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Assembly - Conditions

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
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Assembly - Conditions

Uploaded by

michal hana
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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6/15/24, 3:54 PM Assembly - Conditions

Assembly - Conditions
Conditional execution in assembly language is accomplished by several looping and
branching instructions. These instructions can change the flow of control in a
program. Conditional execution is observed in two scenarios −

Sr.No. Conditional Instructions

Unconditional jump
This is performed by the JMP instruction. Conditional execution often
involves a transfer of control to the address of an instruction that does
1
not follow the currently executing instruction. Transfer of control may be
forward, to execute a new set of instructions or backward, to re-execute
the same steps.

Conditional jump
This is performed by a set of jump instructions j<condition> depending
2 upon the condition. The conditional instructions transfer the control by
breaking the sequential flow and they do it by changing the offset value
in IP.

Let us discuss the CMP instruction before discussing the conditional instructions.

CMP Instruction
The CMP instruction compares two operands. It is generally used in conditional
execution. This instruction basically subtracts one operand from the other for
comparing whether the operands are equal or not. It does not disturb the destination
or source operands. It is used along with the conditional jump instruction for decision
making.

Syntax

CMP destination, source

CMP compares two numeric data fields. The destination operand could be either in
register or in memory. The source operand could be a constant (immediate) data,
register or memory.

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Example

CMP DX, 00 ; Compare the DX value with zero


JE L7 ; If yes, then jump to label L7
.
.
L7: ...

CMP is often used for comparing whether a counter value has reached the number of
times a loop needs to be run. Consider the following typical condition −

INC EDX
CMP EDX, 10 ; Compares whether the counter has reached 10
JLE LP1 ; If it is less than or equal to 10, then jump to LP1

Unconditional Jump
As mentioned earlier, this is performed by the JMP instruction. Conditional execution
often involves a transfer of control to the address of an instruction that does not
follow the currently executing instruction. Transfer of control may be forward, to
execute a new set of instructions or backward, to re-execute the same steps.

Syntax

The JMP instruction provides a label name where the flow of control is transferred
immediately. The syntax of the JMP instruction is −

JMP label

Example

The following code snippet illustrates the JMP instruction −

MOV AX, 00 ; Initializing AX to 0


MOV BX, 00 ; Initializing BX to 0
MOV CX, 01 ; Initializing CX to 1
L20:
ADD AX, 01 ; Increment AX
ADD BX, AX ; Add AX to BX

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SHL CX, 1 ; shift left CX, this in turn doubles the CX value
JMP L20 ; repeats the statements

Conditional Jump
If some specified condition is satisfied in conditional jump, the control flow is
transferred to a target instruction. There are numerous conditional jump instructions
depending upon the condition and data.

Following are the conditional jump instructions used on signed data used for
arithmetic operations −

Instruction Description Flags tested

JE/JZ Jump Equal or Jump Zero ZF

JNE/JNZ Jump not Equal or Jump Not Zero ZF

JG/JNLE Jump Greater or Jump Not Less/Equal OF, SF, ZF

JGE/JNL Jump Greater/Equal or Jump Not Less OF, SF

JL/JNGE Jump Less or Jump Not Greater/Equal OF, SF

JLE/JNG Jump Less/Equal or Jump Not Greater OF, SF, ZF

Following are the conditional jump instructions used on unsigned data used for
logical operations −

Instruction Description Flags tested

JE/JZ Jump Equal or Jump Zero ZF

JNE/JNZ Jump not Equal or Jump Not Zero ZF

JA/JNBE Jump Above or Jump Not Below/Equal CF, ZF

JAE/JNB Jump Above/Equal or Jump Not Below CF

JB/JNAE Jump Below or Jump Not Above/Equal CF

JBE/JNA Jump Below/Equal or Jump Not Above AF, CF

The following conditional jump instructions have special uses and check the value of
flags −

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Instruction Description Flags tested

JXCZ Jump if CX is Zero none

JC Jump If Carry CF

JNC Jump If No Carry CF

JO Jump If Overflow OF

JNO Jump If No Overflow OF

JP/JPE Jump Parity or Jump Parity Even PF

JNP/JPO Jump No Parity or Jump Parity Odd PF

JS Jump Sign (negative value) SF

JNS Jump No Sign (positive value) SF

The syntax for the J<condition> set of instructions −

Example,

CMP AL, BL
JE EQUAL
CMP AL, BH
JE EQUAL
CMP AL, CL
JE EQUAL
NON_EQUAL: ...
EQUAL: ...

Example
The following program displays the largest of three variables. The variables are
double-digit variables. The three variables num1, num2 and num3 have values 47,
22 and 31, respectively −

section .text Live Demo


global _start ;must be declared for using gcc

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_start: ;tell linker entry point


mov ecx, [num1]
cmp ecx, [num2]
jg check_third_num
mov ecx, [num2]

check_third_num:

cmp ecx, [num3]


jg _exit
mov ecx, [num3]

_exit:

mov [largest], ecx


mov ecx,msg
mov edx, len
mov ebx,1 ;file descriptor (stdout)
mov eax,4 ;system call number (sys_write)
int 0x80 ;call kernel

mov ecx,largest
mov edx, 2
mov ebx,1 ;file descriptor (stdout)
mov eax,4 ;system call number (sys_write)
int 0x80 ;call kernel

mov eax, 1
int 80h

section .data

msg db "The largest digit is: ", 0xA,0xD


len equ $- msg
num1 dd '47'
num2 dd '22'
num3 dd '31'

segment .bss
largest resb 2

When the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result −

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The largest digit is:


47

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