Samsung S3C2410A Microphone User Manual


 
ARM INSTRUCTION SET S3C2410A
3-36
HALFWORD LOAD AND STORES
Setting S=0 and H=1 may be used to transfer unsigned Half-words between an ARM920T register and memory.
The action of LDRH and STRH instructions is influenced by the BIGEND control signal. The two possible
configurations are described in the section below.
Signed byte and halfword loads
The S bit controls the loading of sign-extended data. When S = 1 the H bit selects between Bytes (H=0) and Half-
words (H = 1). The L bit should not be set low (Store) when Signed (S = 1) operations have been selected.
The LDRSB instruction loads the selected Byte into bits 7 to 0 of the destination register and bits 31 to 8 of the
destination register are set to the value of bit 7, the sign bit.
The LDRSH instruction loads the selected Half-word into bits 15 to 0 of the destination register and bits 31 to 16 of
the destination register are set to the value of bit 15, the sign bit.
The action of the LDRSB and LDRSH instructions is influenced by the BIGEND control signal. The two possible
configurations are described in the following section.
Endianness and byte/halfword selection
Little-Endian Configuration
A signed byte load (LDRSB) expects data on data bus inputs 7 through to 0 if the supplied address is on a word
boundary, on data bus inputs 15 through to 8 if it is a word address plus one byte, and so on. The selected byte is
placed in the bottom 8 bit of the destination register, and the remaining bits of the register are filled with the sign bit,
bit 7 of the byte. Please see Figure 2-2.
A halfword load (LDRSH or LDRH) expects data on data bus inputs 15 through to 0 if the supplied address is on a
word boundary and on data bus inputs 31 through to 16 if it is a halfword boundary, (A[1] = 1).The supplied address
should always be on a halfword boundary. If bit 0 of the supplied address is HIGH then the ARM920T will load an
unpredictable value. The selected halfword is placed in the bottom 16 bits of the destination register. For unsigned
half-words (LDRH), the top 16 bits of the register are filled with zeros and for signed half-words (LDRSH) the top 16
bits are filled with the sign bit, bit 15 of the halfword.
A halfword store (STRH) repeats the bottom 16 bits of the source register twice across the data bus outputs 31
through to 0. The external memory system should activate the appropriate halfword subsystem to store the data.
Note that the address must be halfword aligned, if bit 0 of the address is HIGH this will cause unpredictable
behaviour.