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JMP and Loops Memory Operand Move Instruction Array Data Related Operation and Directives

JMP and Loops Memory Operand Move Instruction Array Data Related Operation and Directives. JMP and Loop

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JMP and Loops Memory Operand Move Instruction Array Data Related Operation and Directives

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  1. JMP and Loops • Memory Operand • Move Instruction • Array • Data Related Operation and Directives

  2. JMP and Loop • The CPU automatically loads and executes programs sequentially. As each instruction decoded and executed, the CPU has already incremented the instruction pointer to the offset of the next intrusion; it has also loaded the instruction in to its internal queue. • But real life program are not that simple. What about IF statement, goto, and loops? They clearly require programs to transfer control to different locations within the programs. • A transfer of the control, or branch is a way of alternating the order in which statements are executed. All program languages contain statements to do this. We divide such statement into two categories:

  3. Unconditional Transfer: The program branches to a new location in all cases; a new value is loaded into the instruction pointer, causing execution to continue at the new address. The JMP instruction is a good example. • Conditional Transfer: The program branches if a certain condition is true. Intel provides a wide range of conditional transfer instructions that can be combined to make up conditional logic structures. The CPU interprets True/ False conditions based on content of the ECX and Flags register. Loop is a good example.

  4. JMP Instruction • The JMP instruction causes an unconditional transfer to a target location inside the code segment. The location must be Identified by a code label, which is translated by the assembler into an address. • JMP targetLabel • When the CPU executes this instruction, the offset of targetLable is moved into the instruction pointer, causing execution to immediately continue at the new location.

  5. Loop • The JMP instruction provides an easy way to create a loop, Simply by jumping to a label at the top of the loop: • top: • . • . • Jmp top ; Repeat the endless Loop • JMP is unconditional, so the loop will continue endlessly unless some other way is found to exit the loop

  6. LOOP Instruction • The LOOP instruction provides a simple way to repeat a block of statements a specific number of times. • ECX is automatically used as a counter and is decremented each time the loop repeats. • The Loop instruction involves two steps: • First, it subtracts 1 from ECX. • Next it compares ECX to zero. If ECX is not equal to zero, a jump is taken to the label identified instruction following the loop.

  7. Example: • In the following example, we add 1 to EAX each time the loop repeats. When the loop ends, EAX = 5 and ECX = 0 • move eax,0 • move ecx,5 • L1: • Inc eax • Loop L1 • A common programming error is to inadvertently initialize ecx to zero before beginning of the a loop. • If this happens, the Loop instruction decrements ECX to FFFFFFFFh, and the loop repeats 4,294,967,296 times.

  8. The loop destination must be with in -128 and +127 bytes which assuming most instructions takes 3 bytes, so a loop might contain, on average a maximum of 42 instructions. • Following is an example of an error message generated by MASM , because the target label of the loop instruction was too far away: • Error A2075: jump destination too far : by 14 bytes. • If you modify ECX inside the loop , the LOOP instruction may not work properly.

  9. In the next example, ECX is incremented within the loop. It never reaches Zero, and the loop never sops: • Top: • : • Inc ecx • Loop Top • If you run out of registers and must use ECX for some other purpose, save it in a variable at the beginning of the loop and restore it just before the loop instruction: • .data • Count Dword ? • .code • Mov ecx,100 • Top: • Mov count,ecx • : • Mov ecx, 20 • : • mov ecx,count • Loop Top

  10. Nested loops • When You must create a loop inside another loop, the problem arises of what to do with the counter in ECX. Saving the counter loop count in a variable is a good solution: • .data • count Dword ? • .code • Mov ecx,100 ;set outer loop counter • L1: • Mov count,ecx ;save outer loop counter • Mov ecx,20 ;set inner loop counter • L2: • : • : • Loop L2 ;repeat the inner loop count • Mov ecx, count ;restore outer loop count • loopL1 ;repeat the outer loop

  11. Operands • There Three type of instruction operands: Immediate, Register, and Memory. • We have gone through Immediate and Register operands. • There two type of memory operands: • Direct memory operand • Indirect memory operand

  12. Direct memory operand • Example: • .data • Var1 Dword 100h • : • : • .code • Mov eax var1

  13. Indirect operand • An indirect operand can be any 32-bit general purpose register • ( EAX,EBX,ECX,EDX,ESI,EDI,EBP, and ESP) surrounded by brackets. The register is assumed to contain the offset of some data. For example ESI contains the offset of variable 1: • .data • Val1 byte 10 h • .code • Mov esi, offset val1 • If a move instruction uses the indirect operand as the source, the pointer in ESI is dereferenced and a byte is moved to EAX • Mov EAX [esi] Eax = 10 h • Or if the indirect operand is the destination operand, a new value is placed in memory at the location pointed to by the register: • Mov [esi] EBX

