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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



NAME
     AS - the portable GNU assembler.

SYNOPSIS
     as [-a[cdhlns][=file] [-D] [--defsym sym=val]
      [-f] [--gstabs] [--gstabs] [--gdwarf2] [--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] [--statistics] [-v]
      [-version] [--version] [-W] [--warn] [--fatal-warnings]
      [-w] [-x] [-Z] [--target-help] [target-options]
      [--files ...]

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

     Target ARC options:
        [-marc[5678]
        [-EB-EL]

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

     Target CRIS options:
        [--underscore  --no-underscore]
        [--pic] [-N]
        [--emulation=criself  --emulation=crisaout]

     Target D10V options:
        [-O]

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

     Target i386 options:
        [--32--64] [-n]

     Target i960 options:
        [-ACA-ACA-ACB-AC-AKA-AKB
         -AKC-AMC]



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



        [-b] [-no-relax]

     Target IP2K options:
        [-mip2022-mip2022ext]

     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-branchs] [--short-branchs]
        [--strict-direct-mode] [--print-insn-syntax]
        [--print-opcodes] [--generate-example]

     Target MCORE options:
        [-jsri2bsr] [-sifilter] [-relax]
        [-mcpu=[210340]

     Target MIPS options:
        [-nocpp] [-EL] [-EB] [-O[optimization level]
        [-g[debug level] [-G num] [-KPIC] [-callshared]
        [-nonshared] [-xgot] [--membedded-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]
        [-mips3d] [-no-mips3d]
        [-mdmx] [-no-mdmx]
        [-mdebug] [-no-mdebug]
        [-mpdr] [-mno-pdr]

     Target MIX 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]




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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



     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 -me ]

     Target Xtensa options:
      [--[no-]density] [--[no-]relax] [--[no-]generics]
      [--[no-]text-section-literals]
      [--[no-]target-align] [--[no-]longcalls]

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



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



     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
     -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




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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



         -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.

     -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.

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

     --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.

     --gdwarf2
         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"



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



         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.    On
         traditional  a.out  systems  these  start  with  L,  but
         different systems have different local label prefixes.

     --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.

     --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



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



         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[5678]
         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  -moabi
         Select which procedure calling convention is in use.

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



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



     -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  -ACB  -AC  -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 M32R (formerly Mitsubishi M32R) series.

     --m32rx



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



         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 MU for 68020 and up.

     For details about  the  PDP-11  machine  dependent  features
     options, see @ref{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



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



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

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

     --strict-direct-mode



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



         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=CPUVERSION
         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.



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



     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 ECOF 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  ECOF-
         style .mdebug section instead of the standard ELF .stabs
         sections.

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



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



     -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.

     -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.

     --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  ECOF  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.




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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



         This option is currently supported only when the primary
         target  as  is  configured  for  is  a MIPS ELF or ECOF
         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=[210340]
         Select the  cpu  type  on  the  target  hardware.   This
         controls which instructions can be assembled.



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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



     -EB Assemble for a big endian target.

     -EL Assemble for a little endian target.

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

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

     --density  --no-density
         Enable or disable use of instructions  from  the  Xtensa
         code  density  option.   This is enabled by default when
         the Xtensa processor supports the code density option.

     --relax  --no-relax
         Enable  or  disable  instruction  relaxation.   This  is
         enabled    by    default.     Note:   In   the   current
         implementation,  these  options  also  control   whether
         assembler  optimizations  are  performed,  making  these
         options equivalent to --generics and --no-generics.

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

     --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.

     --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.

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 Free Software Foundation, Inc.




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GNU Development Tools                                       AS(1)



     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''.

ATRIBUTES
     See  attributes(5)  for  descriptions   of   the   following
     attributes:

     
       ATRIBUTE TYPE     ATRIBUTE VALUE
    
     Availability         SUNWbinutils   
    
     Interface Stability  External       
    

NOTES
     Source    for    GNU    binutils     is     available     on
     http:/opensolaris.org.
































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