27.6. Opcodes

27.6.1. Branch Improvement

Certain pseudo opcodes are permitted for branch instructions. They expand to the shortest branch instruction that reach the target. Generally these mnemonics are made by prepending j to the start of Motorola mnemonic. These pseudo opcodes are not affected by the -short-branchs or -force-long-branchs options.

The following table summarizes the pseudo-operations.

                        Displacement Width
     +-------------------------------------------------------------+
     |                     Options                                 |
     |    --short-branchs            --force-long-branchs          |
     +--------------------------+----------------------------------+
  Op |BYTE             WORD     | BYTE          WORD               |
     +--------------------------+----------------------------------+
 bsr | bsr <pc-rel>    <error>  |               jsr <abs>          |
 bra | bra <pc-rel>    <error>  |               jmp <abs>          |
jbsr | bsr <pc-rel>   jsr <abs> | bsr <pc-rel>  jsr <abs>          |
jbra | bra <pc-rel>   jmp <abs> | bra <pc-rel>  jmp <abs>          |
 bXX | bXX <pc-rel>    <error>  |               bNX +3; jmp <abs>  |
jbXX | bXX <pc-rel>   bNX +3;   | bXX <pc-rel>  bNX +3; jmp <abs>  |
     |                jmp <abs> |                                  |
     +--------------------------+----------------------------------+
XX: condition
NX: negative of condition XX

jbsr, jbra

These are the simplest jump pseudo-operations; they always map to one particular machine instruction, depending on the displacement to the branch target.

jbXX

Here, jbXX stands for an entire family of pseudo-operations, where XX is a conditional branch or condition-code test. The full list of pseudo-ops in this family is:
 jbcc   jbeq   jbge   jbgt   jbhi   jbvs   jbpl  jblo
 jbcs   jbne   jblt   jble   jbls   jbvc   jbmi

For the cases of non-PC relative displacements and long displacements, as issues a longer code fragment in terms of NX, the opposite condition to XX. For example, for the non-PC relative case:
    jbXX foo
gives
     bNXs oof
     jmp foo
 oof: