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ARM and Thumb Instructions
Instruction summary
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Memory access instructions
General data processing instructions
Flexible second operand (Operand2)
Operand2 as a constant
Operand2 as a register with optional shift
Shift operations
Multiply instructions
Saturating instructions
Parallel instructions
Parallel add and subtract
Packing and unpacking instructions
Branch and control instructions
Coprocessor instructions
Miscellaneous instructions
ThumbEE instructions
Pseudo-instructions
Condition codes
ADD, SUB, RSB, ADC, SBC, and RSC
ADR (PC-relative)
ADR (register-relative)
ADRL pseudo-instruction
AND, ORR, EOR, BIC, and ORN
ASR, LSL, LSR, ROR, and RRX
B, BL, BX, BLX, and BXJ
BFC and BFI
BKPT
CBZ and CBNZ
CDP and CDP2
CHKA
CLREX
CLZ
CMP and CMN
CPS
CPY pseudo-instruction
DBG
DMB, DSB, and ISB
ENTERX and LEAVEX
ERET
HB, HBL, HBLP, and HBP
IT
LDC, LDC2, STC, and STC2
LDM and STM
LDR and STR (immediate offset)
LDR and STR (register offset)
LDR and STR, unprivileged
LDR (PC-relative)
LDR (register-relative)
LDR pseudo-instruction
LDREX and STREX
MAR and MRA
MCR, MCR2, MCRR, and MCRR2
MIA, MIAPH, and MIAxy
MOV and MVN
MOV32 pseudo--instruction
MOVT
MRC, MRC2, MRRC and MRRC2
MRS (system coprocessor register to ARM register)
MRS (PSR to general-purpose register)
MSR (ARM register to system coprocessor register)
MSR (general-purpose register to PSR)
MUL, MLA, and MLS
NEG pseudo-instruction
PKHBT and PKHTB
PLD, PLDW, and PLI
PUSH and POP
QADD, QSUB, QDADD, and QDSUB
REV, REV16, REVSH, and RBIT
RFE
SBFX and UBFX
SDIV and UDIV
SEL
SETEND
SEV, WFE, WFI, and YIELD
SMC
NOP
SMLAD and SMLSD
SMLALxy
SMLALD and SMLSLD
SMMUL, SMMLA, and SMMLS
SMUAD{X} and SMUSD{X}
SMULxy and SMLAxy
SMULWy and SMLAWy
SRS
SSAT and USAT
SSAT16 and USAT16
SUBS pc, lr
SVC
SWP and SWPB
SXT, SXTA, UXT, and UXTA
SYS
TBB and TBH
TST and TEQ
UMULL, UMLAL, SMULL, and SMLAL
UMAAL
UND pseudo-instruction
USAD8 and USADA8
VFP Programming
Directives Reference
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MRS (PSR to general-purpose register)
MRS (PSR to general-purpose register)Move the contents of a PSR to a general-purpose register. Syntax
MRS{cond} Rd, psr
where: condis an optional condition code. Rdis the destination register. psris one of: APSRon
any processor, in any mode. CPSRdeprecated
synonym for APSR and for use in Debug state, on any processor except
ARMv7-M and ARMv6-M. SPSRon
any processor except ARMv7-M and ARMv6-M, in privileged software execution
only. Mpsron ARMv7-M and ARMv6-M processors only.
Mpsrcan be any of: IPSR, EPSR, IEPSR, IAPSR, EAPSR, MSP, PSP, XPSR, PRIMASK, BASEPRI, BASEPRI_MAX, FAULTMASK,
or CONTROL.
Usage
Use MRS in combination with MSR as
part of a read-modify-write sequence for updating a PSR, for example
to change processor mode, or to clear the Q flag. In process swap code, the programmers’ model state of the
process being swapped out must be saved, including relevant PSR
contents. Similarly, the state of the process being swapped in must
also be restored. These operations make use of MRS/store
and load/MSR instruction sequences. SPSR
You must not attempt to access the SPSR when the processor
is in User or System mode. This is your responsibility. The assembler
cannot warn you about this, because it has no information about
the processor mode at execution time. If you attempt to access the SPSR when the processor is in
User or System mode, the result is unpredictable. CPSR
The CPSR endianness bit (E) can be read in any privileged
software execution. The CPSR execution state bits, other than the E bit, can only
be read when the processor is in Debug state, halting debug-mode.
Otherwise, the execution state bits in the CPSR read as zero. The condition flags can be read in any mode on any processor.
Use APSR if you are only interested in accessing the condition code
flags in User mode. Register restrictions
If Rd is PC
in ARM instructions, the result is unpredictable.
You can use SP for Rd in
ARM instructions but this is deprecated in ARMv6T2 and above. If Rd is PC
or SP in Thumb instructions, the result is unpredictable. Condition flags
This instruction does not change the flags. Architectures
This ARM instruction is available in all versions of the ARM
architecture. These 32-bit Thumb instructions are available in ARMv6T2 and
above. There is no 16-bit Thumb version of this instruction. See also
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