Provided by: xa65_2.4.0-0.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       xa - 6502/R65C02/65816 cross-assembler

SYNOPSIS

       xa [OPTION]... FILE

DESCRIPTION

       xa  is  a  multi-pass cross-assembler for the 8-bit processors in the 6502 series (such as
       the 6502, 65C02, 6504, 6507, 6510, 7501, 8500, 8501 and 8502), the  Rockwell  R65C02,  and
       the  16-bit  65816 processor. For a description of syntax, see ASSEMBLER SYNTAX further in
       this manual page.

OPTIONS

       -E     Do not stop after 20 errors, but show all errors.

       -v     Verbose output.

       -C     No CMOS opcodes (default is to allow R65C02 opcodes).

       -W     No 65816 opcodes (default).

       -w     Allow 65816 opcodes.

       -B     Show lines with block open/close (see PSEUDO-OPS).

       -c     Produce o65 object files instead of executable files (no linking performed);  files
              may contain undefined references.

       -o filename
              Set  output filename. The default is a.o65; use the special filename - to output to
              standard output.

       -P filename
              Set listing filename. The default is none; use the special filename - to print  the
              listing to standard output.

       -F format
              Set listing format; default is plain.  The only other currently supported format is
              html.

       -e filename
              Set errorlog filename; default is none.

       -l filename
              Set labellist filename; default is none. This is the symbol table and can  be  used
              by disassemblers such as dxa(1) to reconstruct source.

       -r     Add cross-reference list to labellist (requires -l).

       -Xcompatset
              Enables  compatibility  settings  to become more (not fully!) compatible with other
              6502 assemblers and codebases.  Currently supported are  compatibility  sets  MASM,
              CA65  and  C,  with  XA23 available as a deprecated option for codebases relying on
              compatibility with the previous version of xa.  Multiple compatibility sets may  be
              specified and combined, e.g., -XMASM -XXA23.

              -XMASM  allows  colons to appear in comments for MASM compatibility.  This does not
              affect colon interpretation elsewhere and  may  become  the  default  in  a  future
              version.

              -XCA65  adds  syntactic  features  more compatible with ca65(1).  It permits := for
              defining labels (instead of plain =), and  adds  support  for  unnamed  labels  and
              "cheap"  local  labels  using  the  @ character, but disables its other meaning for
              24-bit mode (see ASSEMBLER SYNTAX).

              -XC enables the usage of 0xHEX and 0OCTAL C-style number encodings.

              -XXA23 restores partial compatibility with xa 2.3.x. In particular, it uses  ^  for
              quote  escapes  instead of 2.4's \, allows nested multi-line comments, and disables
              all predefined xa preprocessor macros. This option is inherently deprecated and may
              be removed in the next 2.x or 3.x release.

       -M     This  option  is  deprecated  and  will  be removed in a future version; use -XMASM
              instead. Allows colons to appear in comments for MASM compatibility. This does  not
              affect  colon  interpretation  elsewhere,  and  may  become the default in a future
              version.

       -R     Start assembler in relocating mode, i.e. use segments.

       -U     Do not allow undefined labels in relocating mode.

       -Llabel
              Defines label as an absolute (but undefined) label even when linking.

       -b? addr
              Set segment base for segment ?  to address addr.  ?  should be t, d,  b  or  z  for
              text, data, bss or zero segments, respectively.

       -A addr
              Make  text  segment  start  at an address such that when the file starts at address
              addr, relocation is not necessary. Overrides -bt; other segments still have  to  be
              taken care of with -b.

       -G     Suppress list of exported globals.

       -DDEF=TEXT
              Define a preprocessor macro on the command line (see PREPROCESSOR).

       -I dir Add directory dir to the include path (before XAINPUT; see ENVIRONMENT).

       -O charset
              Define  the  output  charset  for  character strings. Currently supported are ASCII
              (default), PETSCII (Commodore ASCII), PETSCREEN (Commodore screen codes)  and  HIGH
              (set high bit on all characters).