  14. Array • Indirect operands are practically useful when dealing with arrays because an indirect operand’s value can easily be modified. • Similar to an array subscript, an indirect operand can point to different array elements. • For example, ArrayB contain three bytes. We can increment ESI and make it to point each byte, in order: • .data • ArrayB Byte 10h, 20h, 30h • .code • Mov esi, offset ArrayB • Mov a1, [esi] • inc esi • Mov a1, [esi] • Inc esi • Mov a1, [esi]

  15. Value 0ffset (address) 10200 10202 10204 1000h 2000h 3000h • If we use an array of 16-bit hex numbers, we add 2 to ESI to address each subsequent array element: • Example: • .data • Arrayw word 1000h,2000h,3000h • .code • Mov esi, offset Arrayw • Mov ax, [esi] ax = 1000h • Add esi, 2 • Mov ax,[esi] ax = 2000h • Add esi,2 • Mov ax, [esi] ax = 3000h

  16. Value 0ffset (address) 10200 10204 10208 1000 2000 3000 • If we use an array of 32-bit integers, we add 4 to ESI to address each subsequent array element: • Example: • .data • ArrayDw Dword 1000,2000,3000 • .code • Mov esi, offset ArrayDw • Mov eax, [esi] eax = 1000 • Add esi, 4 • Mov eax,[esi] eax = 2000 • Add esi,4 • Mov eax, [esi] eax = 3000

  17. Data related operators and Directives • Operators and directives, as we said earlier, are not part of the Intel instruction set. They are only understood by the assembler • ( in this case, Microsoft MASM). • Various assemblers have differing syntaxes for operators and directives. • because there is no single defined standard. The various assembler makers often seem to be competing with each other, in fact, by providing more and more sophisticated features.

  18. MASM has a number of operators that are effective tools for describing and addressing variables: • The Offset operator returns the distance of a variable from the beginning of it’s enclosing segment • The DUP operator generates a repeated storage allocation. • The TYPE operator returns the size ( in bytes ) of each element in an array • LENGHTOF operator returns the number of elements in an array • The SIZEOF operator returns the number of bytes used by an array initializer. • These operators are only a small subset of the operators supported by MASM. You may want to view the complete list in Appendix D.

  19. Offset Operator • The offset operator returns the offset of a data label. The offset represents the distance, in bytes, of the label from the beginning of the data segment. • In protected mode, an offset is always 32 bits long .The following figure shows a variable named myByte inside the data segment • offset • Data segment • myBte

  20. Example: we declare three different types of variables: • .data • bval BYTE ? • wval word ? • dVal Dword ? • dval2 Dword ? • If bval were located at offset 0040400h, the OFFSET operator would return the following values: • Mov esi, OFFSET bval ; ESI = 00404000 • Mov esi, OFFSET wval ; ESI = 00404001 • Mov esi, OFFSET dval ; ESI = 00404003 • Mov esi, OFFSET dval2 ; ESI = 00404007

  21. DUP operator • The DUP operator generates a repeated storage allocation. It is useful when allocating space for a string or array, and can be used with both initialized and uninitialized data definition. • Example • .data • Array1 Dword 20 DUP(?) ; 20 uninitialized Dword • Array2 word 10 DUP(0) ; 10 word initialized with 0 • Array3 Byte 4 DUP (“Stack”) ; 20 bytes: “StackStackStackStack”

  22. TYPE operator • The TYPE operator return the size, in bytes, of a single element of a variables. • For example, the TYPE of a byte equals 1, the type of a word equals 2, the TYPE of a doubleword is 4, Here are example of each: • .data • Var1 BYTE ? • Var2 word ? • Var3 Dword ?

  23. LENGHTOF Operator • The LENGTHOF operator count the number of element in array, defined by the values appearing on the same line as its label. We will use the following data as an example: • .data • Digitstr Byte “123456789”,0 • Array3 Dword 1,2,3,4

  24. SIZEOF operator • The SIZOF operator returns a value that is equivalent to multiplying LENGTHOF by TYPE. • For example, intArray has TYPE = 4 and LENGHTOF = 32, therefore, SIZEOF intArray is: • intArray Dword 32 DUP(0) ; SIZEOF = 128 (4*32)

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