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User-visible registers

A user-visible register is one that may be referenced by means of the machine lan­guage that the CPU executes. We can characterize these in the following categories:

  • General purpose
  • Data
  • Address
  • Condition codes

General-purpose registers : can be assigned to a variety of functions by the pro­grammer. Sometimes their use within the instruction set is orthogonal to the opera­tion. That is, any general--purpose register can contain the operand for any opcode. This provides true general-purpose register use. Often, however, there are restric­tions. For example, there may be dedicated registers for floating-point and stack operations. In some cases, general-purpose registers can be used for addressing functions (e.g.. register indirect, displacement). In other cases, there is a partial or clean sep­aration between data registers and address registers.

Data registers may be used only to hold data and cannot be employed in the calculation of an operand address.

Address registers may themselves be somewhat general purpose, or they may be devoted to a particular addressing mode. Examples include the following:

  • Segment pointers : In a machine with segmented addressing, a segment register holds the address of the base of the segment. There may be multiple registers: for example, one for the operating system and one for the current process.
  • Index registers : These are used for indexed addressing and may be autoindexed.
  • Stack pointer : If there is user-visible stack addressing, then typically the stack is in memory and there is a dedicated register that points to the top of the slack. This allows implicit addressing; that is, push, pop, and other slack in­structions need not contain an explicit stack operand.

Condition codes register (also referred to as flags ): Condition codes are bits set by the CPU hardware as the result of operations. For example, an arithmetic operation may pro­duce a positive, negative, zero, or overflow result. In addition to the result itself being stored in a register or memory, a condition code is also set. The code may sub­sequently be tested as part of a conditional branch operation.

Control and status registers

There are a variety of CPU registers that are employed to control the operation of the CPU. Most of these, on most machines, are not visible to the user. Some of them may be visible to machine instructions executed in a control or operating system mode.

Of course, different machines will have different register organizations and use different terminology. We list here a reasonably complete list of register types, with a brief description.

Four registers are essential to instruction execution:

  • Program counter (PC) : Contains the address of an instruction to be fetched.
  • Instruction register (IR) : Contains the instruction most recently fetched.
  • Memory address registers (MAR) : Contains the address of a location in memory.
  • Memory buffer register (MBR) : Contains a word of data lo be written to mem­ory or the word most recently read.

Typically, the CPU updates the PC after each instruction fetch so that the PC always points to the next instruction to be executed. A branch or skip instruction will also modify the contents of the PC. The fetched instruction is loaded into an IR, where the opcode and operand specifiers are analyzed. Data are exchanged with memory using the MAR and MBR. In a bus-organized system, the MAR connects directly to the address bus, and the MBR connects directly to the data bus. User-visible registers, in turn, exchange data with the MBR.

The four registers just mentioned are used for the movement of data between the CPU and memory. Within the CPU, data must be presented to the ALU for pro­cessing. The ALU may have direct access to the MBR and user-visible registers. Alternatively, there may be additional buffering registers at the boundary to the ALU: these registers serve as input and output registers for the ALL and exchange data with the MBR and user-visible registers.

All CPU designs include a register or set of registers, often known as the program status word (PSW), that contain status information. The PSW typically con­tains condition codes plus other stains information. Common fields or flags include the following:

  • Sign : Contains the sign bit of the result of the last arithmetic operation.
  • Zero : Set when the result is 0.
  • Carry : Set if an operation resulted in a carry (addition) into or borrow (sub-traction) out of a high-order hit. Used for multiword arithmetic operations.
  • Equal : Set if a logical compare result is equality.
  • Overflow : Used to indicate arithmetic overflow
  • Interrupt enable/disable : Used to enable or disable interrupts.
  • Supervisor : Indicates whether the CPU is executing in supervisor or user mode. Certain privileged instructions can be executed only in supervisor mode, and certain areas of memory can be accessed only in supervisor mode.

A number of other registers related to status and control might be found in a particular CPU design. In addition to the PSW, there may be a pointer to a block of memory containing additional status information (e.g., process control blocks).

Example Register Organizations:

Example of microprocessor registers organizations

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Source:  OpenStax, Computer architecture. OpenStax CNX. Jul 29, 2009 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10761/1.1
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