       -p?    Set  the  alternative preprocessor character to ?.  This is useful when you wish to
              use cpp(1) and the built-in preprocessor  at  the  same  time  (see  PREPROCESSOR).
              Characters may need to be quoted for your shell (example: -p'~' ).

       --help Show summary of options (-?  is a synonym).

       --version
              Show version of program.

ASSEMBLER SYNTAX

       An introduction to 6502 assembly language programming and mnemonics is beyond the scope of
       this manual page. We invite you to investigate any number of the excellent  books  on  the
       subject;  one  useful  title  is  "Machine  Language  For  Beginners" by Richard Mansfield
       (COMPUTE!), covering the Atari, Commodore and Apple 8-bit systems, and is widely available
       on the used market.

       xa  supports both the standard NMOS 6502 opcodes as well as the Rockwell CMOS opcodes used
       in the 65C02 (R65C02). With the -w option, xa will also accept opcodes for the 65816. NMOS
       6502  undocumented opcodes are intentionally not supported, and should be entered manually
       using the .byte pseudo-op (see PSEUDO-OPS).  Due to conflicts between the R65C02 and 65816
       instruction sets and undocumented instructions on the NMOS 6502, their use is discouraged.

       In  general,  xa accepts the more-or-less standard 6502 assembler format as popularised by
       MASM and TurboAssembler. Values and addresses can be expressed either as literals,  or  as
       expressions; to wit,

       123       decimal value

       $234      hexadecimal value (0x234 accepted with -XC)

       &123      octal (0123 accepted with -XC)

       %010110   binary

       *         current value of the program counter

       The  ASCII  value  of  any  quoted  character  is  inserted directly into the program text
       (example: "A" inserts the byte "A" into  the  output  stream);  see  also  the  PSEUDO-OPS
       section. This is affected by the currently selected character set, if any.

       Labels define locations within the program text, just as in other multi-pass assemblers. A
       label is defined by anything that is not an opcode; for example, a line such as

              label1 lda #0

       defines label1 to be the current location of the program counter (thus the address of  the
       LDA opcode). A label can be explicitly defined by assigning it the value of an expression,
       such as

              label2 = $d000

       which defines label2 to be the address $d000, namely, the start  of  the  VIC-II  register
       block  on Commodore 64 computers. The program counter * is considered to be a special kind
       of label, and can be assigned to with statements such as

              * = $c000

       which sets the program counter to decimal location 49152. If -XCA65 is specified, you  can
       also use := as well as =.

       With  the  exception  of the program counter, labels cannot be assigned multiple times. To
       explicitly declare redefinition of a label, place a - (dash) before it, e.g.,

              -label2 = $d020

       which sets label2 to the Commodore 64 border colour register. The  scope  of  a  label  is
       affected  by  the block it resides within (see PSEUDO-OPS for block instructions). A label
       may also be hard-specified with the -L command line option.

       Redefining a label does not change previously assembled code that used the earlier  value.
       Therefore,  because  the  program counter is a special type of label, changing the program
       counter to a lower value does not reorder code assembled previously and changing it  to  a
       higher  value  does  not issue padding to put subsequent code at the new location. This is
       intentional behaviour to facilitate generating relocatable and position-independent  code,
       but  can differ from other assemblers which use this behaviour for linking. However, it is
       possible to use pseudo-ops to simulate other assemblers' behaviour and use xa as a linker;
       see PSEUDO-OPS and LINKING.

       If  -XCA65  is  specified,  "cheap"  local  labels  may  be  used, marked by the @ prefix.
       Additionally, unnamed labels may be specified with :  (i.e.,  no  label,  just  a  colon);
       branches  may  then reference these unnamed labels with a colon and plus signs for forward
       branching  or  minus  signs  for  backward  branching.  For   example   (from   the   ca65
       documentation),

           :       lda     (ptr1),y        ; #1
                   cmp     (ptr2),y
                   bne     :+              ; -> #2
                   tax
                   beq     :+++            ; -> #4
                   iny
                   bne     :-              ; -> #1
                   inc     ptr1+1
                   inc     ptr2+1
                   bne     :-              ; -> #1

