march=CPU[-EXT...][+EXT...]
	   This	option specifies the target processor. The assembler will
	   issue an error message if an	attempt	is made	to assemble an
	   instruction which will not execute on the target processor. The
	   following processor names are recognized: "z80", "z180", "ez80",
	   "gbz80", "z80n", "r800".  In	addition to the	basic instruction set,
	   the assembler can be	told to	accept some extention mnemonics. For
	   example, "-march=z180+sli+infc" extends z180	with SLI instructions
	   and IN F,(C). The following extentions are currently	supported:
	   "full" (all known instructions), "adl" (ADL CPU mode	by default,
	   eZ80	only), "sli" (instruction known	as SLI,	SLL or SL1), "xyhl"
	   (instructions with halves of	index registers: IXL, IXH, IYL,	IYH),
	   "xdcb" (instructions	like RotOp (II+d),R and	BitOp n,(II+d),R),
	   "infc" (instruction IN F,(C)	or IN (C)), "outc0" (instruction OUT
	   (C),0).  Note that rather than extending a basic instruction	set,
	   the extention mnemonics starting with "-" revoke the	respective
	   functionality: "-march=z80-full+xyhl" first removes all default
	   extentions and adds support for index registers halves only.

	   If this option is not specified then	"-march=z80+xyhl+infc" is
	   assumed.

       -local-prefix=prefix
	   Mark	all labels with	specified prefix as local. But such label can
	   be marked global explicitly in the code. This option	do not change
	   default local label prefix ".L", it is just adds new	one.

       -colonless
	   Accept colonless labels. All	symbols	at line	begin are treated as
	   labels.

       -sdcc
	   Accept assembler code produced by SDCC.

       -fp-s=FORMAT
	   Single precision floating point numbers format. Default: ieee754
	   (32 bit).

       -fp-d=FORMAT
	   Double precision floating point numbers format. Default: ieee754
	   (64 bit).

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

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) 1991-2022 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 1.3 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-2.39			  2023-01-03				 AS(1)

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

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