General-purpose register file – Rainbow Electronics AT90LS8535 User Manual

Page 9

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AT90S/LS8535

1041H–11/01

memory. The different interrupts have priority in accordance with their interrupt vector
position. The lower the interrupt vector address, the higher the priority.

General-purpose
Register File

Figure 6 shows the structure of the 32 general-purpose working registers in the CPU.

Figure 6. AVR CPU General-purpose Working Registers

All the register operating instructions in the instruction set have direct and single-cycle
access to all registers. The only exception is the five constant arithmetic and logic
instructions SBCI, SUBI, CPI, ANDI and ORI between a constant and a register and the
LDI instruction for load immediate constant data. These instructions apply to the second
half of the registers in the register file (R16..R31). The general SBC, SUB, CP, AND,
and OR and all other operations between two registers or on a single register apply to
the entire register file.

As shown in Figure 6, each register is also assigned a data memory address, mapping
them directly into the first 32 locations of the user Data Space. Although not being phys-
ically implemented as SRAM locations, this memory organization provides great
flexibility in access of the registers, as the X-, Y-, and Z-registers can be set to index any
register in the file.

7

0

Addr.

R0 $00

R1

$01

R2

$02

R13

$0D

General

R14

$0E

Purpose

R15

$0F

Working

R16

$10

Registers

R17

$11

R26

$1A

X-register low byte

R27

$1B

X-register high byte

R28

$1C

Y-register low byte

R29

$1D

Y-register high byte

R30

$1E

Z-register low byte

R31

$1F

Z-register high byte

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