           :       bcs     :+              ; #2 -> #3
                   ldx     #$FF
                   rts

           :       ldx     #$01            ; #3
           :       rts                     ; #4

       For those instructions where the accumulator is the implied argument (such as asl and lsr;
       inc and dec on R65C02; etc.), the idiom of explicitly specifying the accumulator with a is
       unnecessary as the proper form will be selected if there is no explicit argument. In fact,
       for consistency with label handling, if there is a  label  named  a,  this  will  actually
       generate  code  referencing  that  label  as  a  memory  location and not the accumulator.
       Otherwise, the assembler will complain.

       Labels and opcodes may take expressions as their arguments to allow computed  values,  and
       may  themselves  reference  other labels and/or the program counter. An expression such as
       lab1+1 (which operates on the current value of label lab1 and increments it  by  one)  may
       use the following operands, given from highest to lowest priority:

       *       multiplication (priority 10)

       /       integer division (priority 10)

       +       addition (priority 9)

       -       subtraction (9)

       <<      shift left (8)

       >>      shift right (8)

       >= =>   greater than or equal to (7)

       >       greater than (7)

       <= =<   less than or equal to (7)

       <       less than (7)

       =       equal to (6); == also accepted

       <> ><   does not equal (6); != also accepted

       &       bitwise AND (5)

       ^       bitwise XOR (4)

       |       bitwise OR (3)

       &&      logical AND (2)

       ||      logical OR (1)

       Parentheses  are valid. When redefining a label, combining arithmetic or bitwise operators
       with the = (equals) operator such as += and so on are valid, e.g.,

              -redeflabel += (label12/4)

       Normally, xa attempts to ascertain the value of the  operand  and  (when  referring  to  a
       memory  location) use zero page, 16-bit or (for 65816) 24-bit addressing where appropriate
       and where supported by the particular opcode. This generates smaller and faster code,  and
       is almost always preferable.

       Nevertheless,  you  can  use these prefix operators to force a particular rendering of the
       operand. Those that generate an eight bit result can also  be  used  in  8-bit  addressing
       modes, such as immediate and zero page.

       <      low byte of expression, e.g., lda #<vector

       >      high byte of expression

       !      in  situations  where  the  expression could be understood as either an absolute or
              zero page value, do not attempt to optimize to  a  zero  page  argument  for  those
              opcodes that support it (i.e., keep as 16 bit word)

       @      render  as 24-bit quantity for 65816, even if smaller than 24 bits (must specify -w
              command-line option, must not specify -XCA65)

       `      force further optimization, even  if  the  length  of  the  instruction  cannot  be
              reliably determined (see NOTES'N'BUGS)

       Expressions can occur as arguments to opcodes or within the preprocessor (see PREPROCESSOR
       for syntax). For example,

              lda label2+1

       takes the value at label2+1 (using our previous label's value, this would be  $d021),  and
       will be assembled as $ad $21 $d0 to disk. Similarly,

              lda #<label2

       will  take  the  lowest  8  bits of label2 (i.e., $20), and assign them to the accumulator
       (assembling the instruction as $a9 $20 to disk).

       Comments are specified with a semicolon (;), such as

              ;this is a comment

       They can also be specified in the  C  language  style,  using  /*  */  and  //  which  are
       understood at the PREPROCESSOR level (q.v.).

       Normally, the colon (:) separates statements, such as

              label4 lda #0:sta $d020

       or

              label2: lda #2

       (note  the  use of a colon for specifying a label, similar to some other assemblers, which
       xa also understands with or without the colon). This also applies to  semicolon  comments,
       such that

              ; a comment:lda #0

       is  understood  as  a  comment  followed  by  an  opcode.  To  defeat this, use the -XMASM
       compatibility mode to allow colons within comments; this  may  become  the  default  in  a
       future  version. Colon statement separation does not apply to /* */ and // comments, which
       are dealt with at the preprocessor level (q.v.).

PSEUDO-OPS

       Pseudo-ops are false opcodes used by the assembler to denote meta-  or  inlined  commands.
       Like most assemblers, xa has a rich set.

       .byt value1,value2,value3,...
              Specifies  a  string of bytes to be directly placed into the assembled object.  The
              arguments may be expressions. Any number of bytes can be specified.

       .asc "text1" ,"text2",...
              Specifies a character string which will be  inserted  into  the  assembled  object.
              Strings  are  understood  according  to  the currently specified character set; for
              example, if ASCII is specified, they will be rendered as ASCII, and if  PETSCII  is
              specified,  they will be translated into the equivalent Commodore ASCII equivalent.
              Other non-standard ASCIIs such as ATASCII for Atari computers should use the  ASCII
              equivalent   characters;   graphic  and  control  characters  should  be  specified
              explicitly using .byt for the precise character you want. Note that when specifying
              the  argument  of an opcode, .asc is not necessary; the quoted character can simply
              be inserted (e.g., lda #"A" ), and is also affected by the current  character  set.
              Any number of character strings can be specified.

       .byt  and  .asc  are  synonymous, so you can mix things such as .byt $43, 22, "a character
       string" and get the expected result. The string is subject to the current  character  set,
       but the remaining bytes are inserted without modification.

       .aasc "text1" ,"text2",...
              Specifies  a  character  string that is always rendered in true ASCII regardless of
              the current character set. Like .asc, it is synonymous with .byt.

       .word value1,value2,value3...
              Specifies a string of 16-bit words to be placed into the assembled object  in  6502
              little-endian   format   (that   is,  low-byte/high-byte).  The  arguments  may  be
              expressions. Any number of words can be specified.

       .dsb length,fillbyte
              Specifies a data block; a total of length repetitions of fillbyte will be  inserted
              into  the  assembled  object.  For example, .dsb 5,$10 will insert five bytes, each
              being 16 decimal, into the object. The arguments may  be  expressions.  If  only  a
              single argument is provided, then the argument is treated as a number of null bytes
              to insert. See LINKING for how to use this pseudo-op to link multiple objects.

       .bin offset,length,"filename"
              Inlines a binary file without further interpretation  specified  by  filename  from
              offset  offset  (relative  to  the  beginning  of the file) for length bytes.  This
              allows you to insert data such as a previously assembled object file or an image or
              other binary data structure, inlined directly into this file's object. If length is
              zero, then the length of filename, minus the offset, is used instead. The arguments
              may  be  expressions.  See  LINKING  for how to use this pseudo-op to link multiple
              objects.

       .(     Opens a new block for scoping. Within a block, all labels defined are local to that
              block  and  any  sub-blocks,  and go out of scope as soon as the enclosing block is
              closed (i.e., lexically scoped). All labels defined outside of the block are  still
              visible within it. To explicitly declare a global label within a block, precede the
              label with + or precede it with & to declare it within the previous level only  (or
              globally if you are only one level deep). Sixteen levels of scoping are permitted.

              .block is accepted as a synonym for .(, as well as .proc (but you cannot specify an
              explicit scope name as in ca65; only anonymous blocks are supported).

       .)     Closes a block.  .bend or .endproc are accepted as synonyms.

       .as .al .xs .xl
              Only relevant in 65816 mode (with the -w option specified).  These  pseudo-ops  set
              what  size accumulator and X/Y-register should be used for future instructions; .as
              and .xs set 8-bit operands for the accumulator and index  registers,  respectively,
              and  .al  and  .xl  set  16-bit  operands.  These  pseudo-ops  on  purpose  do  not
              automatically issue sep and rep instructions to set the specified width in the CPU;
              set  the processor bits as you need, or consider constructing a macro.  .al and .xl
              generate errors if -w is not specified.

       .assert expression,"message"
              Evaluates expression and if it is false (i.e., evaluates to zero),  prints  message
              as  a  fatal  error,  terminating  assembly  immediately.   For example, a block of
              assembly code that creates high ROM might have

              .assert *<$fffa, "hit vectors"

              to ensure that assembled code does not leak into the  6502  high  vectors.  If  the
              preceding  code is too long, the assertion will be false, and the condition will be
              detected in a controlled fashion.  Any  operation  may  be  used  as  part  of  the
              expression, including logical comparisons such as =, ==, <, <=, >, >=, != and <>.

       .include filename
              Includes another file in place of the pseudo-op, as if the preprocessor had done so
              with an #include directive (see PREPROCESSOR), but at  the  assembler  phase  after
              preprocessing has already occurred.

       The following pseudo-op applies to listing mode.

       .listbytes number
              In  the  listing  output, sets the maximum number of hex bytes to be printed in the
              listing for pseudo-ops like .byt, by default 8. The special argument unlimited sets
              no  upper  limit.  If  listing  mode  is disabled, this pseudo-op has no observable
              effect.

       The following pseudo-ops apply primarily to relocatable .o65 objects.  A  full  discussion
       of    the    relocatable   format   is   beyond   the   scope   of   this   manpage;   see
       http://www.6502.org/users/andre/o65/ for the most current specification.

       .text .data .bss .zero
              These pseudo-ops switch between the different segments, .text being the actual code
              section,  .data  being  the  data segment, .bss being uninitialized label space for
              allocation and .zero being uninitialized zero page space for  allocation.  In  .bss
              and  .zero, only labels are evaluated. These pseudo-ops are valid in relocating and
              absolute modes.

       .code  For ca65 compatibility, this is currently mapped to .text.

       .zeropage
              For ca65 compatibility, this is currently mapped to .zero.

       .align value
              Aligns the current segment to a byte boundary (2, 4 or 256) as specified  by  value
              (and  places  it  in  the  header  when  relocating  mode is enabled). Other values
              generate an error.

       .fopt type, value1, value2, value3, ...
              Acts like .byt/.asc except that the values are embedded into  the  object  file  as
              file  options.   The  argument  type  is  used  to  specify  the  file option being
              referenced. A table of  these  options  is  in  the  relocatable  o65  file  format
              description.  The remainder of the options are interpreted as values to insert. Any
              number of values may be specified, and may also be strings.

       .import label1, label2, label3, ...
              Defines the given labels as global labels which are imported  and  resolved  during
              the link stage, like the -L command line parameter.

       .importzp label1, label2, label3, ...
              Analogous  to  .import,  except  that  it  only imports zeropage labels (i.e., byte
              values).

PREPROCESSOR

       xa implements a preprocessor very similar to that of the  C-language  preprocessor  cpp(1)
       and  many  oddiments  apply  to  both.  For example, as in C, the use of /* */ for comment
       delimiters is also supported in xa, and so are comments using the double  slash  //.   The
       preprocessor  also  supports  continuation lines, i.e., lines ending with a backslash (\);
       the following line is then appended to it as if there were no dividing newline.  This  too
       is handled at the preprocessor level.

       For  reasons  of memory and complexity, the full breadth of the cpp(1) syntax is not fully
       supported. In particular, macro definitions may not  be  forward-defined  (i.e.,  a  macro
       definition  can  only  reference  a previously defined macro definition), except for macro
       functions, where recursive evaluation is supported; e.g., to #define WW AA , AA must  have
       already  been  defined.  Certain other directives are not supported, nor are most standard
       pre-defined macros, and there are other limits on evaluation and line length. Because  the
       maintainers  of xa recognize that some files will require more complicated preparsing than
       the  built-in  preprocessor  can  supply,  the  preprocessor  will   accept   cpp(1)-style
       line/filename/flags  output.  When  these  lines are seen in the input file, xa will treat
       them as cc would, except that flags are ignored.  xa does not  accept  files  on  standard
       input  for  parsing  reasons,  so  you  should  dump your cpp(1) output to an intermediate
       temporary file, such as

              cc -E test.s > test.xa
              xa test.xa

       No special arguments need to be passed to xa; the presence of cpp(1)  output  is  detected
       automatically.

       Note  that  passing  your  file  through  cpp(1)  may interfere with xa's own preprocessor
       directives. In this case, to mask directives from cpp(1), use the -p option to specify  an
       alternative character instead of #, such as the tilde (e.g., -p'~' ). With this option and
       argument specified, then instead of #include, for example, you can also use  ~include,  in
       addition  to  #include (which will also still be accepted by the xa preprocessor, assuming
       any survive cpp(1)).  Any character can be used, although frankly pathologic  choices  may
       lead  to amusing and frustrating glitches during parsing.  You can also use this option to
       defer preprocessor directives that cpp(1) may interpret too early until the file  actually
       gets to xa itself for processing.

       The following predefined macros are supported, except if -XXA23 is specified:

       XA_MAJOR
              The current major version of xa.

       XA_MINOR
              The current minor version of xa.

       The following preprocessor directives are supported:

       #include "filename"
              Inserts  the  contents of file filename at this position. If the file is not found,
              it is searched using  paths  specified  by  the  -I  command  line  option  or  the
              environment  variable  XAINPUT  (q.v.). When inserted, the file will also be parsed
              for preprocessor directives.

       #echo comment
              Inserts comment comment into the errorlog file, specified with the -e command  line
              option.

       #print expression
              Computes the value of expression expression and prints it into the errorlog file.

       #error message
              Displays the message as an error and terminates assembly.

       #define DEFINE text
              Equates  macro  DEFINE  with  text  text  such  that wherever DEFINE appears in the
              assembly source, text is substituted in its place (just like cpp(1) would  do).  In
              addition,  #define  can  specify  macro functions like cpp(1) such that a directive
              like #define mult(a,b) ((a)*(b)) would generate the  expected  result  wherever  an
              expression  of the form mult(a,b) appears in the source. This can also be specified
              on the command line with the -D option. The arguments of a macro  function  may  be
              recursively  evaluated, unlike other #defines; the preprocessor will attempt to re-
              evaluate any argument refencing another preprocessor definition  up  to  ten  times
              before complaining.

       The  following  directives are conditionals. If the conditional is not satisfied, then the
       source code between the  directive  and  its  terminating  #endif  are  expunged  and  not
       assembled. Up to fifteen levels of nesting are supported.

       #ifdef DEFINE
              True only if macro DEFINE is defined.

       #ifndef DEFINE
              The opposite; true only if macro DEFINE has not been previously defined.

       #if expression
              True  if  expression  expression  evaluates  to non-zero.  expression may reference
              other macros.

       #iflused label
              True if label label has been used (but not necessarily instantiated with a  value).
              This works on labels, not macros!

       #ifldef label
              True  if  label  label is defined and assigned with a value.  This works on labels,
              not macros!

       #else  Implements alternate path for a conditional block.

       #endif Closes a conditional block.

       Unclosed conditional blocks at the end  of  included  files  generate  warnings;  unclosed
       conditional blocks at the end of assembly generate an error.

       #iflused  and  #ifldef  are useful for building up a library based on labels. For example,
       you might use something like this in your library's code:

              #iflused label
              #ifldef label
              #echo label already defined, library function label cannot be inserted
              #else
              label /* your code */
              #endif
              #endif

LINKING

       xa is oriented towards generating sequential binaries. Code is strictly emitted  in  order
       even if the program counter is set to a lower location than previously assembled code, and
       padding is not automatically emitted if the program counter is set to a  higher  location.
       Changing  the  program  location  only  changes  new  labels for code that is subsequently
       emitted; previous emitted code remains unchanged. Fortunately, for many object files these
       conventions have no effect on their generation.

       However,  some  applications  may  require  generating  an  object file built from several
       previously generated components, and/or  submodules  which  may  need  to  be  present  at
       specific memory locations. With a minor amount of additional specification, it is possible
       to use xa for this purpose as well.

       The first means of doing so uses the o65 format to make relocatable objects that  in  turn
       can be linked by ldo65(1) (q.v.).

       The  second  means involves either assembled code, or insertion of previously built object
       or data files with .bin, using .dsb  pseudo-ops  with  computed  expression  arguments  to
       insert  any  necessary padding between them, in the sequential order they are to reside in
       memory. Consider this example:

           .word $1000
           * = $1000

           ; this is your code at $1000
       part1       rts
           ; this label marks the end of code
       endofpart1

           ; DON'T PUT A NEW .word HERE!
           * = $2000
           .dsb (*-endofpart1), 0
           ; yes, set it again
           * = $2000

           ; this is your code at $2000
       part2       rts

       This example, written for Commodore microcomputers using a 16-bit  starting  address,  has
       two  "modules"  in  it:  one  block of code at $1000 (4096), indicated by the code between
       labels part1 and endofpart1, and a second block at $2000 (8192) starting at label part2.

       The padding is computed by the .dsb pseudo-op between  the  two  modules.  Note  that  the
       program  counter  is  set  to  the  new address and then a computed expression inserts the
       proper number of fill bytes from the end of the assembled code in part 1  up  to  the  new
       program  counter  address.  Since  this  itself  advances the program counter, the program
       counter is reset again, and assembly continues.

       When the object this source file generates is loaded, there will be an rts instruction  at
       address 4096 and another at address 8192, with null bytes between them.

       Should  one  of  these  areas  need to contain a pre-built file, instead of assembly code,
       simply use a .bin pseudo-op to load whatever portions of the file are  required  into  the
       output.  The  computation  of  addresses and number of necessary fill bytes is done in the
       same fashion.

       Although this example used the program counter itself to compute  the  difference  between
       addresses,  you  can use any label for this purpose, keeping in mind that only the program
       counter determines where relative addresses within assembled code are resolved.

ENVIRONMENT

       xa utilises the following environment variables, if they exist:

       XAINPUT
              Include file path; components should be separated by `,'.

       XAOUTPUT
              Output file path.

NOTES'N'BUGS

       The R65C02 instructions ina (often rendered inc a) and dea (dec a)  must  be  rendered  as
       bare inc and dec instructions respectively.

       The  65816 instructions mvn and mvp use two eight bit parameters, the only instructions in
       the entire instruction set to do so. Older versions of xa took a  single  16-bit  absolute
       value. As of 2.4.0, this old syntax is no longer accepted.

       Forward-defined  labels  -- that is, labels that are defined after the current instruction
       is processed -- cannot be optimized into zero page instructions even if the label does end
       up being defined as a zero page location, because the assembler does not know the value of
       the label in advance during the first pass when the length of an instruction is  computed.
       On  the  second  pass,  a  warning will be issued when an instruction that could have been
       optimized can't be because of  this  limitation.   (Obviously,  this  does  not  apply  to
       branching  or  jumping  instructions  because  they're  not  optimizable anyhow, and those
       instructions that can only take an 8-bit parameter will  always  be  casted  to  an  8-bit
       quantity.)   If  the  label  cannot  otherwise  be  defined  ahead of the instruction, the
       backtick prefix ` may be used to force further optimization no matter where the  label  is
       defined as long as the instruction supports it.  Indiscriminately forcing the issue can be
       fraught with peril, however, and is not recommended; to  discourage  this,  the  assembler
       will  complain about its use in addressing mode situations where no ambiguity exists, such
       as indirect indexed, branching and so on.

SEE ALSO

       file65(1), ldo65(1), printcbm(1), reloc65(1), uncpk(1), dxa(1)

AUTHOR

       This  manual  page  was  written  by  David  Weinehall  <tao@acc.umu.se>,   Andre   Fachat
       <fachat@web.de>   and   Cameron   Kaiser   <ckaiser@floodgap.com>.   Original  xa  package
       (C)1989-1997 Andre Fachat. Additional changes (C)1989-2023 Andre Fachat,  Jolse  Maginnis,
       David Weinehall, Cameron Kaiser. The official maintainer is Cameron Kaiser.

OVER 30 YEARS OF XA

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WEBSITE

       http://www.floodgap.com/retrotech/xa/

                                         18 November 2023                                   XA(1)